Read The Devil at Archangel Online
Authors: Sara Craven
hein,
because you did not think it could ever happen. But we will not
rush you. You shall have time to think—to consider. Now leave me,
ma chere,
I wish to get dressed. You may send Eulalie to me.'
Almost without knowing how it had happened, Christina found
herself back in the sitting room. Her head was whirling. What had she
got herself into? she asked despairingly as she made her way back to
her own room. She had gone to Mrs Brandon that morning, intent on
handing in her notice, only to have it waved aside as if it were some
momentary aberration. And now she was being slowly but surely
pressurised into marrying Theo. The appalling thing was that Mrs
Brandon made it all sound so sane and reasonable. Just for a moment,
if you were not very careful, you might find yourself thinking that
one's objections were very trivial in the light of the broader issues
involved.
She closed her bedroom door behind her and leaned back against the
panels, trying to regain control of her suddenly shaking limbs. At
least, she had been allowed a breathing space. She had time to
marshal her arguments, let them see she could not be coerced,
however subtly. But it brought home to her even more forcibly that
she needed to get away. If she could just get as.far as Martinique, she
could surely find some sort of work—something that would keep her
and enable her to save for her fare home—that is if Mr Frith was
unable or unwilling to help her.
The imminent problem was how to get to Martinique. She could, of
course, ask Louis to drive her to the harbour where the ferry stopped,
but she had to remember that he was in Mrs Brandon's pay and might
well report any such request. And though she might tell herself
defiantly that she was a free agent and that the Brandons could not
stop her leaving, she could not convince herself that this was the
whole truth.
She toyed with the idea of appealing to Clive and Lorna Maynard.
Lorna would help, she was sure, if she knew what the position was.
And yet was it fair to ask her? Clive was also an employee of the
Brandon family and it was wrong to expect him to perhaps put his job
in jeopardy.
With a groan, she wandered over to the dressing table and sank down
on the stool, burying her face in her hands. There was another
alternative, of course, an obvious one if she could only bring herself
to accept it.
Devlin Brandon had a boat—p boat in which he had presumably
sailed single-handed back from Martinique, because he had certainly
not been on the ferry with them. More than that, he had made no
secret of his wish that she should leave Ste Victoire. Would he be
prepared to give the practical help in achieving this end that she so
badly needed? Certainly there was no obvious reason why he should
deny it. He owed no loyalty to his aunt—he had made that clear.
But she—she was in his debt already. Had she any right to ask him for
help? What had he told her?
'Don't come crying to me when things get
rough.'
She shivered. Now
She
was considering doing precisely that,
and she would have no one but herself to blame if he turned her away.
She got up stiffly and walked across to the window. He wouldn't turn
her away, a little voice inside her was insisting, but he might charge a
price for his help—this time. She pressed her hands over her ears,
resolutely shutting it out. She couldn't let herself think about that or
she might lose her courage altogether.
Without stopping to consider the wisdom of her actions any longer,
she slipped out on to the gallery and down the steps to the garden.
She was breathless and her side was hurting by the time the beach
house was in sight. She stopped and shaded her eyes, suddenly
uneasy. The place had a closed, shuttered look that she did not
remember, and then, with a rapidly sinking heart, she noticed
something else.
Moon Maiden
was no longer at her mooring.
She paused irresolutely. Her obvious course was to go back to the
house and wait for his return, whenever that might be. That was the
thing to do, she told herself, even as her feet began to carry her
steadily forward again.
The door was shut, but it wasn't locked. Perhaps he wouldn't be gone
for long—or maybe he had left some clue as to when he would be
back, she argued against her conscience as she pushed the door open
and stepped inside.
The shutters were closed; and the air inside hung, heavy and still and
full of silence. The shack was obviously empty. Christina made her
way over to one of the windows at the far end of the living room, and
opened back the shutter, letting the sunlight swarm in, dust motes
dancing in its beams.
It was all very neat. There were no unwashed dishes, and in the next
room the bed had been tidily made. There was nothing to suggest that
the owner had left in a hurry and would soon be back. It was, far more
indicative of the leisured preparation for a journey. She glanced
round a little uncertainly. She wasn't sure what she expected to see
—a note, perhaps, with an address or even a telephone number where
he could be reached? She knew she was being ridiculous. Devlin
Brandon was accountable to no one for his actions. And she had no
excuse at all for being here—prying like this, now that this was
established. No excuse at all.
As if she was being manipulated by unseen strings, she turned back
towards the work bench. This, presumably, was where Devlin
worked at his woodcarving. She was curious, to the point of
compulsion, to see the kind of work he produced. He didn't seem to
have any samples on open display. She guessed these must be his
current works, shrouded by the covering sheet.
Still she hesitated. What would she do—what could she say if he was
suddenly to return and find her here like this, so obviously snooping
through his things like this? She glanced warily towards the open
door, but it was filled by nothing but sunshine and the murmur of the
sea.
Feeling like Bluebeard's youngest wife, she lifted the corner of the
sheet, and picked up the first carving. It was a bird—some kind of
hawk, she thought, but so acutely observed that she half expected it to
take flight from her hands as she held it. She was no connoisseur of
the medium, but she could recognise artistry when she saw it. His
aunt might dismiss his talent with a casual wave of her hand, but that
could not diminish it. She looked eagerly at the other carvings. They
all seemed to have this same individual mastery of touch—the same
vivid life as the hawk.
There was just one more to see. She pulled it free of its wrappings and
stared down at it, her mouth suddenly dry. It was a small statuette—a
girl kneeling. A typical enough subject, she supposed, and it wasn't
even finished. Yet it was unmistakable. The girl was Eulalie, and she
was naked. Again, there was nothing in that. All artists used nude
models, she supposed. But it was the way she was posed— on her
knees, arms slightly extended. Every line of that voluptuously bare
body sang surrender—an offering which no virile man could have
either, mistaken or refused.
Her hands shaking, she put the figure down. How many times, she
found herself wondering, had Eulalie been here for this to be
achieved? Her mind went back to that first night at Archangel when
she had seen the girl creeping off through the garden. Her guess as to
her destination had been right, it seemed. But it hadn't mattered
then—or at least not much. It shouldn't matter now. She ought to be
able to look at the figure quite objectively as if she had looked at the
others and assess its artistic value. Devlin would have little trouble in
selling this, she told herself, trying to be casual. It was an utterly
sensuous piece with a delicate eroticism all its own. A woman's body
carved in wood by a man who knew it well.
She felt hot tears burning at her eyelids—a kind of tormented rage
welling up hysterically inside her. My God, she thought, I'm jealous.
It was nonsense. It was ludicrous. She had no right—no reason. He
had kissed—more than kissed her once—that was all. At all other
times they had been adversaries. With a little choking sob, she turned
and ran for the door, scrubbing furiously at her stinging eyes with a
scrap of handkerchief as she went, and thrusting it wildly back into
her pocket before slamming the door behind her.
Today she had learned something about herself. Something
unpalatable but a fact nevertheless. Somehow, she had fallen in love
with Devlin Brandon.
She shook her head violently in repudiation as she stumbled along the
beach. It wasn't love—it couldn't be. She had too much sense to
confuse liking and tenderness and respect with the sheer physical
desire that Devlin aroused in her. It was a primitive—an animal
thing—and she wasn't like that.
She wasn't, she repeated agonisedly, she wasn't. And found she was
still saying the same phrase over and over again like an incantation all
the way back to the comparative sanctuary of her room at Archangel.
For the next two days, Christina felt that she was existing in a kind of
limbo. Her duties for Mrs Brandon had never been onerous; now they
were practically non-existent. She was expected to appear at meals,
and little else. Theo was on his best behaviour. She could recognise
this and almost be amused by it. She had forced herself to endure his
emotional apology for his behaviour the other night and had made it
clear that she expected no repetition of it. He had reverted to being the
undemanding companion again, only a little more anxious to please.
She accepted his attentions with an indifference which only seemed
to prompt him to exert himself more. He obviously felt he was on the
shortest road to her good graces, and there seemed little point in
disillusioning him.
It was strange how the worry over her developing relationship with
Theo had retreated from the forefront of her mind under the impetus
of this new and shattering discovery. Yet it all came to the same thing
in the end— she had to get away from here. All she needed was the
means.
She could no longer turn to Devlin for help. That would be like
rubbing salt in a self-inflicted wound. The only thing that would
preserve her peace of mind would be to make her escape while, he
was still away. From the security of the adjoining cove, she could
make sure that
Moon Maiden
was still missing from the mooring.
While he was gone, she felt absurdly safe as if, on his return, one
glance at her face would tell him all she was so desperately trying to
conceal.
Her thoughtfulness, her pallor and the shadows under her eyes might
have been remarked by Mrs Brandon, but they were not commented
upon. Perhaps her employer felt she was merely making heavy
weather of considering her options. There was an air of almost
tangible satisfaction about the older woman these days as if it was
only a matter of time before all her designs were accomplished and
she knew it.
Sometimes, Christina allowed herself a wry smile. If Mrs Brandon
really knew! she thought. But it was just as well she didn't, or her
position here would be truly untenable.
The hardest thing of all to bear was the presence of Eulalie, she
found. Christina wondered if she was being over-sensitive, but there
seemed to be an air of secret knowledge, of triumph almost in the
girl's demeanour these days—especially when she came anywhere
near herself. With Mrs Brandon she presented her usual demure,
submissive appearance. It was as if she guessed the unhappy secret
that Christina nursed and was exulting over her. There was an extra
sway to her hips and a thrust to her full breasts whenever she entered
Christina's room. She seemed to be flaunting her exotic
beauty—reminding Christina, if she needed any such reminder, of
how intimately it had been displayed at the beach house for Devlin
Brandon's delectation.
Once she had even entered the bathroom while Christina was taking a
shower, even though the sound of the running water must have
warned her that the room was occupied. She had apologised instantly
and withdrawn, but Christina had been aware of and embarrassed by
her swift but thorough appraisal of her slender contours, and left with