Authors: Sara Craven
Davina needed no second invitation. She dropped her shoes in the
shadow of a large rock and plunged down the slope towards the
pool. She flinched momentarily as the cold water swirled round her
ankles, but soon found the coolness refreshing after her walk. She
scooped up a handful of water and trickled it over her wrists,
enjoying the sensation on her warm flesh. She wished she had
brought a swimsuit with her—the thought of a swim in this remote
and peaceful spot had a potent appeal. She tilted her head back and
stared up at the dragon rock. It had an austere grandeur all its own,
she thought. A powerful presence, even.
She gave a wry smile, deriding herself for her own fancy. It was
nonsense to imagine that a piece of stone, eroded by the elements,
could have power of any kind, or to think that a bathe in the pool at
the foot of the rock could possibly give her any kind of immunity
against the all-too-human power that awaited her back at Plas
Gwyn. All that a swim could do for her would be to make her feel
cool and clean again, washing away the touch of his hands on her
skin. She sighed bleakly, wishing that she could erase the memory
of that delight from her mind as easily.
She stared around her, listening to the silence, registering the
emptiness of the slope behind her, the utter solitariness of the place.
There was absolutely no one about, she told herself. Who would
see her if she did go for a swim? And the bra and briefs she was
wearing were no more revealing than many bikinis seen on beaches
these days. Her indecision at an end, she began to unfasten her
dress. She folded it neatly and took it back to the rock where she
had left her shoes, placing them on top of it to anchor it down.
This time as she entered the water, it merely felt welcomingly cool.
She waded in until she was waist-deep, then struck out strongly
towards the waterfall. She swam round in a long slow circle,
keeping at a respectful distance. She guessed that some
underground channel must take the water away and wanted to avoid
any possible dangerous currents. She floated on her back for a
while, watching the sky. High above a hawk hovered, its wings
motionless against the deep blue. Even in this peaceful place there
were predators, it seemed, and even as the thought came to her she
heard somewhere quite close at hand the rattle of a pebble against
someone's shoe. Tension filled her immediately. She turned in the
water and swam quickly towards the rocks at the other side of the
pool. She was shivering as she hauled herself out of the water and
crouched among the rocks. They afforded only the minimum of
shelter. Anyone coming down the track to the pool would be almost
bound to spot her. She swallowed. There was no need to panic, she
told herself. Plenty of people must use these hills—hikers,
picnickers. Why jump to the conclusion that the person coming
along the track could only have one identity? She was shivering
now, and her teeth chattered. Why on earth had she left her dress
and sandals out in the open, a plain advertisement of her presence?
She could only keep well down and rely on the intruder walking
straight past and over the mountain. She glanced down at herself
and gave an involuntary grimace. There was a marked difference
between the wisps of underclothing she was wearing and a bikini,
after all. Bikinis did not normally become practically transparent in
water.
She could hear no further sounds of approach and lifted her head
cautiously to look around. There was no one in sight, yet a tingle of
awareness told her that she was not alone, that even at this moment
someone might be standing at the top of the track, looking down
into the hollow. She ducked her head down again and looked
around for a more secure refuge. Timothy Fenton had said
something about a cave—the dragon's cave behind the waterfall.
She craned her neck. Was that a dark opening she could glimpse
behind the rush of the water? It was only a matter of yards away,
although getting to it would mean coming out into the open.
She kept very still for a moment, her ears pricked for the sound of
footsteps or voices, but all was silent. So she stood up and began to
edge her way very carefully across the rocks. It wasn't easy. The
stones were slippery with water and slime and the spray from the
waterfall felt like droplets of ice on her cooling skin.
She bit her lip. The cave seemed a definitely uninviting prospect,
and she paused indecisively, staring across the pool at the track.
She was just beginning to convince herself that the sharer of her
solitude had gone on his way long before and that she was getting
thoroughly chilled for nothing, when he came down the track
towards the beach with his long easy stride.
A gasp broke from Davina's lips. Her instinct, it seemed, had been
only too right. Any second now he would see her dress and sandals
lying on the grass, she thought, and as if he was telepathic, she saw
him pause and bend to pick them up.
She had never moved faster in her life. Her only thought was flight,
and she dived for the cave, uncaring about the stones that stubbed
at her toes and wrenched her ankle.
It wasn't really a cave at all—just a scooped-out space, dark, cold,
running with moisture with barely enough room to stand up. Behind
her a deep crack ran back into the mountain itself, but this wouldn't
even admit the skinniest child. She leaned forward a little to see
what Gethyn was doing, and wet fern fronds, clinging to a narrow
ledge, brushed across her face. They smelt dank and cold, and she
shivered again, miserably conscious that her exposed skin was
covered in goosepimples. For a moment she found herself wishing
that this was indeed a dragon's cave. A friendly, fire-breathing
dragon would have been more than welcome right there and then.
But no self-respecting mythical monster would have tolerated such
a damp, cramped hideout even for five minutes. And she wasn't
sure how much longer she would be able to last out either.
Her heart sank as she took another furtive peep across the pool. She
could see Gethyn quite clearly. He was sitting on a rock, smoking a
cheroot, and her dress and sandals were lying on the ground at his
feet. Fury rose in her. What kind of a cat-and-mouse game was
this? For how long precisely did he intend to sit there while she
froze to death in this miserable little hole? She rubbed her cold
hands up and down her arms, to keep her circulation going.
How the hell had he known where to find her? she wondered
despairingly. All she had said was that she was going for a walk,
and yet he had traced her unerringly. He knew she was around
because he had her clothes, yet for all he knew she might be
drowned. He didn't show any signs of concern—of continuing his
search, she thought, wrapping her arms across herself, and taking
another cautious look.
At last he moved. He rose from his rock, pitched the half-smoked
cheroot into the water, threw her dress across his shoulder and
disappeared back the way he had come. Before his tall figure had
vanished round the bend in the track, Davina was out of her hiding
place. She was too numb and cold to swim. Instead she began a
slow and painstaking traverse of the rocks before wading through
comparatively shallow water to the beach.
She was thankful for the warmth of the sun on her body, but
nothing could ease her inward chill. He had taken her
dress—actually gone off with it. Her sandals too, of course, but that
wasn't the disaster that her dress was. Barefoot, she could manage
to get back to Plas Gwyn, but the mere idea of trying to make her
way back down the mountainside next door to naked made her
cringe.
Bastard! she raved inwardly. The fact that he had also crippled her
car seemed relatively unimportant suddenly. Why, she might run
into Huw Morgan—the returning pony-trekkers—anyone. She
would have to wait here until her undies dried and gave her at least
a semblance of decency, then try to brazen it out. After all, she had
met no one on her way here. She would simply have to pray for
similar good fortune on the return journey. Unless, of course,
Gethyn had decided to organise some kind of reception committee
for her, just to make her humiliation complete.
She sank down on the grass, a sudden feeling of weakness
overpowering her. It was getting late, she thought, though she had
no idea of the actual time because her watch was also in the pocket
of her dress. An overwhelming urge to burst into tears was
beginning to take possession of her, but she had to fight it. She
couldn't let him win. Somehow she had to find the courage to make
it look as if she was quite used to roaming about on remote Welsh
hilltops wearing nothing but a few square inches of nylon fabric.
She put her arms round her knees and drew them up to her chin. I
hate him, she told herself vehemently. I hate him! And at the
realisation how far—how very far—that was from the truth, in spite
of everything that had happened, she felt a harsh sob rise
uncontrollably in her throat, and the tears she had tried vainly to
suppress finally overcame her.
'Weeping for your damaged pride, lovely?'
Her head was up in an instant, her trembling lip firmly caught in her
teeth at the sound of his sardonic voice. He hadn't gone far, she
realised, just round the bend in the track. And there he had been
waiting to see what she would do. Oh, why the hell had he had to
find her crouched here on the ground, snivelling? Why couldn't she
have marched up the path with her head in the air, whistling as if
she didn't have a care in the world?
She glared at him. 'May I have my clothes, please?' she asked with
icy calm.
'Must you?' His eyes went over her, insolently appraising,
reminding her how totally inadequate her present covering was.
She got deliberately to her feet and returned his stare, fighting an
urge to cover herself with her hands. 'Do tell me when you've seen
enough,' she invited with dangerous politeness. 'I don't want to
interfere with your voyeuristic little games, but I am getting rather
cold.'
His smile was not pleasant. 'Then come here,
cariad,
and I'll warm
you,' he suggested gently.
The silence that followed seemed endless. Davina heard herself
swallow deafeningly. She stared down at the grass at her feet,
willing herself not to look at him—meet his glance. Something
compelling inside her was warning her that would be fatal. There
had been unholy amusement dancing in the green eyes, and
something else as well, less easy to define, that could, if she wasn't
careful, mesmerise her across this few feet of turf into a situation
that she would regret for the rest of her life.
It was one thing to acknowledge deep inside herself that all the old
cravings were there, devastatingly rekindled. It was quite another to
betray herself to him any more than she had done already. What
had changed, after all? She could still arouse his desire, but there
was nothing new about that. What she had to keep at the forefront
of her mind was the fact that his future plans had no place for her at
all. Besides, too much had happened between them in the past. She
could not let him use her for the casual satisfaction of his physical
appetites, which was how he had regarded their marriage. He had
not been prepared to give her the shared companionship and
responsibility—the love that she had wanted more than anything
else.
'What's the matter, lovely?' The caress in his words tingled over her
bare skin. 'Wishing that you'd stayed in the dragon's cave and
frozen to death?'
'Frankly, yes,' she replied shortly, her toes curling defencelessly into
the short-cropped grass.
She heard him laugh deep in his throat, and then he tossed her dress
towards her.
'Put it on,' he advised almost carelessly. 'Pneumonia doesn't figure
in my plans for you at all.'
Davina dragged the dress over her head, thrusting her arms into the
sleeves and working at the buttons with fingers that shook as much