Read Devil and the Deep Sea Online
Authors: Sara Craven
woman's advance. My face, she thought, I must protect my face!
And she was aware, as if in a dream, of hands gripping her waist,
lifting her out of harm's way.
Roche said grimly. 'Put the scissors down, Liliane.'
She stopped, staring at him, her face relaxing into warmth and
charm.
She said with a little sigh, 'Roche—
mon amour.
You have come to
me at last, as I knew you would. I've wanted you for so
long—offered myself so many times.' Her voice dropped
confidentially. 'But I always knew that one day you would realise
that we were meant for each other—why I could not allow any
other woman to have you.'
She laughed suddenly, stridently. 'That drunken fool who called
herself your wife was easy. I used to visit her—bring her little
gifts—in bottles—tell her stories about the past. How alarmed she
used to get— and the more disturbed she was, the more she drank.'
She tutted.
'Quel dommage!'
Roche said quietly, 'And the day she died -'
'I had visited her—talked with her.' She giggled.
'Pauvre
Marie-Christine—she really believed the curse was about to fall on
her. I made sure she had the car keys, then later I came back. I even
drove with her for part of the way, until we reached a suitable
place, then I let her take the wheel, and I—watched.'
She looked past him to Samma. 'And this child you have brought to
Belmanoir.' She touched the mutilated doll with her foot. 'Will you
want her, I wonder, when I have finished with her?'
He said steadily. 'I want her, and I want my daughter, Liliane. I will
not allow you to hurt either of them.'
Her smile vanished. Her voice high-pitched, she said, 'Daughter?
You have no daughter. Marie-Christine told me so—told me all
kinds of things. How she'd made a fool of you—made you think
you were marrying an innocent virgin, when all the time she was
carrying another man's child.' She sent Solange a venomous look.
'Why do you keep her with you? You know you don't love
her—that you can hardly bear to look at her.'
Roche said quietly, 'Marie-Christine lied to you, Liliane. She was
my wife, and Solange is my child.' He put out his hand. 'Come to
me,
petite.'
'No—send her away. There can only be the two of us.' Madame
Duvalle's scissors fell from her hand, as she dropped to her knees in
front of him. She flung her arms round his legs, burying her face
against his thighs. 'Send them all away. Love me—only me!'
The harsh, grating sound of her sobbing filled the room. In a way, it
was worse than any of the threats and revelations which had gone
before, Samma thought, nausea rising in her throat. As Solange ran
to her, she seized the child and held her tight, aware that Elvire and
Hippolyte were in the doorway.
She whispered, 'Get a doctor,' and saw Hippolyte fade away.
Elvire walked forwards and picked up the scissors, sliding them
into her pocket. She said gently and calmly, 'Get up,
madame.
You
need to rest.'
Liliane Duvalle looked up at her, her face blotched with weeping.
'But I have a rendezvous,' she said with total reason. 'A rendezvous
with
Le Diable.
I have been waiting for him all my life, and now he
is here with me.'
'He is waiting in your room,' Elvire said. 'Come with me now, and
you will find him.'
Slowly, Liliane Duvalle got to her feet, and Elvire led her away.
Roche's face was grey as he watched them go.
'Dieu!'
he said
unsteadily. 'When I think what could have happened . . .' He turned
on Samma. 'I searched the casino for you,
madame,'
he told her
grimly. 'It was fortunate I was able to reach you in time to save you
from the consequences of your own folly, once I discovered where
you had gone.'
'Tante Liliane came into my room, Papa,' Solange said in a small
voice. 'She made me go with her. I did not want to, but she told me
Le Diable
would take me away if I stayed.'
'Le Diable
is a story,
petite,'
Roche said gently. 'And stories cannot
hurt you any more.'
'But he seemed real,' Solange said. 'He wanted me to do things to
send Samma away—like pretending to drown so that you would be
angry, and blame Samma. But I did not spoil the dress.'
Roche's brows snapped together. 'What is this?'
Samma bit her lip. 'The white dress you gave me. I found it cut to
pieces in my room.'
Roche drew a deep breath. 'And did not tell me?'
'Samma thought I had done it, Papa. She did not want you to be
cross with me. She did not tell you about the other things, either.'
Solange's face was piteous suddenly. 'Papa, why did Tante Liliane
say I was not your daughter?'
Roche's face softened. 'She made a mistake,
cherie.
You are my
own, all my own.' He held out his arms, and she ran to him, her face
transfigured as he swung her up, cradling her against his chest.
Samma felt swift tears prick at her eyes. 'Now you must go home to
bed.'
'I will go with Samma,' Solange said graciously. 'Will you come too,
Papa?'
He shook his head, as he set the child on her feet. 'I must wait here
for the doctor.'
'Is Tante Liliane sick?' Solange asked doubtfully.
Roche touched her cheek. 'Yes,
cherie.
More sick than any of us
realised, but she will be better soon. Go now.'
Solange trotted obediently out of the room, but Samma lingered, her
eyes searching her husband's averted face.
She said unhappily, 'Roche—I owe you an apology. I've jumped to
many conclusions—made so many mistakes . . .'
'So I learn from Elvire.' His voice was a stranger's. 'I too am sorry,
madame,
for the grave mistake I made in bringing you here.' He
shrugged. 'But fortunately, it can be corrected.'
She stared at him. 'I don't understand. I'm trying to put things right
between us . . .'
His eyes swept over her in icy appraisal. 'And I am telling you,
madame,
that you are free to go—to leave Grand Cay. And the
sooner the better,' he added, and walked out of the room.
SAMMA lay on the pool lounger, gazing sightlessly at the endless
blue of the sky. She felt half-dead, but was it any wonder? she
thought restlessly. Few of them had got much sleep the previous
night.
There had been a hasty conference in the
salon
at Belmanoir,
attended by the doctor, a startled Jean-Paul Giraud, and a quietly
spoken, middle-aged man, who turned out to be Grand Cay's top
policeman.
Liliane Duvalle had been removed by ambulance to a clinic in St
Laurent, and placed under sedation. Efforts would be made to find
her remaining relatives in France, and arrange repatriation as soon
as she was well enough to travel. No charges of any kind would be
preferred against her.
'At the moment she is inhabiting a fantasy world,' Dr Barras told
them gravely. 'Her admission of involvement in the death of the late
Marie-Christine Delacroix may be true, or simply part of that
fantasy. At the moment, it is impossible to say.' He hesitated. 'And
to supply an alcoholic woman with vodka is only a moral crime.'
'I blame myself,' Roche declared bitterly, dull colour staining his
face. 'I should have realised that she was becoming obsessed with
Le Diable—
with me —and taken some avoiding action. But to me,
she was nothing more than a neighbour who was sometimes a
nuisance.' His flush deepened. 'Whose—attentions could sometimes
be embarrassing.'
'Mon pauvre.'
Elvire patted him on the shoulder. 'She did throw
herself at you, then?'
His mouth tightened. 'Yes, even before Marie-Christine's return.'
Samma found her voice. 'How did she get into the house, and into
my room in particular, without being seen?'
Roche did not answer or even look at her, and it was left to Elvire
to explain, 'There is an old fire escape at the corner of the balcony.
It is half hidden by the vine, and one tends to forget it is there. It
seems she used that, especially when she used to visit Solange at
night to give her
Le Diable's
latest instructions.'
Samma shuddered. 'That would explain the nightmares. And the
fact that sometimes I felt I was being watched.'
The quiet man said, 'You are fortunate, Madame Delacroix, that she
did nothing but look until this evening, and that your husband
arrived in time to protect you.'
I almost wish he hadn't, Samma thought. If Liliane had plunged
those scissors into me, I couldn't hurt more than I do now.
Elvire got to her feet. 'Poor creature,' she said soberly. 'In spite of
what she has done, I pity her.' She paused. 'Now, shall we all have
some coffee?'
As she'd left the room to fetch it, Samma saw Jean-Paul slip out
after her. Perhaps some good will come out of all this after all, she
thought.
She had gone to her room shortly afterwards, and lain awake,
straining her ears for any sound of Roche coming to bed. But yet
again, the adjoining room had not been used.
Samma sighed. Well, at least she knew that the nights when he'd
been absent had not been spent with Elvire, she thought, her mouth
twisting. But she was no wiser about where he'd actually been, and
perhaps she never would be.
She bit her lip. She felt like someone under sentence of death, with
no idea when the axe might fall. Roche had already left for the day
when she'd arrived downstairs.
But, on the positive side, Solange seemed to have had no trouble in
recovering her spirits this morning, and was inclined to make a
heroine of herself—a leaning which Samma and Elvire, in concert,
had dealt with firmly and succinctly. Hippolyte had then driven her
to St Laurent to spend the day with a friend.
'Will you mind being alone?' Solange had asked Samma almost
anxiously before she left. 'I will come back this afternoon.' There
was a long pause. 'Perhaps, this time, I may learn to swim.'
Samma smiled, smoothing the child's hair back from her face.
'There's no rush,' she said gently.
How could there be, she thought bitterly, when she might not even
be there when Solange got back?
She heard a footfall on the path, and sat up hastily, hoping against
hope . . . Instead, she saw Jean-Paul Giraud walking towards her,
his usual smile markedly absent.
Her heart sank. 'Good—good afternoon,' she managed.
'Bonjour, madame.
I hope you have recovered from your ordeal.'
His tone was as formal as his face.
'I-I think so.'
'Excellent,' he said too heartily, and there was a silence. Eventually
he said awkwardly, 'Madame Delacroix—Samantha—you must
know why I am here. Roche has instructed me to arrange your
departure from Grand Cay. I have been able to obtain you a flight to
the United Kingdom tomorrow.' He delved in his briefcase, and
brought out a bulging envelope. 'I have your ticket here, also your
passport, and some money in cash to deal with—immediate needs,
although Roche has asked me to assure you that your original
agreement with him still stands.' He paused. 'He told me you would
understand what he meant.'
'Yes,' she said, dry-mouthed. 'Couldn't he have given me these
things himself?'
Jean-Paul's awkwardness increased. 'He—he feels it is better if you
do not meet again. He intends to occupy his suite at the casino in
the meantime.' There was another silence, then he burst out,
'
Madame—
Samantha—none of this makes any sense. Last night
you were two people passionately in love. Today—it is over.'
Samma bent her head. She said quietly, 'Roche thought he was
buying me, but I wasn't for sale. There was—no love in it. Roche
has always been involved with someone else.'
'Roche has?' Jean Paul stared at her, open-mouthed. 'But that is
impossible.' He gave a very Gallic shrug. 'Oh—there have
been—encounters over the years. He is a man, after all—but an
affaire
of the kind you mention—by no means.'
Samma bit her lip. 'He told me himself he had a mistress.'
Jean-Paul began to laugh. 'He said that—
oh, la la!
It is a joke of
ours—about the casino and his other businesses. I reproached him
once years ago because there was no woman in his life, and he said,
"My work is my mistress,
mon vieux,
and a jealous one. I have no