Authors: Sara Craven,Chieko Hara
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
She hesitated again, then said levelly, 'If your— arrangement with my
son had been a long-term one he would no doubt have made some
financial provision for you. He is not ungenerous in such matters. As
it is, I am to give you this.' She produced a long flat case, and pushed
it across the desk towards Harriet.
A piece of jewellery, Harriet thought, staring at it numbly. The
ultimate insult. She wanted to say something, but she could not make
her voice work.
Madame Marcos was continuing. A seat had been obtained for her on
a plane to Athens, and another booking made from Athens to London.
A maid would be sent to assist with her packing.
At last she found words. 'Am I—am I going to be allowed to say
goodbye to Nicky?'
Madame Marcos' mouth tightened. 'Of course. We are not inhuman,
Miss Masters, and you, I think are not a fool. You must have known
that this—indelicate situation could not continue.'
Harriet- sank her teeth into her lower lip. 'Yes,' she said tonelessly.
'I was certain you would be sensible.' Madame Marcos touched the
box. 'You have forgotten your bracelet.'
'Is that what it is?' Harriet threw her head back. 'I haven't forgotten it.
I just don't share your family's obsession with jewellery—the giving
of it, or the withholding of it. Keep the bracelet for the next lady.
After all, Alex is hardly likely to remain celibate until the New Year.'
She sent the box sliding contemptuously back towards the older
woman across the polished surface of the desk, and walked out.
She paused for a moment in the hall outside, struggling to maintain
her composure, while a voice whispered crazily in her head, 'So that's
it. Over. Finished.'
She wanted to cry and scream, but that was impossible. She didn't
know how Alex's discarded women usually behaved, but she needed
to salvage some rags of dignity, if she could.
One day, some day, perhaps she would be glad that he didn't know the
truth, that she hadn't blurted out her love for him, but not yet. All she
was aware of now was an emptiness as big as the world as she walked
very slowly up the stairs to Nicky's room.
HARRIET felt dispirited as she made her way back to Manda's house.
The temporary job she had had since her return to London had ended
that day, and the agency had nothing else for her at the moment. She
felt ridiculously disappointed, because she had had every reason to
believe that the temp job had been about to become a permanency.
Roger Clayton who ran the office had spoken enthusiastically about
her work, and a possible vacancy, but today he had simply shaken
hands with her and muttered something about her efficiency.
At least she now had some money, she thought, and she could pay
Manda and Bill something for allowing her to stay with them. They
had been endlessly kind since she had arrived pale and hollow-eyed
on their doorstep, insisting that she could stay as long as she needed
to.
Harriet had been determined that it should only be a short stay. She
had to pick up her life and go on. Her job with her old company had
gone, of course, but the personnel department had taken her address
and telephone number and promised they would be in touch if a new
opportunity came up. So far, she had heard nothing, and she had
begun to doubt if she ever would, so it wasn't yet feasible to start
searching for a bed- sitter of her own again without a steady job to
pay for it.
The children Manda was minding had all gone home, and Manda was
sitting at the kitchen table with a freshly brewed pot of coffee in front
of her as Harriet let herself in at the back door.
Manda smiled across at her. 'Well?'
Harriet shook her head. 'Ill,' she returned with an effort at lightness.
'It's the dole next week, I'm afraid. Which reminds me --' She delved
into her bag and produced her wage envelope.
'Keep it,' said Manda. 'You're airing the spare room for us, after all,
and God knows, you don't eat enough to keep a fly alive.'
Harriet flushed slightly. Manda was a good cook, and it must have
gone hard with her to sit opposite a guest who sat picking at her
dinner most evenings. She had told Manda just enough to convince
her that it would have been impossible for her to have stayed at the
villa, without going into details over her involvement with Alex, and
hoped they would interpret her general wanness and lack of appetite
as pining for Nicky. But she had often intercepted a shrewd look from
Manda and thought helplessly that her friend wasn't deceived for a
minute, although she asked no embarrassing questions.
She said quietly, 'I'd rather pay my way—while I can.'
'Jobs with liveable wages are hard to come by,' Manda agreed. She
poured coffee into a cup and pushed it across the table to Harriet. She
went on reflectively, 'Of course you could always contact the Marcos
Corporation and remind them that you only went to Corfu on the
promise of a job when you returned.'
Harriet's flush deepened. She said, 'I'd rather die.'
'I thought so somehow,' Manda murmured, smiling into her own cup.
Harriet sighed abruptly. 'What do you want to know?' It might even
be a relief to confide in someone, she thought.
Manda shrugged. 'What do I need to know?' she . countered. 'You
don't eat, and you don't sleep. Half the time you walk round in a
dream. Nicky's a lovely child, but I can't believe he's had this
profound effect.'
'No, he hasn't.' Harriet bit her lip. 'Although I miss him terribly. I—I
worry about him too. He was still half-asleep when I saw him, and he
started telling me something about "the witch". He could have
nightmares for years about it all—or he could be ill.'
i doubt it.' Manda patted her arm reassuringly, as Harriet's voice
shook. 'Children are resilient little beasts, and everything that
happened that night will probably just seem like a bad dream to him
soon. It was hardly the psychological moment to get you to leave,
though,' she added, her brow creased.
Harriet forced a smile. 'Oh, I don't know. I've had time to think since,
and I believe in some ways Madame Marcos almost blamed me for
what happened. I think she felt it was my presence which had pushed
Madame Constantis to do as she did.'
in other words, she'd rather have gone on sharing her home with a
nut-case than learn the truth?' Manda questioned. She shook her head.
'I'll accept that you might have reminded her of things she'd rather
pretend never happened, but so will Nicky, for heaven's sake, and she
kept him. Drink your coffee,' she added prosaically.
Harriet obeyed shakily. After a pause, she said, 'You're right, of
course. That was only part of it. She wanted to be rid of me because I
was involved with— Alex.' She still found it hard to say his name.
Manda said carefully, 'When you say involved....'
Harriet stared concentratedly into her cup as if she was trying to
analyse the contents. 'That's exactly what I mean.'
'That's what I was afraid of,' Manda muttered, and gave an
exasperated sigh.
'All right/ Harriet spread her hands defensively. 'Tell me what a fool
I've been.'
Manda's mouth curved humorously. 'I'd say you know that already.
Isn't that what you've been telling yourself night after night, walking
up and down in your room? No, I haven't been listening at the door,'
she added with a slight grimace. 'But I had to get up for the twins one
night, and I saw your light on. I was afraid you might be ill.' She
paused and said with unmistakable emphasis, 'You're not, are you?'
'No,' Harriet said tautly. 'No—I don't even have that.' It was
something that had occurred to her once the first agony of her
departure was over, that a new life could have been created from that
one glorious night in Alex's arms. But she knew now that it was not to
be.
'Don't talk like that,' Manda reproached. 'You know quite well from
Nicky that bringing up a child single-handed is no picnic. Even when
the father is alive and well able to provide the financial support,' she
added.
Harriet bent her head unhappily. 'I know. I know all that, but I still
hoped. That's the sort of fool I've been.'
'Hell's bells,' Manda said helplessly. There was a long silence, then
she said gently, 'Does he know how you feel?'
Harriet shook her head, and Manda's lips tightened. 'Well, he must be
an insensitive bastard.'
'No.' Harriet was instantly defensive. 'I was careful never to let him
guess.'
'While you were having a full-blooded affair?' Manda demanded
sceptically. 'What did you do—tell him it was just your little hobby?'
'Hardly,' Harriet sighed. 'I don't think he'd have believed me. And it
was a very short-lived affair,' she added with wry bitterness. 'One
night, to be exact. Hardly a basis for declarations of undying love.'
'And certainly nothing to ruin the rest of your life for,' Manda told
her.
She was right, and Harriet knew it. Those last few hours on Corfu had
been full of forlorn hopes—that Alex would return by some miracle
and prevent her from leaving, even that he'd snatch her off the plane
before it could take off. But by the time she had waited at Athens for
her connection, and endured the flight to London, a sober, more
realistic train of thought had intervened. Alex wanted her to leave.
His mother had only been carrying out his wishes. Her only hope of
salvation was to forget him, to put everything that had happened out
of her mind, no matter how long it took. And if it meant cutting
herself off from Nicky, then she would have to do that too, however
much it hurt.
She'd heard a saying once, 'Love makes time pass. Time makes love
pass.' Well, when time had done its work, perhaps one day she could
make contact again, all passion spent. He would be married, of
course. She might even be married too, although nothing seemed less
likely.
She spent the weekend studying newspapers for possible jobs, and
writing endless letters of application for anything that seemed of
interest, not just in the capital, but all over the country. A change of
scene might be what she needed, she thought.
On Monday it rained, and she spent a depressing day going the rounds
of more temp agencies, getting her name on their books. Everywhere
there seemed to be retrenchment, and she wasn't offered much, apart
from a week's audio typing in ten days' time. It was late afternoon by
the time she made her way back to Manda's feeling a little footsore,
and wondering rather fatalistically if she would ever have a regular
job again. .. .
She was walking up the path, when the door opened and Manda leapt
out at her, a child in her arms and two more clinging to her long skirt.
'Thank heavens you're back!' she exclaimed. 'That Greek's been on
the telephone. Oh, honey, not him,' she added woefully, as she took in
Harriet's sudden tautness. 'The other one—Mr Philippides.'
'But how did he know where I was?' Harriet demanded.
'Sear6h me. But he wants you to go to his office as soon as possible.
It's something about Nicky.' Manda's eyes looked compassionately at
Harriet's paling cheeks. 'He said it was pretty urgent, but he wouldn't
go into details.',
Harriet's mouth trembled. 'There was a chance—just a chance of
pneumonia. Oh, Manda, do you think ...?'
'I don't know what to think, except that you'd better do as he asks and
get over there right away. He's left his number, so that I can phone
and tell him you're on your way.'
Harriet lingered. 'Perhaps if I phoned he'd tell me.
'Go on!' Manda gave her a little push. 'If by any remote chance it is an
emergency, he may want you to go with him somewhere. What about
your passport? Have you got that?'
'It's in my bag.' Harriet felt sick. Nicky, she thought, ill—or worse.
Nicky calling for her. It might already be too late. 'I'll go at once.'
'I'd come with you,' said Manda, 'only --' she gestured expressively at
her small hangers-on. 'Will you let me know—whatever the news?'
'Of course I will.' Tiredness forgotten, Harriet began to run back the
way she had come.
The journey seemed endless. She began to wonder what time Mr
Philippides' office closed, and whether she would arrive in time. It
would be torture if it was all shut up, and she had to go back to
Manda's and wait on tenterhooks until the following day. She
splurged on a taxi for the last few miles, and sat on the edge of her
seat nervously watching the traffic, silently cursing every hold-up.
Her destination reached, she thrust some money into the driver's hand