Read Devil and the Deep Sea Online
Authors: Sara Craven
Marie-Christine had done before her.
She was roused from her reverie by the sound of a car approaching
up the drive. She went over to the window and stepped out on to
the balcony, peering cautiously over the balustrade.
The car, an elderly saloon, had stopped in front of the house, and a
woman with chestnut hair climbed out of the driver's seat, and went
round to the passenger side. After what could only be a low-voiced
argument, the car door opened, and a child emerged, slowly and
sullenly.
She was small for her age, Samma thought, and not a particularly
attractive little girl, with skinny arms and legs, and dark hair
scraped back into two tight and unbecoming braids. And her
pugnacious scowl didn't help, either.
Samma watched the pair of them disappear into the house, and
drew back with a sigh. It was clear she could expect no welcome
from Solange. In fact, she was probably going to have her work cut
out, but at least that would prevent her thinking about what Roche
and his mistress were doing, each time her back was turned.
She flexed her shoulders wearily. Not that it was any of her
business, anyway. To his credit, Roche had made no pretence about
that. He had been as frank as he thought necessary about the
situation.
As she walked slowly back into the bedroom, there was an
impatient rap on the door, and Roche strode in.
'Why do you stay up here?' he demanded. 'Solange has returned,
and the household is waiting to welcome you. Elvire has even
provided a wedding cake.'
'Then let her eat it herself.' Samma found she was hovering on the
edge of a dangerous combination of tears and temper.
His mouth tightened. 'What is that supposed to mean?' he asked
with dangerous softness.
Samma studied the potential confrontation, and decided to back
down.
'Not a thing,' she said. 'I'm rather tired, and all this pretence is a
strain.'
'I have seen very little pretence as yet,' he said coldly. 'At the
moment, all I recognise is the insolent brat I met on the quay at
Cristoforo.'
'Then maybe you should remember I'm an artist, not an actress,' she
flung back at him defiantly.
'In fact, you are my wife,' he said flatly. 'And you will not boycott
our wedding reception, whatever your personal inclination.' He held
out a hand to her. 'Now, come down and play your part as you
agreed, and let there be no more senseless argument.'
'Very well,' Samma said angrily. 'But I don't guarantee the
performance.'
He was angry, too, as he said grimly, 'Then perhaps there should be
a rehearsal,' and reached for her.
This time, there was no gentleness in him at all. His mouth
possessed hers harshly, and without grace. Her body was crushed
mercilessly against his. She couldn't breathe. She could barely
think.
Some instinct warned that to struggle, to fight, would only make
things infinitely worse, so she stayed mute and passive in the
punishing circle of his arms until the violent ruthless kiss came to an
end at last.
She was very pale, her mouth trembling and swollen from his
passion, as she looked up into his dark, relentless face.
'You—you really are a pirate, aren't you?' she managed. 'I bet the
original Devil Delacroix couldn't teach you a thing.'
'Then learn not to annoy me,' he returned brusquely. 'I give you five
minutes in which to join me in the
salon.'
He paused. 'And you
would be wise,
mignonne,
not to make me fetch you a second time.
I am sure that everyone has already drawn their own—romantic
conclusions about the reason for our delayed appearance.' He
flicked a deliberate glance towards the bed. 'Next time, I might
justify their suspicions.'
The door slammed behind him. Samma sank down on the
dressing-stool, her legs giving way under her. She stared at herself
in the mirror with wide, bruised eyes.
She thought, He couldn't—he wouldn't . . . Not when he promised
...
And paused, shivering. For what did a promise mean to a man who
demonstrated quite clearly that he made his own rules?
And was, she realised, as she laid a finger on the tender, blurred
contour of her mouth, prepared to enforce them.
SHE had expected to find the
salon
full of people but, in fact,
Roche was alone there with Solange and her companion.
Samma hesitated in the doorway, aware of the overt hostility in the
child's face as her presence was registered.
'Come in,
cherie.'
Roche came swiftly to her side, drawing her
forwards into the room. 'Solange,
ma petite,
here is someone I wish
you to meet.'
'Papa.' The child's voice was clear, and simmering with resentment.
'Have you truly married this person?'
Samma saw his face darken, and intervened hastily. 'My name is
Samantha, but usually my friends call me Samma.'
'I do not wish to be your friend,' Solange flared. 'I do not want you
here. But you will not stay. The Delacroix curse will send you
away, like all those other silly women.'
'Solange!' Roche's voice was like the crack of a whip. 'You will stop
this nonsense at once, do you hear? And you will apologise ...'
'I will not. It is not nonsense. She will leave. They all do.' She
glared at Samma. 'Go,
madame,
while you are still safe.'
Coming from an angry little girl in broad daylight, it should have
been ridiculous, yet Samma felt herself shiver involuntarily.
'You are insolent and unkind,
ma fille,'
Roche said icily. 'If you are
not prepared to welcome Samantha, then you may go to your
room—and this time remain there.'
Solange looked as if she was on the verge of protest, then thought
better of it, and left the
salon,
shutting the door behind her with
more than a suspicion of a slam.
Samma realised she had been holding her breath, and released it
slowly.
'You must excuse her, Roche.' The other woman, who had been a
silent spectator until then, rose from her chair, and came forward. 'It
is natural she should find her first meeting with her
belle-mere
a
traumatic one.' She smiled pleasantly at Samma. 'Please make
allowances for
la petite, madame.'
'I've been a stepdaughter myself,' Samma said neutrally. 'I know
what the problems are.'
'And I have been neglecting my manners,' Roche said, frowning.
'Samantha, may I present Liliane Duvalle, who is our closest
neighbour?'
They shook hands. It occurred to Samma that her new acquaintance
was slightly older than she'd originally thought, but she was
startlingly attractive with her magnolia skin and slanting brown
eyes, coupled with an entirely French air of confidence and chic.
'
La petite
is not the only one to have had a shock,' Madame Duvalle
was saying with a humorous grimace. 'You kept your marriage
plans a great secret,
mort ami.'
He drawled, 'I feared the gods might become envious and steal her
from me, Liliane.'
She laughed. 'A romantic notion! Allow me to welcome you to
Grand Cay,
madame—
also a place of romance.'
'If that is how you regard murder, robbery and rape,' Roche agreed
levelly. He turned to Samma. 'Liliane is writing a guide to the
island,
ma belle,
which naturally includes the history of the
Delacroix family.'
Liliane Duvalle smiled. 'Which your husband would prefer
forgotten. But that is impossible,
mon ami. Le Diable
and his
exploits—the tourists find them fascinating.'
'Solange seems to be equally interested,' Samma remarked. 'Not a
very savoury subject for a child of her age, I would have thought.'
She paused, then said, trying to sound casual, 'What is this curse
she mentioned?'
Roche snorted. 'An old and foolish legend. It is said that
Le Diable
was cursed by one of the prisoners he held to ransom. The surprise
is that it was only one of them,' he added cynically. 'But, of course,
when any tragedy befalls the Delacroix name, it is said immediately
to be the family curse.'
'Well, Solange clearly believes in it,' Samma said, half to herself.
Liliane Duvalle shrugged. 'Perhaps—but it is part of her blood—her
heritage. It is natural she should be intrigued.' She smiled at
Samma. 'They say, too, Madame Delacroix, that the ghost of
Le
Diable
walks at Belmanoir.'
'Then they do not say it to me,' Roche said grimly. 'I have no
patience with such idiocies.'
Liliane Duvalle heaved a sigh. 'I withdraw my earlier statement,
Roche. You are not at all romantic, after all.' She patted his arm.
'And do not frown,
mon vieux.
Remember, this is your
honeymoon—and I am intruding,' she added with a pretty
moue.
'Forgive me. I only wished to see Solange safely home.'
'We are about to have some champagne,' Roche said. 'Won't you
stay and drink our health?'
'Not this time.' She smiled at Samma. 'But perhaps in a week or so,
you will give me the pleasure of dining with me. In the meantime ...'
She paused.
'Yes?' Samma prompted.
Liliane looked faintly embarrassed. 'I am so fond of
la petite.
Will it
be in order for me to continue my visits here? I would not wish to
interfere,
naturellement.'
'Of course.' Samma forced a smile, aware that the idea didn't fill her
with total delight. It wouldn't be easy for her to form a relationship
with Solange, if the child was constantly being visited by someone
she preferred.
'You are too good.' She turned to Roche. 'You have married an
angel,
mon ami.
Now, permit me to leave you alone together, as
you must wish.'
Samma turned away hurriedly, aware of the amused irony in
Roche's glance, as he escorted their visitor from the room.
When he returned, she said, 'This ghost—is this really why the
others wouldn't stay?'
'Understand this,
ma belle,'
he said harshly. 'There are no ghosts at
Belmanoir. Your predecessors were victims of their own hysterical
imaginings, nothing more.'
'And Solange?'
'That is another matter.' He frowned. 'I dislike this preoccupation
with the past. I hope you will be able to divert her thoughts into
healthier channels, more suitable for her age.'
Outside in the hall, there was the muffled sound of voices, and
excited laughter. Roche reached for her hand, drawing it through his
arm. 'Now it begins,' he said, half to himself. He glanced down at
her. 'Play your part well,
mignonne.'
But that, Samma thought, as she pinned on an obedient smile, was
easier said than done.
Judge Lefevre was a small, rotund man with shrewd eyes behind
gold-rimmed glasses.
He said briskly, 'Be seated, if you please.'
Samma sank into the chair he indicated, aware that her legs were
trembling. The awkwardness of the celebration party at Belmanoir
was behind her, but this promised to be the greatest ordeal so far.
She felt such a fraud, she thought passionately. Back at the house,
they'd all been so welcoming, so delighted to see her, from
Roxanne, the fat and smiling cook, to Hippolyte, the
gardener-cum-handyman, not to mention the maids, and the casual
workers employed in the house and grounds. Their delight in the
fact that 'Mist' Roche' had taken a wife, and their robustly
expressed good wishes had been embarrassing in the
extreme—especially under Elvire's enigmatic regard.
Samma had found herself wondering if the other staff knew what
had been going on between their master and his supposed
housekeeper, and disapproved.
Her hands clenched together in her lap as Roche took his seat
beside her, and his attorney, Maitre Jean-Paul Giraud, sat down on
her other side.
The lawyer was much younger than she'd expected, loose-limbed,
with a smiling, attractive face. When Roche had introduced them,
he had kissed her hand with an exaggerated but heart-warming
admiration.
'Madame, when Roche informed me he was to be married in such
haste, I admit I wondered, but now that I have seen you I
understand everything. He is the most fortunate man in the world.'