Read HIGH TIDE AT MIDNIGHT Online
Authors: Sara Craven,Mineko Yamada
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
dinner at Trevennon tomorrow, evening. Everything would work out after
that—I know it.'
Barbie Inglis seemed to withdraw in upon herself. 'I asked you to go, Miss
Kerslake,' she said in a quiet monotonous voice.
Morwenna hesitated, took one last despairing look at the unyielding face
before her, then walked to the door.
She was halfway down the stairs when a door at the side of the hall opened
and Karen came out. Morwenna froze, hoping that the other girl would not
look up and see her standing there, but it was a vain hope. Karen glanced
round almost casually, but as her gaze focussed upon Morwenna, her
features sharpened inimically.
'What are you doing here?' Her voice sounded shrill with shock. She swung
back towards the room she had just left. 'Dominic!'
Morwenna groaned silently, her fingers gripping the banister rail until her
knuckles showed white.
He came out into the hall and stood looking up at her as if he could not
believe his eyes. Then he said very quietly, 'What in hell's name do you think
you're playing at?'
Morwenna sighed. 'I came to ask Miss Inglis to dine at Trevennon tomorrow
evening.'
Temper barely controlled brought Karen's lovely face to the brink of
ugliness.
'You
came to invite her? My God, if that isn't adding insult to
injury…'
'Oh, you don't have to worry.' Morwenna was very pale. She came down the
remaining stairs. 'She refused—naturally, and I'm leaving.'
'I should damn well think you are!' Karen walked to the front door and flung
it open.
Morwenna went blindly towards it.
'Wait, Morwenna.' Dominic's voice came after her, cool and authoritative.
'No.' She paused, but did not turn arid look back at the two of them standing
there united in condemnation of her. 'Forgive me, but I don't think I can take
any more at the moment. I know what you must be thinking, but I can only
say I meant it for the best. I'm sorry.'
She went out into the raw December air, walking quickly. As she reached
the gate, she heard the front door slam shut behind her, closing them in
together. As she walked away from the house, a few flakes of snow began to
drift down out of the leaden sky, but she paid them no heed, and the
dampness on her face had no connection with the weather at all.
'You mean,' Biddy said incredulously, 'that you've run away?'
Morwenna avoided her gaze. 'Not really. I was going toleave anyway. I've
just done it a little earlier than I intended, that's all.'
'Balderdash,' Biddy said roundly. 'No one takes off for anywhere through
choice on Christmas Eve. I mean, where are you going to go? What are you
going to do?' She saw Morwenna's suddenly stricken look, and her face
softened. 'Oh, love, I mean ultimately. Of course you can stay here with us
as long as you want, you know that. Where do they all think you are?'
'I wrote Nick a note, saying I'd decided to go back to the Priory.' Morwenna
bit her lip. It had been a difficult letter to write, knowing the hurt she was
going to deal the recipient. 'They'll think I've gone to Penzance to catch a
train. At least that's what I hope they'll think.' She took a sip at the scalding
mug of coffee Biddy had just put into her hand.
'Well, Mark won't think it for one,' Biddy pointed out reasonably. 'We can
hardly hide you in a cupboard each time he knocks at the door.'
'I hadn't thought of that,' Morwenna admitted. She sighed. 'Oh, Biddy, I'm
sorry to give you all this trouble. I just couldn't think where else to go.'
Biddy gave a rueful chuckle. 'Love, the only person you're making trouble
for is yourself, as far as I can see. Wouldn't it have been better in the long run
to have stayed behind and faced this row—whatever it was?'
'I suppose so.' Morwenna bent her head over the steaming mug. 'But I just
couldn't stand any more, Biddy. I knew how angry he was going to be—and
I couldn't bear it.'
'Nick?' Biddy raised her eyebrows.
'Oh, no. Dominic,' Morwenna said quickly, and flushed hotly as Biddy's
expression changed from enquiry to an all too comprehensive
understanding.
'Oh,' she said, after a pause. 'So that's the way of it.'
'Yes,' Morwenna pushed her hair back rather defensively. 'Biddy—please
don't say anything to Mark.'
Biddy shook her head. 'I think the boot's on the other foot,' she said drily.
'Mark has already mentioned something of the sort to me.'
'Oh, no!' Morwenna was aghast. 'I thought no one knew.'
'Well, let's say he's had his suspicions.' Biddy smiled at her. 'It's not easy to
hide things from people who are living in the same house. When Mark and I
were having our difficulties, I tried to pretend to Greg that I wasn't in the
least concerned, but he wasn't fooled for a second.' She hesitated. 'Do you
want to tell me what happened, or is it too painful to talk about?'
'No,' Morwenna gave a little sigh. 'It's a long and complicated story, but as
you'll be joining the family, you'd have heard about it eventually anyway.'
Biddy listened without interruption as Morwenna recounted the facts from
her mother's departure from Trevennon years before to her abortive visit to
Barbie Inglis the previous day. The only thing she did not mention was
Dominic's lovemaking, but she guessed Biddy would be able to see the
points at which omissions were made from her sometimes stumbling
narrative and draw her own conclusions.
When she had finished, Biddy whistled thoughtfully. 'It's incredible,' she
said. 'I've always had Miss Inglis marked down as the stereotype English
gentlewoman, very correct and rather colourless. I never dreamed she'd be
capable of such passion, or such spite.' She stared frowningly into the fire for
a few minutes. 'It was bad luck that Dominic happened to be at the house at
the same time as you, but shouldn't you have stood your ground and
explained exactly what your motives were for being there?"
'I couldn't. I'd promised Nick that I wouldn't say anything to anyone else. He
wanted to protect her, I suppose.' She gave a little shiver. 'But Dominic was
so angry. It was only the previous night that he'd tried to get me to promise
to forget the whole thing. It must have seemed to him that I'd deliberately set
out to do quite the opposite, out of malice.'
'And you didn't tell Nick what had happened either?'
'No, I went straight to my room. I stayed there all evening, pretending I had a
headache.' She smiled rather wanly. 'I didn't have to pretend too hard. I—I
did my packing and wrote to Nick. Then I went to bed, but I didn't sleep very
well.'
'I can imagine,' Biddy muttered. 'And what was Dominic doing all this time?'
Morwenna bit her lip. 'He came back very late,' she said. 'Long after dinner
was over. I'd just got into bed and switched the light out, when I heard him
come upstairs. He came along to my room and tried the door, but I'd locked
it, so he had to knock. I—I didn't answer. I hoped he would think I was
asleep, but of course he didn't. He must have knocked for about five
minutes. Then he called to me and said he knew I was awake and that I
couldn't expect to stay in my room for ever, and he would see me in the
morning.'
Biddy grimaced. 'It was just as well you'd already done your packing. I think
after a message like that I'd probably have left half of my things behind.'
'I did leave one thing behind,' Morwenna said sadly. 'A little pearl ring that
belonged to my mother. I had it on my dressing table, but I couldn't find it
and I didn't have time to make another search this morning. I wanted to get
out of the house before anyone saw me.'
Biddy patted her hand. 'Well, you're here now, and all's well. We've got a
camp bed and we'll make it up in my room presently.' She hesitated. 'You
can stay there out of the way when Mark calls for us this evening, if that's
what you want. But you'll have to face him sooner or later.'
Morwenna nodded. 'I'll worry about that when it happens,' she said.
The afternoon seemed very long. She watched Biddy tie up her presents for
Mark and Greg, and thought rather wistfully of her own gifts which she had
placed neatly under the Christmas tree before she had left. They had an early
tea and listened to a carol service on the radio, then Biddy disappeared
mysteriously to make herself beautiful for the 'forthcoming ordeal', as she
put it.
Morwenna sat by the fire and sketched—the spikes of hyacinths in the bowl
Greg had made—the large important marmalade cat fast asleep in the
opposite chair after a dinner of giblets. She supposed there would come a
time when the thought of Dominic would no longer be paramount in her
mind, but that time would be far distant. He filled her mind, and his dark
face swam before her vision so that the image she was trying to create on the
page became distorted. She groaned impatiently as she crumpled up yet
another spoiled sheet and sent it spinning into the fire.
'I don't want to disturb you, but Mark will be here in five minutes.' Biddy
came into the room, a little self-conscious in a full-length wool jersey dress
in a charming sherry colour. She grinned, blushing a little, as Morwenna
complimented her sincerely on her appearance.
'Well, I had to make an effort. Your Dominic was charm itself when he
called here yesterday, but he's still a formidable character. He probably
expects me to arrive in a patchwork caftan and bare feet, with a flower in my
hair. Greg too,' she added, and Morwenna laughed at the image this conjured
up.
She got to her feet hurriedly at the sound of a car approaching, snatching up
her sketchbook and making for the short flight of stairs to the upper storey.
She whisked into Biddy's bedroom and half-closed the door. She heard the
cottage door open downstairs and the murmur of voices. She frowned. It did
not sound like Mark, but who else could it be? She pulled the door a little
further open and stood with her head bent, listening intently.
Biddy's voice floated clearly and sweetly to her ears. 'You say you've been in
touch with her family at the Priory, Mr Trevennon, and they have no idea
where she is? I hope your uncle isn't too worried.'
'Of course he's worried,' Dominic said. 'She's got her luggage, and a
half-return ticket to London, and no money from what we can gather. Mark
has been to the station to try and find someone who may have seen her, but
there were quite a few people travelling because of Christmas and no one
remembers her.' He paused and then said slowly, 'I suppose you have no idea
where she might be?'
Morwenna stood half paralysed, her nails digging deep into the palms of her
hands. Oh, Biddy, she thought desperately, don't give me away. The silence
seemed endless until Biddy said smoothly, 'None at all, I'm afraid. But I
shouldn't worry too much. A lovely girl like that is bound to have a lot of
friends she can turn to.'
Morwenna did not wait to hear Dominic's response to this. She crept across
to her bed and sat down, burying her face in her hands. Her imagination
must be playing her tricks, she thought dully as she heard the door below
slam and the car drive off. What other explanation was there for that note of
almost desperate appeal in Dominic's voice? She had to make herself realise
that he would be only too glad to be rid of her. If he was concerned, it was
for Nick.
She sighed and resolutely swallowed a chokingly painful lump in her throat.
Now that she was alone, she had to consider her future plans. She couldn't
really do very much at all until after Boxing Day, and then she would go to
London and find some sort of hostel accommodation. Dominic had been
right about the pitiful state of her finances, but she couldn't allow herself to
worry too much about that. She would find work somehow. Maybe she
would even find some kind of living-in job like a companion or mother's
help where she could paint in her spare time. There were all kinds of
possibilities, she told herself, trying to shut out of her ears the memories of
Dominic's voice with its unusual hesitancy.
The evening dragged by. She made some coffee and listened to the radio
again, although if anyone had asked questions on the programmes
afterwards, she would have been hard put to it to answer.
She found herself wondering restlessly what stage the dinner party at
Trevennon had reached. Had they reached the toasts yet? Were Dominic and
Karen standing hand in hand receiving everyone's congratulations and best
wishes? She wondered whether they would open their presents to each other
that evening, or keep them for the following day. And on the heels of that
thought came the passionate wish that she had, after all, left a present for