Authors: Amanda Carpenter
them all, those earnest young men, and realised that any one of them
would have given her what she'd always said she'd been looking for
in a husband. None of them had been the type to stray from home, or
enact the kind of subterfuge necessary for infidelity. So why hadn't
she picked one and married him? What was she really looking for?
If anything, she had envisaged a relationship of equals, but when two
people were real partners in strength and character, neither one was
in complete control. She realised then that she could not have what
she wanted without an element of trust, and she could not trust
without caring. Otherwise she might as well marry somebody like
Joshua, and resign herself to the sterile existence Matt had described.
Was the only other alternative to live out her life as Jane had said,
playing Solitaire? Why couldn't she simply accept with good grace
what fate put in her path, instead of trying to consign everything into
neat, tidy little cubicles? She was a big girl now; she should be able
to look after herself reasonably well. And Matt had done nothing to
her that she did not want to happen.
She rubbed her eyes and sighed. Jane came up beside her and met her
newly calm gaze. 'Well, what's the verdict?'
'All right,' she said. 'I can accept what you're saying. I haven't
necessarily changed my thinking about a lot of things, but at least I'm
willing to keep an open mind. We'll just have to wait and see.'
'And the weekend?' asked her friend with bright eyes.
'I'll come,' she said in a rush.
'That's my girl! Besides,' added Jane drily, 'there probably won't be
any privacy for anything to happen even if you wanted it to.'
Sian had recovered enough of her equilibrium to smile wryly. 'Too
true. Well, I've finished with reacting for one day. We'd better get
back to the others.'
'Sian -' She paused with her hand on the doorknob and looked at the
other woman, who continued thoughtfully, 'Maybe you'd better keep
an eye on Joshua. He's been watching the way you act around Matt,
and I think he might be jealous.'
'Jealous!' she exclaimed with a frown. 'What's he got to be jealous
about?'
'He did want to marry you, remember?' pointed out her friend.
'Yes, but he wasn't really in love with me. It was just infatuation. He
certainly took it well enough when I turned him down*
Jane gave a careless shrug. 'Maybe I've got it wrong, but just because
he can accept that you don't want to marry him, it doesn't mean that
he wants to see you fall into his older brother's arms. Very dog-in-
the-manger of him, I'll admit, but how like a man!'
Sian snapped, 'And who said anything about falling into Matt's arms?
All I said was that I'd keep an open mind!'
Jane managed to get in a final parting shot in her ear, as she jerked
open the door, 'But darling, it's already happened a few times now,
hasn't it?'
That was, of course, unanswerable. Sian shook her head as they
walked back into the kitchen where the three men were discussing
the weekend plans. She settled into her chair again, and pretended
she hadn't seen the slow, private smile on Matt's face as he looked
down her long exposed legs.
The group discussed various possibilities of what to see at the theatre.
Not surprisingly, Matt was well informed about many of the latest
plays and musicals, and a few well-timed, pithy quotes from some of
the more scathing reviews soon sent the others into fits of laughter.
'What fun it will be,' said Jane with immense satisfaction. 'I'll have to
pack something civilised, I suppose—maybe my black dress, with
pearls. Do you know what you're taking yet, Sian?'
She didn't know what devil came over her, but she found herself
saying sweetly, as she toyed with her coffee- cup, 'I haven't made up
my mind, but I have it on good authority that it should be silk, and
lace—with maybe a touch of leather.'
The hazel gaze beside her lifted in quick surprise, and flared bright
and hot. She raised one slim eyebrow in mocking response.
Remember what I told you, Matt? Every time you turn your back, I'll
be jumping out of my circle.
Sian turned her head and broke the searing contact. Her gaze
wandered across the table.
She shouldn't have been surprised. Jane had warned her.
Joshua was watching them, with jealous eyes.
Sian took care on Thursday to give Joshua plenty of attention, and
went to the movies with him that night, making sure throughout the
evening that she acted just as warm and as friendly towards him as
she ever had, without suggesting her feelings towards him had
changed to that of a more romantic nature.
At first it was very awkward. Joshua arrived on the doorstep sharp
and prickly around the edges, and Sian was braced for any accusing
comments and questions he might make about his older brother. But
Matt remained conspicuously absent from the conversation, and,
during the course of the film, all the negative nuances melted away.
They were both science fiction fans, and the movie thundered with
dazzling special effects, a rousing adventure plot and a tongue-in-
cheek humorous dialogue that had them both laughing aloud.
Afterwards they went out for pizza, still chuckling and snorting like a
pair of kids, and everything seemed as if it had gone back to normal.
Perhaps the jealousy she had seen in Joshua's face had been nothing
more than insecurity, Sian thought as she kissed him goodnight on
the cheek and ran lightly up the path to her apartment. After all,
Joshua had known her first and he might have felt that their
friendship was being threatened by the emergence of Matt on the
scene. Matt, who represented authority and discipline, and who was
that much older and self-assured and successful in his career, must be
quite a formidable figure to a young man, someone to be idolised and
yet resented.
In fact, Sian suspected that she wasn't actually the person Joshua was
jealous of at all, but Matt might be. She had begun to notice tiny
characteristics of speech and mannerisms that Joshua affected, which
before she had attributed to his own personality but could now see
were copies of Matthew's drawling quick-witted humour, and shrewd
observances.
Joshua so wanted to be like his sophisticated, confident brother
without realising that thirteen extra years of experience could not be
bridged by simply acting the part. He needed to discover loss,
tragedy and recovery for himself to gain wisdom, struggle through
battles of his own to win true self-confidence. Some day, she was
sure, he would grow to be the kind of man he admired— both he and
Matt were moulded from the same thoroughbred stamp—but until
then he was much as he must have been as a very young boy,
watching with adoring eyes as his idol flew off to magnificent
horizons he could only imagine.
Sian would have liked to test her hypothesis on Jane, but the other
girl was already in bed, so she trailed through the silent apartment
and turned off the lights. Everywhere she went, the tidy kitchen, the
comfortable living-room, even her bedroom: all whispered with the
shadow of Matt's lingering ghost. His was the type of presence that
left vibrations.
She smiled wryly as she remembered Jane's suggestion to have a wild
affair with him. As if an affair with him could be anything else! It
would be thunder and lightning, and the occasional black howling
tornado, but where in all that would be the still serenity of the eye of
the storm? Where could she take shelter, bedraggled and feather-
blown, from the raging elements?
Even if she accepted that her life could not be based on placidity
alone and that everything worthwhile contained a certain amount of
risk, she still needed the calm oasis in which to reflect and lick her
wounds. She did not want to be swept off her feet to unbearable
heights only to crash; she wanted a slow and graceful waltz to a
classical tune, each partner's steps in harmony with the other's.
Self-knowledge was a dangerous thing. When she had not known
before the breadth and depth of her desires, she had indeed been
blithely content to play her introspective game of Solitaire. Now her
eyes had been opened to a shimmering possibility, and it was so
hauntingly beautiful that it could only make her ache.
Uncharacteristically, she overslept the next morning and woke
around eleven feeling heavy-eyed and disgruntled. She managed to
finish her chores, pack and be ready on time, however, and dozed
fitfully in the back seat, occasionally surfacing to listen to the other
three converse. They hit the Chicago rush-hour and spent forty-five
minutes creeping along at a snail's pace, so it was six in the evening
by the time they pulled into a car park reserved for residents and
guests of a luxury block of condominiums off fashionable Lakeshore
Drive.
Everybody piled out, staring in fascination as they retrieved their
luggage from the car. Lake Michigan lay panoramic to their right,
dark azure overlaid with silver sparkles. 'Get this place!' said Steven,
overacting his awe. 'Jane, my love, it's .been swell, but I think I'm
leaving you for another man.'
'It is nice, isn't it?' said Joshua, with a pretence to offhandedness that
could not conceal a sense of pride. 'Matt designed the condos
himself. Wait'll you see the rest. It's got security videoscreens at the
doors.'
They followed him to the door; Joshua pressed Matt's button on the
display panel, and Matt's voice came over the intercom. 'Oh, good,
you're here. Come on up.'
The lock on the door buzzed, and they entered the cool, quiet foyer to
take the lift up to his floor. When the doors opened, Matthew was
waiting in the hall, and Sian's heart gave a great, ridiculous leap
when she saw him.
He must have gone to work, for he was still dressed for the office, in
a tan suit several shades lighter than the bronzed outdoor hue of his
complexion. Its severe formality, combined with the carelessness of
his unbuttoned collar and loosened tie, produced the strangest
reaction in the pit of her stomach, a kind of sinking sensation of rabid
hunger, and in her mind, uncontrollably, she imagined completing the
act of pulling off his tie.
His gaze, light and brilliant, met hers briefly, then he said with a
white smile, '"Welcome to my parlour," said the spider. How was
your drive?'
'Fine, until we hit Chicago traffic,' said Joshua.
'Never mind, you're here now. Cold drinks are on offer to any takers,
but first let's get the sleeping arrangements portioned off, so you
know where to put your things. Jane and Sian, you two get the pick
of my study and bedroom, Josh and Steven, you get to share the
guest-room, and I'll bunk down in the living-room.'
Sian's first impression of his home was an enjoyable sense of light
and space. The living-room had huge, ceiling-high windows with an
unobstructed view of the shore. Sleeping in Matthew's bedroom was
far too much a temptation, and before the other girl could speak up
she said hastily, 'I'll take the study, thanks.'
He sent her a mocking glance, but merely said, 'Fine. Jane, your
room is the next door down on the right. Sian, this is yours.'
He led her into the study and stood to one side while she looked
around in curiosity and pleasure.
In front of another spacious window was an angled drawing table and
high stool. The table was piled high with sheets and scrolls of papers,
pens and pencils, business correspondence and a calculator. Next to
one wall was a desktop computer by two tall filing cabinets, and
against the third, by the door, was a short leather-bound settee where,
judging by its softened and worn appearance, he obviously relaxed
quite often.
There wasn't any furniture against the fourth wall, for in pride of
place and covering most of the space was a huge, colourful print that
she recognised as coming from the Louvre museum. 'Oh, it's lovely!'
she exclaimed, stepping as close to it as she could, for on the floor
underneath was a neatly made airbed.
'Thank you,' said Matt as he strolled over. 'I picked it up when I