Read The Devil at Archangel Online
Authors: Sara Craven
quite well, Tina? You look pale.'
She seized on his words with relief. 'Actually, I have a headache. I
think it's the punch. I'm not really used to alcohol, you see.'
'Naturally not. One forgets how potent our drinks can be to someone
who has not yet acquired a head for them. I'll take you home. It is time
we were making a move anyway, or Grand'mere will be worrying
about us.'
Christina felt confused as he ushered her solicitously to the door. She
had expected some sort of tantrum. He had been certainly spoiling for
one before he had been called away to the telephone. Perhaps he'd
had time to think calmly and reason out that Devlin was only trying to
needle him some known truths. All she wanted to do was escape
upstairs to solitude, but that was denied her.
Theo was urging her towards the salon. They would have some
coffee, he directed imperiously, and Madame Christophe would bring
her a painkiller for her headache. Christina gave way reluctantly,
after a half-hearted protest. She did not want a further
tete-a-tete
with
Theo that night, and she was conscious of a feeling of relief when she
saw that Mrs Brandon was still up, sitting waiting for them with the
inevitable embroidery in her lap.
Theo sat down beside her, kissed her hands and launched himself into
a recital of the evening's events that bore little relation to Christina's
own memories of it. For one thing, he mentioned a long list of people
who had been at the hotel and afterwards at the Beguine in a way that
suggested that she and Theo had been members of a large group
instead of studiously on their own. The one name he did not speak
was Devlin's, and Christina gathered with growing amazement that
that particular part of the evening was to be regarded as not having
happened.
The arrival of Madame Christophe with the coffee tray was Mrs
Brandon's signal to depart. She rose slowly and painfully from the
sofa and made her way to the door, after kissing Theo affectionately
and bestowing a slightly more punctilious goodnight on Christina.
As soon as the door had closed behind her and they were alone,
Christina turned to Theo, openly indignant. 'Why didn't you tell her
the truth?'
'Because that was not what she would have wanted to hear.' Theo
lifted his shoulders in a gesture of insouciance. 'What harm has been
done? You must not be so scrupulous, Tina. When you have been
with us longer, you will discover the best way to handle Grand'mere.'
Christina bit back the instinctive retort that boiled up in bier. She
picked up the small medicine cup from the tray, and swallowed the
tablet it contained with a mouthful of coffee. Theo leaned back
against the sofa and watched her through half-closed eyes.
'She was very happy tonight,' he went on after a pause. 'I could see
she thought we made a handsome couple. It is charming that you
should be fair while I am dark. We look good together, Tina, don't
you think?'
Christina set the cup back on the tray, her hand trembling a little.
Theo seemed to be building up to a flirtation —the one thing she had
wanted to avoid.
'I don't think I've ever been invited out on aesthetic grounds before,'
she commented, keeping her voice light. 'I'm sure you're quite aware
of your own good looks, Theo. You don't need any reassurance from
me.'
He replaced his own cup on the tray and moved closer to her. She
tried to edge away imperceptibly, but his hand shot out and gripped
the fold of her skirt.
'Not reassurance, maybe, but I have other needs, Tina. I need love—a
woman's affection.'
She sat very still, her mind working furiously. She tried to smile.
'Well, I'll be fond of you, Theo, if you'd let me go to bed. I'm worn
out.'
'That is unfortunate,' he said, and there was a snap in his voice. 'But I
am not ready to go to bed yet. Don't play hard to get with me, Tina.'
She gasped with indignation. 'Of all the damned cheek
'
she
began, and glanced down, startled. His hand was moving the fold of
silk, pushing it away from her knee up towards her thigh. 'And you
can stop that now!' She slapped him hard.
'You say that—you do that to me.' His voice was harsh, his face set
and suddenly ugly. 'But
ce brave
Devlin—he is another matter, non?
Do you not think I saw the way you looked at him? The way you
moved your body inside your dress while you were dancing for him.'
He lunged at her, pinning her against the sofa back. His mouth sought
hers greedily, and she tried vainly to turn her head away to escape his
wet, seeking lips. His hands were on her breasts, squeezing them so
that she gasped in pain, then his fingers were pulling at her skirt
again. For a moment she lay still, too horrified by this sudden display
of passion to resist. Then summoning all her strength, she pushed at
him wildly, violently. He was off balance, half kneeling over her, and
her move sent him sprawling on to the floor. For a moment he lay
there glaring at her, then suddenly he turned over on to his stomach
and began to cry. Her lips parted in disbelief as she stared down at
him, prostrate at her feet, his whole body shaking with sobs.
'Theo, for God's sake.' She felt totally helpless. 'What in the world's
come over you? You must, stop this—stop crying.'
He raised his head and looked at her. His handsome face was blotched
and swollen with tears. He looked very young.
'How can I not cry, when you are so cruel to me?' he demanded.
'Don't talk such nonsense,' she said angrily. 'Did you really think that
I was going to let you ...' she paused, searching for the right words.
She couldn't say 'make love'. To use those words in respect of that
brutal, selfish assault would be a desecration. 'Let you—use me in
return for a night out?'
'No, no.' He got up on to his knees. 'You don't understand. I lost
control of myself and I regret that—I can't tell you how much. But if I
did, Tina, don't blame me too much. It's only because I love you ...'
'Stop it!' she jumped to her feet, her face white. 'I'm not going to let
you talk like that. It's ridiculous!'
'Just now you were angry because I did not speak the truth. Now you
are angry because I do. Tina, forgive me. I did not mean to tell you
yet, but when I saw you with Devlin tonight, when I knew how he
schemed to get you away from me, I was so jealous.'
^You've no right to be jealous—and no reason either.'This was a bad
dream, and soon, soon, please God, she would wake from it.
'No?' He rose to his feet and faced her. 'When I got to the telephone
my caller' had conveniently rung off, and when I returned you had
gone—with him. At once it was clear. That call was just a ruse to get
me away from the table—one of his friends playing a trick. Always
he has envied me—envied me this plantation—because Grand'- mere
preferred me. And now he envies me my woman.'
'Let us get one thing quite clear,' Christina said very steadily. 'I am not
your woman.'
There was a long electric pause, then Theo turned, away, thrusting his
hands petulantly into his trousers pockets.
'You are saying that to hurt me,' he flung at her over his shoulder.
'No, Theo, it's the truth.' She made herself speak gently. With a kind
of detached anguish, she realised that one of the straps on her dress
was broken, and she lifted a fold of the bodice to cover her breast.
Someone had said—a long time ago—that it was hard to tell where
the dress ended and her skin began. She felt a sob rising in her throat,
and bit it back. 'If I've ever given you cause to think anything else, I'm
sorry. I—I realise in the circumstances it was a mistake to go out with
you this evening, but it won't happen again. Goodnight.'
As
she walked to the door, she knew a moment's fear that he would
come after her, but he made no attempt to move. She closed the door
and stood for a moment leaning against it, trying to regain her calm.
Then she made herself walk without hurrying up the stairs to her
room.
She was thankful there was no one around to see her. One glance in
her mirror told the whole story. As well as her torn dress, some of her
hair had become loosened from its knot during the struggle and was
hanging untidily around her ears, and her lip gloss was smudged. She
felt dirty all over, and she shuddered.
Shedding her clothes, she walked into the bathroom and ran hot water
into the tub. As she scrubbed and rinsed her skin, she began almost
insensibly to feel better, but she knew at the same time that her
feelings were the least of her problems. She was faced with the
unpalatable fact that Dev Brandon seemed to be right, after all.
She was sure that nothing she had said or done could have led Theo to
think that he had some claim on her. Therefore his belief must have
been prompted by some outside agency, and Mrs Brandon was the
obvious—indeed, the only choice. Christina had always felt disturbed
by her employer's willing acceptance of her grandson's interest in her.
She was not of their world, and she had no money, and she was not so
naive as to believe these things did not matter. There was no way in
which she could be considered a suitable bride for the heir to
Archangel, unless they had fallen deeply and passionately in love
with each other.
Did Theo love her? She got out of the bath and began to dry herself on
one of the big towelling bath sheets provided for the purpose. She
tried to consider the matter objectively. He admired her, and had
made no secret of it— but love? There had been few signs of that.
There had been no tenderness, no desire to seek a corresponding
arousal in his behaviour downstairs. For one brief heart-thudding
instant, she recalled another mouth on hers, other hands touching her
in intimate exploration, then she determinedly put that memory away
from her too. That had nothing to do with love either—just an
arrogant wish to add her name to his apparently endless list of
conquests. She could only be thankful she had come to her senses
before being carried away on that sweet golden tide of wantonness.
At the same time, some inner demon muttered that if she had
succumbed to Devlin, at least her present predicament would not
exist. Maybe that was what he had intended all along, and his
lovemaking had been prompted less by desire for her than a wish to
make mischief as Theo had suggested.
With a groan, she dropped the bath sheet in a damp crumpled heap
and walked through into the bedroom. She stood for a moment, taking
a long hard look at herself in | the mirror. She was slim—indeed, if
one was being critical, skinny might even be the word—or
underdeveloped, she thought, biting her lip. Her breasts were small,
and the curve of her hips gently rounded rather than voluptuous. She
gazed for a few seconds more before turning away and reaching for
her gingham nightgown. Nothing there, she thought, to drive any man
wild with desire, as she would do well to remind herself.
Devlin Brandon's motives seemed clear enough, she decided, stifling
the instinctive pain that brought in its train. What had Mrs Brandon
said? 'No respecter of innocence'. It was shaming to think that she had
almost been prepared to sacrifice that innocence to gratify a man with
little but malice on his mind.
But Theo's motivation was more difficult to conjecture. It was not the
pass he had made—she supposed rather wearily she might have seen
that coming—but the avowal of love and the expectation of some sort
of prolonged relationship that had followed it were its most
disturbing features.
Only one thing seemed certain—she would have to get away, and
fast. So first thing tomorrow, she would see Mrs Brandon and hand in
her notice. She sighed. There seemed nothing for it but to write to Mr
Frith, explaining her situation and begging a temporary loan to enable
her to get back to England. She was sure he would help her even
though he would be surprised to get an appeal for help so close on the
heels of her other communication which had been couched in
thoroughly optimistic terms. Once she was back in England, she
would have to take whatever work was going and pay him back
somehow. It was a frankly depressing prospect, especially when she
had thought she had left those sort of worries behind her.
She put a hand to her head. The fictitious headache had become a
factual one, and bed
seemed suddenly very inviting, although she did