Authors: Amanda Carpenter
'Could you actually settle for a marriage of convenience?' He made
the question into a statement of incredulity, twisting her meaning into
a concept that sounded unacceptable. 'Would you really do
something like that to a man like Joshua who was in love with you?
If I were you, I would think about that long and hard, because it
seems to me that there's an element of cruelty in it, especially if you
were to fall in love with someone else.'
'No, of course I wouldn't!'
'Ah,' he stated flatly, 'then you would marry a man who wasn't in love
with you.'
'Love doesn't have to come into it!' she replied heatedly, impatient
scorn crossing her upturned expression. 'Everybody always makes so
much of love and marriage going hand in hand, when stability and
constancy are the important factors—and passionate affairs are
distinctly overrated, when all they appear to bring are confusion and
unhappiness to the parties concerned! Love is fine for those who
want it, but it doesn't hold the least part in my plans, thank you very
much! I prefer my heart just the way it is—whole and unbroken!'
'Now I begin to get a picture of your Utopia,' remarked Matt coolly.
'Polite conversation at the breakfast table and a weekly, joyless
performance of your conjugal duties. Heaven help your children if
you achieve your dream, because a more sterile existence I cannot
imagine.'
She could no longer remain where she was and twisted sideways to
rise out from under him. 'That's because you subscribe to the popular
belief that one has to be in love to be happy,' she retorted over her
shoulder, brushing away the grains of sand that clung to her elbows.
'Whereas I am happy just the way I am, and I fully intend on staying
that way!'
'Unawakened, unfulfilled, untouched,' he murmured, a snake in the
garden of paradise. 'Take care to build your briars very high, sleeping
princess, otherwise real life will creep in when you least expect it.'
'Rubbish,' she said in a strong voice, but she crossed her arms
defensively around a shaken stomach.
He continued, as if he hadn't heard her, 'And I'll tell you this for
nothing. Yes I believe in love, because, unlike you, I have been in
love before, and it was not the naive, helpless emotion you seem to
think it is but a full- blooded, enriching experience in which passion
and serenity were equal partners.'
Sian's head turned. When he stopped, she asked, 'What happened?'
He said quietly, 'She died of cancer when she was twenty-five.'
'I'm sorry,' she said just as quietly, as she turned around fully to look
at him with deep compassion. 'How terrible.'
He smiled at her. 'But somehow it wasn't. Her grace and spirit
wouldn't allow it to be. She's gone, and has been for quite some time,
but I will never forget her. Because of what she taught me, I can say
categorically that I will never marry without that depth and
immensity of feeling. My wife will be so totally and completely in
love with me that she will give her heart gladly into my safekeeping,
and I will guard it and nurture it as the most precious possession on
earth. I'll have to, you see, for mine will be given to her. Completely,
down to the last humble flaw, always and forever. That's what real
love is, Sian, not infatuation, not mere sexuality, not the heat of the
moment. Anything else by comparison is a poor substitute.'
She didn't question the impulse that made her lay a light hand on the
warmth of his forearm, nor stint the sincere generosity of her reply.
That was how far in he had reached. By laying down the tools of
hardness and aggression, by baring his soul and revealing his own
vulnerable, unquenchable hope, he had managed to win this round
without a fight, and he won so well that she didn't even begrudge him
the victory. 'It sounds a fine, rare thing. I hope you find it.'
He took her hand, raised it to his lips and kissed it. 'Oh, I will, never
fear,' he said, then added with a sultry purr, 'The only trouble will be
in convincing her that she wants it as badly as I do.'
Sian smiled and drew away. 'There's the crunch,' she said drily.
'Everybody's looking for something different out of life. You have
your dreams and I have mine, and who's to say? Maybe we'll both get
what we want.'
'But is Joshua really what you want, when it comes right down to it?
Can his immature impression of who you are provide stability?' he
asked, dissecting her with a shrewd level stare.
She hesitated, tempted to confess the real truth of what lay between
her and his younger brother, for she no longer felt such a burning
desire for revenge now that he had neatly taken the sting out of
everything he'd said to her before.
The trouble with Matt was that he too was constantly shifting his
tactics, with such subtle dexterity that she was forced to re-evaluate
her position at every turn. The hunter in him was more dangerous
than anything she had ever met, for he laid his snares with the
seduction of gentleness, the insidious voice of logic and reason. If he
was debilitating in head-on conflict, he was even more so in the
oblique attack, for he hit his target with unfailing accuracy.
In the end she decided that silence was by far the wisest course, so
she just smiled and said gently, 'That would be telling, wouldn't it?'
A sharp frown creased his forehead. He opened his mouth to say
something, but their conversation was abruptly broken off as the
soccer ball landed in his lap and Jane ran up to them. 'Come on, you
two lazy-bones, quit sitting around and join the game!'
Matt rose with good grace, but Sian declined the rough-and-tumble
sport, opting to go for a swim instead. Floating in the silken warm
water was deliciously refreshing after the heat-baked sand. She
closed her eyes, drifting, thinking about everything Matt had said.
Thinking of hopes, dreams, and forgiveness.
The rest of the day passed beautifully, with everyone settling into a
quiet contentment. Voices gentled and bodies, well fed and bathed
and kissed by the sun, reclined on picnic blankets. Even the raucous
blare of radios from other distant camps couldn't break the serene
spell. As the sun dipped towards the horizon, many of the other
bathers began to leave; they would miss the best part of the day, Sian
felt, for the wide sky remained cloudless and there would be a lovely
sunset.
Her discussion with Matt had managed to clear the air as their earlier
explosions had failed to do so. She was as relaxed as she had ever
been, and had lost enough of her antipathy towards him to appreciate,
as the others did, what good company he could be.
He had dropped any outward sign of his former antagonism, even
cracking a joke or two, to which she laughed and the others, after the
first frozen moment of uncertainty, laughed as well.
How clever he was. Sian studied him surreptitiously through her
lashes. He could use his own charm with as much conscious
effectiveness as she ever did, but she could not lay claim to the same
impenetrability as he. A cold thrill shivered through her. Don't soften,
Sian, she whispered to herself. Harden your heart.
Jane had turned somnolent and lay curled on her side, her head by
Sian's thigh, drowsing as the others talked. Sian's fingers
affectionately stroked the blonde hair away from her friend's temple
as she listened, occasionally interposing a quiet comment. Matt
glanced their way often with a smile; she could see the male
appreciation glinting in his eyes at the pretty picture they made.
At length Jane stirred and shivered, for the wind had picked up and
the heat was going out of the day. Sian had already donned her pink
top and had taken care not to stay out too long in the sun, but Jane's
skin felt over- warm when she laid cool fingers along the other girl's
cheek.
'You need your jacket,' she said softly, when Jane's eyes opened. 'Did
you remember to bring it?'
'Yes, but I left it in the back seat of Matt's car,' murmured the other
girl with a wide yawn.
'Would you like for me to fetch it?' she asked.
'Mmn, I need to wake up anyway.' Jane sat and ran her fingers
through her hair. 'Want to walk with me?'
'Sure,' she agreed readily and rose to her feet. Steven had just coaxed
Joshua into another swim. Matt sat watching the two dark heads
arrow through the silver sparkling reflections on the very deep blue
water, and turned enquiringly as she knelt beside him. 'Could we
borrow your car keys, please? Jane's feeling a bit chilled and needs
her jacket.'
'Of course.' He twisted at the waist and reached for his faded denim
shorts that lay folded nearby, digging into one pocket. Left
unobserved, Sian let her gaze roam freely with admiration over his
lithe, powerful body in the brief trunks. That dark brown of his
tanned skin looked like furred velvet, encasing an artist's composition
of grace and strength. A searing vision of his male body, enmeshed
and subjugated and arcing in spear- thrusting passion, imploded in
her with such force that she gasped in silent distress.
He was too quick. His attention fixed on her flushed face, the green
eyes cloudy, the barely discernible tremor in the slim fingers that
took the jingling keys he offered.
Dear heaven, what had she done? She couldn't look at him. His hand
snaked over hers compulsively, and tightened until the keys dug into
her palm. 'Sian.'
The husky voice was raw, urgent, an enquiry. Her terrified gaze
lifted. His hazel eyes had ignited with such ferocity that he looked
nearly blind. 'Let me go,' she breathed, the plea carrying an
intolerable weight of sweeping importance.
'For now,' he said. His hard fingers opened until her trembling fist lay
free in the large palm. She snatched away as he whispered, 'Run
away, little girl. For now.'
The sexuality inherent in that reply, coming like a bolt from the blue,
crackled high-voltage tension all over her body. She fled back to Jane
and scooped up her miniskirt along the way, her composure in tatters.
Her friend, fully alert now, gave her a very curious look but
thankfully refrained from comment, and after five minutes of brisk
walking Sian's temperature returned to normal.
They found the path through the forest easily enough, but, as the
shallow stream offered a much more refreshing walk and a chance to
rinse the sand from their feet, they decided to wade in it instead.
About halfway back to the cars, they came upon a group of four
children who were dancing about in the water, in quite an agitated
state. As soon as the largest, a girl of about eleven years old, saw
them, she came splashing up and cried, 'Oh, please, please help us!
My brother's climbed up the tree and he can't get down again! I told
him not to do it, but he wouldn't listen to me! I'm afraid he's going to
fall!'
The poor child was sobbing so hard she could barely talk, and Jane
groaned; she had such a phobia for heights that even mention of them
was enough to make her queasy. After her initial surprise, Sian said
to the frightened girl with deliberate composure, 'Calm down,
darling. It's all right. As long as he doesn't lose his grip or his head,
he's not going to fall. Why don't you show us where he is, and then
we'll see what we can do about getting him down, OK?'
The girl nodded, then turned and ran back the way she'd come,
throwing great splashes of water that soaked Sian's legs as she
followed. She didn't need the girl's upturned face and pointed finger,
for, as soon as they approached the other children, her eyes were
drawn up to the sound of high-pitched sobbing—up and up and up, to
the very top of the great, twisted tree where the sun still shone on a
bright patch of clothing.
Sian's breath whistled in horror and her heart thumped hard, for the
boy's T-shirt was caught at the back on a jagged branch that must
have broken underneath his weight, at about the height of a three-
storey building, right where the branches were thin and willowy-
young. Jane clutched her arm in an icy grip, for as they watched a
gust of breeze blew through the tree and he swayed sickeningly from