As he entered her, she cried out at the unendurable
excitement of it, and clutched the edge of the bed as he tore
at the lace holding her breasts. ‘Now tell me you spilt the
wine purposely,’ he growled, as he pulled and squeezed her
nipples, while grinding hard against her. ‘Tell me that you
did it because you knew this would happen.’
‘Yes. Oh yes, sir. I wanted you, sir. I wanted you inside me
like this, sir.’
‘That’s it,’ he breamed. And as he ran his hands over the
insides of her thighs, he lifted her from the floor.
‘Oh my God,’ she cried, as she felt him push even deeper
inside her. Then suddenly she knew she couldn’t hold on
any longer. ‘Please!’ she cried. ‘Now, please!’
Putting her back to the floor he quickly moved his fingers
between her legs, and holding her to him as he expertly
stroked and teased her, he slammed into her with long,
urgent strokes until he too passed the point of control. As the orgasms shuddered through their bodies, Celine’s
knees began to give way, but he caught her about the waist
and held her up until with one final thrust, the last of his
semen leapt from his body.
Both were drenched in sweat, and both were breathing
too heavily to speak. He was still inside her, and could feel
her muscles clenching him in the dying throes of her climax.
‘Ah, Beavis,’ she murmured at last, pulling herself
upright and leaning back against him. She tilted her head to I
look up at him, and as he bent to kiss her he wrapped his arms around her, taking her small breasts in his hands.
Eventually he eased himself away, and she moaned softly
as he withdrew from her. Then she turned to sit on the bed,
and looking at him, she started to laugh.
Bemused, he stared down at himself, then he too began to
laugh. His shirt and jacket were open, revealing the hard
muscles of his chest and his trousers and undershorts were
round his ankles, well below the suspenders that held his
socks.
‘What do you look like, cherie?’ she giggled.
‘Ludicrous, I should say!’ he chuckled. ‘But you and your
erotic games are enough to make any man forget his
dignity.’
‘What did you think of the maid?’ she murmured, resting
her head on his shoulder and trailing her fingers over his thigh.
He looked down at her. ‘You have to ask?’
Laughing, she planted a kiss on his cheek, then set about
unfastening her suspenders.
When they were both naked, Beavis turned out the lights
and they got into bed. For some time they lay quietly in each
other’s arms until finally Celine whispered, ‘What are you
thinking?’
In the darkness Beavis frowned. ‘Probably the same as
you.’
She sighed, and turned in his arms. ‘Do you still believe
their marriage will work?’
‘Why shouldn’t I?’
They were quiet again then, and after a few minutes she
heard the steady rhythm of his breathing. Assuming that he
was asleep, she too closed her eyes.
But Beavis wasn’t asleep, it was just that he didn’t want to
talk. He had hoped that by now the sense of foreboding that
had started just before he and Celine left Lorvoire, would
have disappeared. But even the delightful episode with
Celine hadn’t managed to dispel it, and now it was worse
than ever.
When he was certain that Celine was asleep, he got up
from the bed and lit a cigarette. Even if Francois had told
him the name of the hotel in Poitiers, the idea of telephoning
in order to put his mind at rest was, of course,
unthinkable. And if he just looked at it rationally for a
moment, he would probably see himself for the over
solicitous parent he was. After all, what could possibly have
happened to give him such a sense of disaster? If there had
been an accident they would have been informed by now.
And as for Claudine losing her virginity … Well, it had to
happen sooner or later, whether he liked it or not.
He ground out his cigarette and walked back to the bed.
Knowing he would be unable to sleep, he toyed with the idea
of returning to his own room - but Celine would be
offended if he did, so he pulled back the sheets and got in
beside her.
It was just after five in the morning when Claudine arrived at
Montvisse. She hadn’t found a train, or a taxi, but a lorry
driver who was travelling through the night from
Angouleme to Tours had stopped when he saw her walking
through the deserted streets of Poitiers in the early hours of
the morning. She had hastily explained that she had to
return home with the utmost urgency: could he direct her,
or even take her, to the nearest railway station?
He laughed. ‘There won’t be any trains through here
until at least seven in the morning,’ he said. ‘Where are you
heading?’
‘Chinon. Near Chinon.’
‘Get in,’ the lorry driver said. ‘You’ll be far safer in here
with me than out there walking the streets. I’m heading for
Tours myself, so you won’t be much out of my way.’
Ordinarily Claudine would have balked at getting into a
vehicle with a stranger, but this wasn’t ordinarily … All
through the long drive she sat in the warmth of the small cab
while the driver rambled gently on about his wife, his three
sons and his seven grandchildren. He knew Claudine
wasn’t listening, and wondered what lay behind this
beautiful young woman’s need to get to Chinon with such
haste. But he didn’t question her, and by the time he
dropped her at the gates of Montvisse, he too had fallen
silent. Claudine watched him go with an ache in heart, then
turned into the avenue of limes and started to walk up the
drive.
She found a side door that was open, and let herself into
the silent chateau. Now she was so near her father, the
resolve she had gathered in the lorry was beginning to
fracture. But she was determined not to break down. No
amount of anger or tears would change the situation, she
kept telling herself; it could only be handled calmly, with
reason and self-control.
She had decided that she must tell her father the whole
truth - though now, as she climbed the stairs to Beavis’
room at the top of the tower, she was already faltering in her
mind over the accusation of rape. But no matter what
Francois thought, she told herself, no matter how her
treacherous body had responded, she had not wanted him to
make love to her … She hesitated as a burning wave of
misery closed around her heart. But she had responded,
neither she nor Francois could be in any doubt of it… The
memory filled her with self-loathing; now, the very thought
of those grotesque hands ever touching her body again
repelled her.
She tapped gently on her father’s door, then let herself in.
She was baffled at first by the bright light that flooded the
room from the unshuttered windows, then, as she saw the
empty bed, an unbearable despondency swept over her. He
must have spent the night at Lorvoire; she had no choice but to go downstairs to Tante Celine.
There was no answer when she knocked on her aunt’s
door, so she pushed it open and peeped in. The shutters
were closed, but bright bands of light shone through the
slats.
‘Tante Celine,’ she whispered, as she tip-toed across the
room. ‘Taunte Celine?’
There was a movement in the bed. Claudine was on the
point of speaking again when she froze.
Celine’s eyes as they looked up at her were as wide and
disbelieving as her own, but Claudine wasn’t looking at her
aunt. She was looking at her father, who after sleepless
hours of worrying about his daughter, had finally fallen into
a doze. Suddenly his eyes opened, and he looked straight at
Claudine.
There was a moment of dreadful silence, then Claudine
turned and ran from the room.
Outside the chateau, Claudine saw her car. The keys were
in it and in a moment she was out of the gates and roaring
along the narrow road that ran parallel to the Vienne. She
didn’t think about where she was going, it didn’t matter she
wanted only to drive. And she did drive, furiously, for
over half a hour, before she realized she had come
dangerously close to running out of petrol and was miles
from the nearest pump.
But as she abandoned the Lagonda on the side of the hill
and started to walk up over the brow, she didn’t care how
she was to get back, or what she was going to do when she
did. The drive had succeeded in calming her a little, but she
still needed to think; she needed time to sort out in her mind
the appalling events of the past twelve hours.
As she walked she took deep, calming breaths, but the
shock of finding her father in bed with her aunt was still raw.
Every time she thought of it she could see her mother’s face
… How could they have done it? How could they, when
Beavis had loved Antoinette so much he would have died for
her? But it was Antoinette who had died, and wasn’t it just
like Celine to be there with her own special kind of solace? Celine, who had as many lovers as she had dresses, who could have anyone she wanted, had seduced her sister’s
husband. Perhaps she hadn’t even waited for her sister to
die.
That thought was so terrible that Claudine buried her
face in her hands, and at last, as she sank to her knees in the
early morning dew, she allowed the tears to fall. Sobs racked
her body, the pain and confusion seemed to tear her heart
apart. She wanted her mother now as she had never wanted
her before.
It was a long time before she lifted her head again, but
when she did, gazing down into the valley of Lorvoire, she
found that she felt a little steadier. She was sitting at the top
of the hill on the far side of the valley, almost opposite the
spot where she had stood with Francois the first day she met
him. What a long time ago that seemed now - and she
cringed as she remembered the childish way she had
behaved at the fountain. But that was nothing to the way she
had acted since.
She recalled the dreadful circumstances of Francois’
proposal, the way she had made herself so ridiculous in her
determination to marry him. There was no denying now that
she had made the greatest mistake of her life, and it didn’t
help to know that she had only herself to blame. Everyone
had warned her against him, but in her arrogance she had
refused to listen, certain that she could be the one to change
him. How badly she had needed to grow up! The whole
world would know now that Claudine Rafferty had latched
herself onto a man who didn’t love her, didn’t even want
her. How they would laugh when they heard what had
happened, and how they would pity her.
Engulfed in a wave of desperation, she fell back in the
grass, beating her fists against the ground and screaming up
at the sky. How could she have done this to herself? How
could she have been so stupid and pigheaded?
She thought of the gypsy then, and gave a bitter laugh.
Things aren’t always what they seem, the old woman had
said. And she, like the fool she was, had applied that to
Francois. A great love and a great danger, the gypsy had
said. Well, there was no doubt in her mind now that
Francois was the danger. She had only to remember what he
had told her about Hortense to know that he was capable of
any evil. How she was sickened now by her refusal to believe
him! How simple she had been; how unspeakably obtuse…
By the time she pulled herself to her feet it was
approaching midday, and yet despite her sleepless night she
was feeling as though she had at last awoken from a state of
stupefying somnambulance. Her mind was finally beginning
to clear. One day, she knew, in the not too distant
future, the anger and resentment she bore Francois would
cease to exist. But for the moment she must live with it, and
she must face him with it - for much as she blamed herself
for what had happened, there was no reason on God’s earth
why he should have treated her the way he had. Now she
must face this last hurdle. She must confront him, prove
that she could be dignified in defeat, and then she could put
the whole thing behind her.
As she wandered back across the hilltop in her crumpled
navy suit, she lifted a hand to her face and pressed gently
against the bruises on her jaw. Then, as she glanced at the I
angry red marks that circled her wrists, she became aware,
too, of the dull ache at the top of her thighs.
She tossed her head as again the flame of anger she had
struggled to suppress suddenly flared. But she had reached
her decision, she was going to give up the fight, and she
must not allow herself to think of revenge: who could win
against a man like Francois? An image of his naked body
came unbidden to her mind then, and she faltered. But she