Read Desperate Measures Online
Authors: Sara Craven
somehow before Gavin returned.
She would pack her things, walk down to Montascaux and take
the first bus to anywhere.
She'd tackle the studio first, she thought. Meet the pain head-
on.
She wouldn't be able to carry all her equipment. Some of it
would have to stay here. Maybe she'd be able to come back for it,
later. When she could stand it.
It took a long time to bring her painting things down from the
pigeonnier. Even though the easel folded up,
it was still heavy and difficult to manoeuvre on the narrow
stairs, and she was glad of this, because it made her concentrate on
the job in hand, and left no room for other thinking.
She left her unused canvases. The portrait of Alain at the table
she turned to the wall.
She was about to go upstairs to her room and fling her clothes
into her bag when she heard the sound of the car. She paused,
tensing, staring out through the open door.
Alain's car, she thought, her throat muscles tightening
agonisingly. But it couldn't be. It was an hallucination. Alain had gone, and he wasn't coming back.
As if paralysed, she watched him climb out from the driving seat
and cross the courtyard towards the door.
She didn't know why he'd come back, and she didn't want to
know. The only certainty was that she couldn't face him—couldn't see
the triumph in his eyes—or the pity.
She tried to slam the door, her hands fumbling for the massive
key in the lock, but as she did so, Alain reached it and pushed it open, using his shoulder.
'Are you crazy?' he demanded roughly, as she backed away
from him. He looked around, his brows lifting. 'Why is your painting
gear down here?'
'Because I'm leaving.' Her voice cracked a little. 'Travelling on.
I'll make sure you have an address eventually—for the lawyers.'
'For the lawyers,' he repeated slowly. 'What in the name of God
are you talking about?'
'The divorce.' Philippa lifted her chin. 'That's what we agreed,
wasn't it? So there's nothing more to be said. I—I can't imagine why
you chose to come back.'
For a moment he was silent. He was very white, she saw, and
there was a tiny muscle jerking beside his mouth. Then he smiled.
'D'accord.
As you say, madame. There is nothing more. I'd
thought, maybe, we should say adieu—but I will not detain you any
longer.'
Head held high, Philippa went past him, and up the stairs to her
room. She opened the door, and stood, aghast. It was in such turmoil
that, for a moment, she thought the unthinkable had happened in this
backwater—that a thief had got in.
Then, slowly, it dawned on her what the mess confronting her
consisted of.
It was Alain's clothes, she realised, stunned, her eyes roving
over the sweaters, shirts and casual trousers, strewn across her bed.
And over on the dressing chest, his brushes and razor. The leather
toilet bag he used for travelling.
She heard him follow her upstairs and turned slowly.
His face expressionless, he said with cold formality,
'Je vous
demand pardon
. I was—presumptuous. Perhaps it would be simpler if I packed first.'
He made to move past her, and Philippa caught his arm.
She said hoarsely, 'Why did you put your things in my room?'
'Do you really need to ask?' There was a wrenched harshness in
his voice that caught at her heart. 'Because I thought—I hoped that, at last, I would be sleeping here tonight. That from now on you would be spending every night in my arms.' He gave a bitter
laugh. 'What a fool I was! Because it meant nothing to you, did
it,
ma femme
, that—heaven that we shared together only an hour or two ago.' He shook her hand from his arm. 'Be good enough not to
touch me.'
'Alain, no, listen to me.' Her hands gripped the front of his shirt,
clung. 'I thought you'd gone—that you'd left me. You said you would,
as soon as the car was fixed. I woke up alone, and your room was
empty, and the car had gone. I—I didn't look in here. I didn't think...'
She took a deep breath. 'I was so unhappy, I wanted to die. That's why I was leaving. Because I couldn't bear to stay here without you.'
The green eyes narrowed in disbelief, but he didn't push her
away. 'Leave you? You truly thought that?' He shook his head. 'No,
mon amour
. Whatever I may have said, I never had the least intention of going. Even without the intervention of Monsieur de Thiery, I would have found some excuse to stay, until I got what I came for.'
'What was that?' Her voice was barely more than a whisper.
A smile twisted his lips. 'It was you, my reluctant wife. All of you, body, heart and sweet, stubborn mind.' His hands covered hers, and
she realised they were trembling. He said, 'Philippa, don't pretend any more. You know that love you. Will you stay here with me—share the
honeymoon we never had? Begin our marriage all over again?'
She said brokenly, 'Alain, it's you that's pretending. It's not me
that you want. It's the Baronne— Marie-Laure—and I—I can't live with
that, no matter how much I love you. It's too much to ask.'
He said gently, 'But I don't ask it,
mon amour
. Marie-Laure
means nothing to me, and never did. Oh,
yes, when I first met her she was alluring—an exciting adventure,
but that was all.'
'How can you say that?' she whispered. 'Alain, I saw you
together—at that party, on the terrace. You know that. You—you were
kissing her and ...'
'Ah, no.' He gathered her into his arms, held her against him, his
lips against her hair. 'It was over— all over between us long before.
She followed me— threw herself at me. Treated me like the fool I must have seemed. Only by that time, of course, I knew ...'
'Knew what?' Philippa's voice was a thread.
'That like your friend Fabrice, she had been hired, in the first
instance, by my uncle,' he said grimly. He met the incredulity in her eyes, and nodded. 'You find it hard to credit? So did I—at first. have my share of male vanity, you understand? I met this beautiful woman
who made it clear she wanted me, and I believed, to begin with,
everything she wished me to believe.'
He smiled cynically. 'When the scandal broke, I was astonished. I
was not, after all, the first man in her life. It was all—too neat,
somehow. So I had enquiries made, and discovered that she was
heavily in debt. The Baron was a wealthy man, but not a generous
one. And Marie-Laure liked to gamble. There wasn't a casino in the
South of France that she hadn't visited. For my uncle, she was the
perfect weapon. So I ended the affaire.'
He paused. I had, of course, the perfect excuse. I was going to
be married.'
Philippa said bleakly. 'I see.'
'No.' A laugh shook in his voice. 'You do not see,
ma femme
, and you never have.' He cupped her face in his hands. 'Since that evening in Lowden Square
when I first saw you, there has been no one in my life. No one
but you. Don't you know that?'
'No. How can know it? I was an expedient for you. I wasn't
beautiful. I didn't belong in your world...'
'Not beautiful?' he questioned softly. 'Ah, Philippa, for an artist,
you can be very blind. And what does the world I belong to know of
the kind of love and loyalty you had to offer? I found myself thinking—
tonight, she only thinks of her father. One day, perhaps, she will think of me.'
She felt his heart thudding against her. He said unevenly, 'I
could not believe what was happening to me. The next morning, at
the hotel, I was in agony, asking myself what I would do if you did not agree, if you did not come to me. Knowing that, wherever you went, I
would follow. As I did when you left me.'
She looked into his eyes, saw her own pain, her own uncertainty
mirrored there. She said, with a little gasp, 'Alain...'
His arms went round her fiercely, holding her so that their
bodies ground together. His mouth on hers was heatedly passionate—
demanding, questioning, and Philippa answered with her heart on her
lips.
When he lifted his head, his eyes were emerald-bright, the flame
in them scorching her. 'Tell me you love me,' he said. 'Say it. Say you will be my wife in truth, this time, and that you'll never leave me
again.'
'But it was you who kept leaving,' she protested, her fingers
shyly stroking his face. 'In Paris, I was always alone. There were all those nights you didn't stay at the apartment...'
'Do you think I could bear to be there with you?' Alain demanded
roughly. 'Watching you hating me—
shrinking every time I came near you. I didn't blame you for
that. I'd intended to wait, to be patient, and instead, I behaved like an idiot and a brute.'
He groaned. 'All that time in London, I had hardly dared allow
myself to touch your hand in case I frightened you away. On our
wedding night, the knowledge that you belonged to me at last made
me forget everything else. I was crazy with wanting you, and so sure
that I could make you want me in return.
'Afterwards, I hated myself. I didn't sleep for the rest of the
night. All I could see were your wounded eyes, ma chere. All I could
think was that I'd ruined everything between us forever.
'There's a suite of rooms at the company building for use in
emergency. I started sleeping there at night. I had to stay away,
because I couldn't trust myself to be near you. You only seemed
prepared to tolerate the minimum contact between us, and there were
times I needed much more than that, and I was scared I might shock
you—disgust you—create even worse barriers between us.'
'And I thought you were with Marie-Laure.' Philippa looked up at
him reproachfully. 'And you let me think so, Alain. You gave the
impression you were still having an affair.'
He grimaced ruefully. 'Well, perhaps—a little. Your hostility about
her intrigued me. It made me wonder if you could actually be jealous
—if, under all that polite neutrality you showed me most of the time, you were beginning to care. It was the only hope I had to cling to. I kept telling myself that if you were really as indifferent to me as you made out, then my having an affaire shouldn't affect you as it
obviously did. So I decided to lead you on a little. And Marie-Laure
help in her determined attempts to get me back again?
He bent his head and kissed her very gently. 'Can you forgive
me? If I hurt you, I was more than repaid when I thought you'd fallen in love with Fabrice. Then I began to know what jealousy really is, and I suffered. I also realised that by dangling Marie-Laure in front of you as bait, I'd trapped only myself. You were distressingly eager to free me so that I could marry her, and then, when I tried to explain—to tell you the truth—you wouldn't listen.'
'I thought that was what you wanted. A real marriage with the
woman you loved.'
'It was you that I meant. It was our marriage I wanted to be real,
but I would have had you under any terms—any conditions. I'd have
spent the rest of our life together wooing you, praying that one day
you'd turn to me.' He sighed. 'I thought maybe if we had children, and you cared for them, you might eventually come to love their father.
That's how desperate I was.'
'I was desperate too,' she confessed in a low voice. 'That's why I
ran away. I—I couldn't take any more. And today, when I thought you'd left me, I wanted to die.'
'You were sleeping so sweetly I thought I'd have time to
complete my errands and return before you knew I'd been away,'
Alain said wryly. 'I had phone calls to make to Paris—to tell colleagues I was taking an extended leave, and that as it was my honeymoon I
did not wish to be disturbed. Also we needed more food. I have to
keep up my strength, you understand.'
'Do you?' She gave him a limpid look.
'Why, yes,
mignonne
. It's very tough work being an artist's model Particularwhen one is obliged to make love to the artist.'
'Oh God!' Philippa clapped a hand to her mouth. 'I've just
remembered—I tore it up—that beautiful drawing of you.'
'Well, I'll make sure you have plenty of opportunity to draw me
again, if you wish.' He kissed the tip of her nose. 'I do not intend to wear many clothes over the next week or two.'
'Is that all the time we have?' she asked wistfully.
'No,' he said. 'After we leave here, we are flying to the States to
bring your father home. He can come with us to Fontainebleu, and rest up there for a while.'
'I hope finding out that I'm married won't be too much of a
shock for him,' Philippa said worriedly.
'Maybe when he sees how happy we are, he'll forgive us both.'
'And are we going to be happy?' she asked demurely.
'Very.' Alain kissed her mouth softly. 'We have nothing to do,
after all, but eat, drink, enjoy the sunlight—and each other.'
'And I shall paint, of course,' she reminded him, then grimaced.
'I shall have to move all my gear back to the studio again.'
'Later,' he said. He took her hands and carried them to the
buttons of his shirt. 'After our wedding night.'
She said breathlessly, unfastening the buttons with fingers that
shook a little, 'But our wedding night was ages ago.'
'Au contraire, mon amour
.'His hands stroked down her body,