Read HIGH TIDE AT MIDNIGHT Online
Authors: Sara Craven,Mineko Yamada
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
we agreed it would only be fair that you should have some keepsake of her,
although there is no actual legal entitlement. I'm not suggesting, of course,
that you should take any of the better-known canvases hanging downstairs,
but if you want any of the pictures in this room you may have them. I don't
think they can be regarded as her best work by any means, but naturally they
will be of sentimental value to you.'
If she had expected a show of delight, she was disappointed. Morwenna's
face was impassive and her few words of thanks merely polite. Lady
Kerslake went away toarrange her lunch party reflecting that the girl was
probably put out because she had not been allowed to take her pick of the
more valuable paintings.
As soon as she could be sure that she had departed, Morwenna sank back
again on the sofa, her legs shaking. She stared across the room at the
painting of the lonely house on the bleak headland and her stomach
contracted nervously. She thought wildly, 'Oh, God, what have I done?'
She had always tended to be impulsive. It was a family trait, but it had never
carried her to these lengths before. It had been impulsiveness that had led her
to apply to the painting school. Many of the friends she had been at school
with were rather desultorily pursuing careers as personal assistants or
secretaries, but they seemed to be little more than glorified dogsbodies as far
as Morwenna could see. Or they were helping to run boutiques, or serving in
West End department stores. Somehow she had wanted more than that. And
it hadn't particularly pleased her when people said tolerantly,
'Oh—Morwenna? Well, she'll get married, of course,' their eyes lingering
appreciatively over her slender figure with the gently rounded hips and
small, firm breasts.
She tried to control her whirling thoughts. After all, she wasn't committed to
going to Cornwall. 'Trevennon had been a let-out—the inspiration of the
moment—something to save her face with Cousin Patricia. She didn't have
to actually do anything about it. Anyway, a wave of colour flooded her face,
she couldn't just wish herself on a group of strangers, in spite of her brave
words to Lady Kerslake. She had no means of knowing whether the
Dominic of whom her mother had spoken with such affection was still alive.
He would be in his sixties at the very least, and the years that Laura Kerslake
had spent at Trevennon would only be a distant memory.
She had sometimes wondered why her mother had not maintained contact
with Trevennon over the years, but at the time it had never occurred to her to
ask. She had been too young to consider the complexities of the situation,
she thought, and after her mother's death, too much probing into the past had
never seemed quite appropriate. Besides, she had always had the feeling that
her father had not shared her mother's nostalgia for Cornwall. Nothing had
ever been said, but the impression had been a strong one. Perhaps it had been
nothing more than ordinary, and only too human jealousy of a time when she
had lived and been happy without him, Morwenna thought wryly. Sir
Robert's love for his wife had been all-encompassing. But somehow she had
felt the past was an area where she should not trespass with her questions,
and now they could never be answered—unless of course she went to
Trevennon herself.
She shook her head slowly, clenching her fingers together in her lap. She
must stop thinking along those lines. The fact of the matter was that she was
homeless, but that wasn't the disaster it seemed. Friends were always
flouncing away from the shelter of the parental roof after some devastating
row or other, and they managed to survive. There were a number of names in
her address book which she could call on in an emergency. People were
always swopping flats, or marrying and moving out. There would be
someone somewhere wanting another girl to make up the numbers. And
there were jobs too. Not the sort of creative work she had planned on. For
those she would need training—qualifications. But she would find
something to do which would pay her share of the rent and food bills, and
there were always evening classes she could go to.
She suppressed a grimace. It was a far cry from the spring in the South of
France that she had envisaged, but she had only herself to blame. She was
capable of far better work than that she had shown Lennox Christie. But she
had known the money was there to buy her a place in his class, and she had
simply not tried too hard. If she were trying now, it would be very different.
She took the crumpled letter out of her pocket and read it again slowly.
While it held out no definite hope, it did offer her a second chance. But she
would need to work very hard over the next few months to convince him that
she had sincerity and application as well as talent, and wasn't just another
wealthy playgirl looking for an undemanding few months in the sun.
She got up restlessly and walked over to the window, staring out at the
prospect of smooth lawns and leafless trees which unfolded itself before her.
What she needed was a few months' grace to do some serious painting, when
what confronted her was the urgent necessity for job and flat-hunting. She
tried to do some swift mental calculations, but the results were depressing.
The pitifully small amount of money she had in her bank account would not
be enough to feed and house her while she pursued this tenuous dream. It
was time she recognised her hopes of a career even on the fringes of the art
world as the fantasy they were, and got down to realities.
She sighed and cast a regretful look back over her shoulder at the group of
paintings on the wall. Their appeal had never seemed more potent. If she
took any of her mother's work away with her when she went, it would be
those and the self-portrait above the mantelpiece. But if she did take them,
heaven only knew what she would do with them. She could not imagine
them as a welcome addition to the decor in any of her friends' flats. She
supposed drearily they would have to be stored somewhere until she could
find a proper home for them. Whenever that might be.
She was halfway to the door when the thought came to her. She stopped
dead in her tracks and swung round again to survey the pictures. She might
not be able to claim a temporary home at Trevennon, but surely, for her
mother's sake, they might be willing to store the paintings for her. If she took
them down to Trevennon and explained the situation… As long as she made
it clear it was only a temporary measure. They would be far better there than
locked away in some warehouse. And it might give the Trevennon family
some pleasure too to know that Laura Kerslake had never forgotten--
There was some relief to be gained in knowing she had solved at least one of
her problems, minor though it was. It was doubtful whether she would find
such ready" solutions for those that remained, nevertheless as she went to
her room to begin to sort through her clothes and belongings, a tiny ray of
hope began to burn deep inside her.
The next few days were not comfortable ones. Morwenna was thankful that
she had announced that she was leaving in advance, otherwise she felt the
atmosphere in the house would have been well-nigh unendurable. As it was,
she could remind herself that the little barbs and snide remarks which came
her way were only for a little while longer.
She had been totally ruthless with her packing. Most of her extensive
wardrobe was now at the Vicarage awaiting the next jumble sale, and she
had retained only the most basic elements. But this did not grieve her as
much as parting with the childhood books and possessions that still occupied
her bedroom. She had thought sentimentally that one day all these things
could be passed on to her own children, but she knew she had to travel
lightly, and the cherished articles were disposed of to the charity shop in the
nearby town. She had soon reduced her possessions down to the contents of
one large suitcase, while her painting gear was consigned to the depths of an
old rucksack which she found in one of the attics. The Trevennon pictures
and her mother's self-portrait were carefully taken from their frames under
Lady Kerslake's eagle eye and made into a neat parcel.
Life did not become any easier with the arrival of Guy with his latest
girl-friend in tow. She had dark, elaborately frizzed hair and a giggle that
made Morwenna want to heave, but judging by Guy's air of smug
satisfaction, he saw nothing amiss.
Morwenna also had to cope with the added humiliation that Guy had
obviously told this Georgina all about her, possibly with embellishments,
and that Georgina's reaction to the situation was to treat her with a kind of
pitying contempt, mixed with triumph that Morwenna's loss had been her
gain.
Morwenna suffered this in a kind of teeth-grinding impotence, but she knew
there would be no point in trying to convince Georgina that her relationship
with Guy had been very much in the embryo stage, and that she was not
stoically trying to conceal an irrevocably broken heart. It would have given
her immense satisfaction to tell Georgina that she was welcome to Guy, and
that her only regret was that she had not had the wit to see the truth behind
his advances in the first place, but she knew that the other girl would not
believe her.
However, it was Vanessa's attitude that Morwenna found the most
surprising. As the time approached for her departure, her cousin became
almost cordial, even to the point of insisting on driving her up to London to
catch the Penzance train. Morwenna accepted the offer, but she did not
deceive herself that it was promoted by any new-found liking for herself.
She suspected that Vanessa was taking her to the train merely in order to
make sure that she was in fact going to Cornwall, and was seeking her
company during her remaining hours at the Priory simply to enable her to
avoid Georgina to whom she had taken an instant and embarrassingly open
dislike.
Life at the Priory, Morwenna decided on reflection, seemed likely to
become hell for man and beast quite shortly, especially if Guy decided to
marry Georgina and her father's money of which she spoke so often and with
such candour, and in a way this helped to alleviate the pain of parting from
her home. Nevertheless she cried herself to sleep each night, her tears
prompted not merely by grief for the losses she had suffered but fear as well.
It was all very well to tell herself robustly that no one need starve in these
days of the Welfare State, but there was no escaping the fact that she had led
a reasonably sheltered existence up to a few short weeks ago, and that what
faced her was likely to be both difficult and unpleasant. Nor was it any
consolation to remind herself of the thousands of girls of her age who were
far worse off than she was herself. She felt totally and bewilderingly alone.
From being the pivot on which the family's love turned, she was now an
outcast, and she felt all the acute vulnerability of her position.
But when the day of her departure actually arrived, she was relieved. She
said a stilted goodbye to Sir Geoffrey in the study which had once been her
father's and was acutely embarrassed when he handed her with a few
mumbled words a slip of paper which turned out to be a sizeable cheque.
Blushing furiously, she managed a word of thanks and as soon as she was
outside the door, she tore the cheque into tiny fragments and stuffed them
into a jardiniere, conveniently situated on its pedestal further along the
corridor.
Lady Kerslake returned to her former saccharine amiability, giving the
impression that it was only Morwenna's own intractability that was taking
her away from the Priory. Morwenna, putting her own cheek dutifully
against the scented one turned to her, wondered with a wry twist of her lips
what Cousin Patricia's reaction would be if she suddenly took her at her
word and announced that she was going to stay.
Vanessa was waiting in the hall tapping her foot impatiently. She made no
attempt to help Morwenna with her case or rucksack but walked briskly
ahead of her to the car and sat revving the engine while her cousin stowed
her luggage in the boot. Morwenna climbed into the passenger seat and
looked steadily ahead of her. There was no point in looking back. The Priory
was closed to her now and lingering backward glances as the car started
down the drive would only distress her.
Vanessa gave her a sideways glance as they waited to emerge from the drive