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BOOKS BY ANNE MATHER 2 страница



After the door had closed behind Bolt, the man oppo­site sat up and regarded the tray. As well as the teapot and its accoutrements there was a plate of sandwiches and a rather delicious looking fruit pie.

"Milk and sugar, or lemon?" he enquired, the tawny eyes annoyingly disconcerting. But with her newly restored self-confidence, Helen refused to be intimidated.

"Milk, but no sugar, thank you," she replied, and as he poured the tea she went on; "Don't you think it's time we exchanged names?"

The man finished pouring the tea, added milk, and handed the cup to her. "If it's important to you," he conceded dryly.

Helen gasped. "You mean you would ask a complete stranger to share your house without caring what that per-son's name was?"

"Perhaps I consider the kind of person one is rather more important titan one's name," he suggested, continu­ing to look at her, his eyes unblinking. "For example, I don't need to know your name to know that you're a rath­er headstrong young woman who doesn't always take the advice that's offered to her."

Helen flushed. "How can you know that?" she ex­claimed scornfully.

He shrugged. "It's unusual, is it not, to find a young woman like yourself driving alone in conditions like these and apparently, as you've admitted you have suitcases with you, prepared to stay somewhere." He frowned. "You may have arranged to meet someone, of course, and yet you seem unconcerned at being delayed overnight."

Helen sipped her tea. "Women have been known to make journeys alone, you know," she retorted.

"In conditions like these? It's not usual."

"I - I may be a working girl - a representative of some sort."

"Who's lost her way?"

"Yes."

"Possible. But not probable."

"Why not?"

"I don't think you are a working girl."

Helen uttered an impatient exclamation. "Why not?"

"The way you spoke to Bolt. As though you were used to having people run about after you."

Helen sighed. She had the feeling that in any argument with him she would come out the loser. And he was offer­ing her his hospitality, after all. Perhaps she could be a little more gracious in accepting it. It wasn't like her to behave so cattily. But something about him brought out the worst in her.

"All right," she conceded at last "So I'm not a work­ing girl. As a matter of fact, you're right My name is Helen James. I'm Philip James' daughter."

"Should that name mean something to me?" he en­quired, somewhat sardonically. She noticed he did not take tea but helped himself to a sandwich after she had refused, "I'm afraid I'm rather-out of touch."

He smiled and for a moment he looked years younger, Helen's lips parted. His face! Something about his face was familiar She had seen it before - she was sure of it But where ? And when? And in what connection?

Forcing herself to answer his question even while her brain turned over the enigma endlessly, she said: "Ma father is Sir Philip James. His company won an award for industry last year. Thorpe Engineering."

The man shook his head. "I'll take your word for it"

Helen felt impatient. "And you? You haven't told me your name?"

"Tell me first what you're doing here - miles from the kind of civilization I'm sure you're used to."

Helen bit her lip. "As a matter of fact I - needed to get away on my own for a while. I needed time to think and ray rather will never dream of looking for me here."

The man frowned. "You mean — you've run away?"

"Hardly that. I left my father a note. He doesn't have to worry about me."

"But he will."

"Perhaps." Helen moved uncomfortably. "In any event, none of this need concern you. I'm only grateful that you came along as you did. I could have been in real difficulties if you hadn't."

"You could. You could have died out there - in the snow." His voice was low-pitched and for a moment Hel­en felt a tingle of remembered apprehension. "It was very foolish of you to let no one know where you were going. Don't you realise that your car could have been buried for days before anyone found it - or you? Tell me, why was it so important that you should get away?"

Helen felt indignant. "I don't think that's any business of yours."

"Nonetheless, I am curious. Satisfy the curiosity of one who no longer inhabits the world you come from."

Helen stared at him. What a strange thing to say! Sure­ly even the remoteness of this district in winter did not cut one off completely from the outside world. Unless one chose it to be so... She shook her head.

"My father wants to run my life for me," she said slowly. "But I'm twenty-two - and possibly too indepen­dent, as you implied. We - disagreed over a small matter."

"I don't think it can have been such a small matter to bring you more than two hundred miles in the depths of winter, Miss James, but never mind. I respect your desire to keep your personal affairs private."

Helen's mouth turned down at the corners. It was hard­ly a concession. Leaning forward to replace her empty cup on the tray, she said: "And you? Don't you find it lonely living here, miles from anywhere, with only Bolt for com­pany?"

The man's thick lashes veiled his eyes. "I'm a most uninteresting individual, Miss James. Can I offer you more tea?"

Helen declined, pressing her lips together impatiently. "Why are you avoiding answering me?" she demanded

"Was I doing that?" His tone was mild, but his tawny eyes were watchful.

"You know you were." Helen sighed, a frown draw­ing her dark brows together. "I know your face from somewhere. I'm almost sure I've seen you before - either in the flesh or on film I"

"You're very flattering," he mocked. "Isn't that usu­ally the male's prerogative?"

Helen was annoyed to find that he could embarrass her. It was a new experience for her. "You know what I mean. I have seen your face before, haven't I?"

The man seemed bored by her assumption. He rose ab­ruptly to bis feet, pausing a moment to rub his thigh as though it pained him. Then he walked with his uneven gait across to the long windows and drew heavy wine-coloured velvet curtains over the frosted panes. Helen saw, in those moments before the world outside was hidden from view, that it was already dark and the driving flakes of snow filled her with a disturbing sense of remoteness. She should have asked for help in starling her car again instead of accepting the man's hospitality, whoever he was, she thought uneasily. With his directions, surely she could have driven to some small hotel or guest house. But she soon dismissed these thoughts from her mind. She was being ridiculously fanciful in imagining that there was anything sinister in the assistance being offered to her, and besides, she ought to be grateful - he had virtually saved her life!

He turned back to her. "Bolt shouldn't be long with your cases, then he'll show you where you're to sleep, Miss James. I have an evening meal at about eight o'clock. I trust you'll join me."

Helen shifted in her seat, a feeling of irritation replac­ing apprehension. He was clearly determined not to an­swer her questions. Her sudden movements caused the cheetah to raise its head and stare at her. The eyes turned in her direction were curiously like its master's, and tales of witches and warlocks and their familiars flashed through her brain. Who was tin's man who lived in such splendid isolation - who walked with a limp - who kept a wild beast for company? She had an absurd notion that she must have succumbed to the cold and collapsed out there in the snow and this was some fantastic nightmare preluding death...

She started violently at the horrific twist of her thoughts and the cheetah allowed a low growl to escaped from its powerful throat. The man came towards them then, murmuring reassuringly to the animal, his eyes on Helen's troubled countenance.

"Is something wrong, Miss James?" he enquired, his voice as soft as velvet with an underlying thread of steel.

Helen shook her head, looking almost desperately about the lamplit room. It was a most attractive room, she had to admit, and not at all the sort of surroundings to inspire unease. It had a masculine austerity, an absence of any­thing frivolous, but that was only to be expected. There were hunting trophies on the panelled walls, swords in their scabbards and antique guns, and several pieces of ornamental design which Helen recognised as being valu­able. The room gave an impression of quiet quality and distinction, and although some of the appointments bore the marks of well-use, they did not detract from its air of comfortable elegance. Whoever he was, he was not a poor man, but why he should choose to live as he did was beyond her comprehension. Was he a painter, a sculptor, an artist of some sort? Who else desired such a solitary existence?

And then a framed photograph on the wall behind fee bureau caught her eye. She couldn't distinguish every de­tail from where she was sitting, particularly in this shad­owy light, but what she could see was enough to realise that it was the blown-up picture of a car smash, a violent pile-up of men and machinery that churned up the road and threw fragments of metal into the dust-choked air. It was not a coloured photograph, but its perception was such that the ugliness and savagery of the crash were brutally unmistakable.

Her shocked gaze shifted to the man who was now standing so stiffly beside the couch. The tawny eyes were hard and narrowed and she knew he had intercepted her revealing concentration on the photograph. She also knew why he was suddenly so aloof. He had guessed that her earlier suspicions regarding his identity were suspicions no longer. He had been one of the drivers involved in that ghastly crash. But it had been no ordinary pile-up. It had taken place about six yean ago, on the Nurburgring in Germany...

"I know who you are," she said, slowly, wonderingly. She got to her feet. "You're - Dominic Lyall, the racing driver!"

The stiffness went out of his lean body and he leant against the back of the couch, supporting himself with his palms on the braided tapestry cushions. "I am Domi­nic Lyall, yes," he conceded wryly. "But I'm no longer a racing driver."

"But you were." Helen stared at him. "I remember my father talking about you. He admired you tremend­ously before - before -"

"Before the crash?" His tone was bitter. "I know."

"But he thought - I mean -" She broke off, her brows drawn together in perplexity. "It was generally assumed - well, you disappeared. My father said - lots of people said -" She moved her shoulders uncomfortably, leaving the words unsaid.

"It was thought that I was dead?" He was ironic "Oh, yes, I'm quite aware of that rumour. My injuries were extensive, and it suited me to foster such a belief. There's nothing more pathetic than a fallen idol who still tries to hog the limelight."

"But it wasn't like that," Helen protested. "The crash was a terrible accident. No one was to blame. The pub­licity-"

"Did I say I blamed myself?" he interrupted her, his voice cool and cynical.

"No. No, but -" She caught her lower lip between her teeth. "My father was such a fan of yours. He still has some pictures of you in his study. And there were thou­sands of others like him. Do you think it was fair to allow them to assume that you were dead?"

Dominic Lyall straightened, one long brown hand mas­saging his hip. "Do you think I'm not entitled to any pri­vacy simply because for a time I lived in the public eye, Miss James?"

Helen didn't know how to answer him. "I wouldn't presume to make judgements, Mr. Lyall. All I'm saying is that it seems a pity that a talent such as yours should be denied to other aspiring drivers."

His lips twisted. "So much and no more." He ran his fingers over the light hair at die nape of his neck. "You wouldn't begin to understand, Miss James."

Helen held up her head. "You underestimate me, Mr. Lyall."

His smile held a kind of self-mockery. "Perhaps I do, at that. However..." He drew a deep breath. "However, it's unfortunate that your memory serves you so well. I should have thought a child of sixteen would have been more interested in popular music and its idols."

"I've told you - my father went to racing events. Some­times I went with him."

"Oh, yes, your father." His eyes narrowed broodingly. "A curious anomaly."

"What do you mean?" His words troubled her a little.

Dominic Lyall moved his powerful shoulders in a de­precative gesture. "I should have thought it would have been obvious, Miss James."

"What would have been obvious?"

He regarded her with that denegrating unblinking stare. "Why, your recognising me. Miss James. A most -unfortunate occurrence. I'm afraid it means that you will not be leaving here in the morning, after all."

 

 

CHAPTER TWO

For several minutes there was complete silence in the room. Helen couldn't believe she had heard him aright, but something in that lean, harsh countenance warned her that she had.

"You - you can't be serious!" she said at last,

"I'm afraid I am, Miss James."

"But-bu why? Why?"

"Surely that's obvious, too. I have no intention of lay­ing myself open to the kind of publicity that the discovery of me living here would create."

Helen refused to admit to the sense of panic that was churning inside her. "But - but I wouldn't tell anyone," she protested, saying the words she had heard so many times on the films and in television when the central char­acter was confronted by some fugitive from the law. But Dominic Lyall was not a fugitive from the law - only from the world!

"I'm afraid I couldn't take that risk." He shook his head. "I think the temptation to tell your father that the man he thought dead was alive and well and living in the Lake District would be more than you could stand."

"It - it wouldn't!" Helen twisted her hands together. "In-in any case, you can't keep me here! I-it's illegal!"

His smile was not pleasant. "Really?"

"But - but it's insane! I mean, my father will be look­ing for me!"

"You told me yourself he would never dream of look­ing for you here."

"Not initially, no. But if all else fails -"

"By then you will no doubt be free to go back to him."

She trembled. "What do you mean? "

"Simply that I intend to make arrangements to leave the country. Until I do, you will remain."

Helen gasped. "But that could take months!"

"Weeks, anyway,” he conceded dryly.

The door opened suddenly behind her and she started nervously. It was the manservant, Bolt, who stood on the threshold, his massive shoulders coated with snow.

"Ah, Bolt, you're back." Dominic Lyall greeted the man with a warmth he had not shown to Helen. "Did you find the car?"

Bolt grinned. "Yes, sir. The suitcases are in the hall. If you'll give me a moment to shed my coat, I'll show the young lady to her room."

Dominic Lyall nodded. "Do that, Bolt. And by the way, our house guest's name is Miss James, Miss Helen James. She'll be staying with us rather longer than we ex­pected."

Helen had no idea what message flashed between the two men, but Bolt's only show of surprise was a faint drawing together of his brows. He tossed Helen's keys and said: "Yes, sir."

"I'll take those," went on his employer, catching the keys as Bolt tossed them to him. "I'll explain the situation later, right?"

"Yes, sir."

Bolt was infuriatingly complacent, and Helen, standing watching the two men, felt absurdly near to tears. This couldn't be happening to her. It really couldn't. Dominic Lyall wasn't seriously intending to keep her here until he made arrangements to leave the country, was he?

"I don't want to see my room!" she burst out tremu­lously. "You can't keep me a prisoner here, you can't! "

Dominic Lyall's mouth had a slightly cruel twist. "And how do you propose to prevent me?" he enquired, in a soft, menacing tone.

"I -I'll run away-"

"Again?"

"I'll go to the nearest farm - or village. I - I'll phone for help!"

"There are no phones here, Miss James."

"I mean - in the village."

''Do you know the way to the village?" Dominic Lyall asked quietly.

"It shouldn't be too difficult to find." Helen's voice broke.

"In these conditions?"

A sob rose in her throat. "You're mad! Mad!" She caught her breath. "I don't want to stay here. I just want to go to Bowness. I promise I won't tell a soul I've seen you. Just let me go!"

"I'm afraid that's impossible, Miss James." Her tormentor turned to Bolt. "We must move the car tomor­row. Before the thaw sets in."

Bolt nodded. "I'll see to it in the morning."

Helen felt a devastating sense of hopelessness. There seemed no way out of this bizarre situation. Out of her own mouth she had condemned herself. If she had not told him of her flight from her father - if she had not recognised him-if, if, if...

"You can't stop me from trying to escape," she de­clared tremulously.

"I shouldn't advise it," Dominic Lyall commented, flexing his back muscles.

There was a definite look of weariness about him now and Helen realised with a pang that it was standing so long that tired him. She ought to have felt glad that he was not as invulnerable as he would like her to believe, but she didn't. A traitorous sense of compassion was stirring within her, and she wondered what it was that had made him spurn the world he knew for this almost ascetic iso­lation.

Bolt, too, was aware of his master's discomfort, and with the familiarity of years of service said with anxious reproof: "It's almost time for your treatment, sir. If you'll go down, I'll be with you as soon as I've shown Miss James to her room."

Dominic Lyall's expression showed vague self-derision as he looked across at Helen. "You see how it is with me?" he demanded bitterly. "I'm like an old piece of machinery that needs constant oiling, aren't I, Bolt?"

Helen's lips parted. "You're not old!" she exclaimed, unable to prevent herself.

"At least as many years older than you were when first you heard my name," he stated grimly, as a spasm of pain crossed his lean face. "If-you will-excuse me..."

He left the room limping heavily, his hip twisting in a grotesque distortion of itself. Bolt watched him go, an expression of such love and devotion on his face that Helen felt almost an interloper. The cheetah, too, moved silently after its master and then Bolt turned back to her.

"One moment, miss," he said, unbuttoning his fur-lined overcoat and taking it off. "If you'll come with me."

Helen wanted to protest. She ought to protest. She should say all over again that this was crazy, that they couldn't keep her here against her will, that she would find some way to get away whatever they told her. But she didn't. Instead, she watched Bolt pick up her suitcases and then followed his enormous frame up the wide oak stair­case, her feet sinking into tie pile of its leaf-brown and gold carpet.

Like the hall, the staircase was panelled, and halfway up there was a circular window overlooking the back of the house. It was difficult to see anything through the swirling flakes that were still falling, but the brilliance of the snow did give an artificial illumination to the scene.

At the top of the stairs, a long landing led in either direction. A balustrade overlooked the well of the hall below, and Helen silently admired a crystal chandel­ier suspended there. Bolt led the way along the landing to the right of the stairs passing several doors before halting at the room which was to be hers. He opened the door, switched on the lights and allowed Helen to precede him inside.

There was a soft olive green carpet on the floor and this colour was echoed in the olive and cream bedspread and the long wild silk curtains drawn across the windows. The furniture, the bed, the triple-mirrored dressing table, the wide wardrobe, were made of a dark mahogany, slightly larger than life but not out of place in this high-ceilinged apartment. A radiator ran beneath the window and the room was beautifully warm.

Bolt stood down her suitcases and indicated a door near the wardrobe at the far side of the room. "The bathroom, miss," he explained, looking round to assure himself that everything was in order. "I've put hot water bottles in the bed and they can be refilled later if you need them."

Helen bit her lip. "Thank you, Bolt," she said, amazed at her calm acceptance of the situation. Then, as he moved to the door: "By the way..."

"Yes, miss?" He surveyed her politely even while she sensed has impatience to go his master.

"Are you - do you intend to - lock me in?"

Bolt half-smiled, and swung the door closed behind him, and only then did she see the key on her side of the door.

Now that the manservant was gone, Helen moved to the windows, drawing aside the curtains to peer out. Her room appeared to be at the back of the house, but apart from a few snow-clad trees there was little to be seen. She al­lowed the curtains to swing closed and turned to survey her domain.

She thought a trifle hysterically that no hotel bedroom could be more luxurious and no proprietor more con­cerned for the comfort of his guest than Bolt It was ludi­crous! The more she thought about it, the more fantastic it seemed. She smoothed her moist palms down the seams at the sides of her trousers. How long was she expected to stay here? How long would it take Dominic Lyall to settle his affairs to his satisfaction and leave the country?

She paced restlessly about the floor, trying to quell the panic that was rising again inside her now that she was alone. Did he really mean what he had said? Or had it been a deliberate ruse too frighten her for his own amuse­ment? She doubted the latter somehow, and yet he was a cultured, civilised man! How could he so cold-bloodedly decide to detain her here against her will until it suited him to let her go? What kind of life had he led these past few years to destroy the pangs of his conscience?

She looked at her watch. It was after six o'clock. Domi­nic Lyall had said that he had a meal at eight. But right now she doubted her ability to eat anything. And where was he? What sort of treatment did Bolt mete out?

She stopped before her mirror and surveyed her dish­evelled appearance without pleasure. Her trouser legs were creased from when she had rolled them up, her hair was wind-blown, and her cheeks bore the scratches she had received when she had plunged headlong through the hedge. She raised a trembling hand to touch a strand of silky black hair. What was she going to do?

An inspection of the bathroom assured her that there was no other means of access thanfrom the bedroom and turning the key in her bedroom door she decided to take a bath. The bath itself was huge, white porcelain and standing on black iron legs. There was plenty of hot water from a gurgling tank and it was amazing how relaxed the scented water made her feel. She had found several jars of bath-salts on a glass shelf above the wash basin, and she had sprinkled them liberally before climbing in.

Eventually, of course, she had to get out again and after letting the water run away she wrapped herself in an enormous white bath towel and went into the bed­room to get some clean underclothes from her case.

But the case was locked and she remembered with irri­tation that all her keys were on the ring that was presently in Dominic Lyall's possession.

She stood hesitantly in the middle of the floor, wonder­ing what she should do. She was tempted to go out on to the landing and shout for Bolt, but the vulnerability of her position made her think again. With ill grace she put on the clothes she had taken off and had to satisfy herself by doing her hair and applying a light make-up to her face. Her comb and cosmetics were, thankfully, in her handbag, and at least she did not look so dishevelled when she was finished. The white sweater she had worn with her slacks was reasonably smart and she doubted whether Dominic Lyall would notice anyway. All the same, she de­termined to have her keys before going to bed. She had no intention of sleeping without a nightgown.

A ripple of awareness ran through her at this thought. But there was no fear that anyone might disturb her in the night, she thought impatiently. Her door locked se­curely, and was heavy enough to thwart the most determ­ined intruder. Besides, Bolt did not strike her as the sort of man to force his attentions on anyone, and Dominic Lyall...

She licked suddenly dry lips. She didn't want to think about Dominic Lyall, but it was impossible not to do so. She didn't want to remember the disruption of her senses when he had touched her earlier, or the fearful fascina­tion he had inspired in her. It was repulsion, she told her­self fiercely. She loathed and despised him. She couldn't be attracted to a man like him, a cripple; a man moreover who had no compunction about twisting her plans to suit his own ends.

And yet she remembered every small detail about him -the curious lightness of his hair, the tawny eyes, and his dark skin, the lean strength of his body, the way the muscles of his thighs had been visible through the taut material of his black trousers, the knee-length boots, and the revealing anguish when he had been in pain. She caught her breath. She couldn't feel pity for him, she couldn't! But she did.

Shaking her head so that the heavy swathe of black hair swung confidingly beneath her chin, she unlocked the bed­room door and pulled it open. The landing stretched away before her, dimly lit and deserted. With a muffled excla­mation, she switched off her bedroom lights and walked determinedly towards the balustrade at the head of the stairs.

In the ball below, she looked about her distracted­ly. Which door led into the living room? She couldn't re­member. She approached what she thought was the living room and opened the door only to discover a downstairs cloakroom. She quickly closed it again and tried another, feeling a little like Alice must have felt down the rabbit hole. This room proved to be a small dining apartment with a blank cloth covering a circular table. Was this where she was expected to have her evening meal?

She sighed and then, hearing a sound behind her, spun round. A door across the hall had opened and Dominic Lyall was standing in the aperture, the cheetah, Sheba, at his heels.

"Won't you join me?" he invited, in the deep attract­ive voice she had come to know so well in such a short space of time, and with a helpless shrug she obeyed him.

He stood aside to allow her to enter the living room and then closed the door behind them. He had changed from his black clothes into a rich purple silk shirt, cream suede pants that moulded his lean hips, and a darker beige suede waistcoat. His face showed none of the strain which had been evident earlier, and Helen reflected that Bolt must have done his work well. He had the build of a wrestler, but he could be a masseur.

She moved across to the fireplace, keeping an alert eye on the cheetah following her. The fire had been built up with logs in her absence and the occasional table where they had had their tea was now spread with a cloth.

Dominic indicated the armchair she had occupied be­fore. "Please - sit down," he said. "Can I offer you a drink before supper?"

He might have been addressing an expected guest, and Helen felt a rising frustration. Did he expect her to be­have as though that was the case? Was she to offer no ob­struction to his plans? How dared he assume that she had nothing to say in the matter?



  

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