Authors: Sara Craven
For a moment she stared at him, then she said thickly, 'You
bastard!' and started to cry.
'It seems you know already,' he commented. He moved away as
she hunted blindly in her sleeve for her handkerchief. When she
had regained command of herself, he was standing by the
fireplace, his arm resting along the mantelshelf, and with one foot
supported on the brass fender.
He said, 'Come and sit down, Morgana. We have some talking to
do.'
She said huskily, 'I think we've said it all.'
'We haven't even started. Now, do you come here and sit on the
sofa, or do I have to fetch you?'
Morgana moved hastily. The last thing in the world she wanted
was for him to touch her again, and although obeying him even in
this small way wasn't something she relished, nevertheless it
seemed the wisest thing to do.
'That's better,' he approved unsmilingly. 'Now the first thing I have
to say is that I've decided to take your mother up on her offer of
accommodation. As I said before, I've only a limited amount of
time at my disposal at present, and I want to be on the spot for the
next few days while I put my plans for this house into operation.'
'So when do you want us to leave?' she asked. Now that the
moment of truth had finally arrived, she felt strangely calm.
'Who said anything about leaving?' He turned his head and looked
at her coolly.
'Well -' she floundered for a moment, nonplussed. 'We can't
possibly stay . . .'
'You'll be surprised what you can do,' he said softly. 'Now, here
comes your mother, so let's try and act as if we're not at each
other's throats.'
Elizabeth Pentreath came into the drawing room on a little burst of
apology. Miss Meakins had a complaint about the light switch in
her room. 'And it has given trouble in the past, I'm afraid, although
Martin did look at it once or twice.' She gave a little sigh. 'But he
wasn't much of an electrician, I'm afraid.'
'I think he'd probably have to have been a genius to have made
much improvement,' Lyall said drily. 'The whole house needs re-
wiring, Mrs Pentreath. Surely you must know that?'
Elizabeth sighed again. 'Knowing it and being able to do
something about it are two different things, I'm afraid. It's ail been
such a worry, and then people started making threatening noises
about new fire regulations.' She shook her head. 'Oh dear!'
Lyall studied her for a moment, then he said quite gently 'Mrs
Pentreath, do you actually like the hotel business?'
She brightened. 'Oddly enough—yes. Oh, I don't like the business
side—trying to make silk purses out of sows' ears all the time, but
I do like
people.
I like trying to make them comfortable—even the
rather difficult ones like Miss Meakins, although she's only lonely,
I think, poor soul.'
He said, 'Then I hope you'll listen to the proposition I have for you,
Mrs Pentreath. As it stands, this place is frankly a white elephant.
It's too big to be a family home these days, and it never had the
injection of capital it needed to be a successful hotel. Now, I'm
prepared to change all that.'
Morgana said slowly; 'You mean—you want to run it as a hotel?'
'Not quite. As it happens one of van Guisen-Lyall's subsidiaries
owns a hotel chain, but I'm not proposing to add Polzion House to
that. Winters in England rather preclude it from becoming One of
the world's playgrounds. No, what I'm suggesting is rather
different. I want to see a complete facelift—new wiring, proper
heating, any repairs necessary, redecoration throughout—but
nothing that's going to spoil its country house image. For most of
the year it can continue to be run as an ordinary hotel, although I
hope the improvements will bring in more trade, but there's one
proviso—I want van Guisen-Lyall employees always to have top
priority. In fact there'll be times when the place will probably be
occupied by no one else.'
Mrs Pentreath said with
faint bewilderment, 'I'm not sure I
understand. You want to run Polzion House as a private hotel for
the staff of your companies?'
'In a way. I also envisage holding company conferences here.
People seem to think better, become more creative in a relaxed
informal atmosphere. And I'd say this place is about as far from the
rat race as it's possible to get. In between times—well, strain gets
to everyone. I want a quiet refuge where members of our
companies' staff can unwind.'
'A haven for tired business executives?' Morgana raised her
eyebrows. 'Then I suppose your improvements should include a
bar and a selection of hostesses.'
He didn't even glance in her direction. 'A bar, certainly,' he said
shortly. 'But don't run away with the idea that there'll be only
executives here. There are just as many pressures on the shop floor
these days. And the majority of those who come here will be
accompanied by their wives, so we can do without your other
suggestion, well meant though I'm sure it was.'
Morgana flushed and relapsed into silence.
Lyall looked at Elizabeth Pentreath. 'Any comments? Do you like
the idea?'
She said slowly, 'In principle, I like it very much, although I can
see a clash of interest between the ordinary guests, as it were, and
those from the company. I suppose the thing to do would be to
have certain rooms free at all times.' She paused, then said with
constraint, 'But of course, this is really none of my business.'
'On the contrary.' Lyall was smiling now. 'A major factor in
making the place a success will be having an experienced
manageress—someone who knows how to put edgy people at ease.
I'd like to offer you the job, Mrs Pentreath, and I hope very much
that you'll consider it.'
'She'll do nothing of the sort!' Morgana was on her feet. 'I think it's
an insult—to offer my mother a job in her old home!'
'An insult was the last thing I intended, believe me.' He was still
watching Mrs Pentreath. 'It seemed to be a solution to both our
problems. Was I wrong to suggest it?'
'Why, no.' Elizabeth drew a long quivering breath. 'You've just
taken me by surprise a little, that's all. May I have time to think
about it?'
'As long as you wish.'
'She doesn't need time,' Morgana declared passionately. 'And she
doesn't need your charity either.'
'I wasn't aware I was offering charity. It's a job for which a salary
will be paid.' Lyall sounded slightly bored. 'In addition, your
mother will qualify for one of the Corporation's pension schemes,
and other benefits.'
'Benefits!' Morgana was almost crying with rage. 'To be a servant
in her own home?'
'And what else has she been, ever since this place became a hotel?'
he asked coolly. 'You may have been able to kid yourself you were
still Miss Pentreath of Polzion, but it's an even bet that your
mother's view of the situation was rather more realistic.' He turned
back to Elizabeth. 'As I said, I'd like you to think about it. Please
ask me any questions you think relevant.'
'Thank you.' She gave a shaky smile. 'I'm sure there will be dozens
of things I'll want to know, but for the moment I can't think of one
of them.'
'Mother!' Morgana's eyes were fixed on her in a kind of agony.
'You aren't seriously going to consider taking this job, surely?'
'I most certainly am,' said Mrs Pentreath with a kind of robust
firmness. 'I'd be a fool not to, darling. After all, where am I going
to get a better offer? Now, if you'll excuse me, I'll go and give Elsa
a hand in the
kitchen.'
She bestowed an impartial, if slightly
bemused smile on them both, and departed.
There was a long, taut silence, then Lyall said very quietly, 'Are
you going to allow your mother to make up her own mind, or are
you going to pressure her with scenes and tantrums?'
Morgana stared at him furiously. 'You seem to take it for granted
that when she does decide it will be in your favour.'
'No, hers,' he corrected. 'Try and subdue your prejudice and your
resentment against me just for a moment or two, and tell me what
alternatives you have to offer. If you left here tomorrow, where
would you go and what would you do?'
'I've been looking for work,' she said rather haughtily. 'There are
residential posts to be had. It's just a matter of waiting until the
right one comes along.'
'Precisely—and who knows how long that might be.' He gave her a
level look. 'And it would mean your mother would be uprooted
from everything she knows, to take pot luck with strangers in an
unfamiliar environment. Is that really what you want for her?'
'No,' she admitted in a low voice. 'But nor do I want her to be
beholden to you.'
'Why? Because you don't like me—or because you don't trust me?'
'Both,' she said, lifting her chin defiantly, and he laughed.
'I'm not sure I want your liking, little witch. Liking is such a
lukewarm expression of emotion, and trust is something that has to
be learned.'
Morgana was silent for a moment, then she asked, 'Why didn't you
tell us the truth—why didn't you tell us who you really were
yesterday?'
'What difference would it have made? Rich man, poor man, I'm
still the heir to your father's estate. And as you made clear just
now, the fact that I already have money doesn't make it any more
palatable.' Lyall paused. 'And I wanted to find out exactly how the
land lay. Besides, there was always the chance that you might have
recognised me.'
'Recognised you? Why should I do that?'
He shrugged. 'From the newspapers—magazines. They feature me
sometimes.'
'I'm sure they do,' she said sarcastically. 'And not only on the
financial pages either.'
He raised his brows. 'Unfortunately I'm not responsible for
newspaper editors' sense of priorities. That's another reason why I
preferred to keep my identity secret when I first came down here.
When the papers get hold of this story, they'll have a field day, and
I have a feeling I was spotted by a stringer for one of the dailies in
Truro last night.'
'The price of fame,' she jibed.
He gave her a cool look. 'Everything has its price. Morgana. I
wonder what yours is.'
'I'm not for sale.' She felt her breathing quicken under his ironic
gaze, and knew angrily that he was aware of it too. 'You may be
able to buy my mother, but you'll never buy me. I'm not interested
in your slick plans for this house, and I shan't be here when they
come to fruition.'
'That's a pity,' he said. 'Wouldn't you like to see the house restored
to its former glory?'
'Not particularly—and I'm not convinced that that's what will
happen, anyway. It'll turn into one of these horribly anonymous
plastic palaces that you can find anywhere. You have no real
feeling for the place—you can't have. You weren't born here. You
haven't loved it all your life.'
'Warts and all?'
'If you want to put it like that,' she said stiffly.
Lyall laughed. 'But witches are supposed to be able to charm away
warts. Is that what you do when you look at the house, Morgana?
Do you see it with the eyes of enchantment? Others won't, you
know. And I have to do something with the place.'
'You could sell it,' she said slowly.
'I could,' he agreed. 'Are you going to make me an offer?'
'Do you think we wouldn't have done if we could have afforded
to?' She spoke so passionately, her voice almost broke. 'No—but
there is someone else interested—the Donlevens who bought the
Home Farm from us.'
'The parents of the gorgeous Elaine?' he queried, and she nodded.
He smiled a little. 'I see, but I'm not looking for a purchaser. I
think we should keep the place in the family, don't you?'
'What, do you know about the family?' she asked fiercely. 'On your
own admission you don't even use the family name any more—
except when it suits you, of course.'
'Nevertheless it's still the name on my birth certificate, lady, and
there isn't anything that can alter that. And don't forget that I come
from a long line of black sheep of this particular family, so you
can't blame me if that colours my thinking sometimes. I wasn't
brought up to have any great love for this house, or any of its