Authors: Sara Craven
WILD MELODY
Sara Craven
On the strength of a brief holiday romance with Jeremy Lord, Catriona Muir
left her quiet Scottish home and set off for London, firmly convinced that he
would want to marry her. But of course by the time she arrived Jeremy had
forgotten all about her. Instead she found herself involved with his uncle
Jason--who was even more out of her league than Jeremy had been.
Attractive, rich, a sophisticated man of the world, Jason presented a far
greater danger than his nephew--how could she possibly cope with his
devastating attraction? Hadn't she better hurry back to Scotland before her
life was ruined altogether?
'LASSIE, are you sure?' Mrs McGregor, her ample form wrapped securely in
a flowered pinny, paused in her task of kneading dough, and stared at the
slight figure on the other side of the big kitchen table.
'Quite sure,' Catriona Muir said, with a firmness she was I far from feeling.
'I—I simply must get away. The Mackintoshes want vacant possession as
soon as possible, and now I the house is sold, I feel as if I don't belong there
anyway.'
'Don't belong?' Mrs McGregor attacked the dough with renewed vigour.
'Away with you! In your own aunt's house where you were brought up as a
bairn?'
'The Mackintoshes own it now,' Catriona reminded her with a pang. It still
hurt to think of it. The big grey house standing back from the road had been
home as long as she could remember. Ever since, in fact, the parents who
were just vague pictures in her mind had been killed in a car crash and
Auntie Jessie, her father's unmarried sister and Catriona's only living
relative, had descended on her and carried her back to the tiny village of
Torvaig on the west coast of Scotland.
Now, eighteen years later, Aunt Jessie too was dead, and Muir
House—surely, as she herself had ruefully said, the most unsuccessful
guest-house in Scotland—had been sold to a Glasgow couple.
'Aye, they own it,' Mrs McGregor retorted. 'But for how long?' She dropped
the dough back into its bowl. 'If a fine woman like Jessie Muir couldn'a
make the place pay, then it's no likely that painted besom and her man will
do any better. This is the wrong place for summer boarders, my dear, and
that's the truth of it. We're too far away from Fort William and the Islands
and the things folk come to see. It's a family house, that. It's crying out for
bairns and laughter, and it'll no take kindly to that one and
her—improvements.' Mrs McGregor invested the last word with incredible
scorn. 'A discotheque in the basement! Have you ever heard such
nonsense?'
Catriona smiled unhappily. 'I think she's being a little unrealistic.'
'And so are you.' Mrs McGregor folded her arms and gazed at Catriona
sternly. 'Chasing off to England after some laddie that's never given you a
thought all year.'
Catriona flushed and her green eyes grew stormy.
'That's not true,' she protested. 'Jeremy didn't come this spring, I know, but
he has written to me.'
'Not for several months he hasn't,' retorted Mrs McGregor with all the calm
assurance of the sister of the village postmistress. 'And don't jut that Muir
chin at me, my lass. There's no one in this village with anything but your
good at heart, and they'd all tell you what I'm telling you now. A few
moonlight kisses by the sea-loch don't make a marriage.'
She nodded emphatically at Catriona, whose cheeks were flaming.
'Och, we've all been through it, lassie,' she Went on kindly. 'First love's a
grand thing, but it doesn't last. Whenit's real love, you'll know, just as I
knew with Mr McGregor.'
Catriona looking at the round plump face with its coronet of wispy grey hair
and visualising the balding taciturn Mr McGregor had to repress a desire to
giggle, in spite of her annoyance What did Mrs McGregor know of the
sweet and tender secret she and Jeremy had shared in that magical few
weeks the previous year when he had come to Torvaig on a walking torn-
and stayed and stayed until his time was up, and he had to return to
university?
Thinking of Jeremy with his crisp dark hair and laughing blue eyes brought
a tightening to her throat and a mistiness to her eyes. They had shared so
much. They had walked, sailed and swum during those golden days that
seemed as if they would last for ever.
One night they had attended a
ceilidh
in a neighbouring village. Catriona,
who played the guitar and sang folk songs in English and Gaelic, had been
one of the star turns, and later as they drove home in the back of Angus
Duncan's van along the narrow single track road with the clumps of grass
growing in the centre which was Torvaig's only means of access with the
outside world, Jeremy had drawn her close.
'I never knew you could sing like that,' he whispered, his lips against her
ear.
Catriona, more used to her aunt's affectionate bluntness and the villagers'
forthrightness, had blushed.
'Oh, it's nothing,' she said awkwardly.
'Nothing!' Jeremy cast his eyes to heaven. 'My love, in Londcn you'd be a
hit. You've got real talent, and you don't even know it. The record
companies are always crying out for something new, and those songs you
sang in that outlandish language. . .'
'The Gaelic is not outlandish!' Catriona flared. 'And I wish I could speak it
properly instead of just being able to sing a few songs in it.'
'Okay, okay,' Jeremy said placatingly. 'But it does sound strange when
you're not used to it. I think that with the proper backing and promotion you
could be Scotland's answer to Nana Mouskouri.'
'I'd be more flattered if I knew who she was,' Catriona said, resting her head
sleepily on his shoulder.
'Seriously, Trina,' he put his fingers under her chin, forcing her to look up at
him, 'you shouldn't waste yourself in this wilderness. You'd have far more
chance in London.'
'Wilderness?' Catriona faced him bewilderedly. 'But, Jeremy, I thought you
liked Torvaig.'
'I do like it,' he said. 'But I like it because you're here. Without you, I
wouldn't have spent a second day here. It's too quiet for me. I like some
action.'
Remembering this now in the homely warmth of the McGregor kitchen,
Catriona felt her spirits plummet. It was the only difference they had ever
had. When he had finally gone back to London, he had promised to return
the following spring, if he could. But Easter had come and gone and no sign
of him, and then shortly before Whitsun, Aunt Jessie's ill-used weak heart
had finally given way, ironically enough as she sat watching one of her
beloved sunsets over the western sea.
It was Jeremy's parting words that Catriona had remembered in the
bewilderment of grief, when she had realised that the house would have to
be sold to pay off various creditors, as well as the mortgage which she did
not feel capable of shouldering.
'Here's my address.' He gave her a folded piece of paper. 'Keep it safe. If you
ever need me, that's where I'll be.'
They had kissed and she had clung to him, her face wet with tears,
promising to wait for him. At first his letters had come often and hers
returned as eagerly. Then the frequency began to falter, although he still
talked of the time when they would be together always. Now, if she faced it,
five months had gone by with no word. Catriona had salved her pride by
telling herself that Jeremy was busy with his studies and that he had
important exams coming up, which, as he'd said in an early letter, could
make all the difference to their future together. It was this, and the address
carefully treasured in her trinket box at home, that had decided Catriona on
her next course of action, now that she was alone.
She looked up from her reverie and found Mrs McGregor watching her
concernedly. She smiled back at her.
'It'll be all right,' she said. 'I know it will. I can't bear to stay here with
Auntie—and the house—gone like that. And I can't bear to see what the
Mackintoshes are going to do with the place either. Besides, London will be
an adventure, and Jeremy will be there.' She smiled again, more gaily. 'I'll
send you a piece of wedding cake.'
'So I should hope—when you find a husband,' Mrs McGregor said a trifle
caustically.
She confided her misgivings to her husband over supper that evening.
'But she's set on it,' she added, and sighed. 'London's a gey long way to go,
just to have your heart broken. I doubt yon poor lassie knows what she's
getting herself into.'
A week later, standing completely bewildered in the bustle of Euston,
Catriona was wondering exactly the same thing. The noise from the
loudspeakers, the roar of the traffic outside, and the shouting and banging
on the station itself as trains arrived and departed filled her with
unreasoning panic. After the silence of Torvaig, where the hum of the
telegraph wires was often clearly audible even in the middle of the day, she
felt as if her eardrums would burst. What was worse, everyone but her
seemed to know exactly where they were going. She followed the crowd to
the barrier and gave up her ticket.
Outside in the sunlight, she felt even more uncomfortable. Jeremy's address
was tucked safely in an inside pocket of her leather shoulder bag, but she
had no idea how to get there. Awkwardly she shifted her rucksack on to her
other shoulder and leaned her guitar case against a newsvendor's stand
while she tried to take stock of her surroundings. Most of the money she
possessed in the world—just under two hundred pounds—was safely
locked up in a small cashbox in her rucksack, but she had kept a few pounds
in her handbag for emergencies. Catriona decided ruefully that the first
emergency was now. Picking up her guitar, she walked purposefully to the
queue of people waiting for taxis. But when her turn came, she found to her
astonishment that she was calmly elbowed out of the way by two smartly
dressed men. She stood indignantly on the pavement watching the last cab
draw away, and a certain grimness crept into her expression. As another cab
pulled up, a fur-coated woman stepped forward, brushing Catriona aside.
Catriona swung her rucksack and there was a startled yelp as its bulk
encountered the fur coat. The woman tottered, momentarily off balance, and
Catriona squeezed past. 'Mine, I think,' she said, pushing her guitar case on
to the back seat. She sat back feeling a little guilty at her discourtesy, but at
the same time faintly victorious. If this was how Londoners conducted
themselves, then a Muir could do just as well!
'Where to, ducks?'
'Oh.' Catriona produced Jeremy's slip of paper and pushed it through the
glass partition. The driver looked at it and whistled. 'It's quite a way.' He
turned and studied his passenger, from the attractive mass of curly dark hair
on her shoulders down over the duffel coat and slim-fitting levis to the
well-worn brogues. 'It'll cost you.'
'I have money.' Catriona lifted her chin at him.
'Suit yourself, love,' and he let in the clutch.
By the time the journey was over, Catriona was too sick with nervousness to
worry over-much about the amount on the meter, although one corner of her
thrifty soul registered a momentary squeal of outrage as she handed over the
fare and added a generous tip.
'Shall I hang on?' asked the driver, apparently moved by the unexpected
gesture.
Catriona looked up at the house where the cab had halted. It was not quite
what she had envisaged, being a narrow terraced building with peeling
stucco. The paintwork needed renewal, and the front garden was untended.