Read The Devil at Archangel Online
Authors: Sara Craven
asked herself frantically. But she had seen no need. The upstairs
rooms were all dealt with in the mornings, and it was rare for any of
the servants to return there until the evening, when they came to turn
down the beds.
Christina suppressed a groan. Eulalie had always disliked her, she
knew. It would no doubt give the other girl enormous satisfaction to
be able to go to Mrs Brandon and report that her companion was
secretly packing for a no- doubt hurried departure. She wondered
desperately if it would be possible to bribe Eulalie to keep quiet, but
at the same time she knew her already grave financial position
precluded any such possibility, even if Eulalie had been willing.
Eulalie spoke first, a grim little smile playing about her lips. 'You are
going somewhere,
m'mselle?'
Christina compressed her lips. 'Don't let's play any cat and mouse
games, Eulalie,' she said curtly. 'It's quite obvious, isn't it? I'm
leaving. Now run away and tell what tales you have to.'
She had lost all hope of persuading Louis to take her to La Villette
now, she realised with a sinking heart. If she wanted to get there for
the afternoon boat, it seemed more than likely she would have to
walk, carrying her cases. She could not leave them with Lorna now.
'I shall not say anything,' said Eulalie. Christina stared ather in
surprise. The other girl's eyes were gleaming, and her tongue passed
excitedly over her lips. 'I shall say nothing.'
Christina gave her a steady look. 'I have nothing to give you in return
for your silence,' she pointed out quietly.
Eulalie gave a strident laugh. 'Oh, but you are wrong, English girl.
You give me everything when you go. You go—and my man will
forget about you, and turn back to me. I have seen how he looks at
you. I have seen him touch you. But you are prim and cold like all the
English. You cannot give him what I give him.'
Pain, that was almost physical, lashed at Christina. She folded her
arms tightly across her breasts as if she was trying to protect herself.
Of course, for Eulalie it was so simple. Presumably she had been in
the vicinity of the library on the previous day and had seen Christina
in Devlin's arms, as Theo had done. An image rose in her mind of the
carved wooden figure, in all its unashamed longing and passionate
surrender. To Eulalie, no doubt, possession was nine points of the
law where Devlin was concerned. She had already established her
rights, and now the sole threat to them was being removed. No
wonder she was making no effort to conceal her delight.
She looked at the overt eagerness on Eulalie's face and compassion
assailed her.
'I'm sorry if you've been hurt through me, Eulalie. I never intended it
to be so.'
'You hurt no one,
m'mselle.
Soon, we forget all about you. My man
will belong to me again, and it will be as if you. never existed.' As she
spoke, she snapped her fingers and laughed again.
Christina forced a smile. 'I hope, for your sake, that you're right.
But—but is there really any future with a man who is ready to be
unfaithful to you?'
Eulalie gave her a look of contempt. 'Why should he not amuse
himself? He is young and a man, non? Too much of a man for you,
English girl. Always in the past he has come back to me. But since
you came here—not. He will be glad of me when you go. He will be
glad to marry me.'
Christina's hands were shaking so violently she could hardly transfer
the piles of clothes from the bed to the case. It had never occurred to
her that Eulalie would be thinking in terms of marriage. Devlin might
be the outcast of the mighty Brandon clan, but surely he would
hesitate to commit himself to anyone in Eulalie's position. Unless, she
thought achingly, this was to be his final act of revenge against
Marcelle Brandon. What price the Brandon pride, when the nephew
of the house married his aunt's servant girl?
'You—think he will marry you?' she managed. Sleeping and waking,
since her discovery of the woodcarving at the beach house,- the
thought of Eulalie in Devlin's arms had been hideously at the
forefront of her mind. She knew, to her cost, what a demanding lover
he would make, and the thought of Eulalie satisfying those demands
on a purely physical level had been an agony to her. But his wife!
That implied a level of trust, of mental as well as physical intimacy
which she would never have guessed existed between them.
Eulalie grinned triumphantly, as if she could read the tenor of
Christina's thoughts and was amused by them. 'Oh, I think so, English
girl.' For a moment she pressed her hand against her rounded
stomach. 'When he knows what I carry.' Her smile widened as she
saw how pale Christina had gone. 'You said you had nothing to give
me,
m'mselle.
Perhaps I give you something, instead.' Her hand
dipped into her overall pocket and came out holding a tightly rolled
wad of notes. She tossed it on to the bed beside Christina. 'Take it,
English girl. Going away present.'
She left the towels on the dressing table, and walked out of the room.
Christina sank down on to the bed, her legs refusing to support her
any longer. So Eulalie was to have Devlin's child. She supposed it
was inevitable, or had it been a deliberate ploy to bind him to her
irrevocably? An unbearable picture rose in her mind of Devlin, the
cynical lines wiped from his face by a new tenderness as he looked
down at the sleeping child in his arms. And it came home to her with
all the force of a blow how much she herself wanted to bear him that
child. With a groan, she forced herself to her feet again, dragging her
fist childishly across her eyes, refusing to permit the threatened tears
to fall. Eulalie had prophesied they would soon forget her once she
had departed. Perhaps she also would be able to forget—in time.
She was crazy to feel like this, she told herself vehemently, as she
tossed the last few things into her case and closed the lid. They were
all still strangers to her—Devlin most of all. She had only been
among them a matter of days. Logic insisted that it should not drag
the heart out of her to leave. Just because a man with silver eyes and a
body as taut as whipcord had held her in his arms, that was no reason
to take one wild leap into the realms of fantasy. Devlin Brandon, as
she saw him, did not exist. He was merely a myth, manufactured in
her mind,
a casual
rake who helped himself to women as he would
take another cheroot. Just another Brandon, exercising a different
form of power.
She was well rid of him. She choked back a sob. She was well rid of
them all.
She took a last unhappy look around her room, checking that she had
forgotten nothing. She had debated with herself whether or not to
leave a note for Mrs Brandon, but had decided against it. The pathetic
figure who hady crouched in the chair beside her bed the previous
day might have excited her compassion, but the ruthless manipulator
of other people's lives who had deliberately lied to her in order to
keep her on the island did not.
She carried her cases down the stairs from the gallery, and round the
side of the house, pushing them under a large flowering bush from
which Lorna would collect them when the coast was clear. Then she
returned to her room to regain access to the main part of the house. As
she walked down the big staircase, Lorna was waiting at the bottom
with Madame Christophe behind her. Lorna said calmly, 'Louis is
bringing the car round, Christina. I told him one of us needed to go to
La Villette. Shall we toss for it, or will you volunteer?'
'It's all right.' Christina lifted her chin, hoping she looked more
composed than she felt. 'I'll go.'
The minutes of waiting seemed endless. Lorna had tactfully vanished
again after giving her a last reassuring smile, and Christina felt very
alone suddenly. She walked restlessly over to the front door and stood
staring up at the vivid blue sky where some fragile white wisps of
cloud floated. She knew she had plenty of time to get to La Villette,
but all the same she wished Louis would hurry. It was as if at any
moment she expected to see Mrs Brandon coming down the staircase
in pursuit. She gave a little shiver and glanced over her shoulder, but
she was still alone in the hall. Only the great statue of the Archangel
watched her departure. She looked at it uneasily. Was it just her
overheated imagination again, or did the towering figure with the
upraised spear have a kind of warning about it—as if to remind her
that the devil was not yet fully subdued?
She told herself firmly she was being ridiculous, and at that moment,
the big grey car rolled to a halt at the foot of the steps.
She was very quiet as the car bumped and lurched its way to La
Villette. Louis too was uncommunicative, preferring to whistle softly
under his breath as he steered. Christina stared through the
windscreen, a prey to her own thoughts. The first thing she would
have to do would be to find herself somewhere to stay. She would try
and find a small hotel, the sort of place that catered for families, and
see if they would allow her to lodge there for a limited period in
exchange for
j
her working for them. She would do
anything—chambermaid work, or even help in the kitchens if
necessary. Then she would write to Mr Frith, detailing her plight. She
had left Eulalie's roll of money where it had landed—on her bed. Let
the Brandons make what they would of that, she thought.
It occurred to her suddenly that even allowing for the shortcomings of
the road, the car seemed to be behaving J rather oddly. Louis tugged
at the wheel, frowningly, then pulled the car into the side of the road
and got out. When he returned, his face was lugubrious, and he was
stripping ; off his coat. 'Puncture,
m'mselle,''
he announced, and went
to get the tools out of the boot.
Christina concealed a groan. In normal circumstances, they were
making good time on the journey, but she had no idea how long it
would take Louis to change the wheel, and this could make all the
difference. He was certainly starting proceedings in a decidedly
leisurely manner, as if he ; had all day ahead of him, and there was no
way she could chivvy him along without arousing his suspicion. She
got : out of the car restlessly and wandered round to watch him at
work. She supposed she could not blame him for taking his time. It
really was incredibly hot, without even the hint : of a breeze.
'Are you going to be very long?' she inquired, trying to ; sound casual.
Louis shrugged. 'Just as long as it takes,
m'mselle,''
he returned
unhelpfully. Christina turned away, suppressing her irritation with an
effort. She walked slowly along the grass verge, looking down over
the sheer sprawl of the cliff beneath. Devlin's beach house lay in one
of those coves 1 below her, she thought, and found herself wondering
what 1 he was doing at that precise moment. Probably out on
Moon
Maiden
searching for the elusive wind, she thought.
At least that was a more comforting thought than some that had
occurred to her. She turned and strolled back towards the car. Louis
did not seem to have made much progress. He seemed to be having
trouble in detaching one of the nuts and was swearing softly to
himself. Christina maintained a tactful distance, and tried not to
glance too obviously at her watch. The precious moments were
ticking' past-at a relentless rate, she saw with alarm, and Lorna had
warned her that the boat for Martinique left strictly on time. She
looked restlessly up the road, trying to conjure up . another vehicle.
But if one came, what could she do? What excuse could she fabricate
that would convince Louis it was in her best interests to accept a lift to
keep an apparently non-urgent appointment rather than wait while he
changed the wheel?
She strolled over to Louis and watched his struggles. Should she offer
to help?
He glanced up at her, sweat pouring down his brown face. 'Thirsty
work,
m'mselle,
' he gasped. 'You go sit in the shade. I be finished here
soon.'
But how soon was soon? Christina wondered as time dragged on and
little progress seemed to be made. Louis got the wheel off at last and
crowed with triumph. Christina felt like joining him. If he hurried