Authors: Sara Craven
fancy was over. Her head throbbed as she walked beside him up to
the chateau, and she was fighting a churning nausea deep within
her. It wasn't the truth awaiting her at the chateau that she feared,
but one much closer to home. She was Gaston de Rochefort's
daughter, and Rohan knew this —had known it when he became
her lover; had known it when they began to plan their lives
together.
The
Baronne's
words came stinging back at her: 'With Rohan, it is
always a matter of business.'
He wanted La Tour Monchauzet. Had wanted it all his life. 'That's
what counts with Rohan—the vines'. Antoinette had told her so
that day in Monpazier. The day she'd shown him the photograph. .
.
But I didn't listen to her, she thought. Because I didn't want to
hear. I preferred to think she was just a jealous bitch. I wanted to
believe that this man —this stranger—had seen me and wanted
me. I needed my own fairy-tale — my own legend —and to see it
come true.
And they both lived happily ever after.
Her throat constricted sharply. She wanted to scream out loud, to
strike at him with her fists for destroying her dream. The nails
scored the palms of her hands as she fought for control.
Because he wouldn't understand, she thought. He would think she
was being totally unreasonable. The French were a practical
nation, they knew the value of land—of inheritance. They made
arrangements accordingly. She was —part of an arrangement. The
plan had been originally for Rohan to marry Antoinette, but
because she was the
Baronne's
niece, not Gaston's, the inheritance
would have been penalised financially by the government. A
daughter — even an illegitimate one—was a much better bargain.
And if she was naive enough to fall in love with him—so much the
better. That way he got it all. And she'd been too stupid, too
besotted to realise — until now.
There were tears inside her, aching inside her chest, scalding her
throat, burning behind her eyes, but she couldn't shed them yet.
This was a separate — a private nightmare. The one awaiting her
at the chateau was far more public, and that was the one she had to
face head-on.
Every light seemed to be glaring from the windows when they
arrived. Rohan took her to a
salon
on the ground floor. The scene
that confronted her was like a tableau from a waxworks, she
thought with faint hysteria as she walked in.
Heloise de Rochefort was crouched in a chair like a small hunted
animal. On one side of her, Antoinette stood like a statue. On the
other, Ernestine kept up a flow of low-voiced chatter, permeated
by sobs. Gaston de Rochefort sat in his wheelchair by the
fireplace. Logs had been kindled in the hearth, and the room held
the faint, acrid tang of woodsmoke.
If she could, Sabine would have turned and run, but Rohan's hand
was on her shoulder, urging her forward gently but firmly.
'My child.' Gaston's voice throbbed with emotion. 'My girl.' His
hands gripped the arms of his chair, levering himself upwards, his
face grim and set with determination. As the room fell suddenly,
tensely silent, he began to walk, to hobble painfully and with
difficulty towards Sabine.
Heloise de Rochefort cried out, and covered her mouth with her
hand.
'Oh, God.' Sabine swung on Rohan. 'Help him. Stop him —he'll
fall —injure himself.'
'No.' Rohan shook his head, an odd smile playing about his mouth.
'That chair was his refuge, his excuse for avoiding life. It has been
for years. But it needed the right impetus to get him out of it.
You've supplied that, Sabine. He's going to be fine now:'
Gaston de Rochefort was panting, his forehead heavily beaded
with sweat when he reached her. But the arms which seized and
held Sabine were strong with no sign of weakness. There were
tears in his eyes.
'Little one.' He almost groaned the words. 'If I had only known —
if only Isabelle could have forced herself to tell me.'
Sabine heard Madame de Rochefort moan faintly.
'I don't understand.' Her voice shook slightly. 'If— if you were
having an affair—you would surely have realised —she would
have said something.'
'No.' Gaston closed his eyes, as if wincing away from some
unbearable memory. 'It was not like that. There was —no affair.'
He paused, drawing breath with an effort. 'May we—sit down?'
Rohan took his arm and guided him to a sofa. Sabine sat down
beside him, both her hands clasped in his. The room was warm,
but she felt cold, as her father's eyes sadly searched her face.
'This is not easy for me,' he said, after a pause. 'I have to speak of
things I wished so often to forget—of my guilt, of my shame.' He
bit his lips. 'I loved your mother always, I think. Even when I was
a child I was entranced by her. Fabien also, of course, but it was
always me that she seemed to prefer — or so I liked to think. My
parents were concerned at our attachment to her, although they
could understand it. She was beautiful, good and innocent too, a
wife any man would have been proud of—unless, of course, he
was a de Rochefort of La Tour Monchauzet. Fabien and I were
expected to marry—well. The daughter of our
maitre de chai
was
not considered in any way suitable. Therefore, as soon as Isabelle
was old enough, it was decided to exploit her aptitude for art by
sending her to Paris—out of harm's way.'
He paused again. 'My father arranged with Hercule to pay for her
training. They were in total agreement that it was the best thing for
both sides that Isabelle should go. It was seen as an act of
prudence. But I never forgot her—and nor did Fabien.
'Time passed, Hercule became ill, and she returned. Both Fabien
and I had become older, harder, perhaps, but she had not changed
at all. From the moment I saw her, I knew that I still loved her, and
that her absence had only deepened my passion.'
There was another small stifled sound from the
Baronne.
He went on as if he'd heard nothing. 'It wasn't long before I
realised that Fabien felt the same too. And he, as a widower, was
free to woo her, to offer himself as her husband. I was —insanely
jealous. I arranged to see Isabelle alone and told her of my
feelings.
'She was deeply shocked, and very angry. She reminded me that I
was a married man—forbade me to approach her or speak to her
again in that way, but at the same time I knew I had made her
think about the old days —the attraction we'd had for each other
which she could not deny. I'd made her question her own heart.'
He shook his head, his mouth twisted. 'Dear God, after that, it was
like a siege. I would not leave her alone. I told myself that I could
not —that I had to make her admit what we both knew—that she
was in love with me, and always had been.
'I persuaded her once or twice to meet me at the ruined tower. It
had always been our special place from childhood. She was always
reluctant, and always implacable. I had a wife. I should not be
pressuring her in this way. She begged me in tears to leave her
alone — to give her some peace.'
'Do you think I'm a fool? That we're all fools?' Heloise de
Rochefort's voice was hoarse —cracked. 'She was your mistress.
Your slut.'
Gaston shook his head. 'You were wrong, my poor Heloise.
Isabelle was guiltless. I was to blame for everything. Even when it
was announced that she and Fabien had become formally engaged
I would not give up my pursuit of her. She had been living here at
the chateau, helping with the children, but she moved down to Les
Hiboux to get away from me. I knew it was because she was afraid
—not just of me, but her own emotions.
'The old attraction couldn't be banished so easily. Their wedding
was getting closer all the time. I was half crazy with desire for her
— terrified of losing her forever. I begged her to meet me one last
time at the tower.' He paused again. 'It was then I told her I would
divorce my wife and marry her.'
The room was hushed. His words fell into the silence like stones.
The Baronne moved once, convulsively, on her chair, then was
still again.
Gaston went on heavily, 'I told her I knew she was in love with
me. She did not deny it. She called it infatuation — an illusion
which could destroy us both. She said that she loved Fabien, and
wanted to be his wife, and build a future with him. She told me, as
she'd done so many times, that happiness could never be created
out of the misery of other people, that Heloise was already jealous
of her and unhappy because of her influence with the children.'
'I hated her,' the
Baronne
said. 'Even my Antoinette was turning to
her rather than me. The doctors told me I would never have a child
of my own. Antoinette was all I had, and I loved her as if she were
my own. She had to love me best in return — only there was
always — always Isabelle.' Her voice rose slightly. 'She had stolen
my husband. I wasn't going to let her take Antoinette too.'
She looked up at the girl beside her. Antoinette was very pale, with
a muscle flickering in her throat, but when her aunt took her hand
she didn't pull away.
After a silence, Heloise went on, 'I knew Gaston was tired of me—
that he wanted to end our marriage — and I couldn't bear it. He
even gave her this.' She tugged the silver medallion from her dress.
'But as he loved her I loved him. I would have done anything to
keep him—anything. . .'
'There was no need.' The
Baron's
voice was very gentle. 'She
rejected me totally.' His voice cracked slightly. 'She said she had
known for some time that she and Fabien could not remain at La
Tour Monchauzet after their marriage — that they had been
talking together about moving away —of going, perhaps, as far as
Australia or California and starting a totally new life. One of the
reasons for Fabien's trip was to investigate various possibilities.'
His voice sank almost to a whisper. 'I went a little mad, I think. All
those years of wanting her, and for nothing. My love — my name
thrown back in my face. I'd always respected her—kept my
distance—until then. . .'
He threw his head back, staring straight ahead of him, his eyes
filled with agony. He said quietly, 'I took her—I—forced her. She
was weeping, pleading, fighting me, but I was obsessed by my
own need. I was strong, very strong then. She was going to be
Fabien's wife, but I would have her first. I could think of nothing
else. Cared for nothing else.' A shudder ran through his entire
frame, and he was silent.
Sabine freed her hands from his, staring at him almost dazedly.
She said in a low voice, 'You loved her—and yet you did —that?
How could you?'
'It's beyond belief, I admit, but it's true, to my eternal sorrow and
shame. It was my first and only time with Isabelle, and the
memory of it has been a shadow across the whole of my life.' A
sigh was torn from him. 'Afterwards — she would not look at me
or speak for a long time. At last, all she would say was, "Fabien
must not know. He must never know".'
He shook his head. 'I never saw her alone again, although I tried
desperately. I thought that now she belonged to me, she could not
marry Fabien.' He gave a bitter laugh. 'And I was right. But I did
not foresee that she would run away from us both — that we
would both lose her forever.' He turned and looked at the slender
woman cowering in her chair. There was compassion in his face.
'At least I now know why she ran away.'
He sat up, squaring his shoulders. 'She took the secret of our child
with her. She couldn't bear any more —the guilt, the hostility, the
confusion, and, of course, the inevitable breach between Fabien
and myself when the truth emerged.
'My poor wife's attempt to scare her into flight must have been the
final straw. To go —to disappear without trace must have seemed
the ideal—the only solution.'
He sighed. "Then Fabien returned. He was devastated, naturally.
He was also suspicious. He asked questions that I didn't want to
hear. Accused me of things I didn't want to face. Dragged answers