Read HIGH TIDE AT MIDNIGHT Online
Authors: Sara Craven,Mineko Yamada
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
few bare weeks to go before Christmas, the harbour was quiet and almost
deserted.
Mark pulled up near the lifeboat station. 'A lot of places are closed at this
time of year,' he said. 'But there's a newsagent's and a chemist, and rather a
good coffee shop where they also have books and gifts. Come along to the
yard when you've finished looking round. Someone's bound to be going
back to the house.'
Morwenna sighed a little as she watched him drive away along the quayside
towards the sprawl of buildings which constituted Trevennon Marine. It
would have been so much easier to have said, 'I need to go to the yard to
collect something for Nick.' To have been open and above-board about the
whole thing, but Nick wanted the secrecy and as he'd said, the whims of a
sick man were usually indulged.
She wandered desultorily up the steep main street, glancing in shop
windows, killing time until she could reasonably expect to present herself at
the boatyard. She soon found the coffee shop that Mark had mentioned and
decided to go in. It consisted of a few tables set in a room leading off the gift
shop. There didn't seem to be anyone around and Morwenna went in and
seated herself at one of the tables to wait. She could hear a murmur of voices
beyond a curtained doorway and guessed this led to the kitchen and office
premises. She was just glancing at the menu when the curtain was pushed
back and a familiar figure in a long cape came through into the cafe.
'Hello,' said Biddy, and grinned cheerfully. She was carrying a large raffia
basket filled with lumpy objects wrapped in newspaper. She indicated this.
'Samples,' she explained. 'Miss Penruan has been giving me an order.'
'That's good.' It was lovely to see a face that was friendly without
reservations. 'Have you got time for a coffee or are you tearing off
somewhere else?'
'Always time for a coffee.' Biddy put the basket down and took the opposite
seat. 'I was telling Greg I'd met you and we were wondering how you'd got
on at Trevennon and whether we'd see you around.'
Morwenna looked down at the red and white checked tablecloth. 'Oh, I'm
still at Trevennon. I'm working there in a way.'
'Working?' Biddy almost gaped. 'For Dominic Trevennon?'
'Oh, no,' Morwenna said hastily. 'For his uncle. He's writing a family history
and I'm helping.'
Biddy whistled. 'Wonders will never cease,' she muttered, half to herself. In
turn, she picked up the menu and stared at it as if it was written in a foreign
language. Then in a voice that was just too nonchalant, she said, 'And how's
Mark Trevennon?'
'Fine.' Something about the tone of Biddy's voice struck Morwenna as odd.
T didn't know you knew Mark?'
'Oh, I knew him.' Biddy gave a little bitter laugh. 'With the accent on the past
tense. Big Brother didn't approve of our association, so that was that.
Struggling potters aren't his idea of a suitable connection for the mighty
Trevennons. I should have thought one wealthy and eligible lady in
thefamily would be enough without Mark having to follow suit.'
Morwenna's heart skipped a beat. 'What do you mean?'
'Are you saying you've been at Trevennon nearly a week without running
into Karen Inglis?' Biddy gazed at her. 'Dark, glamorous and a bitch, but as
Dominic's the male equivalent, I don't suppose he notices.'
'Oh, yes, I've met her,' Morwenna said steadily. 'Is he going to marry her?'
'If she has anything to do with it, he will,' Biddy said with a shrug. 'And of
course her aunt will be delighted. She's got money of her own, but she works
as company secretary at Trevennon Marine and she'd welcome anything that
linked the two families further. Funnily enough…' she paused and reddened
slightly. 'Look, I ought not to gossip like this. The Trevennons are obviously
friends of yours and…'
'I wouldn't put it quite like that,' Morwenna said drily. 'What were you going
to say?'
'Well--' Biddy paused until Miss Penruan, a tall rather gaunt figure in a
flowered smock, had emerged from the back premises and taken their order.
'It was Mark who mentioned it to me originally. He was joking, I suppose,
but he said that Barbie Inglis was trying to push Karen at Dominic because
she'd failed to get Nick for herself.' She gave an uncomfortable laugh. 'I
don't suppose it's true. Mark said something about them both having been
disappointed in love years ago and that everyone had thought they would
end up consoling each other. Only it never happened, so the next generation
will fill the breach instead. Cosy, eh?'
Mprwenna agreed bleakly. Something that Biddy had said was nagging
away at the back of her mind, but before she could recall what it was, Miss
Penruan had returned with their coffee and the moment was lost. She was
silent for a moment or two, the image of Dominic with Karen inglis at his
side very vivid in her mind, then dragged herself back to reality with a
determined effort.
'I'm sorry that it didn't work out for you and Mark," she said rather
awkwardly.
Biddy shrugged. 'Just one of those things," she said.
'And maybe it was for the best, anyway. Mark's good- looking and terrific
company, but if he hasn't got the guts to stand up to Brother Dominic, then
he's no use to me.' She drank some of her coffee. 'And if he had cared
anything about me, then he would have stood up to him— wouldn't he?' she
ended a little uncertainly.
Morwenna shook her head. 'I don't know. He—Dominic —has a very strong
personality, and he's much older than Mark, of course, and his boss as well.
It's a pretty formidable combination,' -she added unhappily. Just how
formidable, she was only too well aware.
Biddy stared broodingly at her coffee cup. 'Maybe,' she said abruptly. She
was silent for a few minutes, then she said, 'How long do you expect to be at
Trevennon? Perhaps you could come over to St Enna for a meal some time.'
'Oh, I'd like that.' Morwenna was eager.
Biddy smiled back. 'So would I. I'll be in touch.' She finished the remains of
her coffee, and got to her feet.
Morwenna detained her. 'You wouldn't like me to' give Mark any kind of
message?'
Biddy shook her head decisively. 'Thanks, but no, thanks.' She paused. 'If
there's going to be any kind of move, then it has to come from him. At least
that's how I feel right at this moment.' She gave Morwenna a lopsided grin
and a wave and disappeared.
Glancing at her watch, Morwenna decided it was time that she moved on
too. She picked up her patently empty rucksack and eyed it with misgiving.
She stopped in the bookshop on her way out and bought a guide book on
local walks. On the way back down towards the quay, she replenished her
stock of tights, and visited the chemist for more toothpaste and a luxurious
bar of her favourite toilet soap, but she was still very much aware as she
walked along the quayside towards Trevennon Marine that none of her
purchases amounted to very much and hardly justified a trip to Port Vennor.
Her steps slowed as she approached the entrance to the yard. She could see
Mark's Mini parked outside and beyond it was Dominic's car. She bit her lip
and made herself walk up to the entrance. She found herself inside a large
shed with a high roof made predominantly of glass. There were several
boats, pleasure craft and the fishing boats used for shark-expeditions,
undergoing repair, and the air was filled with the pleasant aromas of wood,
paint and varnish. In the distance she could hear the whine of machinery. In
the far corner of the shed, a door with a painted sign and an arrow indicated
that this was the way to the offices.
These, she found, were housed in a small complex of fairly new
prefabricated buildings situated on some waste ground at the rear of the
boatsheds. A concrete path led to them and a rough shelter with a corrugated
iron roof protected those using the path from the vagaries of the weather.
Morwenna trod along the path as if she was skirting her way through
quicksands. The first door she came to said 'Reception' and she made herself
steady her breathing as she pushed it open.
It was a narrow room, bisected by a counter, behind which two girls sat
typing. There were a number of filing cabinets round the walls, and a small
switchboard on one of the desks.
'I'm looking for Mr Mark Trevennon,' Morwenna said.
'Everyone's in a meeting, I'm afraid,' one of the girls rose and came forward.
'Is he expecting you? Do you want to wait?'
Morwenna hesitated. The coward's way out would be to refuse politely and
catch the next bus back to Trevennon, but instead she found herself nodding.
'Oh, all right, then.' She was conscious that both girls were studying her with
thinly disguised curiosity. They were both young and attractive, and she
found herself wondering whether Biddy might not have been the sole
subject of Mark's attentions.
Mark's office turned out to be a cubbyhole, just large enough to
accommodate his desk and two chairs. Morwenna sat there for a few
minutes, getting her bearings and trying to remember the precise
instructions Nick had given her before she set out. When she was sure that
the receptionist had returned to the front office, she got up and quietly
opened the door. She had noted what Nick had described as the inner office
as she went past, and her heart had jolted uncomfortably when she noticed a
neat sign reading 'D. Trevennon' fixed to the door. Nick hadn't mentioned
that it was also Dominic's office, she thought. But the door had been open
and the room obviously unoccupied, and she would never have a better
chance than now while everyone was in a meeting.
As Nick had said, there was only one filing cabinet. For a moment she
thought it might be locked, but the top drawer opened easily enough when
she tugged at it. There were several green folders there, but none of them
bore the code number that Nick had mentioned. Perhaps he had made a
mistake. With a feeling of frustration she closed the top drawer and tried the
second one, but it was not there either, and it was with increasing
desperation that she tried, unavailingly, the third drawer and then, on her
knees, the fourth.
'Looking for something?'
If there had ever been a moment in her life when she wanted to die, to simply
let the floor open and swallow her up, this was it. She gulped and looked
over her shoulder at the door. He was leaning in the doorway, his hands
thrust into his pockets with the air of someone who had been there for some
considerable time.
She got to her feet, brushing off the knees of her jeans. 'I was, but I haven't
found it.'
He said very silkily, and she could not meet his eyes, 'Perhaps I can help.' He
walked over to the big desk, took a bunch of keys from his pocket and
unlocked one of the deep drawers. A green folder came skidding across the
polished surface towards her. She did not even have to check the coding.
'Well,' he said. 'That's what you came for, isn't it? Take it.'
There was a kind of weary anger in his voice.
She had to explain, to say something to justify her behaviour. 'I don't think
you understand.'
'Oh yes, I do,' he said cynically. 'I do understand, my Lady Morwenna. I've
been expecting it, in fact, ever since you arrived on the scene.'
That hurt, and she knew she had flinched openly. He sighed quickly and
sharply. 'I knew it would only be amatter of time,' he said, half to himself.
'But I must admit I didr^t think it would be quite so soon.'
She took two quick steps forward, picked up the folder and thrust it into her
rucksack, fastening the straps with hands that shook.
'Right,' he said. 'Now perhaps you'd be good enough to get the hell out of
here, before any more harm is done.'
But as he spoke, a door opened somewhere close at hand and there were
voices and footsteps approaching. Dominic swore long and elaborately, just
under his breath. He turned to face the corridor, filling the doorway with his
body as if he wanted to block the knowledge of Morwenna's presence from
the newcomers.
From outside, Morwenna heard Mark say cheerfully, 'Hey, Dom, have you
seen Morwenna? Di told me she'd arrived, but she's vanished.'
Dominic said wearily, 'She's here.'
Mark pushed past him into the office. He gave Morwenna a simile,
apparently unaware of the tension in the atmosphere. 'That didn't take long.'
'My own sentiments entirely,' said Dominic, watching them from the
doorway.
Sh£ felt a deep, painful flush wash over her face to her hairline. She said
hurriedly to Mark, 'Can we go now? I don't want to keep Nick waiting.'