Read The Eden Inheritance Online
Authors: Janet Tanner
It was Albert's shout which alerted them. They jerked apart. And in that same moment, it seemed to Kathryn, all hell broke loose.
Afterwards she remembered only a scene of total chaos, a nightmare come to life which she would relive over and over again, fragmented pictures of vehicles roaring into the field and men running, of shouts and screams and gunfire. Some of the reception committee dashed for the shelter of the trees â they knew they stood no chance of making a fight of it with the Boche arriving in such strength. But Paul did not run. He was there beside her, throwing Guy into the Lysander to Celestine's waiting arms.
âGet in!' he shouted to her, pushing her bodily up the little ladder.
âYou come too â¦'
âDon't be stupid ⦠get in! Close the hatch!'
âPaul!' She was almost hysterical. âFor God's sake, Paul!'
It was Celestine who restrained her, Celestine who dragged her into the Lysander and pulled up the ladder. Then the hatch was closed, the engines roaring as the pilot applied full power and the plane began to move forward over the rough ground.
âPaul! My God â Paul!'
She could hear shot peppering the fuselage of the aircraft but she no longer cared about her own situation. All she could think of was that. Paul was still out there in the moonlit field and the Germans had come. He couldn't escape. There was no way â¦
Guy was crying. Somewhere on the periphery of her mind she could hear him and she reached out for him blindly, holding him tight to her while she shook and sobbed. The wheels left the ground, somehow, miraculously, they were airborne, climbing away, and she knew with sick certainty that when the plane was out of range the Boche would turn their guns on Paul. If they had not already done so. And if they didn't â¦
From a cold place somewhere deep inside her she seemed to hear his voice speaking to her in what seemed now to have been another lifetime.
âThey'll never take me alive.'
The memory cut through her hysteria and froze her sobs, turning the whole of her body into a solid block of ice through which breath had to be forced and blood could scarcely flow. She could not move, could not think, but thought was unnecessary. Knowing was enough â knowing indisputably, with every fibre of her being, that this could end in one way only.
Maybe at this very moment Paul was dying or already dead. She would never see him again, this man whom she now knew she loved more than life. It was over.
With an instinctive movement she pulled Guy close so that her face was buried in the soft soap-scented cap of his hair. Her little boy â her son â somehow she had to be strong for him and for the unborn child she was carrying within her.
They were all that was left to her now.
âS
O
,'
KATHRYN SAID
, looking steadily at Guy, â now you know. In the early part of the war, at least, your father and grandfather were collaborators. They positively encouraged von Rheinhardt and called him their friend. That much, at least, is bound to come out if the man you have found living in the Caribbean is von Rheinhardt and if you bring him to justice.'
She was standing now beside the fireplace, leaning back against the stone ledge that ran from the overmantel to the wall. Whilst she had talked she had prowled around the small comfortably furnished living room as if she could not bear to be still; now only the fact that she fiddled incessantly with the bracelets that hung around her wrist beneath the sleeve of her cream sweater gave any indication of the agitation she had experienced reliving the events that had turned her world upside down more than a quarter of a century ago.
For long minutes Guy was silent, sitting in the fireside chair, one leg crossed over the other, nursing his chin in his hand whilst his elbow rested on his knee. Because his head was bent forward his face was in shadow and Kathryn could not read his expression. But she knew her revelations had been a shock to him â how could they possibly have been anything else, raised, as he had been, on stories of his family's heroism? And she still had not told him all of it. The part about his father's treachery she had kept back. She herself had learned of it only after the war was over from a broken Guillaume, who could no longer bear alone the guilty knowledge of what his son had confessed to him. âIt was my doing Papa,' Charles had told Guillaume. âI didn't know Kathryn and Guy would be there, of course, but that's no excuse. I was mad with jealousy and I was responsible for the deaths and torture of men who had only the good of France in mind.' He had done his best to make up for it, of course. When the Communists had carried out their unsuccessful attempt on the life of Heydrich, the SS officer, and hostages had been taken, Charles had offered himself in place of one of them. It had been a brave gesture but she did not want Guy to know the truth of it â that it had been Charles' way of ending his life because he could no longer live with the terrible guilt of what he had done. She hoped with all her heart that what she had told Guy would be enough to make him forget his plans to rake up the past. Then there would never be any need for him to find out the truth about his father.
She looked at him, sitting there assimilating all she had said, and felt her heart swell with love for him just as it had swelled that long-ago night when she had looked into the bedroom at the small sleeping figure with a thumb pressed into his mouth. Guy was a grown man now but that did not mean the maternal instinct was any the less strong. She could soil sense the vulnerability beneath the hard masculine exterior, all the more poignant because of it, and she still wanted to protect him. It was different now, of course, and in a strange way she felt even more helpless than she had done all those years ago when all she had wanted was to keep him safe from harm. She had been afraid then of circumstances beyond her control, but one could at least manipulate a child into the position which afforded the best protection. It wasn't possible to do that when the child was grown. They went their own way â that was as it should be and she had learned to accept it. Throughout his first forays into the adult world, his first motorcycle, the first times away from home, the first broken heart, she had trained herself to stand back on the sidelines. She had offered advice but never tried to enforce her will, for she felt her role now was reduced to a loving, supportive one, counselling, standing back, and if necessary comforting and being there to pickup the pieces. But it didn't make it any the easier, didn't mean that her heart did not bleed for him or that she felt for him any the less acutely. One still wanted everything to be right for one's children, no matter how old they might be. It would be the same, she suspected, if she lived to be a hundred.
Eventually Guy looked up at her, still massaging his jaw with long fingers the exact same shape Charles' had been.
âSo â early in the war they collaborated,' he said, â It's nothing to be proud of, I agree, but I don't see it's such a big problem as you are making it out to be. They thought it was for the best. They were mistaken, of course, but knowing what Savigny means to them I can almost understand it. And it wasn't so long after that that my father died a hero's death. When the chips were down, when the hostages were taken and shot as a reprisal for the attempt on Heydrich's life, my father offered himself in place of one of them. You can't get braver than that.'
âNo,' she agreed. âYou can't.'
âSo why should I or anyone else be ashamed of what went before? It's not very nice, I admit, to think of them entertaining Nazis in the family home but I'd already guessed that much from the photographs I found in Grandpapa's box, and quite honestly I think my rather more than made up for that by giving his life in exchange for the life of one of the hostages.'
Kathryn ran a hand through her hair, the bangles jangling cold against her hot face. It was as she had feared, Guy wasn't convinced by half a story. Unless she told him the rest he would refuse to see it any differently. And telling him the rest was not something she could bring herself to do, though she was very much afraid that it would all come out if von Rheinhardt was brought to trial.
âUncle Christian was a hero, too,' Guy went on. âHe went on working for the Resistance until he was captured and executed. No, what has really shocked me is that you betrayed my father with the British agent â Paul Curtis, or whatever his real name was. How could you do it, Mum? I'd never have believed it of you.'
His eyes met Kathryn's in a cold blue stare and she experienced a wash of horror. He wasn't seeing things from her point of view at all but from his father's. She should have known, of course, that he would. His father had been a hero-figure to him for too long, canonised almost by his heroic death, and she had encouraged that, feeling that Guy needed it and driven also, perhaps, by a guilt she had been unwilling to acknowledge. She had loved Paul so much that it had never seemed sordid or wrong to her â on the surface anyway. But that wasn't the way it looked to Guy. To him it was simply a betrayal of the father he idolised. And perhaps, deep down, she felt it too â that she had been guilty of a disloyalty too deep to contemplate and had, in her own way, been as responsible for what had happened as Charles had been.
âYou never saw him again, I take it?' he said. His voice was cold; she did not think she could ever recollect having heard him use this tone with her before.
âI never saw him again,' she agreed. âHe died the night we escaped to England.' She hesitated. âYou should thank him for that, at least, Guy. If he had run with the others he would have stood a chance. As it was he stayed by the plane, shooting at the Germans to keep them back until we were able to take off.'
âWe shouldn't have been there at all,' Guy said harshly. âWe shouldn't have deserted Papa. Our place was with him, at the château.'
âYou were a little boy, Guy. I was afraid for your safety. And Celestine was desperate. The Nazis might have taken her if she had stayed. They would certainly have taken her baby. Your cousin Lise is half Jewish â the Nazis would have taken them away to the death camps when they realised it.'
âAnd your baby?' Guy asked in the same cold, hard voice. âWhat happened to that? Do I have another brother or sister somewhere I know nothing about?'
âOf course not!' Kathryn flared. âI lost my baby that night.'
She closed her eyes momentarily, reliving it. She had been so dazed with shock she had not even really been aware of the flak as they passed over the French coast or the desperate ducking and weaving and low flying the pilot had engaged in to avoid it, much less the first warm trickle of blood that had heralded a miscarriage. Celestine had told her afterwards of the hazards of that flight; she had crouched in the Lysander holding Guy tightly in her arms, thinking that the dull ache in the pit of her stomach was the beginnings of grief and not noticing the hot wetness between her legs until she was soaked with it. They had taken her to hospital in Tangmere when the Lysander landed and they found the floor awash with blood, but it was too late. She had lost the baby and scarcely even cried for it. All her tears were for Paul and for a future in which she would never see him again. It was only much later that she started to grieve for the little life snuffed out before it had begun, but even then she had not really known what to think about it. If she could have been sure it was Paul's child she would have welcomed it, cherished it as a part of him left to her. But she was not sure and she did not think she could have borne to live with a constant reminder of the night Charles had raped her.
âWell that's something, I suppose.' Guy stood up. âI think I need a drink. Can I help myself?'
âOf course you can. This is your home!' she said defensively.
He glanced at her. Is it? that look seemed to say. I'm not sure of anything any more. But he said nothing, simply crossed to the sideboard and took out the bottle, pouring himself a generous measure and tossing it back.
âYou can get me one too,' she said.
He poured some whisky into a glass and passed it to her. She sipped it, neat, feeling the liquor burn her throat and stomach and spread a little warmth through her veins.
He was refilling his own glass.
âDon't have too much, Guy. Remember you have to drive.'
He did not answer, carrying the glass over to the window and looking out at the winter-bare garden.
âWhat are you going to do?' she asked after a moment.
âWhat am I going to do?' He repeated it almost reflectively. â I'm still going to the Caribbean, of course. I still want the man who murdered my father and I still want the family heirlooms he stole back where they belong. He took over the château for his headquarters soon after all this happened, I suppose.'
âYes. But you already knew that. He ordered the family to move into the
gîte
where the attempt was made on Heydrich's life and moved his own staff into the château. He'd always coveted it â you could see it in his eyes â and I think it was a double pleasure for him, knowing the de Savignys were having to live in the house that had seen the attack that cost your father his life. Heydrich, understandably, didn't want to use it any more and it satisfied von Rheinhardt to know that every time they looked at the bullet holes in the walls they would be reminded of the folly of trying to kill a Nazi general.'
âThe cruel bastard.' Guy set his glass down on the table with a thud. âIf anything, I want him more than ever.'
âWhat he did was unforgivable,' Kathryn said, â But I still wish you'd let the past lie.'
âI'm sure you do.' Guy's voice was hard, full of hidden meaning. She looked at him questioning and he went on: âAre you sure you've been honest with me, Mum? Are you sure the reason you don't want any of this to come out isn't because you don't want anyone to know about your indiscretion?'