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Luckily, she managed to control it.
She opened her eyes and tried to concentrate on more businesslike matters, wis.h.i.+ng the evening was already at an end and she was safe in the solitude of her bed, where her renegade emotions were not likely to betray her.
CHAPTER EIGHT.
LORD AND LADY REDVERS lived in a rambling, uncoordinated house which had been in his family since the time of the Reformation, and which had been built on the site of a convent which Henry the Eighth had caused to be razed to the ground.
Local rumour had it that the intense ferocity with which Lord Redvers' ancestor had set about the destruction of the original building had more Jo do with the fact that an heiress he had been desperate to marry had escaped him by entering the convent than with any real zeal for Henry's new religion. Whatever the case, he had certainly profited from that zeal; Henry had granted him the lands on which the convent had originally stood, and the oldest part of the house was said to be built from stones actually taken from the sacked building.
During Charles the Second's time a disciple of Inigo Jones had added a new facade, behind which the original Tudor rooms remained cramped and low-ceilinged. He had also added half a dozen new reception rooms with expensive panelling and even more expensive plasterwork ceilings, and that grandeur had contented the family until the Prince Regent's time, when the then inc.u.mbent of the t.i.tle had married a woman who had decided that the place could only be improved by incorporating some of the Prince Regent's more outre ideas; so it was that several of the rooms were decorated in the Regency fad for chinoiserie with expensive silks and delicately carved and gilded furniture.
A Victorian Lord Redvers had added an extra wing, and the result was the jumbled sprawl of buildings lining the skyline as Silas turned into the drive past the now unoccupied lodge houses.
Hannah s.h.i.+fted tensely in her seat. She wasn't looking forward to the evening ahead; Silas parked his car next to a very large BMW and commented unemotionally, 'Looks as if we shan't be the only dinner guests.'
It was a statement and didn't invite any comment. Hannah ducked her head as he a.s.sisted her out of the car, wis.h.i.+ng that she didn't have to touch him, but he had already extended his hand to her and to refuse to take it would have initiated exactly the kind of speculation she had no wish for him to embark on. Even so, she s.h.i.+vered a little at the brief physical contact, causing his mouth to harden abruptly and his fingers to tighten around her so that when she tried to release herself she found that she could not.
From feeling cold she went hot; a kind of heat that began in the pit of her stomach and spread to every part of her body, a melting, yielding heat that made her legs tremble and her heart turn over slowly within her body.
How long they would have stayed there like that in the soft darkness of the autumn evening if the ' door hadn't opened, trapping them both in a beam of harsh light, she had no idea.
As it was, the shock of that intrusive light, of someone else's unwanted presence, made her panic and pull away, half surprised to find that Silas had already released her. She was facing the house, and as Silas stood to one side she could see into the brilliantly illuminated hallway.
A butler stood imposingly, waiting for them, formidably correct and very aloof. Hannah blinked a little. Given the much publicised new poverty of so many members of the peerage, she had not expected such evidence of wealth.
Someone had transformed-if indeed that was the correct word to describe the desecration of the elegant austerity Of the Carolinian hall with its panelled walls, cream stuccoed ceiling and lozenge-tiled floor, hanging the stone-mullioned windows with acres of pastel chintz and befrilled curtains, so out of keeping with the heavy majesty of the house that they made Hannah wince.
As he gave their names to the butler, Silas became aware of her expression and bent his head to whisper warningly, 'Lord Redvers apparently gave his wife carte blanche with the decor.' He didn't need to say any more, but Hannah couldn't help giving him a startled glance of distaste for the inappropriateness of the delicate, over-pretty chintz in a room, that cried out for worn, heavy damask, for rich starlets and faded golds.
They were left standing in the large hall while the butler disappeared between a ma.s.sive set of double doors, presumably to announce their arrival.
It was warm in the hall, too warm, Hannah reflected, looking a little sadly at the huge empty fireplace and then at the none too discreetly placed radiators that were heating the room to an almost stifling temperature.
A staircase similar to the one in Padley Court, and carved with all manner of mystical creatures and emblems, rose upwards to a galleried landing. While Hannah was studying the carving, the double doors opened again and a small, portly man hurried towards them, greeting Silas warmly.
'Can't think what Pearson was about, leaving you out here,' he apologised brusquely, ushering them through the doors as Silas paused to introduce Hannah to him.
'Hannah Maitland, my a.s.sistant, Lord Redvers.'
The peer shook Hannah's hand and peered a little myopically at her.
He had kind eyes, Hannah thought, and a rather quizzical-c.u.m-sad, almost canine cast of feature.
'Can't think why we need a butler, anyway, but Fiona seemed to think it necessary. Know my wife at all, do you?' he asked Hannah abruptly.
She shook her head, deeming it unpolitic to tell him that, although she didn't know Lady Redvers personally, she had heard all the local gossip about her.
'Half-American, you know,' he announced, and then shook his head.
Lord Redvers ushered them into a large drawing- room, which Hannah realised instantly must be one of the rooms designed and decorated by his wife. Here again the pretty-pretty chintzes did not do justice to the room, but they were a perfect foil to the woman standing up to greet them. Or rather, not them, but Silas, Hannah recognised bleakly, noting the way Fiona Redvers' eyes flicked over her and then dismissed her.
'Silas, darling! At last. I was beginning to wonder what had happened to you.'
To Hannah she said nothing at all. Not a woman's woman, Hannah acknowledged wryly.
From her position slightly behind Silas, Hannah studied the other woman. She was a little older than Hannah, somewhere in her mid-thirties, Hannah guessed although she adopted the girlish, trilling voice of a much younger woman, and her skilfully applied make-up did much to heighten the onlooker's impression that she was still only in her mid-twenties. This, combined with the cooing voice and fragile, dainty mannerisms, conjured up a vision of delicate, blonde loveliness and fragility which Hannah was pretty sure was totally at variance with the woman's true nature. She was as brittle as overspun gla.s.s, and twice as cold, Hannah suspected.
There was a certain obvious hardness in those round, baby-blue eyes, a certain dispa.s.sionate and dismissing a.s.sessment in the way she studied Hannah from top to toe and then, ignoring her, turned her attention to Silas.
No, she didn't like her, Hannah reflected inwardly. She wasn't the kind of woman she could ever warm to. She wasn't the type of woman who considered her own s.e.x important enough to be worthy f cultivating. And as for female friends . . . this was a woman to whom every other member of her s.e.x could only be seen as a foil or an enemy.
'Silas, come and meet some friends of ours,' she invited, tucking her arm cleverly through Silas's and deliberately drawing him away from Hannah, leaving her standing in the middle of the over-decorated, sugary-sweet room, having neglected to introduce her to anyone else, and having effectively seen to it that Hannah was totally isolated from everyone else, since Lord Redvers had gone in search of a drink for them both, and the only other two guests were seated on an overstuffed, pretty, pastel-pink rose-strewn sofa, which Hannah decided nastily they had been deliberately invited to occupy as the roses contrasted disastrously with the female half of the couple's pale gingery hair.
Fiona, in contrast, looked all blonde delicateness against the backdrop of rose-patterned chintz. The white dress she was wearing was surely far too dressy for a simple sixsome dinner party and showed off a tan that was far too even to have been acquired on any beach.
Hannah's chin tilted firmly in defiance as she saw the nervous, pitying glance the ginger-haired woman gave her, almost as though she was used to the bad manners their hostess displayed to the female section of her guests, and, deliberately turning her back on all of them, Hannah walked slowly across to where a group of paintings were displayed on the wall.
Vaguely reminiscent of Ca.n.a.letto's style, they had a pleasing amateurishness about them that, combined with the dates on them, made Hannah wonder if they had perhaps been painted by some member of Lord Redvers' family, after the fas.h.i.+on of the time.
She was musing on this when Lord Redvers coughed apologetically behind her. She swung round, flus.h.i.+ng a little. She had been too engrossed in the paintings to be aware of his presence. He handed her her drink, and said in the abrupt style she was becoming accustomed to, 'Painted by a spinster aunt of the family. Quite good, I thought. Found 'em in the attic and had 'em reframed. Fiona doesn't care for them.'
'I think they're lovely,' Hannah a.s.sured him warmly. As she turned towards him, she saw that Silas was standing chatting to the male occupant of the sofa who had now stood up, leaving his wife, if indeed that was their relations.h.i.+p, sitting forlornly on her own, while Fiona stood between the two men, leaning provocatively against Silas, her trilling laughter ringing out every now and again.
Hannah wondered cynically if she and Silas were having an affair.
She had recognised her immediately as being the woman she had seen in Silas's car and, whatever Silas's feelings toward her, there was little doubt about hers towards him. Beneath all the sugary sweetness, she was watching him with all the eager s.e.xual hunger of a female praying mantis.
Was it because she herself loved him that she found it so easy to recognise her own need in others? She went rigid abruptly, totally unaware of what Lord Redvers was saying to her. She didn't love him. How could she? Love was something that grew slowly. It needed nouris.h.i.+ng, cheris.h.i.+ng; it wasn't something that materialised out of nowhere like ectoplasm.
But it had done. She loved him. She loved Silas .. .
The words rang hollowly through her like a death knell. She actually s.h.i.+vered, despite the almost tropical heat of the room, not wanting to admit the truth, not wanting to acknowledge what had happened.
She looked across at Silas wildly, as though desperate to find a denial of her feelings, to look at him and discover that he was after all just another man, but by some unlucky chance, as she looked at him, he looked back at her, and desire, need . . . love itself arced through her like lightning, unmistakable and unchangeable.
Fiona was still talking to him, and he lifted his hand as though commanding her silence. For one heart-stopping moment Hannah actually thought he intended to cross the room and come to her, but then Fiona reached out and touched him as she had done that day in the car, slender, beautifully manicured nails against his sleeves . . .
nails that to Hannah were more like claws.
She closed her eyes and s.h.i.+vered, and in the distance heard Fiona's tinkling, unmelodious voice announcing dinner.
The other couple turned out to be one of Lord Redvers' business a.s.sociates-an architect, whom he wanted Silas to meet, and his wife.
The husband paid more attention to Fiona than his wife, flattering her with such fulsome compliments that Hannah knew if she had been on the receiving end of them she would have instantly put him down. Couldn't he see what he was doing to his wife?
All through dinner Hannah felt her anger grow: against Fiona for being so vainly selfish that she cared not one whit about the misery of the little mousy, ginger-haired wife; the husband, George Mercer, for his lack of consideration for his wife, and for his total and obvious belief that women were the lesser species and that they came in two varieties-those one married and kept domestically at home, and those like Fiona, whom one flirted with and l.u.s.ted after.
She was also angry with Lord Redvers because he seemed not to notice his wife's bad manners. But most of all she was angry with Silas.
Silas, who every now and again detached himself from Fiona's predatory attentions and looked across the table at her, not as George Mercer looked at his wife, but questioningly, affectionately, thoughtfully.
How ironic that she should be forced to acknowledge that she loved him tonight of all nights, when she was forced to witness everything she detested about woman's portion of the marital state.
She looked briefly at Anne Mercer. The woman seemed, to have literally shrunk before her eyes. She was huddled over her plate, barely touching her food, her blue-white skin unpleasantly pale with tension and misery. She was avoiding looking at anyone, and Hannah noticed with irritated compa.s.sion that her hand shook as she lifted a forkful of food to her mouth.
Her husband, who should have been the one to notice these symptoms of his wife's distress, was totally oblivious to her. He had reached across the table to squeeze Fiona's hand, and Hannah felt pretty sure that the heavy thigh she had felt pressing exploratively against her own belonged to him, and that its contact had not been intended for her at all. She had retaliated by stabbing the instep of his foot with her high heel, and then apologising sweetly and falsely.
Silas, whom she had thought too engrossed in his conversation with Fiona to notice what was going on, had broken off what he was saying to give her an extremely sharp look which she had returned with rebellious pride.
Now, thank heaven, the meal was almost over. How on earth she was going to endure spending an hour or so closeted with Anne Mercer and Fiona while the men talked business she really had no idea.
When Fiona gave the signal for the ladies to leave, treating Silas to a gurgle of laughter and clinging provocatively to his jacket as she whispered something in his ear, Hannah thought with distaste that this must be the worst dinner party she had endured.
It was, she thought with vehement mental bitterness an hour later: seated opposite Fiona on what had to be the most uncomfortable chair she had ever been invited to occupy, gritting her teeth against the explosion she could feel building up inside her as Fiona alternately toyed with Anne Mercer with all the refined cruelty of a hunting cat, and tried to question Hannah about the exact nature of her relations.h.i.+p with Silas. There was a good deal of innuendo in her questions, and an almost open prurience that made Hannah feel physically sick.
She had stated already that she was Silas's personal a.s.sistant and that she knew nothing about his personal life and was most certainly not involved in it, but to her astonishment Fiona refused to let the matter rest there.
She had mentioned the fact that Hannah would be spending the night under the same roof as Silas, and had even had the gall to question her about her past and present lovers. Hannah had remained grim-lipped and uninformative, mentally acknowledging that she had wrongly accused Silas on one subject at least. He was obviously not s.e.xually involved with Fiona-at least, not yet-since the other woman was making it plain exactly how she felt about him.
Hannah had been stunned when Fiona had casually mentioned that she believed a marriage benefited from both partners having lovers; she had gone on to say speculatively that she supposed Silas must have many women in his life. Hannah had replied frigidly that she had no idea. Now Fiona, very obviously furious at her refusal to give her any information, was trying a different tack.
'How very businesslike you are, but you must have noticed how s.e.xy Silas is,' she prodded, her smile wide, but her eyes cold and watchful.
'Not really,' Hannah fibbed.
The coldness increased, the mouth hardening a fraction.
'Don't tell me you're one of those women who isn't interested in men,' she asked unforgivably.
Hannah gave her a withering look and said quietly, it depends in what context. Certainly I have no desire to marry, if that's what you mean, but neither am I s.e.xually interested in my own s.e.x.'
Behind her she heard Anne Mercer give a tiny shocked gasp, and she smiled thinly. She would die before she gave Fiona the opening she knew she was looking for. One hint to the other woman of her feelings for Silas, and Fiona would use them to destroy and humiliate her. She had no illusions about the older woman, none at all, and it was with a feeling of tremendous relief that she heard the door open and saw that the men had at long last come to join them.
At last it was time to leave. She stood up with a speed that wasn't missed by either Silas or Fiona.
'There's really no need for you to rush off, Silas. Stay and have another couple of drinks. We can always put you up if you're worried about driving. In separate rooms, of course!' She gave a throaty, affected laugh, i can't understand how Hannah is managing to remain immune to you, Silas, but apparently she is. She a.s.sures me that you're the very last man she would be likely to find attractive.'
Hannah felt her face burn as Silas turned to look at her. What must he be thinking? She hated the way Fiona was reducing her to her own level; interested in nothing more than the appeas.e.m.e.nt of her own shallow emotions and greedy desires, and yet stupidly when Silas returned in an even voice, 'Hannah is my personal a.s.sistant, a business colleague,' she didn't feel in the least mollified. Quite the opposite, in fact.
As Lord Redvers escorted them to the door, Hannah saw Anne Mercer give one despairing, longing look after them. What a silly woman! It was time she stood up to her husband, who was behaving more like a spoilt, bullying child than an adult.
She said as much to Silas as they reached the car, the emotions inside her too explosive to be controlled.
In the light from the windows she saw the cool, considering look he gave her, and winced inwardly, furious with herself for betraying so much emotion.
'I agree; but she obviously loves him, which makes it hard for her.'
'A handicap carried by far too many women,' Hannah said bitterly, 'and exploited by far too many men.'
He unlocked the car and she got in, waiting until he was seated beside her and starting the engine before saying explosively, 'I detest men like that.'
'And women like Fiona?' Silas asked her drily.
She looked at him, and then decided to throw tact to the winds.
'The very worst of our s.e.x,' she said baldly. 'Avaricious, s.e.xually and materially . . . cruel, shallow . . . vindictive.'
'I agree,' Silas said promptly, silencing her. 'But unfortunately Lord Redvers dotes on her.
and I've come too far with this project to risk it now by getting on the wrong side of her.'
'Was that why you let her paw you all through dinner?' Hannah challenged acidly, and then realised what she was saying and to whom. Her face went scarlet, and her fingers curled into hard fists.
Without removing his attention from the road, Silas picked up her right hand, his stronger fingers prising hers open. She could hear the warmth in his voice as he apologised, 'I'm sorry. I can see she's been giving you a difficult time.'
'She seemed to find it hard to accept that you and I are merely business a.s.sociates,' Hannah excused hef tension weakly. To her chagrin her voice trembled, just as her body was starting to tremble.
A physical reaction to her release from her earlier tension, she tried to tell herself, but she knew it wasn't true. It was Silas who was having this effect on her. Silas who was making her shake with physical and emotional yearning for him. Silas who had the power to move her to hitherto unknown depths of feeling simply by speaking to her. By looking at her . . .by touching her as he was doing now. If he could make her feel like this just by stroking her fingers, what would she feel if . . .?
He was still holding her hand.
'Did she? I wonder why.'
Something about the way he said the words made her body shake.
Fear and anger mingled inside her, rus.h.i.+ng through her. What was Silas trying to imply? That he realised she was attracted to him?
Oh, please, no. She wanted neither his pity nor his partic.i.p.ation.
Unlike other women in her situation, she had no desire for him to turn to her and see her as a woman ... to want her physically and emotionally-to love her.
Everything she had witnessed tonight had only confirmed her deeply held belief that marriage was not for her; she would want too much-total commitment, total sharing. Her parents loved one another very deeply indeed, but how many times had she seen her mother forced to take a back seat to her father's paris.h.i.+oners, to his duties and responsibilities? Her mother seemed to accept it, but she didn't think she could. Perhaps all those years of growing up with so many older brothers - had left her with too fierce a desire to have herself acknowledged as the equal of any man, as worthy of time, attention and consideration as him, to enable her to accept second place. And children . . . She had never wanted children, never even thought about wanting them, but when she looked at Silas there was a tiny, curling, weakening sensation there inside her that whispered seductively to her that there would be much joy in having this man's child.
She was appalled that she could even form such a thought, never mind be forced to acknowledge it, so appalled that she sat bolt upright in her seat, and turned her face away from Silas, saying dismissively, 'We all make misjudgements. When I saw Fiona in your car with you the other weekend, I a.s.signed from her demeanour toward you that she was already your mistress.
However, what she said to me tonight proved that I made a mistake.'
It was that fateful word 'already' that gave her away. How bitterly she wished she could recall it when she almost felt the searing look Silas gave her as he braked hard and demanded explosively, 'Just what exactly are you trying to say? Lord Redvers is very important to my plans for Padley Court, but at no time have I or shall I become his wife's lover.'
She should have left it there, but she couldn't, unable to stop herself from saying acidly, 'Do you think that Fiona will accept that? She struck me as a very determined woman. She told me openly that she believes affairs outside a marriage strengthen it, and she made it equally clear how she feels about you. If she has as much influence with her husband as you say, isn't it feasible that she could destroy everything that you've worked for if you turn her down?'