she had invariably found herself wondering about the man
who would bring that body to life, the man who would kiss
and caress those achingly ripe breasts, who would introduce
Claudine to the unsurpassable pleasures her own body
could give.
Now, Celine closed her eyes, trying to block out the
image of Francois de Rassey de Lorvoire and concentrate
on what her niece was saying. But the image was persistent,
it was as if de Lorvoire were there in the room, mocking her,
taunting her with that dark, mysterious power that seemed
to spill from his black eyes. What would a man like de
Lorvoire do with such innocence as Claudine’s? It was an
innocence not many would detect, but Celine was in no
doubt that he would recognize it at a glance. He would
destroy it. He would crush Claudine as ruthlessly as the
presses of the Lorvoire vineyards crushed the cabernet
grapes. Oh, that such a man should be the one to take the
virginity that Claudine had protected so lovingly, the
virginity she had always sworn would never be given before
the night of her wedding. To think that she had saved
herself for a man like Francois de Lorvoire! Celine thought
it might almost break her heart.
She tried to pull herself together, to tell herself she was
over-reacting. And certainly, when she came to speak of
him to Claudine later, she must try hard not to let her
prejudice show. The fact that de Lorvoire had remained so
resolutely impervious to her own charms - resolutely
impervious! an understatement worthy of the driest
Englishman! - must not be allowed to have any bearing on
the way she behaved now. Of course, she wasn’t the only
one he had spurned, nor was she the only one to have
suffered such humiliation in rejection. Even now she was
unsure why she had tried to seduce him — except that once
the rumour started that he was homosexual, she had been
determined to find out if it was true. He had merely laughed
in her face; she had hurled the accusation at him, screaming
it at the top of her voice as she clutched the sheets about her
body in a vain attempt to preserve the remaining shreds of
her dignity.
How that loss of dignity had hurt! But it was her own
fault. Where was the dignity in receiving a man lying naked
on your bed and offering yourself to him in any way he might
care to choose? In having him pick up your clothes, drop
them into your lap and tell you he took great exception to
being called to your home for tea and being offered
something markedly less appetizing than cake … That was
when she had thrown the accusation at him - but she should
have known better. Francois de Lorvoire cared nothing for
what society thought of him. The malice of those he had
scorned could vent itself as it chose - it would not affect
him. He was a man without emotion - a man without
morals.
And he was a man, Celine now knew, with a mistress. A
mistress who not only adored him, but satisfied him in a way
only a great courtesan could - completely and unconditionally.
She was Elise Pascale, arguably the most beautiful
woman in all France; a woman who had come from nowhere
and succeeded with de Lorvoire where all others had failed.
For de Lorvoire she had thrown off every other lover and, if
the rumours circulating in Paris were to be believed, he in
turn had devoted himself to Elise. If that was true, where did
it leave her precious Claudine? How could she even begin to
compete with a woman so experienced in the art of lovemaking?
A woman who knew exactly what it took to satisfy
the sophisticated tastes of a man like Francois de Lorvoire.
Celine’s only hope now was that Claudine’s dream would
be shattered the instant she set eyes on him. This thought
cheered her a little, for de Lorvoire could not, by any stretch
of the imagination, be described as handsome, and she
sensed that Claudine had an image of him that was as
romantic as it was false. No, Celine told herself now, she
refused to worry any more, she would leave it to Claudine.
Claudine might be headstrong and impulsive, but she most
certainly wasn’t stupid: she would understand soon enough
that all that was required of her was to become a Lorvoire
brood mare - and if she knew anything at all about her
niece’s spirit, that would be the end of the whole business.
‘I don’t think Tante Celine is with us, Papa.’ Claudine’s
voice cut into her thoughts, and Celine opened her eyes to
find Beavis standing over her ready to pour the last of the
champagne into her glass, and Claudine laughing softly at
her aunt’s apparent lack of attention.
‘I am sorry, cherie,’ she said, ‘it is the heat. What were you
saying?’
‘Only that Magaly will be arriving from Paris tomorrow
with my new wardrobe,’ Claudine answered. ‘Nothing
important.’
‘Magaly?’
‘My maid, Tante Celine,’ Claudine smiled.
‘Of course, Magaly.’ Then, seeming to collect her wits,
Celine rose, stood on tip-toe and kissed Beavis on either
cheek, saying, ‘Claudine and I are going to take a walk in the
garden, dearest, so you may go off to the study and use the
telephone. No, don’t look at me like that, I know you always
have business to attend to - and Claudine and I want to have
a nice woman-to-woman talk, is that not right, cherie?
Knowing only too well what her aunt wished to discuss
with her, the corner of Claudine’s mouth dropped in a wry
smile, and sitting forward on the sofa, she treated her father
to an extremely bawdy wink. Beavis choked on the last of his
champagne, but the merriment in his eyes showed the
delight he took in his daughter.
‘Come along, cherie,’ Celine chuckled, as she held out her
hand to Claudine. ‘We’ll stroll through the trees down to the
river, it shouldn’t be too hot if we keep in the shade, and
there’s something I want to show you.’
They parted company with Beavis outside the library,
then wandered arm in arm out of the front door, round the
lake in the courtyard and through the stable blocks to the
avenue of limes at the rear of the house, which led down to
the banks of the River Vienne.
‘So tell me how you are feeling, now you are here,’ Celine
said, as they ambled through the dappled shadows.
Letting her head fall back, Claudine gazed up at the
sparkling archway of branches above them and let out a soft
groan. ‘I don’t know, Tante Celine, truly I don’t. Perhaps
I’m insane even to be contemplating this, but I know I’m
going to go through with it.’
‘Meeting him or marrying him?’
‘Both. That is, of course, if he wants to marry me. Maybe
when he meets me he’ll change his mind.’
Celine gave her beautiful niece a long, considering
glance. ‘He won’t change his mind, cherie.’ She paused. ‘But
what about love, Claudine?’ she said softly. ‘Have you given
that no thought at all?’
Claudine chuckled. ‘I think about it all the time.’
‘And?’
‘Again, I don’t know. Maybe we will fall in love, who
knows?’
It was on the tip of Celine’s tongue to tell her that that
would never happen, but she stopped herself. Which of
them could predict the future? Who could say that de
Lorvoire wouldn’t fall in love with her? God knew, Claudine
had turned into as captivating a woman as she’d ever seen,
so maybe she would win his heart - if indeed he had one.
But then she remembered Elise Pascale, and it was as if the
ground beneath her was tilting, plummeting her into
despair.
For a moment she toyed with the idea of telling Claudine
about La Pascale, but again she kept silent. Claudine might
be an innocent, but she knew enough about the French way
of life to know that most French husbands had mistresses.
And, of course, if Claudine were to marry de Lorvoire there
was nothing to stop her taking a lover, too - after she had
given birth to the heir, naturally. But Celine judged it better
not to say any of that to Claudine just now - and besides,
there was still the hope that Claudine would see how foolish
she was being before things got as far as marriage. Though
how successful she would be in defying her father, Celine
wasn’t at all sure.
Suddenly Claudine laughed. ‘I know you’re longing to
talk me out of this, Tante Celine.’
‘You’re right, I am,’ Celine said. ‘Maybe I should tell you
why.’
‘There’s no need. I’ve heard enough about Francois de
Lorvoire in these past weeks to know that he’s the most
unsavoury character you could wish to meet.’
‘But you don’t believe what you hear?’
Claudine shrugged.
Celine looked at her. ‘So, would you like me to tell you
about him?’
‘Do you know, I don’t think I would,’ Claudine answered,
after a moment or two. ‘What I’d like now is to meet him for
myself.’ Then, after another pause: ‘However, there is one
thing you could tell me.’
‘Yes?’ Celine prompted when Claudine didn’t continue.
Claudine’s eyes were wandering dreamily about her,
taking in the glorious spectacle of nature left to tend itself
the trees that rose on either side of them, the carpets of
green and yellow that spread as far as the eye could see.
Then her lips curved in a secret smile as she decided that,
no, she wouldn’t ask about Hortense after all. She would
save that question for Francois. Instead she turned to her
aunt, gave her a brief kiss on the cheek, and as they
approached the steps in the tall grass which led down to the
river, she skipped on ahead, lifting her dress to stop it
catching on the thistles and revealing the dark bands at the
top of her stockings as she tripped down to the water’s edge.
Watching her go, so unselfconscious, so natural, Celine
felt a jolt of painful love shoot through her heart. Claudine
reached the roughened sandy beach, kicked off her shoes,
rolled down her stockings and splashed into the river. ‘This
is heavenly, Tante Celine,’ she cried, throwing out her arms
and spinning round and round. ‘It’s so beautiful here. Just
look at the sunlight on the water, look at the poppies, look at
the trees and the sky. I love it here, Tante Celine, I love it so
much I want to hold it in my arms.’
And how, Celine thought, could Francois de Lorvoire,
were he here to see her, not want to do the same to her?
Surely even he could not remain impervious to such charm,
such guileless joy, such unsullied beauty. And again that
brief flicker of hope ignited in her breast. Perhaps he would
love her; perhaps beneath that implacable exterior there was
a heart.
‘Is there a rowing boat here?’ Claudine called. ‘It would
be wonderful to row across to that forest over there, don’t
you think? To sail about under the branches hanging over
the water.’
She had stopped spinning, and her head was on one side
as she contemplated the opposite bank where the trees
crowded one upon the other, the river lapping at their roots
and the sun scorching their topmost leaves where they rose
high, high into the sky. There was something mystical about
that forest, she felt; she wanted to go closer, to find out what
it was.
‘That is what I wanted to show you,’ Celine answered.
‘It’s the de Lorvoire forest. It spreads all over the hillside,
much further than you can see, and the chateau is in
amongst it, hidden from view.’
‘The Lorvoire chateau is surrounded by those trees?’
‘Yes. But there’s a steep meadow in front of the chateau,
and lawns on either side - like a kind of oasis in the middle
of the forest.’
Claudine gazed in wonder. Then she turned to face her
aunt, who had come to stand at the edge of the river. ‘I’m
going to be happy here, Tante Celine,’ she said softly.
Celine smiled, and wondered if Claudine had ever known
what it was to be anything other than happy. But of course
her mother had died when she was sixteen years old, and Celine knew that still, even now, Claudine missed her
terribly. And that was another thing she admired so much in
her niece, her indomitable courage, her understanding and
selflessness that had helped to hold Beavis together when
Antoinette fell to her death on that fateful Italian holiday.
Her own grief Claudine had nursed privately, confiding in
no one but Celine.
Claudine was looking down at the grey-brown water
lapping about her ankles. Then, lifting her head, she said in
a voice of quiet but unmistakable passion, ‘I am going to
marry him, Tante Celine.’
‘But why?’ Celine asked gently. ‘Why, when…’
‘Because I have to.’
‘No, cherie, you don’t have to. I will speak with your father…”
‘I have to,’ Claudine repeated.
Celine’s confusion showed, and smiling, Claudine waded
out of the water to put an arm around her aunt. ‘I have to,’