Authors: Sara Craven
startled flight, its wings almost brushing her, and Sabine jumped
back against the wall, her heart hammering.
The floorboards in the centre of the room had clearly rotted,
leaving gaping holes in places, and she edged her way round the
perimeter, keeping the wall at her back all the time. The windows
up here were waist-high, but very deep, and she found that by
lifting herself up into the actual narrow embrasure, and leaning
precariously forward, she could get a limited view of the clearing
below. But it appeared totally deserted, she acknowledged with a
sigh. Devoid of either anxious friends, or triumphant adversaries.
As she was about to wriggle back into the room, the faint scent of
the climbing rose came to her nostrils, and she sniffed it
appreciatively, then paused, remembering the legend. It had
worked for that other Sabine, she thought. So it was worth a try, at
least.
She took a deep breath and leaned out further, groping for the
nearest bloom, closing her eyes to the drop beneath her. The rose
didn't give up without a struggle. It had thorns like daggers, Sabine
discovered, wincing with the pain of her torn fingers. Well, if all
else failed, she could always bleed out of the window, she thought,
with a mordant shrug.
Eventually she managed to pick three blooms. She held them for a
moment, inhaling their perfume. She whispered, 'Help him to find
me—please,' then threw them down, one at a time, into the
gathering shadows. It was impossible to see where they'd landed,
so all she could do was hope.
She retreated back downstairs, and climbed on to the mildewed
sofa, hugging her knees up to her chin. And waited.
In spite of her discomfort, she must have dozed off, because she
found herself sitting up with a start, all her senses suddenly alerted
by the sound of a key, the creak of a hinge. Her throat constricted
in passionate relief. Rohan had come. She'd been found at last.
She began to say, 'Thank God. . .' then halted, as the door swung
open and she saw a figure momentarily silhouetted against the pale
evening light. Into the shadows of the room came the beam of a
powerful flashlight, and she flung up a hand to shield her eyes
from its glare.
But the shaft of light didn't waver. It stayed on her, pinning her
down mercilessly, like a fly trapped in amber. And from
somewhere behind it she heard once more the menacing whisper,
'Isabelle's daughter.'
Only this time she recognised the voice.
She uncurled herself, and got to her feet, grimacing slightly at the
pain in her cramped muscles. She said quietly, 'Good evening,
Madame la Baronne.
May I ask the meaning of all this?'
There was a silence, then Heloise de Rochefort said, her voice
grating, 'You cannot stay here. You should never have come. You
must go away—to England — tonight.'
'Why should I do that?' Sabine kept her own tone level.
'Because you're not wanted here.' The intensity deepened in the old
woman's voice. 'When you came, you ruined everything. The same
story repeated all over again. I saw the way Rohan looked at you. I
knew what it meant. You had come—Isabelle's daughter— to steal
another woman's man, as your mother did before you.' She gave a
little harsh laugh.
'I followed you both the way I used to-do so many years ago. I saw
you together. But I won't allow you to take Rohan. I stopped your
mother all those years ago, and I shall stop you now.'
Sabine was very still. She said quietly, 'What do you mean?'
'Antoinette is to marry Rohan. It's what I planned for her—what
I've dreamed of for her all these years. Nothing and no one is
going to get in the way of that dream. We had no children of our
own,' the
Baronne
almost choked on the words, 'but there was
always Antoinette, my beautiful, radiant Antoinette, dearer to me
than any daughter could have been. Rohan belongs to her. So does
the vineyard — everything, Gaston was on the point of making her
his heir. Until you came.' She drew a hissing breath.
'When I saw you at the side of the road, it was as if a nightmare
had come true. For a moment —ah,
Dieu!—
I thought it was
Isabelle herself, who had dared to return.'
It was eerie listening to this voice, one moment high and
hysterical, sibilant as a snake's the next, issuing from the shadows
as if directed down that merciless beam of light. Sabine could see
the
Baronne's
figure, rigid and unyielding, blocking the doorway.
But for the heavy torch in the older woman's hand she might have
been tempted to make a dash for it. In the circumstances, she
supposed wryly, it was safer to stay where she was. It was also
important to remain calm, and not reveal how unnerving she found
this confrontation.
She said quietly, 'It's no business of mine who inherits La Tour
Monchauzet,
madame,
unless you think I have some prior claim
through Monsieur Fabien. But I swear to you that's not something I
intend to pursue.'
The
Baronne
laughed harshly. 'Are you really still so naive,
mademoiselle
? Even if you genuinely wished to forgo your claim,
do you think Rohan would allow it? What a romantic notion you
must have of him.'
'We've fallen in love with each other,' Sabine said quietly. 'It
wasn't something either of us expected, perhaps. . .'
'Oh, there was no question that Rohan would want you—once he
realised who you were. And he knows. He had an interview with
my husband this afternoon. I listened at the door. He knows
everything.'
'Then he's much wiser than I am,' Sabine returned wearily. 'I don't
understand any of this.' She took a deep breath. 'However, you
must be aware,
madame,
that Rohan has never —cared for
Antoinette in that way. You can't want her to marry someone who
doesn't love her in return.'
'She wants him. That is enough. Sometimes in life it has to be
enough.' The
Baronne's
voice was brittle. 'And Rohan has always
wanted La Tour Monchauzet.
He would have taken her to make it his own, just as he is now
taking you.'
Sabine's head lifted sharply. 'What do you mean?'
'Are you really such a fool? Of course, with you he has to
pretend—to play the lover. He was with you last night, wasn't he?
I saw him return this morning, so pleased with himself.'
Warm blood stung Sabine's face. 'I think that's our business.'
'Oh, yes,' the
Baronne
said bitterly. 'With Rohan, it is always a
matter of business. Or did he really make you believe he had
developed some sudden, overwhelming passion for you?'
It was like being on stage in a spotlight, which revealed every
minor action and reaction. Sabine did her best not to flinch from
the contempt in
madame's
voice as well as the implications of
what she was saying. But there was a sour taste in her throat
suddenly. She thought, I don't want to hear any more of this.
Aloud, she said coolly, 'I don't think this conversation is getting us
anywhere,
madame.
And I'm still waiting for you to explain why
you locked me in here.'
'So that you would go, just as she did, and never come back.' The
older woman's tone was almost matter-of-fact.
Sabine caught her breath. 'Are you saying you locked my mother
in here?' she demanded.
She saw the poised head nod slightly. 'Of course. But in her case I
was able to leave her in here much longer, Fabien was away, and
Gaston had gone to Bordeaux on business, so there was no one to
raise the alarm.'
She paused. 'I talked to her through the door, I told her that I
wouldn't allow her to take him from me. That I would do
anything—anything to keep him.' Her voice deepened in intensity
for a moment, then became reflective. 'At first, she argued. She
didn't realise, you see, that I had followed them, that I had seen
them here together—and knew what they were planning.
'She was frightened then, and so, in the end, she agreed to do what
I wanted, and leave La Tour Monchauzet forever.'
She's mad. The chilling thought struck Sabine to the bone. She said
carefully, 'You—wanted Fabien yourself,
madame?'
The torch beam jerked suddenly as the
Baronne
moved her hand in
an irritable gesture of negation.
'Fabien? What foolishness is this? It was never Fabien. That was
just a pretence to cover up her real
affaire.
No, Isabelle's lover was
Gaston—my husband. And he was the father of her bastard child.'
Sabine's gasp seemed torn out of her throat. 'No, it can't be true.'
'Ah, but it is,' Rohan said quietly. 'Your father is waiting at the
chateau to greet you as his daughter, Sabine.'
Neither of them had heard his approach. The
Baronne
cried out
hoarsely, and turned, the beam of light dipping and wavering like
some live and frightened creature seeking sanctuary, as Rohan
took the torch from her hand. He said very gently, 'It's all over,
Tante Heloise. There's nothing more you can do.' He called over
his shoulder, 'Jacques—come and help
madame.'
Heloise de Rochefort stood very still for a moment, then she
covered her face with her hands and began to cry in great, gusty,
choking sobs. It was one of the worst sounds Sabine had ever
heard.
Jacques appeared in the doorway. He said respectfully, '
Madame
,'
and offered her his arm. 'You should go home and rest a little now.
Ernestine—everyone has been concerned about you.'
For a moment it seemed as if she would pull away from him, then
she nodded, and, still weeping, allowed herself to be led away.
Rohan came to Sabine's side. 'You're all right.' It was a statement
rather than a question.
'I —suppose so.' Her voice sounded strained. 'I just feel — stunned
— and so terribly cold.'
He slipped off his jacket and put it round her shoulders. 'I did not
want you to find out like this,' he said, more gently. 'I planned to
tell you myself.' He paused. 'How did she get you here?'
'I found a note at the house. I thought it was from you.' She drew a
shuddering breath. 'She locked my mother in here years ago —
threatened her. That's why she ran away.'
'It wasn't just that. There were other factors. The child she was
having, for example. Obviously, she could not bear to hurt Fabien
with the truth.'
Her lips felt stiff. 'How —how long have you known — that the
Baron
was my father?'
'I knew for certain when you showed me that photograph, and I
realised it was Gaston, not Fabien whose picture she had kept all
those years. This afternoon I confronted him with my suspicions,
and he admitted everything. I think it was almost a relief to him —
after all this time.' He was silent for a moment. 'It is a painful
story. Some aspects of it may shock you.'
'I don't think I can handle any more shocks,' she said with taut
bitterness. 'It's bad enough just knowing that Isabelle was having
an affair with a married man while she was supposed to be
engaged to his brother. I feel as if the woman I loved and looked
up to never existed.'
'Talk to your father before you judge her too harshly,' he said.
'Do I have to? I feel as if I just want to leave this place —and
never see it —or anyone here ever again.' She didn't look at him as
she said this.
'I'm afraid it is essential,' he said. 'You were the one after all who
wanted the truth. You can't avoid it now, even if it isn't the clean,
pure vindication that you desired.'
'No.' She fought down a sob. 'How —how did you know where to
find me?'
'I was on my way down to Les Hiboux when I saw a light in the
trees. Jacques caught up with me to say that Tante Heloise, who'd
gone to her room with a supposed migraine, had disappeared too,
and Ernestine was having hysterics.' He paused. 'Then I saw these.'
For the first time, she saw he was holding the roses she'd thrown
from the window, and he handed them to her. She looked down at
them expressionlessly. They were crushed — almost lifeless, but
the thorns were still sharp.
As he turned to close the door of the tower behind them, she let
them fall to the ground again. The legend—the romantic flight of