Authors: Amanda Carpenter
for her courage, but in all honesty she had not really considered
herself to be in any personal danger; when she had grabbed on to
Barry's wrist, she had done so instinctively, without thought to the
consequences such an action might possibly have for herself.
Real courage, or so it seemed to her, was what people like Matt
possessed, for she knew that he had climbed far higher than was safe
for a man of his size and weight, in full knowledge of what he risked.
Yet he had made everything seem so easy, and not once spoken of
what must have gone through his mind as he met her eyes in the tree
and made his decision to act as he had. All his comments were of the
fear he had felt for her sake, and the boy's, never his own.
'I owe you my life,' she said, not fully comprehending until that
moment the truth in her words.
His head turned, a quick, startled movement. She was obscurely glad
that he did not pass off her statement with a shrug and a flippant
reply, for she was genuinely moved and the depth of her feelings
could not be dismissed lightly.
'That little kid owes you his,' Matt said, with a slow, crooked smile.
'And the reckless, self-destructive boy I used to be owes the salvation
of his to the memory of a wise girl who taught him the meaning of
sanity, and quality of life. That's just how life is, Sian. That's the real
message in your interlocking circles. You can't talk of
owing
anybody as if it were a debt to be paid. Our humanity binds us
together with ties of decency, dedication and sometimes self-
sacrifice. There isn't such a thing as a free spirit.'
She looked away, confused and troubled by what he'd said. It showed
in the frown that drew the slim wings of her dark brows together.
'I'm not sure I agree with you,' she replied, and, though her gaze
rested on the stereo across the room, what she saw in her mind's eye
was the ghost of an abandoned, lonely little girl. 'My father's a free
spirit who always does exactly as he pleases.'
'Does he?' Matt asked, settling back to put one long arm with extreme
care along her shoulders. He stretched out his muscular legs. 'I don't
know much about him, except that he cuts a rather exotic figure in
Joshua's eye. He's quite a gambler, isn't he?'
'Yes,' she said drily, 'he's one of the best in the world. When I haven't
been at boarding schools or university, I've been visiting him at
whatever five-star hotel happens to be his home at the moment.'
The hand from the muscular arm circling her very gently tucked a
black strand of hair behind her hair, making the moment into a
caress. 'You must have been a beautiful little girl,' he said. 'I can just
see you in a pretty dress, with your hair curling down your back and
those huge, melting green eyes. If I had a daughter like that, it would
break my heart to send her away.'
'Would it?' she asked, her throat aching. If Matt gave to his children
the same profound gentleness that he had just now showed to her, he
would be an excellent father. She almost found herself envying the
woman who would become his wife.
'Yes. I also know,' he continued after a pause, 'that if I were in a job
or lifestyle that was unsafe or unsuitable for that precious little girl, I
would send her away, to some place where she could grow up safe,
and I would deny myself the selfish pleasure of letting her depend on
me too much. I can't speak for your father, of course, but self-
sacrifice comes in many different ways.'
'Oh, you're right, of course,' she said with a sigh, as she leaned her
tired, sore head back. The muscle behind her was very still. 'I know
he does love me in his own fashion, and he did keep me with him as
long as he possibly could. I certainly have never wanted materially
for anything. I just want something better for my children, that's all.
A real home where they can be happy, always knowing that they'll
have some, place to come back to if they need it. Is that too much to
ask?'
'No,' he whispered, pulling her against his chest. 'That's not too much
to ask.'
The muscle relaxants were working, and the throbbing pain in her
limbs was liquidly melting away. She yawned so widely her jaw
cracked, and drowsily considered asserting her independence by
pushing away from him. In fact, she would in a minute.
Her head sank down to rest on his shoulder, and he shifted so that she
could curl comfortably into his side. Warmth stole over her; who
would have thought that the towering, icy stranger who tore strips off
her at the party on Sunday would be such a delight to cuddle?
'Isn't it funny?' she murmured.
Matt rubbed his cheek against the perfumed softness of her hair, a
slight, stealthy movement, and asked, 'Isn't what funny?'
'All the roles we play,' she murmured, and fell asleep.
He sat for a long time with his head bent down to hers, then, when
headlights flashed through a gap in the curtains, he twisted
unhurriedly to ease her lax body into his arms. She stirred to nestle
her face into his sweatshirt but didn't rouse as he carried her into her
room to tuck her into bed. For a few moments he stood looking down
at the madonna-like beauty of her moonlit face until the voices of the
returning cinema-goers sounded at the back door.
Then he bent, and pressed his warm mouth lightly against the
luscious, still curve of her lips, and whispered, 'Wake soon, sleeping
princess.'
Sian smiled and snuggled deeper into her pillow. She was dreaming
of a midnight lover.
THE phone was ringing as Sian fitted her key into the lock at the back
door. She tried to hurry, but the mountain of bags and packages that
she'd balanced precariously on one arm slowly listed to one side.
Jane, similarly laden, lurched forward to catch .them but they
cascaded all around her.
Sian hesitated, caught between the mess on the porch step and the
distant shrill of the phone, until Jane cried, 'Go on—go on—I'll pick
all this up. It might be somebody important!'
She hurried down the hall as fast as her protesting muscles would
allow, swung around the corner and lunged for the receiver. After all
her scrambling, it would probably be for Jane, she thought in
amusement, as she snatched up the handset and said breathlessly into
it, 'Hello?'
There was a click and a crackle, then a man's voice, wonderfully
familiar, came down the line, 'Sian?'
'Daddy!' she exclaimed in surprise and pleasure, as she dropped into
a nearby stuffed chair.
'Sure, and what other man would be calling for you, darling?' Devin
said teasingly. 'Might there be some little secret that you've been
keeping from your old Dad?'
'Quite a few, now that I come to think of it,' she retorted with a grin,
while a delighted glow spread all over her. He never failed to make
her day when he called; she was crazy about him, fool that she was.
'But nothing along those lines. How are you?
Where
are you?'
He paused, but she must have imagined it, and promptly put the
reason down to long distance when he said, 'London. I was just
checking to see if your birthday present had arrived yet.'
'Yes, thank you,' she replied, touching the heavy antique gold
necklace that she wore. It appeared deceptively plain but the
craftmanship was exquisite, of Egyptian design, the smooth sculpted
plates linked on the underside. The necklace had arrived by courier
and was accompanied by a heavy cream card on which was the name
of a company of an English insurance company, and must have cost a
fortune. 'It arrived a few days ago, and it's simply gorgeous. I love it
very much—I hardly ever take it off. Jane's threatening to take a pair
of metal-cutters to it.'
'How is the little scamp?'
'She's fine. She's still wondering when you're going to take her
ballroom dancing.'
'Well, you can fell her for me that the answer's still the same: not
until she's grown an inch or two. I'm too old to get done for child
molesting.'
'Forty-six isn't old!' Not that he even looked his age. With his elegant
slim figure, unlined face and just a sprinkle of distinguished grey at
the temples of otherwise jet-black hair, Devin Riley could easily pass
for ten years younger. She could just picture him at seventy, leonine
and gracefully light on his feet, charming his grandchildren with the
same fairy-tales he used to tell her when she was small.
'It's old enough, daughter, it's old enough. So, tell me what you've
been doing with yourself.'
Sian obligingly settled back and regaled him with various anecdotes
from the last few weeks. She stifled a pang when she described the
graduation ceremony he had not been able to attend, concentrating
instead on his roar of laughter as she told him of the scene in which
she dumped a laden plate down the front of a guest at the recent
party, and how he grew silent over the incident about rescuing the
little boy from the tree the day before yesterday, even though she
took care to edit out the frightening bits.
Without bothering to explain that the party guest and Matthew were
one and the same, she finally concluded, 'Joshua's older brother has
invited us to his place in Chicago for the weekend, then it's down to
work for those who have summer jobs. I've already said that I
couldn't go to Chicago with the others since you're flying in for a
visit. Do you have any idea how long you can stay?'
Again there was a pause, and Sian was sure she hadn't imagined it
this time as it was such a lengthy one. 'That's another one of the
reasons why I called, actually,' he told her. 'I'm afraid that I won't be
able to come after all.'
'Oh, Da, no,' she said, unable to help herself as crushing
disappointment settled on to her shoulders. First her commencement
ceremony, then her birthday, and now this.
'I know, poppet. I wanted to be there as well, but it can't be helped.'
'But why ever not?' she asked, and hated herself for the asking. How
many times over the past had they enacted the same scene? How
many times did she tell herself that never again would she beg for his
company, when it was obvious that he was too involved in his own
life to make the time to share the important parts of hers? But this
time, as ever, she had believed that things would be different. 'Surely
if you've double-booked yourself, you could cancel your other
engagements just this once?'
'I'm afraid not, darling.' The thread of disappointment that leadened
the Irish lilt in his voice was really good, she thought bitterly. He
could sound so sincere, so he could make her believe all over again,
just when she'd erected her strongest barriers, that she was the most
precious and important thing in the world to him.
'Well,' she said flatly, 'if it can't be helped, it can't be helped. Maybe
next time, huh?'
'I'll be there with bells on, I promise. And in the mean time, there
isn't a parent alive who could be more proud of their child than I am
of you.'
'Yeah,' she whispered, Opening her eyes very wide. But the tears
spilled over anyway. 'Well, you tell Malcolm "hi" for me, will you?
And tell him he'd better be looking after you. How is he, anyway?'
'Fine,' he said of his partner and old friend. 'Just fine.'
He sounded so odd. 'Da, is anything wrong?'
'Of course not, poppet,' her father replied more strongly. 'We just
have a bad connection.'
'All right, then. Take care of yourself.' But then, didn't he always?
'Sian -'
'Yes?' she asked, as he hesitated.
'Nothing,' he said with a sigh. 'I just love you, that's all.'
'I love you too, Daddy.'
And that, she thought coldly as she replaced the receiver, was the
whole problem. Despite everything, she still loved her father.
Maybe love belonged to a secret society, a magical few who were
imbued with the depth of personality that could cope with
disappointment and disillusionment, then rise above them to emerge
unscathed and without bitterness. Maybe there was some flaw in her
that made her incapable of loving without clinging on.
She didn't know. But what terrified her enough to make her break
into a cold sweat was that, if she could be so hurt by loving someone
like her father, how much greater would be the pain if she were to