Authors: Sara Craven
She sighed faintly. 'An exquisite child, growing into a beautiful
girl. Unfortunately, she was also one of those women born to be
adored by men. That can often bring more grief than pleasure,
don't you find?'
'It's not something that's ever concerned me particularly,' Sabine
said drily. 'Are you saying that's why my mother ran away from
here—because she was loved too much?'
'She was certainly worshipped by my brother-in-law Fabien,' the
Baronne
said flatly. 'He always did, it seems. But he was
contracted to marry elsewhere —a suitable marriage, and Isabelle
was a dangerous distraction.'
She paused. 'That was why, when she showed promise as an artist,
my mother-in-law arranged for her to be trained in Paris — and
even provided money for the purpose.' She sighed faintly. 'It was
thought — everyone assumed —she would marry in her turn, and
that would be the end of it. But she didn't. And when Hercule
became ill she came back to look after him, and it all began again.
'By this time Fabien was a widower, you understand. After
Hercule died, it was suggested that Isabelle should stay on for a
while —assist with the children. Antoinette was just three.' Her
face softened perceptibly. 'And so spirited. None of the nursemaids
I had engaged were of any use at all. Rohan was older, of course,
but he needed the kind of attention that Fabien could not give him,
although he was devoted to the boy.'
She threw back her head. 'It was a terrible mistake, of course, for
Isabelle to stay —to be close to Fabien again. I —realised that at
once. But it was too late. He had already asked her to marry him.
We protested, naturally, but he was adamant. He had married once
for duty, he told my husband. This time he would make his own
choice.'
'So they were actually engaged?' Sabine queried.
'Yes, but there were problems. Your mother had learned to be
independent in Paris—her own woman. She refused outright to
live here at the chateau. She wanted a house of her own, and she
persuaded Fabien to give her the money to buy Les Hiboux in her
own name. He could refuse her nothing, of course, and she bought
the house. I suppose he thought that when they were married they
would live there together.'
She was silent for a moment, then she said harshly, 'And then she
left—disappeared —without a word — without a trace, only two
weeks before the wedding.'
'So soon?'
The
Baronne
nodded. 'Fabien was not here when she went. He was
on a business trip to California. She had —laid her plans carefully,
it seems. He was inconsolable when he found what she'd done. It
— destroyed him. Nothing was ever the same again.'
'But she couldn't just go, like that. She wasn't a cruel person.'
The
Baronne
shrugged. 'Clearly, she never loved him as he did
her. I sensed that, but it is the same in many relationships. There is
one who loves, and the other who allows that devotion.' She
paused for a moment, biting her lip as if fighting for her
composure.
Sabine was silent too. It was not easy to come to terms with this
view of Isabelle as someone who received love without giving in
return. That wasn't the woman she remembered at all. But the
memory of Hugh Russell's blind, unthinking adoration of her
mother raised doubts in her mind.
I was a child after all, she thought. I saw only what I wanted to.
Isabelle's acquisition of Les Hiboux seemed inexplicable too. It
was an oddly cold-blooded act to coax a large sum of money from
someone she had no intention of marrying to buy a house she
didn't intend to live in.
And why had she secretly kept it all those years, when she didn't
want it? Why hadn't she arranged for the house to be sold so that
Fabien de Rochefort could at least be repaid to some extent?
Because she didn't want to be traced, that was why, she thought.
And negotiations over the sale of a house — signature of the
various contracts would have inevitably revealed her whereabouts.
But surely even having second thoughts about marriage wasn't
enough to prompt that kind of reaction, particularly as Isabelle
must have known she was expecting Fabien's child. Yet she'd been
prepared to chance it, alone and pregnant as she was.
Something must have happened, Sabine told herself. Some
traumatic, terrible thing. And I have to know what that was. I can't
just leave it and walk away. She said quietly, 'If you want me to
explain why my mother acted as she did,
madame,
I can't. I only
recently discovered her connection with this place, and that was by
accident. She—left some things.' She took the wine label from the
envelope, and handed it across. 'This was among them, and that's
why I came here.'
The
Baronne
had retreated behind her mask again, but her lips
tightened as she glanced at the label.
'It was one she designed for our chateau at Fabien's request. A new
label, he said, to mark a new beginning for the
vignoble.
He —
insisted that it be used, even afterwards. The legend of the tower
and the rose,' she added, half to herself.
'And there was also this.' Sabine unfastened the chain round her
neck, and put the medallion gently into the
Baronne's
hand. 'It
obviously belonged to your family, and I'd like to return it.'
The older woman was very still, staring down at it. 'Where did you
get this?'
'I found it. It must have been another gift.'
'Yes.'
Madame
drew a deep breath like a sigh. 'Another gift.' She
opened a small drawer in the pretty rosewood table beside her
chair, dropped the trinket into it, then closed it with a kind of
finality.
Then she looked at Sabine. 'Why have you come here, Miss
Russell? Fabien is dead —your mother also. Why do you want to
probe into old wounds like this? What do you hope to gain?'
Sabine lifted her chin. 'I want the truth,' she said. 'It's that simple.'
The
Baronne
shrugged. 'The truth? Your mother was a silly greedy
girl —a gold-digger who wanted to marry above her station, but
took fright at the last moment, without caring what hurt she
bestowed. That is the truth.'
'I'm sorry,' Sabine said. 'But I don't believe it.'
The
Baronne
leaned forward, her eyes fixed piercingly on Sabine's
face. 'Be advised by me, Miss Russell. Take a little tour in our
beautiful country—sit in the sunshine — drink some wine. But ask
no more questions. Enough harm has been done.'
She looked past Sabine. 'And here comes our tea,' she added, her
face softening into an approach to warmth. 'It is good of you to
save Ernestine the trouble of the stairs,
mon cher.
As you see, I am
entertaining a visitor.'
Sabine sat rigidly upright in her chair. She didn't have to look
round to know who'd entered the room. Every sense, every nerve-
ending in her body was tingling with sudden awareness.
'So I was informed,' Rohan Saint Yves said grimly, as he set down
the tray. 'Ernestine, however, failed to tell me the identity of the
guest. What are you doing here,
mademoiselle?'
'How fierce you are, my dear Rohan,' the
Baronne
intervened,
openly amused. 'I invited her, of course.'
'And I've clearly outstayed my welcome,' Sabine said tightly,
rising from her chair.
Madame
waved an imperious hand. 'No, no, sit down again, and
we will all have tea together. Such a pleasant English custom,' she
added as Sabine reluctantly subsided. 'Miss Russell and I have
been talking over the past.'
Rohan drew up a chair with gilded legs which looked altogether
too fragile for his tall frame.
'It's time that was forgotten in this house,' he said brusquely.
'We've dwelt too much on disaster —and former triumphs too.
Now we should be occupied totally with the future, or we shall risk
being left behind.'
'I gather you've been visiting Monsieur Jerome,'
Madame
remarked with a slight edge to her voice. 'I hope you found him
well?'
Rohan
shrugged.
'He's
getting
impatient,'
he
returned,
enigmatically.
The
Baronne's
gathering frown dispersed almost magically as she
espied a flat be-ribboned box on the tray. 'Macaroons from Saint
Emilion!' she exclaimed. 'My favourites, you dear boy.' She turned
to Sabine. 'These are the best macaroons in the world,
mademoiselle,
made from a centuries-old secret recipe. There is
nothing like them. You must try some.' She paused. 'You have
heard of Saint Emilion, of course.'
Sabine nodded. 'I passed it on the way here from Bordeaux. But I
only associated it with wine.'
'It is a charming village — almost a temple to wine.'
Madame
filled her cup. 'I hope you have time to visit it before you leave.
Cream or lemon, Miss Russell?'
'Lemon, please.' Sabine paused too. 'And I have all the time I need,
madame,'
she added with cool emphasis. Make what you want of
that, she thought, flicking a glance under her lashes at the silent
man lounging opposite her.
'Speaking of wine,' the
Baronne
said, as they sampled the
macaroons, which Sabine found to be crisp on the outside, moist
on the inside, with a delicate, delicious flavour. 'Have you tried our
own Chateau La Tour Monchauzet? Because you must: As the
granddaughter of a great
maitre de chai,
your opinion would be
valued.'
'I doubt that,' Sabine said drily. 'I'm no expert.'
'We are perhaps a little unusual in this region in that we produce
only red wine,' the
Baronne
went on. 'Many of our neighbours in
the Bergerac
vignoble
produce white wine, and often rose too.'
'Which gives them immediately a greater share of the market,'
Rohan put in drily. 'Our wine has been good, but it is not and never
will be one of the great classic vintages of, say, the Bordeaux
region. We should diversify too, and invest, if we wish to survive.
Or we may live to see the vines ploughed up and turned into
orchards as has been happening in other areas.'
'It is your uncle Gaston you have to convince,
mon cher,
not me,'
the
Baronne
said with a shrug.
'As I am already aware,' Rohan replied with a certain curtness. 'At
the moment, it seems impossible to convince him that any kind of
action at all is necessary.'
'Quite impossible this afternoon, at any rate,' said the
Baronne.
'Leon has taken him to Domme.'
Sabine cleared her throat. She had no wish to be drawn even
marginally into any of the other de Rochefort family contentions.
'It's really time I was going,
madame.
Thank you for the tea.'
'It has been my pleasure —Sabine.' The mouth smiled but the blue
eyes were oddly expressionless as the
Baronne
offered her hand.
'Rohan —make sure that Miss Russell samples some of our wine
before she leaves. It may be her only opportunity.'
Sabine groaned inwardly. 'Really, that isn't necessary—' she
began.
'Ah, but I insist for Hercule's sake.'
Madame
cut short the protest.
'Rohan, send Ernestine to me, if you please. I wish to rest now.'
He kissed her hand, his swift glance concerned. 'You shouldn't
disturb yourself like this. There was no need. Is your headache
better?'
'Completely gone, I assure you. And I wished to make amends a
little. We were not gracious yesterday—especially as this child
came so far to find us. I have spent a most interesting afternoon.'
And I'm fascinated to have met you — Tante Heloise. Walking to
the door, Sabine wondered detachedly what the reaction would be
if she voiced her unspoken thought aloud, but decided not to risk
it.
On one of the occasional tables, as she passed, she noticed a large
silver-framed photograph of two young men, presumably the
Baron
and his brother. Apart from their fair hair and strong
features, there was little to label them as twins, she thought,
wondering which was her father, and which her uncle.
It seemed crazy that she couldn't ask outright —