Dark Summer Dawn (4 page)

Read Dark Summer Dawn Online

Authors: Sara Craven

BOOK: Dark Summer Dawn
11.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

    'I'm sure he does more than that.' His eyes seemed to linger on her mouth, on the deep vee where the lapels of the dressing gown crossed. 'Even with your hair in rats' tails, you're quite something.'

    Lisa felt herself shrink inwardly, but there must have been some physical movement as well, because he threw up a hand. 'Don't be alarmed. I said I wanted nothing from you, and I meant it. All I need is your co-operation for a few weeks.' He paused, then added cynically, 'And you won't be out of pocket over it. I'll make it worth your while.'

    She said between her teeth, 'How readily you reduce everything to cash terms. You know what you can do with your bloody money!'

    'Spare me the righteous wrath,' he drawled. 'I know quite well Chas has been paying out handsomely for the honour of -keeping you in the manner to which you've become accustomed. I can't stop him, of course, but perhaps you should remember that there'll come a time when the gravy train will stop permanently.'

    And on that day, Lisa thought savagely, it would give her immense satisfaction to return every unspent penny.

    She said with assumed lightness, 'You disappoint me. There was I thinking I was set up for life. I shall have to take care I don't lose my looks.'

    'I should just take care generally,' he said gently. He put down the pottery mug and stood up. 'Thank you for the coffee. I'm driving back to Yorkshire tomorrow. I'll pick you up around midday.'

    'Thanks, but no, thanks,' she said. 'I have arrangements to make, and there are trains.'

    'So there are,' he agreed. 'But Chas at least would think it strange that we didn't travel together. I don't deny your attractions, but I'm sure there are other models in London.'

    'Plenty,' she said flatly.

    'Then let's have no more excuses about arrangements.' He gave her a long dispassionate look. 'Play this my way, Lisa, and I'll see to it that you aren't bothered in future. You can come back here after the wedding and live whatever kind of life takes your fancy. I'll see you tomorrow, and don't keep me waiting.'

    He didn't seem to expect her to show him out, and she was glad of that because she didn't think her shaking legs would support her. She remained on the sofa staring at the door which had just closed behind him and trying to make sense of the last teeming half hour.

    In a moment, she told herself, she would wake up and find she'd been having a bad dream. Whenever there had been nightmares, it had always seemed as if Dane was part of them hovering there somewhere on the fringe of her subconscious.

    She hoped very much she would wake up soon. She moved restively and her hand caught her undrunk mug of coffee and spilled it across the hearthrug, and she stared for a moment down at the resultant mess, forcing herself to face reality.

    Somehow, without knowing quite how it had happened, she was going back to Stoniscliffe to help with Julie's wedding. She sank her teeth into her lower lip. It was no wonder Dane was such a success,in business. No object remained immovable for long under the pressure of his irresistible force. She loathed him!

    She cleaned up the spilled coffee while her mind ran round and round like a small animal trapped on a wheel. She could always vanish, she supposed. She had done it once two years ago, and she could do it again. But to do so would be to hurt Julie who didn't deserve it, and more importantly, it would grieve Chas.

    Lisa caught her breath at the thought of him in a wheelchair. He had always been such a strong, positive man. This new weakness would irk him terribly, she knew, and found herself wondering exactly when it had happened.

    At the same time, she told herself fiercely that she wasn't to feel guilty. If her disappearance from Stoniscliffe had had even a remote connection with Chas's stroke, then Dane would have mentioned it. A mirthless smile curved her mouth. Boy, would he have mentioned it! So she wasn't to blame herself, although she knew that her conscience would trouble her. Chas had been ill and needing her, and she hadn't known. Why hadn't Julie told her? she asked herself almost despairingly, and then shook her head at her own foolishness. Julie would have been obeying orders.

    Chas would have wanted her to return to Stoniscliffe under her own steam, at her own wish. He wouldn't take kindly to any sort of pleading on his behalf from anyone. Not even from Dane.

    So that was yet another secret she had to keep, because Chas had never known the real reason why she had left Stoniscliffe in the first place, and that was the most important secret of all. No one knew the truth except herself, and the man who had just left her crouched, trembling like a child, in a corner of her own sofa.

    She went across to the telephone and dialled Jos's number. Myra answered almost at once, and her voice bubbled down the phone as she recognised Lisa.

    'Did you enjoy the trip? Are you worn out? Come to supper tomorrow night and tell me your version.'

    'I'd love to, but I can't.' Lisa hesitated. 'Is he in a good mood, Myra?'

    'Fair to middling. Why, is there something wrong?'

    'In a way. I have to go away for a few weeks, that's all.'

    'That'll be enough,' Myra said blankly. 'What's happened?' She paused. 'You're not—ill or anything?'

    Lisa guessed the real question behind the tactful words. 'No, nothing like that. I have to go up north to organise a family wedding. My stepsister is getting married, and there's a panic on.'

    She could hear Myra talking to someone at the other end, her voice muffled and then Jos spoke.

    He said sharply, 'What is all this. Lisa? Myra says you're going up north. You have to be joking!'

    'I wish I were.' Lisa rapidly explained about the wedding. 'But there's more to it than that,' she went on. 'I've just found out that my stepfather had a stroke at some time, and that he wants to see me.'

    'Oh, hell!' Jos was silent for a moment. 'You realise that all this couldn't be happening at a worse time.'

    'Please believe that if I could get out of going, I would,' she said unhappily. 'But they're all the family I've got, and I owe them a great deal. Certainly I owe them this.'

    'Then obviously you must go, but for heaven's sake get back as soon as you can. They have short memories in this game,' he said grimly. He paused. 'You said they were all the family you've got. Wasn't there a brother as well? I seem to remember Dinah mentioning him.'

    'There was and there is,' she said. 'But I don't regard him as a brother. It was Julie I grew up with.'

    'Lucky Julie,' Jos commented. 'Tell the stepfather he did a good job. And phone me as soon as you get back.'

    'That's a promise,' Lisa said, and replaced her receiver. Her hand was sweating slightly and she wiped it down the skirt of her dressing gown.

    She would have to write to Dinah and she could pay Airs Hargreaves and give her any necessary instructions in the morning. There was no great problem there.

    The towering, the insuperable, the shattering difficulty was getting through, firstly, tomorrow, and then the days after that. If it hadn't been for the wedding she might have been able to do a deal—to say to Dane, 'I want to go back. I want to see Chas, to spend some time with him, and I'll do it on the understanding that you go and stay far away from Stoniscliffe while I'm there.'

    But because of Chas's paralysis, Dane was going to give Julie away. He had to be there, and so there was no bargain to be struck.

    Not that Dane struck bargains anyway, she thought. He made decisions and carried them through to his own advantage. If he negotiated, he expected to be on the winning side, and generally was. She had never seen him bested by anyone, although at one time she had dreamed dreams of doing it herself. But not any more. He had shown her brutally and finally that against him, she could not win, and she still had the emotional scars to prove it.

    But she wasn't going to think about that now. She couldn't let herself think about that because otherwise she would turn tail and run away somewhere—anywhere, and Dane would know then exactly what he had done to her, and triumph in his knowledge.

    She was restless, pacing round the flat like an animal in a cage, and she had to make herself stop, and fetch the hairdryer and sit down and do something about her ill-used hair which was going to dry like a furze bush if she wasn't careful, and contribute nothing to her self-confidence. There was something soothing and therapeutic in sitting there, brushing the warm air through her hair, and restoring it to something like its usual smooth shine. She wished she could smooth out her jitters as easily.

    She didn't sleep when she went to bed, but she told herself that she wouldn't have slept anyway. She'd had no exercise or fresh air to make her healthily tired.

    There was too much to do in the morning to give her time to think. She packed and tried to eat some breakfast, while she gave a surprised Mrs Hargreaves her instructions. Then she found Dinah's tour schedule and wrote her a hasty explanatory note, addressing it to the current theatre.

    She dashed out, posted the letter, and as she walked back from the box on the corner, she saw there was a car parked in the street outside the flat. She lived over a shop—a boutique really where they sold small pieces of antique furniture and jewellery, catering for the connoisseur market, and of course the car could have belonged to one of the said connoisseurs, but somehow she didn't think so.

    She stood for a moment, her hands buried in her coat pockets, and stared at it, and wished she was able to turn round and walk away again as fast as she could. It was dark and sleek and shining and looked extremely powerful. It proclaimed money and a quiet but potent aggression.

    Dane was waiting at the top of the stairs. He swung impatiently to meet her.

    'I was beginning to think you'd run out on me.'

    'I had to post a letter.' Lisa despised herself for the defensive note in her voice. She had nothing to apologise for. She wasn't late; he was early. She took her key out of her pocket and Dane calmly appropriated it and fitted it into the lock.

    'Thank you,' she said between her teeth, and went past him into the flat.

    'If you're ready, I'd like to leave as soon as possible,' he said. 'The weather forecast isn't too good for later in the day.'

    It would be brave weather that would dare interfere with his arrangements, she thought bitterly as she went into the bedroom to close her case.. She tugged russet suede boots on over her slim-fitting cream cord jeans, and pulled a matching coat, warmly lined, on top of her cream Shetland sweater. She had left her hair hanging loose round her shoulders as she had worked and packed, but now it was a moment's task to sweep it into, a smooth coil and anchor it securely on top of her head. It was a severe style, but it suited her, highlighting the line of her cheekbones and her smooth curve of jaw.

    She picked up her case and the weekend bag that matched it and went into the living room. Dane was standing by the window looking down into the street.

    'Is that all you're taking?' His glance ran over her luggage.

    'It's enough,' she returned shortly. 'I've learned to travel lightly.'

    'But not alone.' There was a barb in the smooth words which angered her, but she decided to ignore it. The journey ahead was going to be trying enough without a constant sparring match going on between them.

    Dane picked up the cases. 'I'll put these in the boot while you see to any locking up you need to do.

    She was fastening the safety catches on the windows when the phone rang.

    'Lisa?' Simon Whitman's voice sounded plaintively down the line. 'Jos has just told me you're off up north for an unspecified time. What's going on?'

    Her heart sank at the note of grievance in his voice, which she had to admit was fully justified. Before the West Indies assignment, she and Simon had been seeing quite a lot of each other. She had met him some months before through her work, because he was a young and promising executive with an advertising agency which often used Jos's photographs. They had got on well almost immediately, and she had accepted the invitation to dinner from him which had speedily followed. They were starting to be spoken of as a couple, to be invited to places together, and although Lisa wasn't sure that was entirely what she wanted, she was happy enough with the arrangement to allow it to continue unchallenged as long as Simon didn't start making demands she couldn't fulfil. Up to now, he had shown no signs of this. On the contrary, he had seemed quite happy to keep their relationship as light and uncommitted as she could have wished, but just then she had heard a distinctly proprietorial note in his voice.

    She said, 'A family emergency of sorts.' She should have let him know, she thought. He should have been on her list ahead of Dinah and Mrs Hargreaves really, but the truth was she had never even given him a thought. She went on, 'It's been landed on me so suddenly, I haven't really had a chance to contact anyone.'

    'I didn't think I was just anyone,' Simon said, and there seemed no answer to that, so Lisa didn't make one. After a pause, he said 'Will you be gone for very long?'

    'I hope not,' she said. Tor as long as it takes, and no longer. I do have my living to earn, and as Jos reminded me, they have short memories in the fashion world.'

    'They'll remember you.' His voice warmed, lifted a little. 'I can't get you out of my mind, night or day.'

    That troubled her a little, but she found herself smiling. 'It would be nice if the other agencies in town felt the same. Do you think you could become contagious?'

    She was aware that Dane had come back into the room and was standing by the door, silently watching and listening. Anyone else would have had the decency to withdraw out of earshot, she thought bitterly as she turned a resentful shoulder on him.

    She could hardly hear what Simon was saying. She had to force herself to concentrate on his words because she was too conscious of that other dark and disturbing presence behind her.

    Simon said with that special note in his voice which belonged to almost everyone who had spent their entire lives south of Potters Bar, 'It will be awful in the north at this time of year, and they reckon there's bad weather on the way. You'll take care, won't you, love?'

Other books

Cross Country Murder Song by Philip Wilding
Addicted by Charlotte Featherstone
The Iceman Cometh by Eugene O'Neill, Harold Bloom
The Belting Inheritance by Julian Symons
The Byram Succession by Mira Stables
Vita Brevis by Ruth Downie