Authors: Sara Craven
Sabine was totally lost. 'Who was Monsieur Fabien?' she enquired,
as they went out to the car.
Marie-Christine's lively face sobered. 'He was the
Baron's
brother—his twin, but younger by just a half-hour, and so different
—in looks, temperament — everything. He was the true
vigneron,'
she added, sighing. 'He loved the land, and understood the grape.'
She paused. 'Monsieur Gaston concerned himself with other
things.'
'Monsieur Gaston being the
Baron,
I take it.' Sabine also hesitated
for a moment. 'So, where does — Monsieur Rohan —' she
stumbled over the name a little '-fit in?'
'Monsieur Fabien married a Madame Saint Yves, who was a
widow with a little boy,' Marie-Christine explained readily. 'She
was having another baby, but something went wrong—apparently,
she was never strong—and she and the child both died.' She shook
her head. 'It was a terrible thing—a great tragedy. Monsieur Rohan
stayed with Monsieur Fabien and was brought up as his own son
—at first anyway.'
Sabine stared ahead of her through the windscreen. Fabien de
Rochefort, she thought. Rohan's stepfather, who had loved and lost
her mother, had a name, if not a face.
Maybe I know now who my real father was, she thought. But the
swift excitement bubbling inside her was mingled inevitably with
sadness, because it was all too late. He was lost to her too.
She asked colourlessly, 'When did Monsieur Fabien die? How long
ago?'
Marie-Christine considered. 'It must be over a year and a half—
nearly two years. Time goes so fast,' she added apologetically.
'Why was the house only emptied then?'
'Because he had been living there.'
'Even though the house belonged to my mother?' Sabine queried,
her heart thumping. She tried to sound casual. 'I suppose he was
some kind of tenant.'
'My aunt will be able to explain better, perhaps.' Marie-Christine
was clearly embarrassed. 'It is none of my affair and, besides, it
was all a long time ago.'
'I'm sorry to ask so many questions,' Sabine said, after another
pause. 'But apart from the fact that my mother obviously lived here
at some time I know nothing at all.'
Marie-Christine bit her lip as they turned on to the road leading up
to the chateau. 'Well, I wish I could be more help, but all I've heard
are rumours —a lot of confused stories. It wouldn't be fair to
repeat them,' she added firmly.
'I suppose not,' Sabine said wistfully. She paused again, then tried
a new tack. 'So, apart from the
Baron
and Madame de Rochefort,
who else lives at the chateau?'
'Well, Rohan lives there —for the time being, anyway. And
Antoinette, of course.'
'Oh.' Sabine digested that. 'Is —is she —Rohan's wife?'
Marie-Christine laughed. 'Not yet, but it is expected. It would be a
very suitable marriage. She's Madame Heloise's niece, and very
beautiful. Her parents were killed in an accident when she was
very young, and she has been brought up at the chateau, almost as
the daughter of the house. The
Baron
and his wife have no
children of their own,' she added.
'I see,' was all Sabine could think of in reply.
She never forgot her first proper view of the chateau. It was much
smaller than she'd imagined, just a country house, she thought,
which had been added to in a haphazard way over the centuries.
The stones glowed like warm apricots in the afternoon sun, and the
jumble of towers and turrets with their high pointed roofs topped
with blue-grey tiles had an endearing and slightly eccentric charm.
Sabine had half expected to be taken round to some tradesman's
entrance, but Marie-Christine led the way to the main door,
chattering nineteen to the dozen, clearly relieved that her mission
was almost accomplished. She was probably glad that the
inquisition was over too, Sabine thought drily.
Some parts of the house had been closed off, for economic
reasons, she was told. Madame de Rochefort and Antoinette both
had suites on the first floor, while the
Baron
occupied rooms at
ground level. She didn't volunteer any information about where
Rohan Saint Yves slept.
One of the main rooms, and the most beautiful, the grand chamber,
was used solely for vineyard business these days. All the
entertaining was done there, and there were regular wine-tastings
for customers.
'May I see it?' Sabine asked.
'Another day, perhaps,' Marie-Christine said non-committally. 'We
must not keep
Madame
waiting.'
After the radiance of the sunlit walls, the interior of the chateau
was frankly a disappointment. The entrance hall, although large
and square, was panelled in some dark wood, which made it
gloomy, and the ancestral portraits which stared disapprovingly
down on Sabine as she mounted the stairs did nothing to lighten
the atmosphere.
To reach Madame de Rochefort's suite, they had to traverse a
series of other rooms, most of them shuttered to exclude the sun.
The furniture seemed very grand, and totally impersonal, as if the
rooms were never used, except as a passage to somewhere else.
Sabine couldn't imagine anyone lounging in those chairs, or
throwing a book or a magazine down on one of the tables.
This place is like a labyrinth, she thought with a sudden shiver, as
yet another door opened in front of her. Just like last night's bad
dream. She had the sensation that if she looked over her shoulder
she would find Rohan Saint Yves watching her from the shadows.
. . Her hand lifted and touched the medallion at her breast, as if
warding off an evil spirit.
They stepped out into a corridor, richly carpeted in Turkey red.
'This is
madame's
part of the house.' Marie-Christine lowered her
voice. 'She has carpet everywhere because she said the noise of the
servants' shoes on the polished floors made her head ache.' She
rolled her eyes, then sobered, tapping respectfully on the double
doors at the end of the passage.
'Come in.' The answering voice was clear, controlled and
authoritative, giving no sign of yesterday's weakness.
Marie-Christine turned her friendly grin on Sabine.
'Courage
,' she
whispered. 'You're on your own now.' And pushed her gently but
firmly into the room.
The royal summons had clearly brought Sabine to the throne room
of the palace, she thought drily, as she halted inside the door. The
far end of the room was built on a higher level than the rest, and
was reached by a single step. And there, seated by a window in a
big winged chair, shaded by peach silk curtains, was Heloise de
Rochefort.
She was not a tall woman, but the classic smoothness of her grey
hair, immaculately dressed, gave her an air of distinction. To
Sabine, used to Aunt Ruth's dab of power and smudge of lipstick,
the
Baronne's maquillage
made her appear as if she was wearing
an exquisite but remote mask, spoiled only by the small piece of
sticking plaster on her forehead. Her eyes were deep-set and cold,
and her dress in matching blue emphasised an impression of chilly
reserve. She wore an antique brooch on one shoulder, and her
hands, discreetly beringed, were folded in her lap, and one wrist
had been bandaged.
'Miss Russell,' she said almost musingly in English. 'Please take a
seat.' She indicated a brocaded chair placed opposite to hers, and at
an angle.
Sabine obeyed, folding her hands in her lap with equal composure.
She had the oddest impression that she was taking part in a play,
for which she knew neither her lines, nor the stage directions.
Madame
turned her head slightly. 'Antoinette, my dear, you
haven't met this young lady, who is paying a short visit from
England.'
When the leading lady's on stage, you don't notice the rest of the
cast, Sabine thought wryly, the wording of
madame's
introduction
not lost on her, as a young woman got up from a sofa in another
part of the room, and came forward with open reluctance.
She was taller than Sabine, and older too. Her thick dark hair fell
in a waving mass to her shoulders, and she had a short, straight
nose, a mouth that was full-lipped to the point of petulance, and
almond-shaped brown eyes, currently studying Sabine without
friendliness. She wore a pale yellow dress cut to emphasise
shapely legs and the thrust of her rounded breasts. Altogether, she
had the kind of gloss normally associated with models and film
stars, and it seemed oddly out of place here in her aunt's elegant
sitting-room.
Her fingers barely touched Sabine's in greeting, but one swift
head-to-toe appraisal absorbed everything she had on, and
dismissed it. The de Rochefort clan, as a whole, had a pretty strong
line in contempt, Sabine decided, not letting her own polite smile
slip by one iota.
So, this was the girl Rohan Saint Yves was planning to marry. His
scowl wedded to her sulks, eh? Well, they were welcome to each
other.
Antoinette turned and addressed .the older woman in her own
language. 'Tante Heloise —is it really necessary that we do this —
that we receive this person?'
'Entirely necessary,' Madame returned imperturbably. 'And I
should warn you, Antoinette, that Miss Russell understands our
language perfectly — and speaks it too.'
She didn't need to be warned, Sabine thought drily, as Antoinette
flushed angrily.
'Now ring the bell,
ma chere,
for Ernestine to bring us some tea,
then you may leave us. I wish to speak privately with Miss
Russell.' She smiled. 'But how can I be so formal with Isabelle's
child? What is your name, my dear?'
'Sabine,
madame.'
She saw the upright figure stiffen suddenly, and the hands clench
together in her lap.
Then, 'What insolence!' Antoinette exclaimed shrilly. 'That is a de
Rochefort family name. She had no right.' Her intervention
snapped the sudden tension in the room, as if a wire had been cut.
The
Baronne's
rose-tinted lips twisted slightly. 'Calm yourself, my
child. We do not have a monopoly in names —or very much else
these days,' she added, almost as an aside. 'And Sabine has not
been used as a de Rochefort name for several generations. Now
ring for tea, as I requested you, please.'
Antoinette looked mutinous, but she obeyed, leaving the room
with something of a flounce.
'So,' Madame de Rochefort said, when they were alone. 'Now we
can talk comfortably.'
Can we? Sabine wondered. She said levelly, 'I hope you've
recovered from your unfortunate accident,
madame.'
The
Baronne
gave a silvery laugh. 'Oh, do not remind me of my
own stupidity, I beg you. I am so ashamed. But for a moment, you
understand, I thought I had seen a ghost.' She nodded slowly. 'Yes,
you are Isabelle's daughter without mistake.'
'Is that the reason you invited me here — to a house where I'm
clearly not welcome — to have another look at me?'
'No, of course not,' the
Baronne
returned peevishly. 'I wished to
express my regrets for my nephew's— hasty reaction. Such a dear
boy. So devoted to our family's interests.'
She paused. 'I was sorry to hear that your mother is dead.'
'Thank you,' Sabine said quietly.
'Tell me—was she content in England? Your father—was he a
good husband to her?'
'They—seemed very happy,' Sabine returned neutrally.
'She grew up here, of course. Her father, Hercule, was our
maitre
de chai,
responsible for making our wine, as Rohan is now. But no
doubt she told you this?'
'No,
madame
.' Sabine shook her head. 'My mother never
mentioned her life here, except to say that I had no grandparents.'
'She said nothing else?'
Madame's
fingers twisted the magnificent
ruby she wore. 'But that is —quite extraordinary.'
'I thought so too,' Sabine agreed. 'No doubt she had her reasons,'
she added pointedly.
'Ah.'
Madame'
s eyes seemed to look past her into a different time.
'She was very lovely. My mother-in-law was alive then, and she
indulged her — encouraged her artistic talents, I believe.'