Authors: Sara Craven
Morgana was out of breath by the time she reached the wishing
stone. The wind had been blowing steadily against her all the way,
and by all the natural laws the stone should already have been
rocking precariously on its pediment. But it wasn't, of course. She
leaned against the upright, regaining her breath, and looking about
her. She could see the lights of Polzion House below her, and
away on the right those of the Home Farm. She couldn't see the
village, because it was down in a hollow in the edge of the sea,
where the surrounding cliffs provided a safe harbour for the
fishing and pleasure boats.
She thought suddenly, 'This could be the last time—the very last
time that I stand here.' She put her hand on the stone and it felt
warm to the touch, but perhaps that was because she herself
suddenly felt so cold.
It couldn't happen, she told herself passionately. This was her
place, her land, and she refused to give it up to an uncaring
stranger.
She said quietly, but aloud because that was the rule, 'I wish that
he may never come here. I wish that he may renounce his
inheritance, and that we may never meet.' Then she began to walk
round the stone, slowly and carefully, the wind whipping her cloak
around her legs, her head thrown back slightly, her eyes narrowed
against the gloom as she watched for a sign of movement.
She had never really believed in the Wishing Stone, had always
dismissed it as an amusing local superstition, but now she
desperately wanted the legend to be true, and to work for her.
But when her circuit was completed, the great stone remained
where it was implacable, immovable. Her wish hadn't been
granted, and she could have thrown herself on to the ground and
wept and drummed her heels like a tired child.
She stared at the stone, and sighed despairingly, 'Oh, why didn't
you work?'
And from somewhere behind her, but altogether too close for
comfort a man's voice said, 'Perhaps you used the wrong spell. Or
simply asked for the wrong thing.'
Morgana spun round, her hand going to her mouth to stifle an
involuntary scream, and found herself caught, transfixed like a
butterfly to a cork, in the merciless, all-encompassing beam of a
powerful torch.
HER heart hammering, Morgana stared back, lifting her chin
defiantly. She didn't recognise the voice. Low-pitched and
resonant, with a trace of an unfamiliar accent, it struck no chord in
her memory. And she couldn't see him either, although she had the
impression that he was tall.
She wondered why she hadn't heard him approach, but supposed it
had been partly because of the noise of the wind, and principally,
because she had been so totally absorbed in what she was doing.
All of which he had observed, judging by his opening remark. She
felt the blood rush into her face with embarrassment, and her
temper rising at the same time as she visualised him skulking up
through the bracken, deliberately not using his torch, giving her no
hint that she was no longer alone until it was too late, and she had
made a complete and utter fool of herself.
She demanded sharply, 'Do you enjoy spying?'
'Not particularly, although I must confess it can be most
instructive,' he said. 'And it's not every day one gets the paces. But
isn't it a little early for this sort of thing? I always understood the
witching hour was midnight.'
There was a trace of amusement in his voice which he wasn't at all
concerned to hide, and it stung.
She said stiffly, 'I am not a witch.'
'I think that's just as well.' The laughter was open now. 'I don't
think you'd be very good at it. That stone's supposed to rock, isn't
it?'
'How did you know that?'
'From a book I bought in the village. I hope you didn't think it was
a closely guarded secret.'
'No, no, of course not.' The fright he had given her, and her own
anger, had knocked her slightly off balance, and she hated the way
he kept her trapped in the damned beam of light, so that he could
see her, but she could know nothing about him, except that
impression of height.
Her voice sharpened. 'Did your book also tell you that this is
private land?'
It was only a technicality, and no one at Polzion House had ever
dreamed of debarring any of the interested tourists from visiting
the stone, but there was something about this man that flicked her
on the raw, that made her want to put him down—to make him
feel small in his turn. It was abominable the way he had stood
there in the darkness and watched her, and listened, and then added
insult to injury by laughing at her.
He said slowly, 'Is it now? And do you think the owner would
mind?'
'We don't like trespassers round here—intruders.'
'I was always told the Cornish were very hospitable. And as for
intruding, actually I was here before you. I was standing back so I
could look at the stone from a distance when you appeared out of
nowhere and began your incantations.'
'I had every reason to believe I would be alone,' she said coldly.
'And do you think you could switch off that spotlight of yours—
always supposing you have seen all that you want,' she added with
icy sarcasm.
The torch remained on. He said, 'Tell me something, are you
always so prickly? Even in that weird cloak with your hair all over
your face, you're an attractive girl. You must have had men look at
you before this.'
'Oh, yes,' she said. 'But I've always been able to look at them too.
The present situation is a little too one-sided for my taste.'
He said, 'But easily remedied.' The torch beam swung up and away
from her and she saw him properly for the first time. He was tall,
his, face thin, with prominent cheekbones, a high-bridged nose and
firm mouth and chin. And his hair was fair, lighter altogether than
Rob's, and longer too, reaching almost to the collar of the black
leather coat he was wearing.
Morgana thought, 'A fair man—but it can't be ... it couldn't be! I
don't believe it.'
As if he could read her thoughts, he began to smile, deep laugh
lines appearing beside his mouth.
'You look as if you've seen a ghost.'
She wanted to ask, 'Who are you?' but the words wouldn't come.
Then the torch snapped off, and there was only the darkness and
the howl of the wind, and the tall dimly seen figure who said
quietly, 'And perhaps you have, at that.'
He was coming towards her, and she recoiled involuntarily, her
hands flying up in front of her to keep him away. Then she
stumbled against a clump of grass and went flying.
'Dear God!' The torch flicked on again, as she lay there, winded
and humiliated, and he bent towards her pulling her up, his voice
abrupt as he asked, 'Have you hurt yourself? Are you all right?'
'I'm fine.' She'd twisted her ankle slightly and it hurt enough to
make her wince when she put her weight on it, but she wasn't
going admit it. She didn't want him to touch her again. He'd put his
hands under her arms and lifted her as if she was a child, and she'd
hated it.
He said harshly, 'When I said you'd seen a ghost, I wasn't trying to
frighten you. There was no need for you to leap away like that.
What I meant was that I thought I possibly reminded you of
someone.'
Morgana could have said quite truthfully, 'You remind me of a
number of people. You remind me of at least half the portraits
hanging in the long gallery at home, except that they're all dark,
and you're fair.' But she remained silent because there was still an
outside chance it might all be a coincidence, and she could be
wrong. Under her breath, she prayed that she was wrong.
He said sharply, 'Well?'
She shrugged. 'I don't spend my life looking for chance
resemblances to people I know in local tourists. We have too many
of them.'
'I wasn't talking about chance, and I think you know it.' His hand
gripped her arm, bruising her flesh, and she said with ice in her
voice, 'Would you let go of me, please?'
'When you've answered a few simple questions. For starters, what's
your name?'
'If this is a new version of the pick-up, then I'm not impressed,' she
shot at him.
'I'm tempted to make a very different impression on you.' His voice
slowed to a drawl, but now he didn't sound amused at all. The
torchlight was on her face again, and his hand moved from her arm
to grip her chin. She wanted to pull away, but she wasn't sure she
could evade his grasp, and it would be another humiliation to
struggle and lose. So she remained very still, making her eyes
blank, enduring his scrutiny.
At last he said slowly, 'I'm Lyall Pentreath. And unless I miss my
guess, you're my cousin Morgana.'
'Brilliantly deduced,' she said huskily. 'And what are we supposed
to do now—shake hands?'
'I think it's a little late for that.' His voice was dry.
'We expected you this morning.'
'I was held, up.' He let her go and stepped back, and her breath
escaped with a little gasp of relief.
'More business, I suppose.' She made no attempt to hide the
bitterness in her voice.
'Of a sort.'
'I suppose it didn't occur that my mother and I would be waiting
for you—would be worried?'
'Frankly it didn't.' A match flared as he lit a cheroot, his hands
sheltering the flame against the snatching wind, and she saw his
mouth twist cynically. 'I hardly imagined I would be the most
welcome visitor the Polzion House Hotel had ever had.'
She'd heard the edge in his voice when he mentioned the word
hotel, and she made her own tone blank and a little wondering.
'You resent the fact that the family home is now a commercial
enterprise? I'd have thought as a business man yourself, you'd have
been delighted.'
'But then,' he said coolly, 'I would hardly describe that particular
venture as a commercial enterprise.'
Morgana was silent for a moment, her brain working madly. Far
from lacking interest in his inheritance, it now seemed he was only
too well informed. But where had he gleaned his information? she
wondered. Was that where he'd been since this morning? Going
round Polzion, asking questions? She flinched inwardly as she
thought of some of the answers he might have been given. On the
other hand, it was far more likely that he'd found out all he wanted
to know through correspondence between his solicitors and Mr
Trevick, who would have been bound to be frank.
She decided to proceed cautiously. 'I admit we're not the Hilton,
but we make out.'
'Do you really? You seem to be alone in that opinion. From what
I've learned, the hotel seems to owe quite a lot of money to a
number of people.'
She was mortified, but she made herself reply quietly. 'Yes—we
do, unfortunately. But it's been a bad year.'
'It must have been a succession of bad years if all I've been told is
true.'
'If you want to put it that way,' Morgana agreed, numbly hating
him.
'I don't, believe me.' His tone was dry. 'After all—a hotel in
surroundings like these. It's hard to see how it could fail.'
'In the course of your snooping, you may also have noticed that
Polzion isn't exactly Newquay,' she said sharply. 'I'm sorry if we
haven't come up to your expectations, but no doubt you'll be able
to figure out the reasons why at your leisure.'
'Unfortunately, I don't have that much leisure to waste.' He
sounded abrupt again. 'I'm going to walk down to the house now,
and meet your mother. Are you going to come with me, or have
you got more spells to cast?'
'No,' she snapped. 'I'll come down with you.' She felt chilled to the
bone, and cold and sick inside.
'Good. I didn't relish the prospect of being turned into a frog as
soon as I turned my back.'
'I think in the circumstances,' she said tightly, 'a rat would be more
appropriate.'
'If we're playing at animal similes, I can think of one or two that
would fit you quite well too,', he returned equably, and Morgana
flushed in the darkness. After a moment's pause he turned away