Authors: Sara Craven
at what she held in utter disbelief. Of all things, it was, it had to be
the costume her grandmother had worn as Morgan le Fay. She
shook it out, gently, and held it up to get a better look. There was
no doubt about it, she thought, as her bemused eyes took in the low
embroidered neckline and the long pointed sleeves, lined in
contrasting silk. The colour had faded and was yellowing slightly
along the folds it had lain in for so many years, but all the same it
was in fantastically good condition. It was beautiful too, the dark
green of woodland glades, with the gold embroidery dappling it
like sunlight. There was a golden girdle too, which hung on the
hips and was knotted loosely below the waist so that the long
fringed ends trailed almost to the hem of the gown. There was a
filmy veil too, to wear over the hair, and a tiny green and gold
juliet cap to hold it in place.
She thought, 'This is one thing that's not going to any jumble sale
or theatrical company.'
Acting on a barely understood impulse, she stood up and took it
into her bedroom, holding it in front of herself, and studying
herself intently in the dressing table mirror.
Rob had reminded her more than once that they were supposed to
attend the Templetons' Hallowe'en party in some kind of
appropriate fancy dress, but she hadn't been able to muster a great
deal of interest in the idea. Not until now, she thought, seeing how
the green of the gown darkened her eyes to emerald. There was a
mounting excitement deep inside her. There would be a plethora of
witches at the party, she had no doubt, all with steeple hats and
dark cloaks and blackened teeth. But this would be incredibly
different.
Hastily she stripped off her jeans and sweater and eased the fragile
silk carefully over her head. It was a close fit. She was slim, but
her grandmother must have been a sylph, she decided ruefully,
turning sideways to view herself critically. But she could always
alter the position of a few salient hooks, although she could little
about the rounded curves of her breasts swelling above the deep
square of the neck. She was sure such conscious provocation
would have been unthinkable in her grandmother's day. Probably a
discreet frill of lace had been added then.
But the real Morgan le Fay wouldn't have bothered with such
concealment, she thought. According to the legends, she was lady
who relied on more than just magic for her enchantments.
She untied the ribbon that confined her hair at the nape of her neck
and shook it gently, allowing it to fall forward on to her shoulders.
A stranger seemed to look back at her, cool and dangerous with the
knowledge of her own feminine power. The dress clung to every
curve, accentuating her hips, and outlining the smooth line of her
thighs.
She thought, 'It's no wonder Grandfather couldn't resist her.'
She stared at' herself until the mirrored image blurred and swam
under the intensity of her gaze, then she said aloud and fiercely,
'Grandmother—Morgan le Fay— teach me your spell. Teach me
how to bewitch the man I love and bind him to me for ever.'
THE days leading up to Hallowe'en were busy ones. Paul Crosbie
left, and Steven Chisholm, the architect, took his place. Morgana
and her mother found themselves staring at an endless series of
drawings showing them what the new flat could or should be like,
and found themselves having to answer questions on their
preferences in bathroom fittings and kitchen units.
Yet Morgana found it hard to show a great deal of interest in the
project.
'You make the decisions,' she urged her mother. 'After all, it's
going to be your home.'
'Yours as well, darling,' Mrs Pentreath protested.
'Only, temporarily. I've agreed to stay a year—no more,' Morgana
said stubbornly. The agreement was now in writing. Contracts had
arrived, and been duly inspected by Mr Trevick and then
recommended for signature. Morgana had felt trapped while she
was doing so, but the terms had been more than clear, and if her
mother was to have security then she had little choice.
'You may not want to leave,' Mrs Pentreath said serenely.
'Oh, yes, I shall.' Morgana's voice was grim. 'I want to leave right
now.'
But was it really true? she asked herself as she tossed and turned at
night, trying to find the sleep which constantly eluded her. If Lyall
were to set her free from her promise tomorrow, would she really
want to go—to sacrifice any hope of seeing him again?'
Perhaps hope was the wrong word to use, she thought, because she
had little or nothing to look forward to from Lyall. Their
relationship had been fraught with trauma from their first
encounter, and nothing was likely to happen that would improve
matters, least of all if she were to surrender to his casual
lovemaking, to forfeit her self-respect for a few hours of sensual
pleasure.
Longing for him made her body burn as if she was consumed by a
fever. She was terrified by the strange pagan restlessness which
seemed to be flowing in her veins, making her feel at one with the
wind which howled round the Wishing Stone on the high moor, or
sent the stormy breakers crashing over the rocks at the foot of
Polzion cliffs.
She had changed her mind about the costume for the party. She
had hung the Morgan le Fay dress in her wardrobe, and tried to
ignore its presence there, telling herself it would be far more
sensible to make herself a black steeple hat, and search through the
outhouses for the old besom broom, kept for sweeping leaves from
the lawns.
Her grandmother's gown was dangerous, she told herself. It made
her desire impossible things, gave her the illusion that she had the
power to bring them about. The romantic aura which still clung to
it had too much influence, she thought wryly, but she was a fool if
she thought for one minute that the spell her grandmother had cast
would work for her.
One evening, she and her mother had looked through the
photograph album she had found in the bottom of the trunk,
smiling over the faded sepia prints with the careful captions
written below in copperplate handwriting.
'I suppose we can add this to the family records,' Mrs Pentreath
said when they reached the end of the album. 'Some of them are
fascinating, but it's a pity there are so many gaps.'
'Yes,' said Morgana, frowning a little. 'Did you notice that nearly
all the gaps are photographs where Mark Pentreath was in the
group?'
'No, I didn't,' said Mrs Pentreath, 'but then it's hardly surprising. I
expect that your grandfather had them removed after the big row.'
'And the portrait sent up to the attic,' said Morgana, and sighed.
'My grandfather was a very unforgiving man.'
'Yes, he was, but there's always been a ruthless streak in the
Pentreath men which emerges every generation or so. I was always
thankful that your father seemed to have escaped it.' She looked
wistful for a moment. 'Although I suppose for the sake of the
business, it might have been better if he hadn't.'
'Well, for our sakes, I'm glad of it,' Morgana told her, and gave her
mother's slightly dropping shoulders a swift hug. 'By the way -' she
hesitated, 'there was a leather case among Grandmother's things
which I've kept as well as the photo album. But the trouble is it's
locked and I haven't found any trace of a key. When you were
sorting out the keys of the house for Lyall, did you come across
any spare ones that didn't have a lock to belong to?'
'Only one, but that was absolutely enormous. It wouldn't have
fitted a small case.' Mrs Pentreath pursed her lips. 'I can't imagine
why such a thing should have been kept.'
'Unless it contains something precious,' Morgana said slowly. 'It's
heavy enough.'
'I can't think what that could be,' her mother shrugged. 'It certainly
isn't your grandmother's jewellery. Every piece of that was sold.'
'Oh dear!' Morgana spread her hands in mock dismay. 'Does that
mean no secret cache of diamonds? And there was I thinking we'd
be able to buy back Polzion and tell Lyall to go to hell.'
'An attractive thought,' her mother said drily. 'But what makes you
think he would sell? It's his home, after all. He has Pentreath
blood.'
'And so much family feeling that he couldn't even be bothered to
retain the name,' Morgana said too fiercely.
'There's an explanation for that,' Mrs Pentreath twisted her
wedding ring pensively. 'From the time he was a small boy. I think
he was imbued with Stories of the Pentreath feud, and how his
father and grandfather had been wronged. Giles, certainly, had an
obsession about the house, and the fact that they'd been pushed out
into the cold to make their way as best they could. Not that he did
badly, at all,' she added, wrinkling her forehead. 'Lyall's mother
was a rich heiress, but not even the knowledge of that could pacify
him, and eventually there was a separation. It's hardly to be
wondered at that Lyall grew to prefer to use his stepfather's name,
instead of Pentreath which he associated with quarrelling and
bitterness.'
'I suppose not,' Morgana said reluctantly. Her own childhood had
been a relatively happy one. It disturbed her to think of Lyall
coming from a broken home, no matter how luxurious.
Before she went to bed that night, she took the leather case from
her dressing table drawer and studied it. She supposed if she
wanted to know what it contained, then she would have to break
the lock, and it was certainly far too heavy to be empty. She slid it
back in the drawer and closed it decisively. She had too much to
do and to think about to spend her time worrying about old
mysteries and feuds.
And she would get rid of that dress, too, she thought. Every time
she opened her wardrobe, the green silk seemed to glow out at her
from the other rather sparse contents.
She walked across the room and took it out of the cupboard,
tossing it carelessly over the back of her chair, regretting the
impulse which had made her separate it from the rest of the things
in the trunk. It was a dress that spoke of dreams and fantasies, and
not the kind of reality she had to come to terms with.
Hallowe'en itself dawned with clear skies and a slight frost. The
fierce wind had dropped overnight, and a crisp day held the
promise of winter.
Morgana had just finished serving lunch and was on her way back
to the kitchen for her own meal when the telephone rang. She was
surprised to hear Elaine's voice asking abruptly for Lyall.
'He isn't here,' she said, rather taken aback. Although Lyall hadn't
been in touch with them, she had supposed he would have
maintained contact with Elaine, especially as they had a date for
the party that very evening.
'Then where is he?' Elaine demanded. 'He can't still be in Sweden.
He was due back two days ago.'
'I really don't know anything about his plans,' Morgana returned
wearily.
'Is that a fact?' Elaine's tone was frankly sceptical. 'You're not
being exactly helpful for a van Guisen-Lyall employee, you know.
I hope you're not nurturing secret hopes of your own in Lyall's
direction, because, I can tell you now, sweetie, they're doomed to
disappointment.'
Morgana was stung, both by the vulgarity of Elaine's remark, and
its uncanny accuracy. Before she could stop herself, she said
sharply, 'Because of your own hopes, I presume?'
'If you like to put it like that,' Elaine returned smugly. 'Stay in your
own league, my pet. Rob seems reasonably besotted with you.
Capitalise on that.'
'Thanks for the good advice.' Morgana's voice shook a little, and
the knuckles on the hand holding the receiver were white with the
strain of trying not to slam it back on the rest.
'You're welcome,' Elaine said negligently. 'Ask Lyall to call me
when he does arrive, will you?'
'I'll be sure and make a note of it,' Morgana said ironically. 'Is there
anything else?'
'Not at the moment.' She could hear the smile in Elaine's voice.
'But if there is, I'll let you know.'
Morgana replaced her receiver with deliberate gentleness and sat