Red Lotus (19 page)

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Authors: Catherine Airlie

Tags: #Canary Islands, #Plantations

BOOK: Red Lotus
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Julio laughed at her distress.

"I am here!" he reminded her. "You can be happy with me."

It would have been difficult not to enjoy herself and be happy in that gay throng. When night fell with the tropical suddenness which she had never become quite used to, they were still apart from Philip and the others and Julio continued to laugh her protests aside.

"You are safe," he assured her, "with me!"

Perhaps that was so, but she was subtly aware of Philip's disapproval, even at that distance. He had been doing his best all day to keep their small party together, to avoid just such a breakaway as this, and now it must seem that she was defying him, especially after their conversation in the plaza when they had first come down from the hill. She had accused him of unnecessary harshness in his handling of Conchita. Might he not think now that she was accusing him also on Julio's behalf in this less direct way?

"Julio," she pleaded when all the lanterns were lit along the miniature stone quay and their reflection as bright as stars in the dark water, "you must take me back to Philip."

"I will neve
r take you back to him, querida!
" he told her

 

passionately. "You are mine. He has no right to you. Besides, he is already in love!"

"No, Julio—"

He swept her, protesting, into his arms. The dance was over for the moment and they had been sitting on a bench in the shadow of the stone wall surrounding the harbour, with a group of palms behind them and the murmur of the sea in their ears, and suddenly the shadow of the palm fell darkly across them. Julio's lips sought hers, demanding, arrogant, passionate, and her senses swam for a moment before the insistence of his kiss.

"You will love me," he said. "You do love me. I have seen it in your eyes!"

The shadow behind them stirred and lengthened. She knew that someone was standing there. It was Philip. He had moved away from the wall, turning his back on them.

Desperately she struggled to be free, her heart engulfed by humiliation and anger against Julio who could make such light love to her with such seeming passion.

"Philip," she said, "Were you looking for us?"

He did not answer her immediately, but he did not turn in surprise at the sound of her voice so that she knew he had seen her sitting there locked in Julio's arms.

"I came to find you—yes," he said at length, his voice so unlike the resonant, confident voice she knew that she could have mistaken him for a stranger in that deceptive half-light beneath the palms "It is time that we went back to San Lozaro."

Why had he not said "It is time that we went back home"? So often he had used the word in the past few weeks, making it sound intimate and warm, part of them both, but now she knew that anger or disillusionment or some other fiercely primitive emotion had choked back the word in his throat. He could not bring himself to utter it. He could not believe that they would ever make a home together at San Lozaro after this.

The effort they were making was no longer congenial, no longer bound together by implicit trust.

Somehow she knew that she had had his trust. She had earned it during those four weeks of silent endeavour when they had both held fast to an ideal and sought to bring about an old man's dying wish. The atmosphere at San Lozaro had lightened, but now it would be fraught with

 

danger again. A danger of her own making. She should have been more firm with Julio. Philip would blame her for her cousin's impetuous love-making, and he had turned from her in anger and scarcely-veiled contempt.

She felt that she could not reach him in that moment. The atmosphere between them was volcanic, as explosive as the dark soil under the crust of El Teide. One break and a whole torrent of fury must burst upon her defenceless head.

Anger against Julio crept uppermost. How dared he do a thing like this? She had never encouraged him to make love to her. She had only tried to be kind, to understand him and perhaps to protect him a little from his own swift passions.

Was kindness a thing, then, that he did not appreciate? Did Julio consider that nothing but love was possible between the sexes? If so, she had been to blame.

Confused and angry and strangely dispirited, she realized that Philip was not going to do anything to help her. He strode on ahead, leaving her to follow with Julio, who scowled and murmured, complaining that Philip had always interfered.

"He has always wanted everything to go his way," he declared. "Philip is a tyrant, but one day, we shall see!"

Conchita was strangely silent on the way back to San Lozaro. Like Julio, she looked almost sullen when her wishes had been thwarted for a reason she refused to accept, and she had wished to stay at Zamora. The dancing and the festivities would continue far into the night, but Isabella had looked tired after her long, exacting day and Philip had been adamant. They had been there since early morning. It was time that they went home.

Almost before the car had come to rest at the foot of the terrace steps Conchita flung herself out of it and rushed into the house, looking as if she would burst into a flood of angry tears at any moment.

"Go with her, Sisa," Philip advised. "It is late for you, querida."

Sisa, whose long, silken lashes were already drooping over her dark eyes, kissed Felicity and obeyed. Julio had been driving and he whisked the car away in the direction of the stables.

 

"Goodnight, Felicity!" he called back to her with a laugh. "We will meet again in the morning!"

Felicity bit her lip. She was standing beside Philip on the top step and he made no effort to follow the others into the house. When the car had disappeared he looked down at the luminous dial of his watch.

"It's two o'clock," he said. "Are you very tired?"

"Not very." She felt as if the weariness of the whole world was weighing her down, but she could not tell him so. It was no physical weariness, and that was what he had meant. "Is there something you want me to do?"

"I want to speak to you," he said, "about Julio."

Her heart gave a swift lurch and then seemed to lie still. What could he want to say to her about Julio? She could not imagine anything short of censure as she followed him slowly through the house and out on to the patio overlooking the sleeping garden.

In the light of the new moon all the flowers seemed to have lost their flamboyant colouring and even the lotus looked pale. It hung in great fronds above their heads, cascading from the ornamental urns which topped the wall, but suddenly it was the overpowering scent of stephanotis which filled the night.

It was everywhere, in the very air they breathed, a heady, disturbing fragrance which she knew she would never be able to forget as long as she lived. It would remind her of this moment always.

Philip's stern profile was etched sharply against the yellow circle of the one lamp he had lit.

"What is the position between you and Julio?" he asked harshly. "Are you in love with him?"

"No!" Her voice felt strangled deep in her throat. "How could I be?"

"It would not be an unusual thing." His tone had not changed and there was no reaction to her confession to be seen in his hard, set face. "Julio is not without his attraction."

She pressed her hands together, moistening her suddenly dry lips.

"I'm not going to marry Julio," she said.

He moved then, warily, striding to the edge of the patio and back again before he spoke.

"Would you consider marriage," he asked, "with me?"

 

She looked up, stunned by the question for a moment. Philip was not looking at her. His eyes were fixed on the distant pale silhouette of El Teide, which they could see even in that uncertain half-light standing up there, tall and remote, above the valley.

"We must have some sort of stability at San Lozaro," he went on when she did not—could not—answer him. "If you are not in love with Julio he must be made to see that straight away or all sorts of complications will arise."

"I have told him that I am not in love with him," she whispered. "I have said that I don't want him to make love to me."

He turned, coming to stand beside her.

"Julio will take more convincing than that," he told her dryly. "He is all Spanish, and a Spaniard believes that a woman exists for love, which may be true or untrue. I do not know. The point is that we can't go on here at San Lozaro with a small volcano brewing beneath our feet all the time. These things explode eventually. It is best that

Julio should understand immediately that you are not for"

"And so you have asked me to marry you?" Her smile was a small hurt thing which he would barely be able to see in the inadequate lamplight. "What sort of marriage would it be, Philip—without love?"

He took a full second to answer, turning away again so that she could not see his face.

"There have been such marriages in the past," he said. "Built on mutual respect and a shared ideal. We have undertaken a task here at San Lozaro. I believe you are as serious about your part as I am about mine. We could live—peaceably enough together, I have no doubt."

"Because neither of us is in love? But I am in love, Philip! I am in love!"

It was a heart-cry, driven from her by the intensity and pain of her longing, and he turned to look at her sharply before he said:

"Are you going to marry this man, then? Is it someone you knew—in England?"

"No," she said unsteadily. "No, I shall never marry him " Her lips were trembling, but she drove the confession out. "He is not in love with me."

 

His eyes searched her face with a ruthlessness which she found hard to bear.

"You know that for the truth?" he asked.

"Yes. Yes, I know it."

He drew in a deep breath.

"We seem to be very much in the same boat," he acknowledged with surprising bitterness. "Would it be too difficult to suppose that my former suggestion might work out, all the same?"

"That I should marry you and—and chance our being happy?" Her voice shook. "Oh, Philip! if we could only understand each other! I know you can't be in love with me as you were with Maria, but—"

He stood waiting for her to continue. His face in profile looked like a mask hewn out of granite and his voice was equally hard when he said, at last:

"No, I am not in love with you as I was with Maria. That is past."

But you can't forget! You will never forget, Felicity thought desperately. And now you are in love with Isabella. That is a different sort of love, but equally lost to you because Isabella's faith will never permit her to consider her freedom. She has married Rafael and she will remain his wife. Your love is impossible and your heart is torn asunder. And now you have offered it to me. But is it really in the hope that it might be healed one day? Oh, Philip! Philip, she thought. If only I knew the answer!

"I'm not asking you to make up your mind immediately," he said. "I couldn't expect that, but we ought to have something concrete to present Julio with. The fact of our engagement, for instance. He will never be convinced otherwise."

She stood quite still, looking out over the silent garden without seeing the flowers now or any of the beauty of the night.

"I can't answer you, Philip," she said. "I have to think—to reason it all out. It has been so unexpected. Less than an hour ago I would not have believed it possible—"

She saw him smile, but he said gravely enough:

"And now that you know it is possible, how long are you going to take to make up your mind?"

She thought for a moment, her lower lip gripped tightly between her strong white teeth.

 

"Can you give me till tomorrow?"

He looked surprised.

"It is a decision that will affect your whole life, remember," he warned.

"Yes," she said, "that is true. But I shall know, I think, what I want to do—by tomorrow."

He came behind her, putting a hand heavily on either shoulder, and she could feel the magnetism which she had always known he possessed like something tangible between them.

"You know that once your decision is made I shall not let you reverse it," he said.

"I won't want to," she answered steadily. "I have always tried not to go back on a promise."

"I can believe that," he said, releasing her, although the pressure of his strong fingers still seemed to burn through the thin silk of her dress. "That was what kept you here, wasn't it, after your uncle died?"

"In a way," she said.

"What else could there be?" He turned her to face him. "Was it also a way of escape?"

She looked up at him, not understanding what he meant. "From England," he supplied tersely, "and the man you loved?"

"No," she whispered, her heart twisting painfully because she could not tell him that she had never been in love until she had come to Tenerife. "No, it wasn't a way of escape."

"I don't think you would run away," he said briefly, "even from love."

She stood waiting as he turned to put out the lamp. There were other lights in the hall but here, in the patio, they were surrounded by an intimate darkness. The scent of stephanotis was stronger than ever, heady, powerful, well-nigh overwhelming.

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