Read HIGH TIDE AT MIDNIGHT Online
Authors: Sara Craven,Mineko Yamada
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
a lot of question marks hanging over the past, and a lot of skeletons in the
family cupboards. Dominic's worked damned hard—and Nick and my father
before him—to redeem that image. Communities like this have long
memories. We have to convince everyone that we no longer wreck
boats—we build them instead.'
Morwenna shook her head. 'I had no idea the sense of the past was so strong.'
He shrugged. 'Why should you? After all, you don't know us very well yet."
His words suggested that she would be at Trevennon long enough to make
all the discoveries that were needful, and she was grateful to him for that.
She could see that in many ways it would have been this sense of the past
that had fascinated Laura Kerslake and kept her looking back nostalgically
to her childhood. But Laura had recognised that there was also a world of
reality as represented by Robert Kerslake and the calm safety of his love,
and she had opted for this in the end.
And what will happen when I leave here? Morwenna asked herself. Will I
too be always looking back over my shoulder, remembering the dark cliffs
and the wild sea and the arrogance of men who built a house to stand for
hundreds of years in the teeth of the wind?
And even as she formulated the thought, she knew that above and beyond
everything else she would remember one man all her life and the hot, sweet
danger of his lovemaking that held no love at all.
She ate the food Inez put in front of her because in some ways it was less
trouble to do that than to argue about it, although she had no appetite. When
she had finished he? meal, she went listlessly upstairs to transfer her
belongings back into her suitcase so that they could be moved to Laura's
room. That was how she thought of it. There was no way in which she could
relate the possession of such a room to herself.
While she was waiting for the grumbling Zack to bring her things along, she
wandered round it, examining everything more closely. There were cut glass
scent and cosmetic jars on the dressing table, and a pretty glass tree on which
to hang rings, she supposed, only her hands were bare. She remembered
Nick had said there were some trinkets in the dressing table and found them
without difficulty. There was not a great deal—a small silver cross and
chain, a necklace made out of shells, some coral ear-rings, and a ring to hang
on her tree—a pretty thing made out of pearls. She tried it on and it fitted,
and as she looked down on it she remembered that people said pearls were
for tears, but surely she had cried enough.
Then the door opened and Zack entered, weighed down by a strong sense of
grievance as well as her case and rucksack and an unwieldy brown paper
parcel.
'Troublin' folks and botherin' 'un, and turning the 'ole 'ouse upside down,' he
muttered truculently as he dumped the case down on the carpet. He
produced a hammer and some picture hooks from inside his waistcoat and
fixed her with a stern look. 'And now I s'pose you'll be wanting these hung
up.' He indicated the brown paper parcel which he had put down on the bed.
In spite of her emotional state, Morwenna had to suppress a giggle. The
more she saw of Zack, the more impossible it seemed that there could be any
kind of relationship between him and the cheerful outgoing Inez.
'I'm sorry,' she apologised meekly. 'I realise I'm giving a great deal of
trouble. What's in that parcel?'
'Them pictures you brought when you come here. Been at the framers in
Penzance, they have, and now you'll be wanting them up.'
She pulled off the string and the layers of brown paper with fingers that
shook. It was quite true, they were her mother's paintings, surrounded by
antique frames which became them far better than the original ones at the
Priory. She had wondered several times what had become of them, but had
not liked to ask Nick, thinking that perhaps he had put them away
somewhere because he found the sight of them painful still. But instead he
had sent them to be framed somewhere as a surprise for her. She felt tears
prick at the back of her eyelids and -wiped them away with her fist as a child
might do.
'Mr Nick had these done for me,' she said slowly. 'I didn't know…'
Zack snorted. 'Tidn't the only thing you don't know, by the sound of it.
Where do you want 'un? I got other things to do 'sides this.'
It wasn't too difficult to decide. She got Zack to arrange them on an
otherwise bare wall above a little jewel of a chest of drawers, just where the
first morning light would catch them. They looked right there. They
belonged, and perhaps in time they would make her feel as if she belonged
too.
Long after Zack had gone, she stood staring at them, thinking of her mother
and wondering what she would say if she knew where her pictures had
ended up. And yet wasn't this the whole purpose of her being here? She had
come to ask the Trevennons to protect her sole inheritance, and her wish had
been granted.
She heard the door behind her open quietly and thought she knew who had
come to see how his gift had been received. She took a long, trembling
breath, aware that there were tears on her face.
'Nick, you're so good to me. I can never thank you enough…'As she turned
to face him, her voice faltered and died. It was Dominic. He took a half step
forward, then halted, his face like a dark mask as he saw how she
instinctively recoiled from his approach.
'What's the matter?' he asked abruptly. 'Why are you upset*'
'It's nothing. No, that's not true—it's everything.' She spread out her hands in
an all-encompassing gesture. 'It's this room—and her ring—and now Nick's
even had her pictures framed for me. It's as if she were here—with me. Oh, I
can't expect you to understand.'
'No,' he said drily, 'you can't, can you? I came to talk to you, but I can see it
isn't the right moment."
There is nothing you have to say to me that I want to hear.
Brave words.
Words of defiance, and now singularly inappropriate for some reason she
could not even define to herself.
'No, it isn't,' she said, and her voice was ragged. 'There'll never be a right
moment for us. Now if you have the slightest mercy, go and for God's sake
leave me in peace.'
He made a half-movement and she tensed, willing him with all her strength
not to approach her. If he touched her, if he took her into his arms she would
break into little pieces. She had asked for mercy and peace because-that was
all she had the right to ask for. She could not ask for love.
She closed her eyes and waited and when she opened them at last, she was
alone. And when she whispered, 'Oh, Dominic. Oh, my love,' there was no
one to hear her.
MORWENNA fixed the last glittering glass bauble in place, then alighted from
the small step-ladder and took a long, appraising look at the Christmas tree.
She'd had to fight hard enough to get it here, so she was determined that it
was going to look right in its corner of the sitting room.
Mark had taken a lot of persuading before he had agreed to tie it to the roof
of the Mini and drive it home from Penzance where they had been doing
some belated Christmas shopping.
'A Christmas tree.' She could recall the scepticism in his voice. 'In a bachelor
household? Have a heart, love! It'll go down like a lead balloon.'
'Just a tree,' she had told him solemnly, her eyes dancing nevertheless. 'And I
promise to forgo the paper chains and the mistletoe.'
'Oh, I don't object to mistletoe.' He had pretended to leer at her, and she'd
laughed.
She had spent a lot of time with Mark over the past few weeks. So much so
that Nick had asked her rather gruffly if she was sure she knew what she was
doing.
'He likes to play the field, young Mark,' he told her, his brow furrowed, and
again she had laughed and bent over to drop an affectionate kiss on the top of
his head. Because she knew that Mark's days as a Lothario were past and
done for ever.
Ever since, in fact, that first supper party they had been invited to at St Enna.
She had sensed Mark's nervousness as they drove there. It was a low
rambling building—two cottages knocked into one—and Biddy had
answered the door to their knock. Morwenna had seen them look at each
other and although nothing had been said, she knew that all was well.
Biddy had been her usual cheerful self, with a spot more colour in her cheeks
than usual. She had served a delicious chicken casserole, piquant with herbs
and wine, and they had all drunk Greg's home-brewed lager and grown
steadily more hilarious as the evening progressed. Later she had helped
Greg, tall, bearded and taciturn, to wash up in the tiny kitchen, leaving Mark
and Biddy alone together.
Since that night she had spent a lot of her time at St Enna, even when Mark
did not accompany her. It was a relaxed and undemanding atmosphere, and
she was always sure of her welcome. She had even made a thumb pot under
Greg's supervision, and it had been baked in the kiln with his own work and
glazed, and she was proud of the way it had turned out. Biddy had said she
had a natural flair for pottery and Greg had promised he would show her
how to throw a pot on the wheel in the workshop, if she was interested. And
she was more than interested, she was fascinated. She liked the feel of the
clay under her fingers, and she loved sitting and watching the pots and
utensils grow and take shape under Greg's hands. And, more importantly, it
gave her something else to think about.
She told Greg and Biddy about her ambition to study .under Lennox Christie
and Biddy stared at her wide-eyed.
'Why go to those lengths?' she demanded. 'There are good art schools all
over the place, including Cornwall. You could even get a grant. And who
says you're meant to be a painter anyway?'
Perhaps Biddy might be hoping that when she and Mark were married,
Morwenna might take her place at the pottery with Greg. If so, it was a vain
hope. She couldn't confide in Biddy, because Biddy loved Mark and had no
secrets from him, and she couldn't risk Mark finding out that she was
hopelessly and desperately in love with his brother. Meaning well, he might
choose to interfere, and her blood ran cold at the thought. No, her secret was
safe with just herself. And if everyone thought that her heart was set on
Mark, then so much the better. By the time the truth came out, she could be
miles away.
Even Inez had issued a dark warning that 'Mr Mark was a rare one for the
maidens', although her general attitude had suggested that Morwenna could
do worse than join him in gathering rosebuds while they both might.
As for Dominic… Morwenna sighed as she bent to pick an errant piece of
tinsel from the carpet. No one would be prepared to hazard a guess as to
what he thought about the situation. It was impossible to suppose that he
approved of her going out with Mark night after night, but he made no
comment at all to either of them. But she noticed that no matter how late
they returned from their outings, there was always a thin streak of light
showing under the study door. Was he really working there alone, she
wondered, or was he monitoring her comings and goings? She smiled
bitterly to herself. If he silently objected to her going out with Mark, it was
not hard to imagine his anger when he discovered the true state of affairs.
She had little doubt in her own mind that Mark would choose the line of least
resistance and take Biddy off to the nearest register office early in the New
Year, presenting Dominic with a
fait accompli.
She gave her tree a last look and prepared to leave the room. It seemed to
light up the whole room, she thought, and perhaps the star she had wired to
the topmost branch was a star of hope, after all, for Mark and Biddy at least.
There did not seem to be a great deal of hope for Nick and Barbie. Barbie
had not been near Trevennon since the night of the dinner party, and
according to a terse remark from Nick, Morwenna gathered that she had not
been to work either at the boatyard, pleading illness.
But Karen, in spite of what had happened, had been much in evidence. She
had obviously decided to overlook the fact that it was her own ill-natured
behaviour which had triggered off the entire incident and behaved to
everyone with an air of tolerance and Christian forgiveness which sent Nick
limping hurriedly for sanctuary in his room whenever she appeared at
Trevennon. Morwenna, she appeared not to notice whenever possible, and
Morwenna was content for it to be so.
As she set her hand on the door-knob, her heart sank. She was sure she had