Authors: Sara Craven
taken and enjoyed, do you think,
mademoiselle?'
Sabine laughed. 'The '86 certainly,' she said. 'Although I can't
approve of the sexist metaphor. The '89 needs to put on a little
weight.'
'You hear?' The
Baron
looked at his nephew. 'Maybe Hercule has
returned to us too.'
'No one has returned to us,' Rohan said curtly. 'Miss Russell is here
on a short holiday, that's all. She will be going back to England
very soon.'
'Then we must make the most of her. Perhaps you will dine with
us,
mademoiselle,
on Saturday evening?'
'We cannot monopolise Miss Russell's time.' Rohan's frown was
swift and disapproving. 'No doubt her plans are already made.'
'You must forgive Rohan's apparent churlishness,' Gaston de
Rochefort said gently. 'Your mother's inexplicable desertion of my
poor brother all those years ago still rankles with him.' He lifted a
shoulder. 'But the heart has its reasons, and in any case Isabelle is
beyond blame now.'
'That's exactly how I feel about it,' Sabine said, giving Rohan a
defiant glance. 'Although I admit I'd like to know exactly what
those reasons were.'
'Who can tell?' The
Baron
sighed. 'A lovers' quarrel — the natural
nerves of a bride. One can find all kinds of explanations.'
'I suppose so,' Sabine said slowly. 'But with my mother it was
more than that. I'm sure of it. It was if she wanted to forget that
this part of her life ever existed.'
'You don't think maybe her wishes should be respected?' Rohan
asked, a note of anger simmering just below the surface of his
voice.
'She's been accused of a lot of things,' Sabine said coolly. 'I feel it's
up to me to put the record straight.' She turned to the
Baron.
'Thank you for your invitation,
monsieur.
I'd be happy to accept.'
'Then shall we say eight o'clock? But I hope you will visit us less
formally before then. Where are you staying?'
'Miss Russell is using Les Hiboux,' Rohan said abruptly.
'But of course. A charming place, but a little primitive,' said the
Baron.
'We have a swimming-pool at the rear of the house, Miss
Russell, which you are welcome to use whenever you wish.' He
turned to his nephew. 'Rohan, you must show Miss Russell the
short-cut through the woods between our house and hers.'
Rohan's mouth tightened. 'It would be better if I asked Marie-
Christine to point the way, Uncle Gaston, if that's what you wish.'
He paused. 'We need to talk, you and I.'
Gaston de Rochefort was still smiling, but Sabine saw that tell-tale
tightening of his hands on the controls of the chair. The tension in
the room had changed in some way. 'You have been to Arrancay
today, I suppose. The jewel of the Haut-Medoc.' He made it sound
almost insulting.
'Yes,' Rohan said, wearily. 'But that's not important. At least not
yet. It's the quotation from Lemaitre I put on your desk two weeks
ago that we have to discuss.'
'I've seen it,' the
Baron
said shortly. 'His prices are absurd. Our
present casks can be scraped.'
'They have been,' Rohan said grittily. 'Too many times already.
And we should also discuss the replanting programme with
Jacques.'
The
Baron
moved a hand dismissively. 'There is plenty of time for
this later. You are always so impatient, my dear boy. And, besides,
we should not bore Miss Russell with the business of the
vignoble.
Particularly when she wishes you to escort her back to Les
Hiboux. It's not very gallant to keep her waiting,' he added
reprovingly.
'Oh, please.' Sabine's face flamed. 'I can find my own way. . .'
'It doesn't matter,' Rohan said harshly. 'The
vignoble
has never
been my uncle's top priority.'
For one inimical moment, the eyes of the two men met. Oh, Lord,
Sabine thought, dismayed, the swords are out.
'Touché.'
It was as if the
Baron
had picked up her thought. He was
smiling ruefully, disarmingly. 'Rohan will tell you,
mademoiselle,
that I spend too much time on my researches. But when one has
become—inactive some consolation is needed in life. And, I
admit, the history of our region has become mine.'
'May I know what you're researching?' Sabine asked.
He gave a self-deprecating shrug. 'The role of the local
bastides
in
the Wars of Religion. I am writing a book on the subject.'
'I don't think I know what a
bastide
is.'
'They were fortified towns built in the Middle Ages, some by the
French and some by the English, from which they preyed on each
other, particularly during the Hundred Years' War between our
countries. It was a violent and savage period, you understand.
Later, in the sixteenth century, some of the
bastides
allied
themselves with the Huguenot cause against the Catholics, and
there was more bloodshed.'
'Not always,' Rohan put in drily, and the
Baron
laughed.
'Rohan is referring to a story he's always enjoyed about the men of
Monpazier versus Villefranche de Perigord. They set off to raid
each other on the same night, but passed somehow in the darkness.
Of course, when each army arrived at the other's
bastide,
it found
no defences, and looted as much as it wished. When light dawned,
both sides looked very foolish, and made a treaty that everything
should be put back exactly as it had been.'
Sabine laughed too. 'It's a nice story. I wish all wars could be
settled as easily.' She paused. 'Are any of these
bastides
in the
neighbourhood?'
'Monpazier—one of the most beautiful —is only a few kilometres
away. Rohan has to go there tomorrow — some tiresome business
with insurance. He would be glad to take you with him. There is an
excellent restaurant where you could have lunch.'
'Oh, please.' Sabine shot an appalled glance at Rohan's stony face.
'I don't want to be a nuisance. I can do my own sightseeing,
really...'
'Oh, but I insist,' said Gaston de Rochefort. His smile was
curiously sweet. 'There is no problem, is there, Rohan?'
'None at all,' Rohan said colourlessly, thrusting his hands into his
pockets and turning away.
'That is settled, then.' The
Baron
sounded satisfied.
'A bientot,
mademoiselle.
Until Saturday.'
This is crazy, Sabine thought, as they went out into the sunshine.
One moment, I'm being thrown off the premises. The next, I'm
practically being adopted. Yet when he first saw me it was
definitely scary. . . I don't understand any of it.
She stole a look at her companion. His eyes were brooding and his
mouth compressed. She said, 'I'm sorry if I got in the way just
now, when you wanted to talk about the vineyard.'
He shrugged. 'If you'd not been there, he would have found
another excuse, believe me.'
'Oh.' Sabine digested that, then took a breath. 'Nor was I hinting
for a guided tour. You —don't have to take me to Monpazier.'
'Those are the
Baron's
orders,' he said with cool indifference. 'It's
best to comply. It makes life much easier,' he added with faint
grimness. 'Besides, you'll probably have to face a full interrogation
on the Monpazier
bastide
on Saturday. I'll pick you up at ten
tomorrow morning.'
She looked down at the broad flags of the terrace they were
crossing. 'But won't Antoinette object?'
He gave her a brief, incredulous look. 'Why should she? She hasn't
the slightest interest in Monpazier. She belongs, heart and soul, to
Paris.'
'Oh,' was all she could think of to say. It would be a strange
marriage, she thought, with Antoinette hitting the high spots in the
big city, while her husband tended his vines here in the Perigord.
But if that was what they both wanted. . .
It wouldn't suit me, she thought. I'd want to be with him, working
alongside him. Sleeping with him at night.
From the terrace, a broad flight of central steps led down to lawns
and formal flowerbeds. Ahead of them the dark shadow of the
trees waited. She wasn't at all sure she wanted to be shown this
short-cut through the woods, although Isabelle must have used it
many times, when she was living at Les Hiboux and working at the
chateau. She glanced back at the house. There seemed to be
windows everywhere, like bright eyes, staring down at her,
watching her every move.
She suppressed a shiver. 'It's very beautiful here,' she commented
over-brightly in compensation.
'Yes, I suppose it must seem so.' Rohan roused himself from his
abstraction and glanced round him. 'But I may have become blind
to its charms. This place hasn't the happiest of associations for me.'
He looked at her. 'Tell me something. Are you still glad you came
here?'
'I'm neither glad nor sorry. It was something I felt I had to do.' She
looked straight ahead, desperately aware of him beside her,
conscious of the start of an unfamiliar and unwelcome ache of
yearning deep within her. 'Although it hasn't been one of the
happiest experiences of my life either,' she added in a low voice.
'What did you expect? One stone is disturbed on a hillside, and
soon it becomes a landslide.' He shrugged again, almost angrily.
'Well, it is done, and there's no turning back now.'
She gave an uneven laugh. 'You make me sound like some kind of
natural disaster.'
'Perhaps that's how I see you.' His mouth twisted. 'Like one of the
summer hailstorms which come without warning and strip the fruit
from the vines. One moment the sky is clear—then, on the
horizon, one small insignificant cloud. And afterwards—one is left
with the wreckage.'
They'd reached the trees now. There was a clearly defined path,
but she still had to pick her way with care. Except for the rasp of
the crickets, it was very quiet.
She said huskily, 'I didn't come here to wreck anything. Or to make
any kind of demand. Whatever you may think or believe about my
mother, you must understand that.'
'Perhaps Isabelle didn't intend it either. But it happened. Maybe
she was the kind who trails havoc behind her wherever she goes.'
'And I'm her daughter, so naturally I must be the same,' Sabine said
harshly. 'Well, she broke no hearts in England, and nor have I—
ever. I didn't mean to make trouble here either.' She stared up into
the sun-dappled leaves. 'In fact, if I'd known the effect my arrival
was going to have, perhaps I'd have stayed away. I —I just don't
know.'
Rohan halted, seizing her arm, and jerking her roughly round to
face him. 'Then why did you come?' he grated. 'You don't want
money. It can't have been mere curiosity. You're too determined —
too single-minded about it for that. What is this—great truth you're
looking for?'
She swallowed. 'I —I came to find my real father.'
There was a long silence, then he said wearily, '
Mon
Dieu!'
and his
hand fell from her arm. 'Are you saying that Isabelle was pregnant
— that she was expecting Fabien's child when she ran away?'
She nodded.
'But it makes no sense.' He punched one hand against the other.
'Fabien loved her, and they were going to be married within weeks
anyway. Plenty of babies come too soon after the wedding. People
would just have shrugged their shoulders. There would have been
no shame attached to either of them. Why should she have left
him?'
'That's what I keep asking myself—because she didn't just leave.
She hid in England, and never came back.'
'What are you implying? That she was afraid of something —
afraid of my stepfather, perhaps?' He shook his head. 'That's
impossible. He married my mother when I was just two years old.
I never heard him raise his voice to her, and he mourned sincerely
when she died. Children know these things—they have an instinct
— they sense undercurrents.'
'Do they?' Sabine asked bitterly. 'I was totally oblivious. I never
suspected a thing, even though my supposed father always kept me
at arm's length.' She folded her arms across her body. 'Every time I
called him Daddy, it must have been like twisting a knife in a
wound,' she said, with a shiver. 'I tried so hard, you see, to give
him extra attention — extra love —to try and make up for the loss