Authors: Sara Craven
claim the relationship which was almost certainly hers. But in the
circumstances it seemed better to remain silent, particularly with
Rohan Saint Yves marching grimly at her shoulder like some
gaoler.
When they were in the corridor, she said tartly, 'I can find my own
way out. Or are you afraid I'll make off with the family jewels?'
'Madame de Rochefort wishes you to taste our wine. I don't usually
ignore her commands,' Rohan returned coolly. 'Indulge her,
please.'
Sabine suspected that the
Baronne
was already sufficiently
indulged, but she allowed herself to be escorted to the grand
chamber.
It was a large, imposing room as the name suggested, its walls
hung with tapestries, and with a minstrel's gallery at one end. A
long polished table stood in the centre, holding an assortment of
bottles, and a tray of glasses. Sabine looked round her with eager
curiosity, her gaze lingering on one large central tapestry. The
tower and the rose again, she thought. But this time there was an
added element—the tower had a window, from which a girl, with
one of the steeple-like headdresses of the fifteenth century, seemed
to be peering down.
'You know the legend of La Tour Monchauzet?' Rohan had noticed
where her eyes were fixed.
'I feel as if I should,' she admitted. 'I think I may have heard it as a
bedtime story when I was a small child.' She racked her brain,
trying to remember once more. 'Wasn't there something about a
princess locked up by her cruel father?' she hazarded.
'The real story is not so fairy-tale,' Rohan said drily.
'The girl wasn't a princess, just an unfaithful de Rochefort wife.'
He paused. 'Her name was Sabine,' he added without expression.
'Oh, really?' Sabine's eyes narrowed, and he laughed suddenly, his
whole face changing, bringing home to her the full force of his
considerable attraction.
'Yes, really,' he said. 'She was the first Sabine. Her husband found
her one day wearing a rose pinned to her gown that was not from
his garden, and guessed it was a gift from her lover. He was mad
with anger and jealousy, so he locked her in the tower, with only a
spinning-wheel for company. There she would stay, he told her,
without food or water, until she had spun enough thread to weave
new hangings for their marriage bed.'
'Sounds like a life sentence,' Sabine commented.
'It could well have been,' Rohan agreed, deadpan. 'Spinning, of
course, was not the lady's chief skill.'
'What happened?'
He shrugged. 'Her lover came seeking her, worried because he
hadn't received any word or token from her. By this time, she was
too weak from hunger and thirst to call to him from the window.
But the rose he had given her was still miraculously blooming on
the breast of her gown. So, with her last remaining strength, she
pushed it through the bars, and it fluttered down to his feet.'
'And he rescued her, and they lived happily ever after,' Sabine
guessed.
'That's one version, certainly,' he agreed. 'But another says that he
didn't notice the rose and simply rode away.'
'So what became of the girl?'
'She starved to death. Her husband gave out she'd perished of some
wasting disease, and duly married someone else, less beautiful but
more docile, who gave him twelve children.'
Sabine grimaced. 'I prefer the happy ending.'
'I'm sure you do,' he said, after a pause. 'But real life is rarely so
tidy. You have only to look back a generation.'
She bit her lip, refusing to be drawn. 'Is there really a tower still?'
'Yes, in the woods,' he said. 'But my uncle says it is structurally
unsound, with a danger of falling masonry, so no one is allowed
near it.'
'It's a pity he doesn't have it repaired instead,' Sabine said. 'As it's
featured on the chateau label, the legend could be used to attract
visitors, and sell more wine.'
'Most of our wine is exported, and our sales are satisfactory at the
moment,' Rohan said curtly. 'And attracting visitors has not been a
priority of the chateau for a very long time. Not since my uncle's
accident, in fact.'
'I'm sorry,' she said. 'I didn't know—although the Maison du Vin in
Bergerac did warn there were no tours of the vineyard because the
Baron
wasn't well.'
'The
Baron's
general health is excellent,' he corrected her.
'However, he damaged his spine over twenty years ago, after being
thrown from his horse, and has been in a wheelchair ever since.'
He paused. 'It has made him — over-sensitive to the presence of
strangers, perhaps.'
Sabine swallowed. 'The de Rocheforts seem to have suffered a lot
of misfortune.'
'Not the least being the fact that the line ends with my uncle. Even
before his accident it seemed doubtful that my aunt would ever
have a child of her own. Afterwards, it was impossible.'
'But they have Antoinette,' she ventured, remembering what
Marie-Christine had told her.
'Indeed they have.' Face and voice gave nothing away. 'I'd hoped,
too, they might have a little peace,' he added more pointedly.
In other words, without my disruptive influence, Sabine thought
wryly, turning her attention to the minstrel's gallery. 'That's
beautiful,' she remarked, rather too brightly. 'Is it still used?'
'On occasion —say, if we have a big wine-tasting for overseas
buyers. Or when the chateau is
en fete,
on Tante Heloise's
birthday, for example. Even my uncle puts in one of his rare public
appearances then.' He paused. 'The next time, I suppose, will be
the wedding.'
So it's true, Sabine thought. He is going to marry Antoinette. She
remembered the beautiful, sullen face and the sensual movement
of the other girl's body in the yellow dress, and an odd pang
assailed her, piercing her to the heart with its intensity.
She cleared her throat. 'Will —will the wedding be soon?'
He nodded, almost casually. 'In a few weeks.'
By which time, I'll be gone, she thought, then, fiercely, And I'm
glad I'll be gone.
Because, it occurred to her with heart-stopping suddenness, the last
thing in the world she wanted was to be around when Rohan Saint
Yves married Antoinette — or anyone else.
'Is SOMETHING the matter?' Rohan's voice seemed to reach Sabine
from a great distance. 'You're very pale.'
'I'm fine.' She found a voice from somewhere. 'It's very hot today.
I'm just not used to it yet. . .' She made herself smile. 'Maybe some
wine will do me good.'
'Very well.'
Sabine watched as Rohan chose a bottle and poured some of its
contents into a glass. 'Try this.' He held it out to her. 'It's the '89
vintage.'
She took it, thankful that her hand wasn't trembling noticeably.
Her knees seemed to have turned to water, her mind still reeling
under the impact of the devastating revelation which had just come
to her.
It's not possible, she thought. It's complete madness. This is the
first time he's even been remotely civil to me, for God's sake. . .
She pulled herself together with an effort, trying to remember what
she'd been told about wine-tasting, holding the glass carefully by
the stem, and sniffing delicately.
'Bravo!'
Rohan said satirically. 'What does that tell you?'
'Not a lot,' she admitted.
'Well, at least you are honest about that,' he remarked, and, in spite
of her new-found feelings, Sabine was sorely tempted to throw the
wine in his face. 'Now drink some, but don't swallow it at once.
Hold it in your mouth and think about it.'
Sabine obeyed, wrinkling her brow in concentration.
'You look fierce.' He sounded almost amused. 'Is it that bad?'
'Not at all,' she said, swallowing.
'Can you still taste the wine?'
'Yes,' she said, rather doubtfully.
'Don't sound so worried,' he advised drily. 'It's a young wine, not
really up to drinking yet. You're not supposed to experience a great
deal.' He picked up another bottle. 'Taste this instead. It's the '86.'
He handed her the glass. 'This time, look at the colour first.'
'It's beautiful,' Sabine said. 'Like the heart of a ruby.'
'Now the bouquet.'
Sabine complied and gasped. 'That's completely different. It's got a
lovely rich, warm aroma.'
'Good,' Rohan approved, his tone faintly sardonic. 'Now drink.' He
filled a glass for himself. 'I'll join you.' He was watching her
closely. 'So—what do you think?'
'It's wonderful,' Sabine said, as she swallowed. 'It's got this
incredible fruity taste, rather like blackcurrant. But my mouth feels
very dry, almost furry.'
'That's the tannin from the Cabernet Sauvignon grape. We use a
combination of that and the Merlot, which is much softer, and the
Malbec. One of the problems we've had of late is the wine keeping
too much tannin as it matures. With all wine, it's the force —the
long-lasting flavour in the throat—which matters.'
'But it's not unpleasant,' Sabine said, taking another mouthful, and
savouring it.
'Nevertheless it is not to all tastes. Sometimes it can be caused by
the age of the oak casks the wine is stored in. Some
vignerons
will
tell you that a cask lasts only for four years. Ours have needed
replacing for some time,' he added with a touch of grimness.
'If they're oak, they must be expensive.'
'They're not cheap,' he agreed. 'But a good vintage requires the best
of care. I intend to see that it gets it.'
'Another customer for our wine, Rohan? No one told me.' At the
sound of the voice from the doorway, they both swung round.
Gaston de Rochefort would always be a handsome man, in spite of
his disability, but pain had carved deep and bitter lines across his
forehead, and beside his mouth. The fair hair had faded to a dusty
grey, and his skin looked pale and unhealthy, as if he spent too
much time indoors, but the green eyes were lusty with life and
rebellion against the confines of the wheelchair he was
manoeuvring into the room —
Eyes which widened when they looked at Sabine, then became
opaque —blank. The chair stopped, and the hands directing it
tightened on the controls until the knuckles turned white.
Suddenly, the room was filled with silence, threatening and highly
charged.
It was like that endless moment, Sabine thought, between the
lightning flash and the first crackle of thunder.
He said softly, 'Who are you?' and Sabine felt all the hairs stir on
the back of her neck.
She lifted her chin, and stared back at him. 'My name is Sabine
Russell,
monsieur.'
'And you are Isabelle's daughter, of course.' A pause. 'How is your
mother?'
Sabine said evenly, 'She died eight years ago,
monsieur,
when I
was fourteen. I learned only recently that she'd lived near here.'
'And so you decided to pay us a visit.' She saw his hands relax, and
the broad shoulders lean back in the chair. 'Well, that is natural.
But someone should have told me that you were here,' he added,
shooting a glance at Rohan, who stood, his face expressionless. 'I
live very much in seclusion these days,
mademoiselle,
with my
books and my papers. Yet when I returned to the house just now I
sensed that something—unusual had occurred.'
He gave a wry smile. 'Of course, I understand now the reason for
my poor wife's accident. Your resemblance to your mother is—
quite amazing. I confess that when I came into the room more than
twenty years—slipped away.'
Sabine bit her lip. 'I seem to have been a shock to a number of
people. I didn't intend it.'
'Oh, not a shock,
mademoiselle.
More —a delightful surprise,
wouldn't you say so, Rohan?'
Rohan shrugged, his eyes fixed watchfully on his uncle's face.
'But I should have been told of your arrival,' the
Baron
went on.
'So that I could welcome Isabelle's daughter to my house in
person.'
Rohan drank the remainder of the wine in his glass and replaced it
on the tray. He said, 'I thought you were still in Domme, Uncle.
And Miss Russell was only able to pay a brief visit. She is just
leaving.'
'But not before she has told me what she thinks of our wine,' the
Baron
said, smiling. 'I was told once that a good vintage should be
like a woman—full-bodied and generous. Is ours ready to be —