Read Devil and the Deep Sea Online
Authors: Sara Craven
else.'
He was a terrible colour, she thought uneasily.
He said, 'Tonight—I lost tonight, Samma.'
The fact that she'd been expecting such news made it no easier to
hear, she discovered.
She said steadily, 'How much?'
'A lot. More than a lot. Money I didn't have.' He paused, and added
like a death knell, 'Everything.'
Samma closed her eyes for a moment. 'The hotel?'
'That, too. It was the last game, Samma. I had the chance to win
back all that I'd lost and more. You never saw anything like it.
There were only the two of us left in, and he kept raising me. I had
a running flush, king high. Almost the best hand you can get.'
She said in a small, wintry voice, 'Almost, but not quite it seems.'
Clyde looked like a collapsed balloon. She was afraid he was going
to burst into tears. 'He had—a running flush in spades, beginning
with the ace.'
There was a long silence, then Samma roused herself from the
numbness which had descended on her.
She said, 'You and Hugo Baxter have been playing poker together
for a long time. Surely he'll be prepared to give you time—come to
some arrangement over the property . . ,'
'Baxter?' he said hoarsely. 'I'm not talking about Baxter. It was the
Frenchman, Delacroix.'
This time, the silence was electric. Samma's hand crept to her
mouth.
She felt icy cold. 'What—what are we going to do?'
'Baxter will help us,' he said rapidly. 'He promised me he would.
He—he doesn't want to see us go under. He's going to see
Delacroix with me tomorrow to—work something out. He's
being—very generous.'
There was something about the way he said it—the way he didn't
meet her gaze.
She said, 'Why is he being so—generous? What have you promised
in return. Me?'
He looked self-righteous. 'What do you take me for?'
'Shall we try pimp?' Samma said, and Clyde came out of his chair,
roaring like a bull, his fists clenched. He met her calm, cold stare
and subsided again.
'We—we mustn't quarrel,' he muttered. 'We have to stick by each
other. Baxter—likes you, you know that. And he's lonely. It
wouldn't hurt to be nice to him, that's all he wants. Why, you could
probably get him to marry you . . .'
'Which would make everything all right, of course,' she said bitterly.
'Forget it, Clyde, the idea makes me sick to my stomach.'
'Samma, don't be hasty. What choice do we have? Unless Baxter
supports me in some deal with Delacroix, we'll be bankrupt—not
even a roof over our heads.'
She rose to her feet. 'This is your mess, Clyde,' she said. 'Don't
expect me to get you out of it.'
Back in her own room, she leaned against the closed door and
began to tremble like a leaf. In spite of her defiant words, she had
never felt so frightened, so helpless in her life. She seemed
incapable of rational thought. She wanted to cry. She wanted to be
sick. She wanted to lie down on the floor, and drum with her heels,
and scream at the top of her voice.
All she seemed to see in front of her was Hugo Baxter's sweating
moon face, his gaze a trail of slime as it slid over her body.
No, she thought, pressing a convulsive fist against her lips. Oh God,
no!
Clyde said there was no other choice, but there had to be. Had to . .
.
'A year out of your life.'
The words seemed to reverberate
mockingly in her brain.
'A year out of your life.'
She wrapped her arms round her body, shivering. No, that was
unthinkable, too. She shouldn't even be allowing such an idea to
enter her mind.
And yet, what could she do—caught, as she was, between the devil
and the deep sea once again? But surely that didn't mean she had to
sell herself to the devil?
She lay on the bed, staring into the darkness, her tired mind turning
over the alternatives. She was blushing all over, as she realised
exactly what she was contemplating.
But wasn't she being rather melodramatic about the whole thing?
She didn't have to meekly submit to the fate being designed for her.
She was no stranger, after all, to keeping men at arm's length.
Surely, she could manage to hold him off at least until they reached
Allegra's
first port of call when, with luck, she could simply slip
ashore and vanish, she thought feverishly. Her savings were
meagre, but they would tide her over until she could find work, and
save for her flight home.
She couldn't let herself think too deeply about the inevitable
problems. The important thing was to escape from
Cristoforo—nothing mattered more than that—before she found
herself trapped into a situation with Hugo Baxter that she could not
evade. Because it was clear she couldn't count on Clyde to assist
her.
She began to plan. She would take the bare minimum from her
scanty wardrobe—just what she could pack into her bicycle basket.
And she'd leave a note for Clyde saying she was having a day on
the beach to think. With luck, she would be long gone before he
realised she was not coming back.
When it was daylight, she went over to the hotel, and carried out
her usual early morning duties, warning the staff not to expect
Clyde until later in the day. Then she collected a few belongings
together, wrapped them in a towel to back up her beach story, and
cycled down the quay.
Apart from the fishermen preparing to embark, there were few
people about. Samma bit her lip as she approached
Allegra's
gangplank. She wished she could have said goodbye to Mindy and
the rest of her friends, but at the same time she was glad they
weren't around to witness what she was doing.
'Can I help you,
ma'mselle?'
At the top of the gangway, her path
was blocked very definitely by a tall coloured man, with shoulders
like a American quarter-back.
She squared her shoulders, and said, with a coolness she was far
from feeling, 'Would you tell Monsieur Delacroix that Samantha
Briant would like to speak with him.'
The man gave her a narrow-eyed look. 'Mist' Roche ain't seeing
anyone right now,
ma'mselle.
You come back in an hour or two.'
In an hour or two, her courage might have deserted her, she
thought. She said with equal firmness, 'Please tell him I'm here, and
I have some money for him.'
It was partly true. The small roll of bills representing her savings
reposed in the pocket of her faded yellow sundress.
The man gave her another sceptical glance, and vanished. After a
few minutes, he returned.
'Come with me, please.'
The companionway and the passage to the saloon were only too
familiar, but she was led further along to another door, standing
slightly ajar. The man tapped lightly on the woodwork, said, 'Your
visitor, boss,' and disappeared back the way he'd come, leaving
Samma nervously on her own.
She pushed open the door, and walked in. It was a stateroom, the
first glance told her, and furnished more luxuriously than any
bedroom she'd ever been in on dry land.
And in the sole berth—as wide as any double bed—was Roche
Delacroix, propped up against pillows, a scatter of papers across
the sheet which barely covered the lower half of his body, a tray of
coffee and fruit on the fitment beside him.
Samma took a step backwards. She said nervously, 'I'm sorry—I
didn't realise. I'll wait outside until you're dressed.'
'Then you will wait for some considerable time.' He didn't even look
at her. His attention was fixed frowningly on the document he was
scanning. 'Sit down.'
Samma perched resentfully on the edge of a thickly padded
armchair. Its silky upholstery matched the other drapes in the room,
she noticed. She wasn't passionately interested in interior
decoration, but anything was better than having to look at him.
She thought working in the hotel would have inured her by now to
encountering people in various stages of nudity, but none of their
guests had ever exuded Roche Delacroix's brand of raw
masculinity. Or perhaps it was the contrast between his deeply
bronzed skin, and the white of the bed linen which made him look
so flagrantly—undressed.
The aroma of the coffee reached her beguilingly and, in spite of
herself, her small straight nose twitched, her stomach reminding her
that she'd eaten and drunk nothing yet that day.
Nor, it appeared, was she to be offered anything— not even a slice
of the mango he was eating with such open enjoyment.
'So—Mademoiselle Briant,' he said at last, a note of faint derision in
his voice. 'Why am I honoured by this early visit? Have you come
to pay your stepfather's poker debts? I am surprised he could raise
such a sum so quickly.'
'Not—not exactly.' A combination of thirst and nerves had turned
her mouth as dry as a desert.
His brows lifted. 'What then?'
She couldn't prevaricate, and she knew it. She said, 'I know you're
leaving Cristoforo today. I came to ask you to—take me with you.'
They were the hardest words she'd ever had to utter, and they were
greeted by complete silence.
He sat up, disposing his pillows more comfortably, and Samma
averted her gaze in a hurry. When she glanced back, he was
rearranging the sheet over his hips with cynical ostentation.
'Why should I?' he asked baldly.
'I need a passage out of here, and I need it today.' She swallowed. 'I
could—pay something. Or I could work.'
'I already have a perfectly adequate crew. And I don't want your
money.' His even glance didn't leave her face. 'So—what else can
you offer?'
She'd been praying he would be magnanimous—let her down
lightly, but she realised now it was a forlorn hope.
She gripped her hands together, hoping to disguise the fact they
were trembling.
'Last night—you asked me for a year out of my life.'
'I have not forgotten,' he said. 'And you reacted like an outraged
nun.' The bare, shoulders lifted in a negligent shrug. 'But that, of
course, is your prerogative.'
'But, it's also a woman's prerogative to—change her mind.'
When she dared look at him again, he was pouring himself some
more coffee, his face inscrutable.
At last he said, 'I assume there has been some crisis in your life
which has made you favour my offer. May I know what it is?'
She said in a small voice, 'I think you already know. My stepfather
lost everything he possesses to you last night.'
'He did, indeed,' he agreed. 'Have you come to offer yourself in lieu
of payment,
cherie?
If so, I am bound to tell you that you rate your
rather immature charms altogether too highly.'
This was worse than she could have imagined. She said, 'He's going
to pay you—everything. But he's going to borrow—from Hugo
Baxter.'
'A large loan,' he said meditatively. 'And the collateral, presumably,
is yourself?'
She nodded wordlessly.
'Now I understand,' he said softly. 'It becomes a choice, in fact—my
bed or that of Hugo Baxter. The lesser of two evils.'
Put like that, it sounded awful, but it also happened to be the truth,
she thought, gritting her teeth. 'Yes.'
'Naturally, I am flattered that your choice should have fallen on me,'
the smooth voice went on relentlessly. 'But perhaps you are not the
only one to have had—second thoughts. The prospect of being
doused in alcohol for the next twelve months is not an appealing
one.'
'I'm sorry about that.' Her hands were clenched so tightly, the
knuckles were turning white. She said raggedly, 'Please—please
take me out of here. I'm— desperate.' Her voice broke. 'I'll do
anything you ask—anything . . .'
'Vraiment?'
He replaced his cup on the tray, and deftly shuffled his
papers together. 'Then let us test your resolve,
mignonne.
Close the
door.'
In slight bewilderment, she obeyed. Then, as she turned back,
realisation dawned, and she stopped dead, staring at him in a kind
of fascinated horror.
He took one of the pillows from behind him, and tossed it down at
his side, moving slightly at the same time to make room for her. His
arm curved across the top of the pillow in invitation and command.
'Now?' She uttered the word as a croak.
His dark eyes glittered at her. 'What better way to begin the day?'