Read Devil and the Deep Sea Online
Authors: Sara Craven
'Nothing about you,
monsieur,
would surprise me. But it isn't very
wise to flaunt quite so openly the fact that you're loaded. Aren't you
afraid of being ripped off?'
He said coolly, 'No.' And she had to believe him. If this man chose
to keep a gold ingot as a pet, she couldn't see anyone trying to take
it away from him.
He went on, 'But when I see something I want, I'm prepared to pay
the full price for it.' Across the table his eyes met hers, then with
cool deliberation he counted off some more money and pushed the
bills across to her.
It was only to be expected, working where she was, dressed as she
was, and she knew it, but she was burning all over, rage and
humiliation rendering her speechless.
When she could speak, she said thickly, 'I am—not for sale.'
'And I am not in the market.' He leaned forward. 'Didn't you hear
me say,
cherie,
that I'm here to play poker? No, this is payment for
the sketch you did of me. I presume it is enough. Your artist friend
on the quay told me your usual charges, and where I would find
you.'
More than ever, she wished she'd ripped that particular sketch to
pieces. !I don't want your money.'
'Then you're no businesswoman.' His voice gentled slightly. 'Forget
how much you loathe me, and take the money. You cannot afford
such gestures, and you know it.'
Samma bit her lip savagely, wondering exactly how much Mindy
had told him.
'I make a perfectly good living,' she said defiantly. She gestured
around her. 'As you see, business is booming.'
'I see a great many things,' he said slowly. 'And I hear even more.
So this is your life, Mademoiselle Samantha Briant, and you are
content with it? To sketch in the sunlight by day, and at night lure
the unwary to their doom in a net of smiles and blonde hair?'
No, she thought. It's not like that at all.
Aloud, she said, 'If that's how you want to put it—yes.'
'Did you never have any other ambitions?'
She was startled into candour. 'I wanted originally to teach—art, I
suppose. But I haven't any qualifications.'
'You could acquire some.'
Samma's lips parted impulsively, then closed again. She'd been, she
thought with concern, on the very brink of confessing her financial
plight to this man.
She shrugged. 'Why should I—when I'm having such a wonderful
time?' She pushed back her chair, and got to her feet. 'And you've
acquired an instant portrait—not exclusive rights to my company.
I'm neglecting the other customers.'
As she made to move away, his hand captured her wrist, not hurting
her, but at the same time making it impossible for her to free
herself. The dark eyes were unsmiling as they studied her. 'And
what would a man have to pay for such rights, my little siren?'
She tried to free herself, and failed. 'More than you could afford,'
she said bitingly, and he laughed.
'You estimate yourself highly,
mignonne.
I am not speaking of a
lifetime's devotion, you understand, but perhaps a year out of your
life. What price would you place on that?'
Something inside Samma snapped. Her free hand closed round the
stem of her glass, and threw the remains of her cocktail straight at
his darkly mocking face.
She could hear the sudden stillness all around them as her deed was
registered at the adjoining tables, then the subdued, amused hum of
interest which followed. And, out of the corner of her eye, she saw
Clyde bearing down on her, bursting with righteous indignation.
'Have you taken leave of your senses?' he stormed at her, before
turning deferentially to the Frenchman who was removing the worst
of the moisture with an immaculate linen handkerchief.
'I can't apologise enough,' he went on. 'Naturally, we'll be happy to
arrange any cleaning of your clothes which is necessary, Mr—er . .
.?' He paused.
'Delacroix,' the Frenchman said. 'Roche Delacroix.'
Clyde's mouth dropped open. 'From Grand Cay?' he asked weakly,
and at the affirmative nod he gave Samma an accusing glance.
'You'd better get out of here, my girl. You've done enough damage
for one evening.'
'Don't be too hard on your
belle fille, monsieur,'
Roche Delacroix
said. 'She has been—provoked, I confess.'
'I don't need you to fight my battles for me,' Samma flared hardily.
'And nothing would prevail on me to stay in this place another
moment.'
Her legs were shaking under her, but she managed to walk to the
door, ignoring the murmured comments and speculative looks
following her, then she dashed for the comparative refuge of the
dressing-room.
Margot, one of the other hostesses, was in there, sharing a cigarette
with Cicero the barman. They looked up in surprise as Samma
came bursting in.
'What's the matter, honey?' Cicero asked teasingly. 'Devil chasing
your tail?'
Samma sank down on the nearest chair. She said, 'I've done an
awful thing. I—I threw a drink over a customer.'
'That old Baxter man?' Margot laughed. 'I wish I'd seen it.'
Samma gulped. 'No, it was a stranger—or nearly. I—I had a run in
with him this morning, as a matter of fact.'
'That's not like you.' Margot gave her a sympathetic look. 'What do
they call this man?'
Samma frowned. 'He said his name was Roche Delacroix and that
he came from Grand Cay.'
There was an odd silence, and she looked up to see them both
staring at her. 'Why—what is it?'
'I said the devil was chasing you,' Cicero muttered. 'It's one of those
Devil Delacroixes from Lucifer's own island.'
'You—know him?' Samma asked rather dazedly.
'Not in person, honey, but everyone round here knows the
Delacroix name. Why, his ancestor was the greatest pirate who ever
sailed these waters. Every time he left Grand Cay, a fleet of
merchant ships went to the bottom, and he didn't care whether they
were English or Spanish, or even French like himself. He'd had to
leave France because he'd quarrelled with the King, which was a
mighty bad thing to do in those days, and he figured the whole
world was his enemy. So they called him
Le Diable,
yessir.' Cicero
laughed softly. 'And they called his hideout Lucifer's Cay.'
'Did they, indeed?' Samma said grimly. 'Well, I hope they caught
him and hanged him from his own yardarm.'
'Not on your life,' said Cicero. 'He turned respectable, got a free
pardon, and took up sugar planting. But they say every now and
then the breeding throws up another Devil—a chip off the old
block, like that old pirate.'
He paused. 'This Mr Roche Delacroix now, why, they reckon he's
made more money than old Devil Delacroix himself. He owns the
casino, right there on Grand Cay, and he has a boat-chartering
business as well. He's one rich guy, all right.'
'And he's here in this club right now?' Margot asked huskily, her full
lips curving in a smile. 'This I have to see. Maybe when he's dried
off, he'd like some company.'
'Perhaps—but I think he's more interested in playing poker.' Samma
forced a smile. 'Maybe I should have found someone else to pour a
drink over.'
'You sure should,' Cicero agreed sombrely. 'Why, honey, you don't
ever want to cross anyone from Lucifer's Cay—specially someone
by the name of Delacroix. That was one bad mistake.'
Margot rose, pretty and sinuous as a cat. 'Then I'll have to try and
make up for it,' she said, her lips curving in an anticipatory smile.
'Wish me luck, now.'
She drifted out, and Cicero followed a moment or two later, leaving
Samma alone.
She tore off Nina's dress and bundled it back on a hanger. Never,
ever again would she work at the Black Grotto in any capacity,
although Clyde was unlikely even to ask her again, after tonight's
performance, she reminded herself wryly.
She dragged on her T-shirt and jeans, and walked back through the
grounds towards the small bungalow she shared with Clyde.
She felt restless—on edge, and it was all the fault of that foul man.
In just a few hours, he'd turned the quiet backwater of her life into
some kind of raging torrent, she thought resentfully.
And nothing Cicero had told her had done anything to put her mind
at ease. It was no wonder Roche Delacroix had been annoyed at her
sketch, she thought restively. He probably considered she knew
who he was, and was taking a petty swipe at his family history.
Well, let him think what he wanted. He would be leaving soon and,
anyway, his opinions were of no concern to her. Indeed, she didn't
know why she was wasting a second thought on the creature.
But, at this rate, she wasn't going to sleep tonight. Some hard
physical exercise was what she needed to calm her down, and tire
her out. She turned down the path which led to the hotel's small
swimming pool. She rarely got the chance to use the pool during the
day, but that wasn't too much of a hardship when she could come
down here at night, and have it all to herself. And there was the
added bonus that she didn't have to bother with a costume.
She collected a towel from one of the changing cabins, stripped and
plunged into the water. But, as she struck out with her swift,
practised crawl, she couldn't seem to capture her usual sense of
wellbeing.
Oh, it wasn't fair, she thought with a kind of desperate impatience.
Of all the men who'd passed through Cristoforo, there had never
been one who'd come even close to touching her emotions. Yet, in
the space of a few minutes, Roche Delacroix, of all people, had
given her a swift, disturbing insight into what it might mean to be a
woman—even though he'd treated her for most of the time like a
child, she thought stormily, as she turned for another length.
And then—paradoxically—had come that cynical —that
abominable offer.
'A year out of your life.'
His words seemed to beat a tattoo in her
brain. How dared he? she raged inwardly. Oh, how dared he? And
it was no comfort to tell herself that he'd simply been amusing
himself at her expense. After all, a man like that could have no real
interest in an inexperienced nineteen-year-old. Margot, or even the
absent Nina, would be far more his type.
But soon
Allegra
would be gone, she tried to console herself, and
she would never have to see Roche Delacroix or think about him
again.
She hauled herself out of the water, and began to blot the moisture
from her arms and body, then paused suddenly, a strange prickle of
awareness alerting her nerve-endings as if—as if someone was
watching her.
She stopped towelling her hair, and glanced over her shoulder,
searching for a betraying movement in the shadows, listening for
some sound. But there was nothing.
She was being over-imaginative, she told herself, but she still felt
disturbed, and she resolved to give nude swimming a miss for a
while. If one of the waiters from the club, say, was taking a
short-cut through the garden, there was no need to give him a field
day.
She pulled her clothes on to her still-damp body, and set off back
towards the bungalow, her head high, looking neither to right or
left.
Probably there was no one there at all. But everything was off-key
tonight because of Roche Delacroix, and she would be eternally
grateful when he turned his back on Cristoforo for ever.
Because, to her shame, she knew she would always be left
wondering just what that—that year out of her life might have been
like—with him.
SAMMA was woken from a light, unsatisfactory sleep by a crash,
and a muffled curse. She sat up, glancing at the illuminated dial of
the clock beside her bed, whistling faintly when she saw the time.
The poker game had gone on for longer than usual.
She lay for a few moments, listening to the sounds of movement
from the kitchen, then reached resignedly for her robe.
Clyde was sitting at the table, staring into space, a bottle and glass
in front of him. The eyes he turned on her were glazed and
bloodshot.
He muttered, 'Oh, there you are,' as if he'd been waiting for her to
join him.
She said, 'I'll make some black coffee.'
'No, sit down. I've got to talk to you.'
She said, 'If it's about what happened earlier—I'm sorry . . .'
'Oh, that.' He made a vague, dismissive gesture. 'No, it's something