Authors: Sara Craven
and go back to England. But this still presented problems. Santino
gave no sign that he was prepared to let her go just yet. At times,
she wondered if the humiliation she had suffered over the past few
weeks was intended to punish her for the deception she had
practised on him. She was no longer sure of anything, except the
lonely ache deep inside her.
There were also practical problems standing in the way of her
immediate departure. She was still having to make do with the
assortment of clothes that Santino had collected from the apartment
that first night. Her handbag with her passport and money, and the
rest of her clothes were still at the apartment. And while Jan was
plentifully supplied with clothes—Juliet guessed that the set of
matched luggage reposing in her room contained the trousseau she
had bought for Mario—that did not prevent her from making
slightly edged remarks when Juliet appeared in anything from her
wardrobe. And unfortunately the majority of garments that Santino
had selected belonged to Jan. She had tried to raise this point with
Santino a few times, but he had impatiently brushed it aside.
Roccaforte was a tiny fishing village, he said coldly, not a
fashionable resort.
Juliet looked down at her mother's envelope still clutched in her
hand and her eyes blurred with sudden tears at the sight of the dear,
familiar writing. That was where she belonged, she told herself
bleakly, back among the small dramas of the staff room and high
street. She could cope with those. Here, she was out of her
emotional depth, but at least she had the sense to know it.
There was nothing else for it. She would have to tackle Santino
about fixing a date for her return to England. After all, the autumn
term would be starting very soon, and she would have to be back in
her classroom for that.
Nor was there any point in putting the interview off to a more
opportune moment. She never really knew from one day to the next
whether Santino was going to be there or not, and when he was
there, Jan was never far away either so she had little hope of any
real privacy to say what she had to.
She felt self-conscious and miserable as she left the road and
walked across the yielding sand towards them. She knew they had
seen her and were watching her approach, and she had an
uncomfortable instinct that she had intruded. As she neared them
she saw that Santino, who was lying only about a foot away from
Jan, had propped himself up on his elbow, and that his mouth was
twisted impatiently. Jan was talking in that low, laughing voice she
seemed to reserve for him, but as Juliet came up to them, she broke
off rather theatrically and smiled up at her.
'Hello, sweetie. Are you joining us? How nice. I thought you'd be
writing back to Mim like a dutiful daughter.'
Juliet made herself smile back. 'There seems little point,'
she said coolly. 'I can probably get there myself ahead of a letter.'
She did not look at Santino as she spoke but kept her eyes fixed on
Jan, noticing that her sister's gaze flickered a little at her words. She
hoped that Santino would say something, but he remained silent,
and she supposed that he was either wilfully ignoring what she had
just said, or merely indifferent. She sighed inwardly. His attitude
was not making her task any easier. She made herself turn to him.
He had removed his shirt, and the close-fitting denim pants he wore
citing to his muscular legs. Dark glasses hid the expression in his
eyes as he looked up at her, but she knew intuitively that he was
annoyed at the interruption.
She felt a little spurt of anger rise within her. How dared he behave
like this? He had forced her to agree to this fake engagement, and
had been quick to demand certain standards of behaviour from her,
she thought bitterly. She made herself smile down at him.
'Could I have a word with you—darling?' She had to force the word
past suddenly dry lips. 'I hardly seem to see you nowadays.'
For a moment, he seemed to hesitate, then he rose to his feet. 'You
will excuse us, Janina?'
'Of course,' Jan leaned back on her cushions, smiling. 'I mustn't be
selfish about my enjoyment of your company. I mustn't forget that
you belong to Julie.'
Santino glanced at Juliet and his teeth showed momentarily in a
smile that was more like a sneer. 'So I do,' he said lightly. 'Will a
stroll along the beach content you,
mia,
or would you prefer to
return to the
castello?'
'The beach will be fine,' she said, trying not to let her hurt show in
her voice: 'I—I won't keep you.'
She walked Stiffly beside him, knowing that Jan was watching them
go.
'So you've sought me out at last,' he said coldly when they were at
last out of earshot. 'I suppose I should be flattered. May I know the
reason for this sudden desire for my company?'
'You can hardly complain that you've lacked female
companionship,' she returned stormily, goaded by his tone.
'No, I can't—and I don't, believe me.' His voice was satirical. 'Are
you here in the role of outraged
fidanzata
to complain that I am
spending too much time with your sister?'
Juliet bent her head so that her hair swung like a curtain across her
face, concealing her expression from him. She was afraid that
something of the pang of real pain his words had caused her might
show on her face.
'I don't think we need take this—charade quite to those extremes,'
she said, trying to match his own tone. 'You are a free agent, and
I—well, I can no longer see that I'm doing the slightest good by
remaining here.'
'I believe that our arrangement was that you should continue to be
engaged to me until Mario and Francesca were married,' he said
sharply.
'Was that it?' she shrugged. 'I really don't remember. But if you
insist on going on with this, I'm afraid that you'll have to be
contented with an engagement at a distance. I have to return to
work. I'm a schoolteacher, if you remember, and the school year
starts in England in a matter of days.'
'But the wedding—Mario's wedding. You will return for that?'
'Hardly.' She shook her head.
'But my mother will be expecting you to be there.'
'I fail to see why,' she said wearily. 'I think, on the contrary, that
she'll probably give three rousing cheers when she hears I've
returned home. Besides, it will be-—much easier for you to tell
everyone the engagement is over once I'm back in England. You
can tell them I decided I couldn't settle in Italy, perhaps.'
'Thank you,' he said, his voice like ice. 'I think I can manage to
prepare a story that will satisfy the curious.' His hand shot out and
gripped hers so tightly that she had to suppress a little cry of pain.
'Don't pull away,
cara,'
he grated. 'The performance is not yet at an
end, and we are happy lovers strolling along a sunlit beach hand in
hand.' She shivered at the molten anger in his voice. 'Tell me, is
your anxiety for your pupils the only reason for this sudden urge to
return to England?'
'Not entirely,' she said slowly, afraid of saying too much, but also of
revealing too much by her silence. 'There are other reasons.'
'And am I aware of those reasons?' He stopped suddenly and swung
her round so that she was standing in front of him with his arms
linked round her waist. To a casual observer, their stance would
look like a light-hearted embrace. Only Juliet knew that the arms
that held her felt like a vice against her flesh, and that there was no
softness on the dark face that stared down into hers. She felt he was
looking through her into her very soul, and that there was not a .
thought or an emotion that was hidden from him,' and the thought
shamed her to the core of her being.
'You may be,' she said wretchedly. What did he want her to say?
she asked herself bitterly. To admit her love and grovel at his feet,
begging him to be merciful?
'So your sister was right,' he said softly, and she felt a deep
mortified blush suffuse her face. Had Jan guessed her secret, she
thought confusedly, and passed it on during one of those laughing
intimate conversations of theirs?
'Poor little Julie.' She could hear the words in her head. 'She's so
dreadfully in love with you. She'll make a wonderfully submissive
wife.' And then Santino, his perceptions sharpened by the hint,
watching her, noting the give-away signs she probably wasn't even
aware of. She wanted to say, yes, but it doesn't matter. I won't cling
or be an embarrassment, just let me go—but the words wouldn't
come. The soft sounds of the day, the wash of the sea at her feet,
the distant laughter of children, were all suddenly magnified and
intensified, and over them all, Santino was saying bleakly, 'Did you
imagine she wouldn't tell me?'
'I didn't even realise that she knew,' she said, and paused, appalled
at the extent of the confession she had just made. She made a little
awkward movement of her hands. 'I'm sorry. But it surely doesn't
matter. If you'll just let me go...'
His arms fell away from her, and she thought for a moment that he
had mistaken her meaning, but then he spoke.
'I've let you go already,' he said harshly. 'Haven't you noticed?'
She looked up at him, realising for the first time that this was why
he had been avoiding her, devoting his free time at the
castello
to
Jan instead. Being cruel to be kind, she told herself dazedly. Letting
her see at once that she had nothing to hope for. Probably
wondering to himself why her pride hadn't driven her away days
ago.
It came to her rescue now, stiffening her spine and lifting her chin,
and she was thankful for it.
'Then let's not waste any more time,' she said coolly. 'There's only
one snag—my passport and money are still at Jan's apartment, with
the rest of my clothes. I would like to pick them up.'
He gestured impatiently. 'There is no need. I will collect them. I
have to go to Rome tomorrow, and I will return them to you here.'
He stared at her again and was glad that she could not see the look
in his eyes behind those enigmatic glasses because it might have
been pity. 'If—if you are sure that is what you want.'
'Quite sure,' she said, and managed a smile.
She heard him take a quick breath as if he was going to say
something, then stop. For a moment he stood motionless, an odd
tension about his body, then he gave a faint shrug. 'Then there is
nothing more to be said.'
He turned and walked away from her back to where Jan was lying.
Juliet could see that she had turned on to her front and unfastened
the top half of her bikini. As Santino dropped down beside her he
ran a finger down the curve of her spine, and Juliet heard her little
laughing protest in response.
Jealousy, that harsh destructive emotion, tore at her being, and she
thought, 'Oh, please let me go from here soon. I can't stand it any
longer.'
But it appeared that she had to stand that and more, for when she
went downstairs to breakfast the following morning it was to find
herself alone except for a disgruntled Annunziata. Disbelievingly,
she was given to understand that the Signore had already left for
Rome, and that her sister had gone with him.
Juliet drank her coffee, feeling as if she had been publicly slapped
in the face. And the situation was not helped by Annunziata's
unspoken but nevertheless overt sympathy.
She spent a forlorn day wandering along the shore, toying with the
appetising food Annunziata anxiously set in front of her, and finally,
in a determined effort to do something positive about her departure,
sorting her clothes from Jan's and hanging those that did not belong
to her in the guest room her sister was occupying. But for how
long? she wondered. Probably as soon as she had left, Jan would
move into Santino's room.
She had no idea how long the journey to Rome and back would
take, but it was nevertheless a shock when evening came and she
found herself eating a solitary dinner. When the meal was over, she
tried to listen to some music on the stereo, but nothing in Santino's
enormous record collection seemed to have any appeal, and when