Read A High Price to Pay Online
Authors: Sara Craven
longer interested in tormenting her.
They enjoyed a quiet, civilised dinner, then went for a walk in the
hotel grounds, relishing the last freshness of the late spring evening.
When they returned to the suite, Alison felt almost relaxed. During an
earlier exploration, she had discovered extra blankets in one of the
fitted wardrobes in the bedroom, and she brought an armful through
to the sitting room and deposited them on the end of the couch,
together with a spare pillow, for Nick to find when he came up from
having his nightcap in the bar.
Then she went and got ready for bed, changing into a pair of the thin
cotton pyjamas she preferred to nightgowns. She had brought a
paperback novel in her case, a detective story by a favourite writer,
and she managed a chapter before turning off the lamp and sliding
down into that preposterous apricot cloud.
She was half asleep when she heard Nick come in quietly and go into
the bathroom, and she closed her eyes with even greater
determination, burrowing down under the covers. She heard him
emerge at last, and waited to hear the bedroom door close behind him.
Only it didn't. She heard the sounds of movement in the shadowy
room, a rustle, then the dip of the mattress beside her as Nick got into
the bed.
Suddenly sleep was a million miles away. She shot upright. 'What do
you think you're doing?'
'Trying to get some sleep,' he returned flatly. 'If you imagine for one
minute that I'm going to spend my wedding night falling off some
bloody sofa, you can think again, and fast!'
'But you said—you promised . . .' Breathing was difficult, articulation
more so.
'And I meant it. I'm here for sleep, darling, not sex. God knows this
bed would sleep twelve at a pinch, so there's no danger of any—close
encounters in the night. Unless,' he added, 'you insist, which I doubt.'
There was a long silence. Alison didn't trust her voice to say anything.
'I thought not,' he went on, just as if she had spoken. 'One other
thing--I should warn you, perhaps, I sleep in the raw, and always have
done, but you seem to be wearing enough for both of us, so you can
comfort your outraged modesty with that. Goodnight, Mrs Bristow.'
He turned on his side, punched his pillow into shape, and appeared to
become instantly oblivious to her.
Lying wide awake, rigid with nerves and embarrassment, Alison
savagely envied him his sangfroid. She stared into the darkness,
listening to his quiet even breathing for a long time, then began
slowly and cautiously to edge away from him, towards the furthest
limit of the bed.
She was being foolish, and she knew it. Nick had showed no sign at
all of wishing to pursue her shrinking body across this vast expanse of
apricot satin, but she needed to get as far away from him as possible,
just in case by some mischance she happened to touch him
accidentally in the night. She moved cramped limbs cautiously, as
she huddled on the edge of the bed. Because if she touched him, and
he woke and thought she was— that she wanted . . . She swallowed
painfully. The consequences were too humiliating to contemplate
even, and she dared not take the risk.
Her..wedding night, she thought unhappily, and it promised to be the
most uncomfortable, miserable night she had ever spent. She wanted
very badly to cry, but knew she couldn't because, again, she might
awaken Nick. She touched her clenched fist to her lips. It was
irksome to realise just how accustomed he was to sharing his bed, she
thought bitterly. He'd fallen asleep almost at once, whereas she would
be fortunate if she closed her eyes all night.
But she was wrong. Eventually sheer physical and emotional
exhaustion overtook her, carrying her into some deep twilight
tranquillity, from which she emerged to find daylight filtering into the
room through the pale curtains.
For a moment she was disorientated, wondering dazedly where she
was, and whether she was still dreaming, then she turned over,
stretching cramped limbs, and saw Nick, propped up on one elbow
watching her, and reality came back with a jolt.
She said, 'Oh!' with a little gasp, and tugged hastily at the covers, a
reaction which was acknowledged by his sardonic grin.
'Good morning,' he said. 'I've been lying here wondering whether this
cruise is such a good idea after all. Perhaps you'd have preferred a
mountaineering holiday. Are you a keen climber?'
Alison took a hasty gulp of breath and sanity. 'I've never done any
rock-climbing in my life.'
'Amazing,' Nick said silkily. 'Judging by the way you've been
clinging to the edge of this bed, I thought you must spend all your
spare moments bivouacking on narrow ledges up the North Face of
the Eiger.'
She gave him a muted glare. 'Well, you're wrong.' She made a
performance of looking at her watch. 'What's the time? How long is it
before we need to be at the airport?'
Nick said lazily, 'There's plenty of time.' But the growing speculation
and amusement in the blue eyes nullified instantly any sense of
reassurance Alison might have felt.
'Well, perhaps we should be making a move just the same,' she found
herself babbling, and he laughed.
'Stop pressing the panic button,' he advised coolly. 'What's the
matter? Did your mother warn you that men are at their most
dangerous early in the morning?'
'No.' It was no more than the truth. Mrs Mortimer's material advice
had been restricted to I a few embarrassed remarks about Nick being
'a man of the world' and girls being 'so much better informed these
days, darling, than we ever were'.
He laughed again. 'Then perhaps she should have done,' he said.
Before she could escape, or take an evasive action, his arm was across
her, imprisoning her, the weight of his shoulders pinning her to the
bed. His mouth was warm and deliberate, and terrifyingly persuasive
as he began to kiss her. The heat of his bare skin was penetrating the
thin cotton pyjama top, making her tremblingly aware of her own
helplessness and vulnerability. Her lips were already parting
obediently to the insistence of his kiss.
This time he was neither forcing her nor playing a part, Alison
realised dazedly. He was seducing her. As his mouth moved
enticingly on hers, his hand was stroking her slender throat, marking
the flutter of her pulse, before sliding down into the modest vee
opening of her pyjama jacket. His fingers. brushed gently across the
upper curves of her slight breasts, and she felt the breath catch in her
throat with shamed excitement. The touch of his hand on her naked
flesh, the warm sensuous invasion of her mouth, were an almost
painful delight to her untutored senses.
The sudden ringing of the telephone was like a slap across the face, a
rude awakening from the sensual dream world which had begun to
enfold her.
Nick released her, snarling an expletive under his breath, and turned
to pick up the receiver.
'Yes?' His tone was not encouraging.
The sound of his voice had an instant effect on Alison, rocketing her
back to earth with a vengeance. A soundless gasp of dismay escaped
her as she realised he'd undone half the buttons on her pyjamas
without her even being aware of it. Clumsily, she tried to repair the
damage, pushing aside the covers as she did so, and swinging her feet
to the floor.
'Our early call,' Nick said shortly, replacing the receiver. The blue
eyes appraised her burning face and shrinking figure, and his mouth
curled slightly. 'Or I suppose you could say—saved by the bpll!'
She was amazed to hear how steady her voice sounded. 'You
promised you'd leave me alone!'
'I know,' he said. 'But the temptation to—coax you a little was quite
overwhelming, believe me.'
'Really?' Alison asked coolly. 'I'd have said myself that it was because
I—just happened to be there. A kind of reflex action on your part.'
His face darkened. 'You could be right,' he said after a brief pause.
'However, it won't happen again. You have my personal guarantee on
that.'
'I'm not so sure that's a valid assurance,' she said bitterly.
The lines beside his mouth deepened harshly, it was an impulse, for
God's sake—one which I now regret. Or did you think it was a
deliberate plot, hatched by my lust-crazed brain?' he added
contemptuously. 'God, you must think I'm desperate!'
'No.' His words were like a whiplash, but she bore them without
flinching, at least not outwardly. 'And nor am I. Perhaps you'd
remember that.'
'With pleasure.' Nick sat up with energy, pushing the covers away,
and reaching for his robe, making Alison avert her gaze hastily. 'The
instruction is now etched on my memory cells for ever. And you
needn't worry about the
Ariadne.
She's a big boat. Play your cards
right, and we need only encounter each other at mealtimes. Now,
would you like first use of the bathroom, or shall we flip a coin?'
'No, I—I'll go first.' She couldn't bear to stand there any longer,
confronting him over that great expanse of bed, like enemies on
opposite sides of some vast sexual minefield.
She didn't care for the connotations of the bathroom either, but it
seemed like a sanctuary, as she bolted the door behind her.
She was shaking all over suddenly, her heart racing madly, and she
sank down on the tiled rim of the bath with a little stifled groan,
thankful that Nick's piercing gaze could not pursue her here, and see
the state she was in.
Or had he already guessed, she asked herself bleakly, just how close
she had been to complete surrender?
She sighed. Nothing was working out as she had expected, least of all
her own emotions. And that was the most troubling realisation of all.
ALISON poured a measure of sun-oil into her palm and began to
massage it into her neck and shoulders. Over the weeks, she had
acquired a warm honey tan, and she didn't want to spoil everything by
burning now—especially when, tomorrow, they would be on their
way back to Rhodes, and home.
Home, she thought. Ladymead—redecorated, and refurbished, and
waiting for their occupation. It was amazing how remote it seemed
suddenly. Light years away from the gently swaying deck of the
Ariadne
, and the sunbed with its prettily striped awning set above it.
Surprising, too, how quickly these four weeks which she had so much
dreaded had passed, and how easily.
After that first disastrous morning, she hadn't known quite what to
expect from Nick. Further advances, possibly. Recriminations and
resentment almost certainly. And yet it hadn't happened. Once they'd
embarked on
Ariadne,
Nick had undergone some kind of sea-change
almost in front of her eyes. On the flight to Rhodes he had been silent
and aloof, deep in his own thoughts, and Alison had sat beside him,
her normal nervousness due to the flight exacerbated by his
remoteness. How could she spend the next month of her life
imprisoned on a boat in the Aegean with a man who neither looked at
her nor spoke? she wondered wildly. Anything would be better—
even a flaming row. And then, suddenly, everything had changed.
Nick had gone to his stateroom on
Ariadne
a hostile stranger, and had
emerged the next day a relaxed, friendly companion.
She had responded to his casual camaraderie shyly at first, and then
with growing confidence as the days passed. And there was no
denying that he had brought the islands of Greece alive for her in a
way she could not have imagined. She had brought several excellent
guide books, but he had taken them away from her, telling her she
would learn far more by looking and using her senses to interpret
what she saw. She hadn't realised before how well he knew the
islands, and loved them, and he made her share his own enthusiasm,
as well as teaching her to appreciate their variety of landscape and
atmosphere.
She had scrambled with him over the ruins at Knossos, walked with a
strange sense of awe beneath the stone lions on sacred Delos, caught
her breath at the bleached beauty of Hydra, and giggled at the
pompous pelican of Mykonos.
She'd swum, and sunbathed, and even, after some caustic coaching
from Nick, tried her hand at water-skiing. She had acquired her tan,
and even put on some weight, filling out the painful hollows in her