Read Devil and the Deep Sea Online
Authors: Sara Craven
time for any other." ' He stared at her. 'And it is for this you have
quarrelled?'
'No.' Samma shook her head wearily. 'That's the least of it.'
'Ah,' he said. 'Then I am truly sorry.' He glanced around casually. 'Is
Elvire in the house?'
'Almost certainly.' She forced a smile. 'Why don't you go and find
her?'
When she was alone, she sat staring at the envelope, fighting back
her tears. So that was it. She was being flung out of his life as
suddenly as she'd been dragged into it. And with no chance of a
reprieve.
She threw her head back defiantly. Well, she was damned if she'd
be—dismissed like this! There were still too many things left unsaid
between them, and Roche clearly intended they should stay that
way.
But maybe this time it was
his
turn not to have a choice.
She picked up the envelope, and went up to the house. Jean-Paul's
car was standing in the drive, the keys in the ignition. She glanced
down at herself. Her pale lemon sundress was respectable enough
for a trip to St Laurent, and Jean-Paul would hopefully be too
occupied with Elvire to notice his car was missing for quite some
time. Therefore ...
She opened the driver's door and slid behind the wheel. The car
started at the first attempt, and she set off down the drive.
The casino was once again a hive of activity when she arrived, but
this time only the cleaners and staff were involved. She received a
few curious glances, but it was clear she was recognised because
no one challenged her as she walked to the lift, and rode up to the
administrative floor.
She went straight to Roche's office, and walked in without
knocking. He was sitting behind that massive desk, staring down at
some papers, an open whisky bottle and a half-filled glass in front
of him.
Without looking up, he said harshly, 'Helene, I told you I would
buzz if I needed you. Now leave me alone.'
She said, 'But I'm not Helene.'
His head lifted sharply, and his expression hardened, but not before
she'd glimpsed the bleakness, the vulnerability in his face.
He said glacially, 'What are you doing here? Did you not get my
message?'
'Every detail of it.' She put the envelope down on the desk. 'And
your little package deal. But aren't you forgetting something?'
'I don't think so. But no doubt you are going to tell me.'
'The reason I came here,' she said brightly. 'Solange, even though
she isn't really your daughter at all, is she?'
'No.' His voice was stark. 'Liliane's story was true in every respect.
Marie-Christine was a whore who needed a husband. She had a
beautiful face and a good body, which I was not permitted to enjoy
until after our wedding. That night, having had too much to drink,
she gigglingly confided to me that she had already had a lover who
was married, and was three months pregnant by him. She seemed to
think I was so consumed by passion for her that I would overlook
so small a detail. She soon discovered her mistake.'
'And the Augustins didn't know?'
'It seems not, or they would have used the information.' He gave her
a long look. 'But make no mistake, Samantha. The lack of a blood
tie makes no difference. Solange needs me, and I have given her my
name.'
'Then having gone to all this trouble to stake your claim, I'm
surprised you want to jeopardise everything now by sending me
away. If the Augustins try again, you could lose her.'
'Then that is a risk I will take.' He paused. 'It does not weigh on me
as heavily as the knowledge that if you remain on Grand Cay, I
shall almost certainly rape you, and end up loathing myself for
ever.' He gave her a blazing look. 'There, you have heard me admit
it.' He pointed. 'The door is behind you. Use it.'
Her heart had begun to beat slowly and loudly. She said, 'I'll leave
when I'm ready. You made me come here—deceived me in all
kinds of ways—disrupted my life. I think I'm entitled to some
compensation.'
'There is cash enclosed with your ticket.'
'But hardly enough to make up for some of the things I've been
made to suffer since I came here.'
His mouth curled. 'Last night,
madame,
you threw my money in my
face, with the accusation that I was buying you in some way.
Naturally, I hesitated to insult you again.'
'I wouldn't be insulted—as I'm leaving, anyway.'
'Very well,' Roche said after a pause. He pushed back his chair, and
walked to the wall behind his desk, touching a concealed switch. A
section of panelling slid back to reveal a wall safe. 'How much do
you want from me?'
She said huskily, 'A very great deal—but I think I'd prefer to be
paid in kind, rather than cash.' She turned and walked across the
room to his bedroom. 'You may leave your clothes on that chair,'
she added over her shoulder.
She stood, her back turned, staring down at the bed, her stomach
churning in mingled excitement and trepidation. She had no idea
how he would react to her challenge. He might have her thrown out,
he might laugh—or he might . . . The silence from the other room
was almost deafening at first, then she thought she heard sounds of
movement, but she did not dare look round to check.
When his hands descended on her shoulders, she almost cried out in
shock because he had approached so noiselessly.
But the arms which slid round her to hold her were bare.
He said with a ghost of laughter in his voice,
'Et maintenant,
madame?'
Colour flooded into her face. She said in a muffled voice, 'I—I don't
know. I thought—you . . .' She stopped with a little gasp. 'I must
have been crazy to come here like this!'
His mouth touched the side of her neck, and trailed small kisses
down to the curve of her shoulder. 'Not crazy.' His voice wasn't
totally even. 'Just very sweet,
ma belle,
and very brave.' He paused.
'And what happens next—is this,' he whispered, sliding down the
zip of the sundress, and pushing its straps off her shoulders, so that
the garment pooled round her feet. 'And this.' Her briefs joined her
dress on the floor.
Roche lifted her on to the bed, and lay beside her, his hands
cupping her face. He said huskily, 'I want you so much I am almost
frightened to touch you.'
Samma wound her arms round his neck. 'I won't break,' she
whispered.
'I think I will.' He began to kiss her, his lips brushing hers in a
myriad of tiny caresses, each as light as a butterfly's wing. 'Into a
million tiny pieces.'
He wooed her slowly and sweetly, his hands exploring with subtle
delicacy every line, contour and curve of her body, making each
pulse, each nerve-ending sing with joy. His mouth adored her
breasts, teasing each rosy peak into throbbing excitement until she
moaned at the wonder of it.
And against her skin he whispered the kind of things she had never
dreamed she would hear him say—endearments, small, broken
phrases of need and longing, words that spoke only of love.
The world had shrunk to the compass of his arms. Nothing existed
outside the slow, delicious torment of yearning he was arousing in
her.
She was making explorations of her own, shy at first, learning the
texture of his skin, and the shape of bone and play of muscle
beneath it. As her hands grew more daring, she felt him tense, his
dark face suddenly strained.
'Don't you like that?' she whispered.
'Too much.' He kissed her deeply, parting her lips so that his tongue
could probe the full sweetness of her mouth.
She smiled at him, aware of a power she had not known she
possessed. 'Shall I stop?'
'No.' He returned her smile.
For slow, languorous minutes, he let her have her way, his pleasure
in her caresses sighing from his throat, but when she bent to touch
him with her mouth, he stopped her, his hand tangling in her hair.
'Ah, no,' he told her huskily. 'My control is not infinite, and I want
this first time to be for you,
ma belle.'
He kissed the thudding pulse in her throat, and let his mouth drift
downwards over her shoulders and breasts with a tantalising lack of
haste. Samma felt as if she was being drawn into some inescapable
spiral of sensation, the breath catching in her throat, as Roche's lips
followed the stroke of his fingers down her pliant body.
She was locked into the spiral now, the ascent to its apex, swift and
sharp and quite inevitable. She no longer belonged to herself. She
was out of control, her whole being mastered by this torturous
ecstasy he was inflicting on her.
Then he lifted himself, moved, and entered her with one fluid thrust.
And, as the first scalding wave of pleasure and release welled
inside her, she sobbed out his name, and her love for him.
When it was over, they lay for a long time locked in each other's
arms, without speaking, kissing a little, touching each other almost
with reverence.
At last Samma said, her voice breaking, 'I—I never dreamed it
could be like that.'
'Nor I.' Roche wound her hair round his hand and carried it to his
lips. 'The first time I saw you,' he said softly, 'you were on the
quayside at Cristoforo. You were laughing and your hair was like
sunlight. I looked at you and thought—with her, I could begin to
live again.' He kissed her mouth. 'After Marie-Christine, I swore
that I would use women as she'd used me.' He grimaced. 'But that
soon palled. Work, making money, became all in all. I told myself
there was no room in my life for love—no need for it.' His hand
cupped her breast, stroking it gently. 'How wrong, how stupid could
I be?'
Samma nestled her cheek again his shoulder. 'But you were going to
send me away.'
'You would never have got on that plane,
ma chere.'
The dark face
was serious. 'I would have brought you back—taught you to trust
me, somehow.' He kissed the tip of her nose. 'How could you not
know I loved you,
ma bien-aimee?'
'There was Elvire,' she reminded him wryly. 'We were totally at
cross purposes there.'
He nodded. 'She is too sensitive about her birth—about the way my
father failed to acknowledge her during his lifetime. She begged me
to say nothing, to allow you to think she was just the housekeeper.
But both of us believed you had guessed or been told the truth
about her, and did not approve.'
'Who could have told me?'
'Liliane Duvalle, perhaps. God knows, she spent enough time on my
family's private affairs to have discovered that Elvire was my sister.
Or Marie-Christine might have hinted something to her.'
'So many secrets.' Samma touched her lips to his skin. 'Learning to
trust is a two-way process,
mon amour.'
'I know,' he said remorsefully. 'But I was so afraid of losing you,
Samantha. After all, you made it clear you had agreed to my
proposal for Solange's sake only. How could I confess she was not
really my daughter, or even hint at the other problems you might
encounter? You might never have married me, and I could not risk
that.'
'And if I had turned you down?'
'Then I would probably have taken a leaf out of
Le Diable's
book,
and carried you off anyway.' He brushed her mouth with his. 'As I'd
have done at the airport tomorrow. But fortunately you needed me,
mon coeur,
although not,
helas,
in the way I wanted you.'
She sighed. 'I thought you wanted to sleep me with me because I
was—there. A—a temporary diversion.'
'If you'd examined the papers you signed last night,
ma belle,
you
would have realised my plans for us were totally permanent.' He
brushed a strand of sweat-dampened hair back from her forehead
very tenderly. 'Why did you suddenly turn on me like that?'
She bit her lip. 'The same thing, I suppose. A—fear of being
used—without love.'
'Ah,
mignonne,
why do you think, in the end, I walked away from
you last night? Because I could not take you with anger between
us.'
She said, 'You walked away once before, when I went to your room
and waited for you in bed.'
His mouth twisted. 'I had been at the casino,
ma belle,
trying to
drown my sorrows, and the memory of our quarrel in alcohol.
When I got to my room, I thought at first I was seeing things. Then,