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Authors: Barbara Taylor Bradford

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Unexpected Blessings (38 page)

BOOK: Unexpected Blessings
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‘Well, I recently had a conversation with him, and I said I would probably never get married again after this débâcle with–’

‘Lorne’s response?’ he asked peremptorily, cutting her sentence off.

‘He said that was all right, but he wasn’t going to allow me to lead a celibate life, that he was going to make sure I had lots of lovers.’

‘Only one,
ma chérie.’
He reached out, put his hand over hers.

‘Oui, absolument.
Only one.
You.’

His face was illuminated by a bright smile and his dark eyes were warm, loving as he said, ‘You had this thought about your brother, and I had one too when I was downstairs getting the sandwiches. It occurred to me that it would be nice if he came to the country with us tomorrow.’

‘We’re going to the country?’ she asked, sounding surprised.

‘You did agree to spend the weekend with me, didn’t you?’

‘Yes, I did.’

‘I have a house outside Paris, small but comfortable.’ He made a gesture with his hand and continued, ‘It is pleasant there, you would enjoy it. You will come, won’t you, darling?’

I would go anywhere with you, she thought, and said, ‘It would be nice. And perhaps we should speak to Lorne now. I’m not sure what his plans are.’

‘I thought he was learning his lines,’ Jean-Claude responded, picked up the phone on the desk and dialled the hotel number.

A moment later he was speaking to Lorne.
‘C’est moi, mon ami. Comment tu va?’

‘Hello, Jean-Claude,’ Lorne exclaimed. ‘I’m fine, and you? Is everything all right with you and Tessa?’

‘Bien sûr.
Are you busy tomorrow?’

‘No, just studying my part. Why do you ask?’

‘I thought it would be a good idea to take Tessa out of Paris for the weekend, and it would be a great pleasure for me if you would come also. To my little house…you’ve been there.’

‘Little house!’ Lorne exclaimed, laughing. ‘Haven’t you told her it’s a
château?’

‘Ah, my dear friend, you exaggerate always, it’s hardly a
château.
But you
will
accompany us, won’t you?’

‘Thanks for your invitation, Jean-Claude, and I think it is a very good idea to get her out of Paris while those two scoundrels are skulking around.’

‘That was my thought exactly,’ Jean-Claude replied. ‘And so you will join us?’

‘If she wants me along.’

‘Let me put her on,’ Jean-Claude murmured, and handed the phone to Tessa.

‘Hello, Lorne,’ she said. ‘You are going to come with us, aren’t you? If not, I won’t go either.’

‘Of course I’m coming, I love that house of his. Are you all right, sweetheart?’

‘More than that, I’m…
great.’

‘He’s a fantastic man, a really wonderful person, Tessa. It makes me feel better knowing you are with him. You’ll always be safe with Jean-Claude.’

‘I realize that. I suppose Jean-Claude will call you later with the exact plans. No news?’

‘None. Have you heard from Linnet?’

‘No, but I didn’t expect her to phone. I spoke to her this morning, before I left for lunch, and all was well. I have my mobile and it’s on all the time.’

Jean-Claude took the tray back to the kitchen, and whilst he was gone Tessa put on her clothes. She was standing looking at a photograph of him on the wall when he walked back into his office, and she swung around to face him, puzzlement reflected in her eyes.

‘Who’s this child with you? It is
you,
isn’t it?’

He came to join her, stood with his arms around her. ‘Yes. And that’s my son,’ he said, looking down at her. ‘When he was ten.’

‘Oh,’ was all she could manage, so startled was she.

‘He’s grown up now, he’s almost your age. I told you I was too old for you. I’m old enough to be your father.’

‘No, you’re not! I didn’t know you had been married.’ She cleared her throat. ‘You
were
married to his mother?’

‘Very briefly. When I was young. It was a long time ago. I was twenty-one, and Philippe was born when I was twenty-two.’

‘I see. Does he live in Paris?’

‘No, the south of France, he’s an artist,’ Jean-Claude explained.

Tessa hesitated, and then she said, ‘Are you still married?’

He burst out laughing. ‘Of course not. Pm divorced and I have been for many years.’

‘And you never got married again?’

‘No…there have been plenty of women…’

‘So I gather.’

Turning her towards him, he held her by her shoulders. ‘I cannot erase the past,’ he said, looking down into her upturned face. ‘Neither can you,
ma chérie.
We both bring…a certain amount of baggage to this relationship. And we have to deal with that the best way we are able. I can say this to you in sincerity…I believe you are
right
for me. I think you can fill all the empty places in my heart, as I will fill those in yours. So don’t ever dwell on my past. Or yours. The past is gone, we have the future.’

She laid her head against his shoulder and thought of Lorne’s words a short while before…‘You will be safe with Jean-Claude,’ he had said. And she knew her brother had spoken the truth.

Jonathan Ainsley sat at the Louis XVI desk in the study of his sumptuous apartment on Avenue Foch, one of the most elegant streets in Paris. The phone was pressed to his ear and he listened attentively to the woman on the other end of the line.

Once she had finished speaking, he said, ‘But are you sure Tessa Fairley is in Paris?’

‘Yes. With her brother, Lorne Fairley. And they are bound to be staying at the Paris O’Neill Hotel, where else but at their father’s hotel?’

‘Only too true, my dear,’ Jonathan replied, playing with the piece of jade in his hand. ‘When did they arrive?’

‘Thursday evening, and she’s not expected back in London until Wednesday of next week. Her brother is staying on, he’s filming in Paris. She’s coming back sooner, no doubt because her mother is returning from New York on September the sixth.’

‘Well done, well done, there’ll be a really nice surprise for you when I see you in London, a little gift, and of course a rendezvous, a reunion. You’d like that, wouldn’t you, sweetie?’

‘You know I would, Jonathan.’

‘Very well, I’ll let you know when I am coming over. In the meantime, thanks for the information, it’s very useful.’

They said goodbye and hung up, and Jonathan immediately dialled the Ritz Hotel where Mark Longden was staying. But he was obviously not in his room. The phone rang and rang and nobody picked up. Slamming the receiver down, he next dialled the Paris O’Neill Hotel and asked for Mrs Tessa Longden.

A split-second later the operator was back on the line, and told him in slightly-accented English, ‘Mrs Longden is not registered.’

‘Perhaps her brother Mr Lorne Fairley is staying at the hotel and she is with him. Can you please try his suite?’

‘Mr Fairley is not here, sir. None of the family is in residence at the hotel at this time.’

Irritated to the point of anger, Jonathan muttered his thanks and hung up, an ugly grimace clouding his face. Settling back in the chair, he brought his hand up to his chin and pondered for a moment or two. Obviously they were not at their father’s hotel after all, but it was hardly likely they would be staying somewhere else. Since Fairley was filming in Paris, he could have rented an apartment for a few weeks, perhaps even a few months.

Jonathan wondered how to find out if that were the case. Mark Longden would have to do the dirty work, find out what was happening with the Fairley twins. He loathed to miss an opportunity to do Tessa harm; how easy it would be to arrange an accident of some sort if he knew where she was staying in Paris.

Since Longden had vanished for the moment, Jonathan decided to call his cousin Sarah Pascal. She probably wouldn’t know anything at all, since she was on equally bad terms with the Hartes as he was. But occasionally he did get a little sadistic pleasure making digs at Sarah about their cousins.

His taunts always seemed to rile her, much to his amusement.

Once again he was out of luck. He telephoned Sarah at her office, only to be told she was not in Paris, that she had left for the weekend. Of course, it was Friday afternoon at four o’clock and she had no doubt gone to join her husband at their country home.

Too bad, he thought, and dialled his mistress, Yvette Duval. To his utter astonishment, when her housekeeper heard his voice she told him that Madame had gone to Rome. ‘Rome!’ he spluttered and banged the receiver into the cradle in fury and frustration.

What the hell was
she
playing at? He suddenly wondered if she was going to be as faithless a bitch as his wife had been. Suddenly he saw her in his mind’s eye–
Arabella Sutton.
A woman he had loved to distraction, who had betrayed him, cuckolded him in the most foul way, by sleeping with his Chinese partner Tony Chui. How he loathed her. He had often thought of putting
her
on his hit list, along with the Harte women and Evan Hughes. Yet somehow he had balked at that. Maybe because he had once loved her. But what the hell, why not? She deserved to suffer after what she had done to him.

As for Yvette Duval, he was finished with her. Tonight he would resort to one of the high-priced whores from Madame Simone’s for his pleasures of the flesh. And next week he would start courting Yvette’s daughter Chantal. What better form of revenge? He would dump the mother and start up with the delectable, beddable daughter–only nineteen, but a hot number he believed.

The mere thought of all this intrigue brought a smile of delight to his face. Picking up the phone once more, he dialled the Ritz Hotel, asked for Mark Longden.

When there was still no answer, he left a message. Eventually he would hear from him. Weak, depraved, gasping for money, Mark would do his bidding. After all, the architect was his creature, at his beck and call. For as long as he needed him. When Longden was of no further use he would simply discard him, throw him to the wolves.

Jonathan was not at all surprised when Mark Longden telephoned him later and invited him to dinner. With nothing better to do, he decided to accept the invitation, and the two men met for cocktails at the Ritz Hotel in the Place Vendôme.

As they sat together in the bar drinking dry martinis, Jonathan couldn’t resist telling Mark about the bit of gossip he had heard earlier in the day.

‘That beautiful wife of yours, the delectable Tessa, is in Paris, Mark. Bet you didn’t know that, did you?’

Mark was obviously startled, and he stared hard at Jonathan. ‘How do you know?’

‘A little dickey bird told me. She’s here with her other half, her twin that is, the handsome actor, Lorne Fairley. He’s going to be making a film here.’

Mark merely nodded, took a slow sip of the drink.

Irritated at the lack of response, wanting to goad Mark, Jonathan said, ‘Pity you’re not in England. You could have a visit with your
adorable
child.’

To Mark’s ears this sounded sarcastic, and he stiffened and said, ‘Adele
is
adorable, the most beautiful child in the world.’

Softening slightly, remembering one didn’t catch flies with vinegar, Jonathan continued, ‘She is
beautiful,
Mark, I’ll grant you that. You must miss her.’

‘I do,’ Mark confided. ‘She’s such a little chatterbox, loves to tell me about the things she does. She’s going to be a bridesmaid at Linnet O’Neill’s wedding. She’s very excited to be included along with the older girls.’

Jonathan pricked up his ears, leaned forward, his eyes alert and shining with glee. ‘And when is the famous wedding? I’ve forgotten.’ He lied, never having known the date; Eleanor was no longer forthcoming with information. She would have to go, no two ways about that, he decided.

‘The first Saturday in December. It’s the first, I think.’

‘Really. And all the clans will be there, I’ve no doubt. All of the Hartes, the O’Neills and the Kallinskis. Imagine that, Mark. All of them in Yorkshire at the same time. And where is the wedding taking place?’

‘The little church in Pennistone Royal village, and the reception is at Pennistone Royal, at least that’s what I’ve gathered.’

‘I’d love to be there…as a fly on the wall, I mean. Wouldn’t you?’

Mark made a face. ‘Not on your life. Not with that snobby bunch.’

‘Just imagine, all of the clans…what a pity we can’t drop a bomb on the church. Blow it up. Or set fire to it. Oh my God, just imagine that!’ He began to laugh hilariously.

‘You’re joking aren’t you?’ Mark said, eyeing Jonathan warily.

‘Of course I am, dear boy. Do you think I’d put myself in that position…having to swing for a bunch of Hartes. Not on your life. But you know something, Mark, I wish I could upset the applecart a bit. You know, just for fun.’

‘No, you don’t,’ Mark said swiftly. He laughed and added, ‘You merely love to shock.’

‘Yeah I do, that’s true,’ Jonathan agreed. ‘I read a story recently in the
Daily Mail,
about a bunch of yobbos, you know skinheads, hooligans, who went in a van to one of those picturesque villages in Somerset, and camped on the village green. They claimed it was public land and they had squatters’ rights. Just imagine, the police couldn’t get them off that village green for months. It disturbed the life of the village no end. Just
imagine
that.’

Motioning to the waiter, Mark ordered two more dry martinis, and then said to Jonathan quietly, ‘You shouldn’t joke about such things, Jonathan. At least not to anyone else. Someone might take you seriously.’

Jonathan simply smiled again, sipped the second drink which had suddenly materialized at his fingertips. But I am serious, he thought, smiling inside. Deadly serious. A nice little fire in that church will fry all of the Hartes, O’Neills and Kallinskis. I could kill three clans with one stone, or rather, one fire. Now all I need to do is hire a bunch of yobbos, get them a van and send them up to Pennistone Royal village to create chaos and mayhem on December the first. Well, what a good idea that is. A very good idea indeed.

BOOK: Unexpected Blessings
5.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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