Authors: Sara Craven,Chieko Hara
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
told herself. He was probably downstairs at this moment being fed
titbits in the dining room.
She said, 'I'll go and check.'
She ran out of the room full tilt into Alex. He caught her by the arms
steadying her, his eyes sharpening.
'What is it?' he demanded. 'Are you ill?'
'No.' She tried to steady her breathing. 'Is—is Nicky downstairs?
Have you seen him?'
'No to both questions.' His fingers tightened on her arms until she
could have cried out. 'What are you saying?'
Her voice was toneless. 'He's not in his room, and Yannina hasn't seen
him. His door was open and someone had switched off the alarm.'
There was a greyish tinge suddenly under the swarthy skin as lie
stared at her. He reached out and gripped the door jamb for a moment
as if he needed support, and beneath his breath he whispered
something that might have been a prayer or an oath in Greek.
He looked at her grimly. 'I'll get a search going. Look in his room
again—look in the bathroom in case he's hiding. You say the door
was open. What, about the window?'
For a moment she felt sick, then she said, 'No—the shutters were
fastened,' and saw the relief on his face.
She searched as he'd told her, but Nicky wasn't hiding. If he had been,
he would have come out when he heard their voices, she knew, unless
he was too frightened... .
Frightened of what? The storm? Or something else?
She stood in the middle of the room, listening to the rapid sounds of
activity elsewhere in the villa. So many- rooms, so many places
where a little boy could be lost, a child whom she had left sleeping
deeply and safely.
Her palms were damp suddenly, and she wiped them mechanically on
her floating skirt. She didn't like a single one of the thoughts that were
beginning to press on her mind, but they had to be faced somehow.
With a new purpose she went out of the room, and towards the stairs.
Alex was in the hall, and he looked up as she came towards him, his
face taut. 'Well?'
She shook her head. 'No sign. I'm going to look outside.'
'He won't have gone out there,' he said with conviction. 'It is still
pouring with rain, and you said he was frightened of storms.'
'Perhaps the storm hadn't started when he was taken out there,' she
said.
'Taken?' The look sharpened to a glare, and his brown cheeks flushed
ominously. 'Are you suggesting that someone in this house would do
such a thing? Why?'
'Probably because he's his father's son,' Harriet said levelly. 'Or hasn't
it ever occurred to you that someone got rid of Kostas too?'
She went past him and out into the rain and the darkness.
SHE was drenched to the skin within minutes, the thin cotton clinging
uncomfortably round her limbs. Rain had made the paths slippery and
she walked fast, but with care, pausing every few minutes to call,
'Nicky!'
As she reached the swimming pool, all the lights around it went on as
if Alex, from the house, had guessed the route she had taken. She had
to make herself look into the water, but the pool was empty except for
the toy swan floating rather forlornly in the shallow end. Harriet bit
her lip and hurried on.
The gate down to the beach stood wide. The ground seemed to fall
away in front of her like a descent into hell, and she wished she had
brought a flashlight, but there was not time to fetch one now. She
slipped off her sandals and. began to make her way slowly and
painfully down the path, catching at shrubs and the branches of trees
to steady her progress. .
In the end she nearly fell over him. He was lying in a little crumpled
heap at the side of the path, and she fell on her knees, touching him
frantically, terribly afraid. The path was awash, and children older
than Nicky had drowned in puddles before this. The relief when she
felt his shallow breathing under her hands, and heard the slight moan
he gave as she turned him, was enormous. He was soaked and cold,
however, and next door to unconscious with a sizeable bump on his
forehead, she discovered, her fingertips tenderly exploring. He might
have other injuries—perhaps she shouldn't move him.
Above her on the path she heard the slither of other footsteps, and she
flung back her head and almost screamed Alex's name, because it
could be anyone coming down towards them in the darkness.
Alex said, 'Hush,
agape mou.
I am here.' He lifted her gently to her
feet, and she clung to him, her hands fierce with panic, her breath
sobbing harshly in her throat. There were other people behind
him—Andonis, she saw, and Yannina, her face twisted with anxiety.
She felt Alex's mouth brush her wet hair. He said, 'We must get him
to the house. Can you walk or shall I help you?'
She disengaged herself from him, embarrassment taking the place of
relief in her emotions. She had flung herself at him as if he was her
hope of salvation.
'I can manage,' she muttered, averting her face.
Madame Marcos was standing in the hall as they all trooped in,
Andonis carrying Nicky cradled protectively against his broad chest.
She looked terrible, the usually immaculate coiffure dishevelled as if
she had been clawing at it. Her hands were tearing at a lace-edged
handkerchief. She started forward with a little cry, her face agonised,
and Alex put a swiftly protective arm round her, speaking soothingly
in his own language.
There was something strange and dreamlike about the whole scene,
Harriet thought dazedly. In the distance she could hear the last growls
of thunder as the storm finally retreated, and closer at hand above the
splash of the rain through the open door, came the sound of a woman
wailing and distraught.
She knew who it was. The hall was full of people, concerned,
chattering and staring. Even Maria was there, her eyes nearly popping
out of her head. There was only one person missing—the woman
whose ambition for her son had been so disastrously underestimated.
By all of us, Harriet thought numbly, remembering her own secret
amusement as she'd watched Zoe Constantis trying to push Spiro and
Maria together. And yet in her heart, surely she had always known
that the older woman was no laughing matter....
Alex was beside her. He said, 'The doctor is on his way.'
Her voice sounded far away. She said, 'That's good.
That's very good,' and the world tilted and slid slowly away.
The doctor was young and stocky with a heavy black moustache. In
perfect but accented English he assured Harriet that her fainting fit
had been caused by stress after the unfortunate events of the evening,
and that sleep would soon restore her. This was the conclusion she
had already drawn herself, but it was reassuring to have it confirmed.
She felt a fraud anyway, because once she had regained
consciousness, and got out of her wet clothes and into a warm bath,
she had begun to feel better almost at once. The chicken broth that a
very subdued, red-eyed Androula had brought her had helped too,
because, quite apart from anything else, she realised, she'd been
hungry.
The doctor had calmed some of her fears about Nicky too. He had
suffered other bumps and contusions as a result of his fall, but there
were no broken bones, and he was only slightly concussed.
Pneumonia was always a danger, but with care he felt it could be
averted. He spoke with a certain amount of constraint, and Harriet
guessed he was also thinking about the other patient he had been
called to that evening. Presumably he had administered some kind of
sedative, because the dreadful, spine-chilling wailing had stopped
now.
'He is a strong healthy child,
thespinis.''
The doctor rose to leave. 'But
it is a fortunate thing that he was found no later.' He smiled at her
kindly. 'Although he was not born on the island, already our saint has
him in his care. No harm will come to him now.'
It was a consoling thought, Harriet found, as she lay back against her
pillows, agreeing meekly that it would be better for her to remain
where she was rather than take a turn at sitting up with Nicky.
He asked her if he should leave her some tablets to help her sleep, but
she refused. She felt exhausted,waves of tiredness seemed to be
beating at her. She would have no trouble in sleeping, she told herself.
Nor did she. The trouble came in her dreams, dark, swamping
confusions where everyone seemed her enemy, and she ran endlessly
down black tunnels with Nicky in her arms, trying to escape the
hatred which stalked behind. She was saying a name, crying it
hysterically because the darkness was clamping round her, and this
time he would not rescue her in time. It was like another miracle
when his arms closed round her, lifting her up into light and safety
and a warmth that made her bones ache.
She opened dazed eyes. She was lying wrapped in Alex's arms, her
face buried into the curve of his throat.
With a stifled gasp she pulled herself away, out of his embrace.
'What are you doing here?'
'I came to make sure you were all right.' His voice was husky. 'You
seemed to be having a nightmare, and I tried to comfort you. I did not
mean to wake you. I'm sorry.'
She stared at him, shaken and incredulous. He wasn't actually in bed
with her, just lying on top of it next to her, and that was bad enough.
She said, 'I'd hardly be likely to go on sleeping in the circumstances.'
His mouth twisted slightly. 'No? You did that night in London.' After
a long, taut pause while she endeavoured to make sense of what he
had just said, he added, 'You called my name then, too?'
She remembered that night, those dreams, the odd sense of loss in the
morning when she had woken alone. Her voice sounded strangled.
'You—slept with me?'
'
You
slept,
agape mou
.'
Propped on one elbow, he looked at her
wryly. 'I spent an uncomfortable night fighting my conscience—and
losing. I have cursed myself for being a fool a hundred times since
then.'
'Don't!' Harriet pressed her hands against her burning face.
'Little hypocrite,' he said, amused. 'Are you really trying to pretend
you do not know that
i
want you? And if I tell you that I know you
want me too, will you call me names again?'
There was little point in denying it, she thought, staring down at the
scalloped edge of the sheet she was clutching as if it was her shield
and defender. Was it really only a few hours earlier that Alex had
stirred her to that frenzied response? It seemed like a lifetime ago.
He talks about wanting, she thought. Not about love.
She said dully, 'No, I won't call you names. And I was—having a
nightmare. I'didn't realise I was making a noise.'
'Why should you?' he asked coolly. 'And don't sound apologetic,
Harriet
mou.
After what has transpired in this house, you are entitled
to a nightmare or two.'
She said in a muffled voice, 'I'm so sorry. It's so awful. Do you know
why . . .?'
'Oh, yes.' The amusement vanished. He sounded tired and a little
defeated. 'She had decided a long time ago that Spiro should be my
heir. After Kostas, he was my nearest male relative. Perhaps you
guessed?' She nodded. He went on, 'From speaking to my mother
earlier, I gather that—my aunt encouraged the original rift between
them and that when Kostas returned, she seized the opportunity to do
him more harm. When he visited the safe, he was in too much of a
temper to secure it properly, and she waited until the room was empty
and then took the ring herself. It has been with her ever since, at the
bottom of the bag in which she keeps her tapestries and threads,' he
added with a kind of groan. 'My poor mother is shattered, as you can
imagine. She has always known that Thia Zoe was envious because
she felt my mother made a better marriage, but that her own sister
could behave in such a way—cause her such agony—is beyond
belief. And of course if my mother ever showed signs of softening
towards Kostas, Thia Zoe was there, reminding her of the "wrong" he
had done her.' He said something short and savage in his own
language.After a pause, he went on, 'Before Nicos ever came here she
tried to turn my mother against him, by hinting that he might not be
Kostas' child. She cited the indiscreet behaviour that some girls from
England and other parts of Europe are guilty of when they come to
Corfu, and said that your sister would share the same easy morals.