Read Devil and the Deep Sea Online
Authors: Sara Craven
course, be imagined.'
'Of course,' Samma echoed dazedly, then straightened, as she heard
the sound of voices approaching. The coffee, it seemed, was
arriving.
'Elvire,' Solange pounced at the table, 'Madame has drawn this
picture of me. It is good,
hein?'
'Excellent.' Elvire arranged the coffee things with minute care,
having greeted Liliane Duvalle with politeness rather than warmth.
'Madame has many talents, that is clear.' She gave Samma a bland
look. 'Will Roche be returning for lunch?'
'I'm not quite sure.' Samma's hands gripped together in her lap, out
of sight under the table. She thought savagely—Why didn't you ask
him yourself, when he climbed out of your bed this morning?
'And that is not all.' Solange snatched up her doll. 'See, Tante
Liliane?'
'But how charming.' Liliane Duvalle studied the doll with interest.
'And how clever of your
belle-mere
to find you a doll that looks
like herself. You see the hair—and the colour of the eyes?'
With a sinking heart, Samma saw the animation fade from Solange's
expression, as if a new and unpleasant thought had come to her.
'I—suppose,' the little girl said at last, colourlessly, and made no
attempt to reclaim her toy. It was obvious that a chance
resemblance, which had escaped Samma completely, had spoiled
the gift for her.
And put me back at square one, Samma thought, sighing inwardly
as she poured the coffee.
Liliane, aware she'd been tactless, hurried into speech. 'So you are
also an artist. Do you accept commissions?'
'Not exactly,' Samma said warily.
'You should paint Elvire. She is like the portraits of the ladies in the
house, only more beautiful,' Solange put in unexpectedly.
Samma felt a dismayed flush rise in her face, and saw it echoed, to
her surprise, in Elvire's own heightened colour.
Elvire said sharply, 'That is nonsense, Solange,' and walked away,
back to the house.
So she can actually be embarrassed, Samma thought. Amazing!
But at least she knew now how Roche and his mistress had met.
She'd come to Belmanoir to act as watchdog for his alcoholic wife.
Samma wondered with a pang if the
affaire
had begun while
Marie-Christine was still alive, and whether the knowledge of it had
driven her towards the final tragedy. The thought made her shiver.
Conversation over coffee proved desultory, and Samma wasn't
sorry when Liliane Duvalle excused herself afterwards, on the
grounds that she had work to do.
'My little book, which Roche hates so much,' she said with a little
laugh. 'Perhaps you would care to read some time what I have
completed so far—learn a little about the past of this family that has
become your own.'
'Thank you,' Samma said politely. But she knew she wouldn't be
taking Madame Duvalle up on her offer. I'm not a Delacroix, and I
never will be, she thought. I'm just an imposter here. Another
unwanted wife.
And definitely an unwanted stepmother. Samma was aware of
Solange watching her, with a kind of quietly hostile speculation.
And she made no attempt to touch her doll, lying half dressed and
face-down beside the lounger.
She sighed inwardly. She couldn't blame Solange for being so
prickly. She'd had a raw deal out of life, so far. A father who
virtually ignored her, and a mother who drank. No wonder she'd
lashed out at all well-meaning attempts to provide her with
companionship. And, each time she'd succeeded in driving one of
her companions away, it must have reinforced her doubts about her
own lovableness, Samma thought with a swift ache of her heart.
Whatever pranks she'd played must have been some kind of test,
which no one had ever passed. Or not until now.
She longed to put her arms round Solange, and reassure her in some
way, but she knew it was too soon, that they might never, in the
year she'd been allowed, achieve such terms of intimacy. The
person best able to help Solange was her father, she thought
restlessly, but was he prepared to do it? Or was Solange, perhaps,
an all too potent reminder of the wife he'd hated?
Samma shivered. Because suddenly, frighteningly, she understood
only too well the desperation which must have driven
Marie-Christine when she finally realised Roche would never be
hers. Perhaps, to her fuddled mind, life without him would have
seemed just another form of eternal darkness.
Oh, God—that's how I could feel—only too easily, she thought.
And knew with a pain too deep for words that it was already too
late.
SAMMA hauled herself out of the pool, and reached for a towel,
blotting the water from her shoulders and arms, and wringing the
excess moisture from her hair.
Her swim had refreshed her physically, but not mentally. She was
still reeling from the implications of that unheralded, unwanted
self-revelation.
She couldn't have fallen in love with Roche Delacroix! Common
sense, logic and even decency all legislated against it. She knew so
terrifyingly little about him, she thought. The only certainty was that
he was quite cynically prepared to exploit her for his own purposes,
and made no bones about doing so.
But as a man, and certainly as her husband, he remained an enigma.
She sighed as she walked back to the table. It was proving to be a
long and disturbing day, and, as an exercise in togetherness for
Solange and herself, it had to be marked down as a dismal failure.
The child had barely addressed a remark to her over the delicious
fruit-filled salad they had shared for lunch, or afterwards.
Now she was sitting, staring down at her portrait-sketch, her brows
drawn together.
'Do you like drawing?' Samma prepared herself for another
monosyllabic answer.
'I do not make very good pictures.' Solange hesitated, then pushed
the sketching-block towards Samma. 'Draw Papa.'
'I already did,' Samma said wryly. 'And it wasn't a great success.'
'Well, draw Tante Liliane.'
Well, it was something, Samma thought, as she tried to comply, but
even after several attempts Madame Duvalle's likeness failed to
transpire. As she scrunched up yet another page, a shadow fell
across her.
Roche said, 'Employing your dubious talents,
ma belle?
Samma looked up with a startled, indrawn breath, aware her skin
was tingling suddenly at his proximity. She said inanely, 'I—I
wasn't expecting to see you.'
'Evidemment,
' he agreed drily, his brows lifting slightly as he
regarded her. 'Yet, here I am.'
'Papa!' Solange ran to him. 'Look—Madame has done a picture of
me. I look very different,
hem?'
'Very different indeed,
petite.
' Roche's face softened as he looked
down at her. He tweaked one of her braid?. 'Perhaps it is time we
carried the difference into real life. Go up to the house, and Elvire
will take you to the hairdresser in St Laurent.'
'Oh!' Solange digested this. 'And may 1 have my hair cut to look
like this?' She held up the sketch.
He smiled. 'Take your portrait with you,
cherie,
so that you can
show the
coiffeuse
exactly what you want.'
Solange needed no further bidding, her thin legs galvanised into a
sprint as she made off, shouting excitedly for Elvire.
Samma pushed the sketching-block away, aware that her hands
were shaking. It was just shock, she told herself defensively. She'd
expected him to be away all day, and yet here he was in the early
afternoon, and, judging by the fact that he was wearing only brief
swimming trunks, and carrying a towel slung over one bronzed
shoulder, with every intention of remaining.
She hurried into speech. 'Thank you for remembering about her
hair. You—you didn't waste any time.'
He gave her a level look. 'You don't think so? Yet at times, I think I
have wasted a great deal.'
She wasn't sure what he meant, but she wasn't going to hang around
and find out, she thought confusedly. She said, 'Well, if Solange is
going to St Laurent, I may as well go, too.'
'No.' Roche was smiling, but his tone was definite. 'I prefer,
ma
jemme,
that you stay here with me. I did not complete my morning's
work in record time in order to spend the rest of the day alone.' His
mouth twisted. 'Everyone was most co-operative when I explained I
was on honeymoon.'
'But you aren't—we're not.' She took a deep breath. 'You seem to
have forgotten—last night.'
'Not at all,' he said calmly. 'As you see, this time I have ensured we
will not be interrupted.'
But that wasn't what she'd meant at all, she thought swallowing. She
said breathlessly, 'I—I think I'll go for a swim.'
'You have been for one.' He reached out, and coiled a tendril of
damp blonde hair round an exploring finger. His other hand slid
down over her shoulder. 'Now, you should sunbathe a little. With
me.'
As if she was in a dream, Samma watched him remove the long,
padded cushions from the loungers, and arrange them deftly on the
tiled floor.
Then he held out a hand to her.
'Alors, ma belle.'
He was still
smiling, but there was a purpose in his face which would not be
denied.
Still in that dream, Samma felt her hand taken, herself drawn down
beside him on to the softness of the cushions, while a voice in her
head whispered, this can't be happening—it can't . . .
Yet it was. She lay in the circle of his arms, her body taut, the long
sweep of her lashes veiling her eyes in what, it seemed, would soon
be the only defence left to her. And felt, with a shock that pierced
her inmost being, the first slow brush of his lips on her skin.
He was gentle, almost tender, his mouth making few demands as he
explored the planes and contours of her face and throat with a slow,
lingering pleasure he made no attempt to disguise.
Gradually, almost in spite of herself, Samma began to relax. The
heat of the sun pouring down on them was nothing compared with
the sweet, insidious warmth inside her which his caresses were
engendering, as his lean, supple fingers soothed her, stroking lazily
over her shoulders and back.
He drew her closer still, taking her hands and placing them on his
bare chest, letting her feel through her fingertips the hard, steady
beat of his heart.
He said softly, 'You think our marriage is not real,
mignonne.
Well,
I am real. And—so is this . . .'
His mouth took hers with breathtaking emphasis. Samma's lips
parted, half in surprise, half in involuntary response to the frank
sensuality of this new invasion. Her hands stole shyly round his
neck to tangle in his dark hair and hold him closer, while his own
arms tightened round her in fierce reply.
That first time on
Allegra,
she thought, she'd had a hint of what
passion could be. But she hadn't known even a fraction if it . . .
Roche kissed the line of her jaw, the soft pink recess of her ear,
gently nibbling its lobe. His mouth travelled downwards, tracing the
column of her throat, skimming lightly over the hollows and lines of
shoulder and collarbone to where the first soft curves of her breasts
had escaped the chaste restraint of the
maillot.
He lifted his head, a faint smile curving his mouth as he studied the
swimsuit's austere lines. His fingers slid under' the straps, propelling
them off her shoulders and down, and Samma gasped, snatching at
the slipping fabric.
'No—please.'
'Yes.' In spite of his amusement, he was inexorable. 'You are too
lovely,
ma belle
, to spend our private hours together hiding under
unnecessary covering.' He bent and touched his mouth to the
sunwarmed curve of her shoulder. 'You are like honey,' he
murmured. 'Does all of you taste as sweet, I wonder?'
'You—you mustn't . . .' She barely recognised her own voice.
He shook his head, slowly. 'You are wrong.' His tongue flickered
sensuously across the swollen contour of her lower lip. 'Because I
must . . .'
His mouth fastened on hers in deep, insistent demand as his hands
slid down her body, sweeping away the despised
maillot
with total
determination.
Samma cried out in protest, and tried to cover herself with her