Read HIGH TIDE AT MIDNIGHT Online
Authors: Sara Craven,Mineko Yamada
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
her going to Barbie Inglis and telling her that she had nothing to hide —that
Nick knew what she had done all those years before? Her spirit quailed
slightly. It was not a course of action that she would ever have contemplated
in the past, and she was far from convinced about its wisdom now. If it went
wrong—would Nick ever forgive her? she wondered. And almost in the
same moment--But if she did not try at least to bridge the gap between them
would she ever be able to forgive herself?
She sat in silence for the remainder of the journey while Mark talked
exuberantly about his hopes and plans and pondered likely dates for the
wedding. His remarks were largely rhetorical, demanding no more than a
sympathetic ear in response, and Morwenna was able to sit smiling faintly
and nodding her head at intervals while her thoughts pursued each other. She
would be taking a terrible risk. Barbie Inglis might simply refuse to see her
and that would make matters even worse than they were at present. But at
the same time she knew that if there was nothing ventured, there was nothing
gained. She did not even contemplate the prospect of Dominic's anger if he
ever found out about her interference. That was best left out of the reckoning
or she might lose her courage entirely.
'The yard's closing down early this afternoon,' Mark commented suddenly
after a few minutes' silence. We always do that at Christmas, and we always
all have a drink together before the closing. If you're in the vicinity, I'm sure
you'd be welcome to join us.'
'Who else will be there?' she asked cautiously.
'Well—everyone. Dominic, of course—and Nick when he was well enough.
There's always a little present each for the men's children which Dom hands
out. Aunt Barbie used to go, but I suppose she'll hold aloof this time.'
'And Karen?'
'Naturally,' he said rather drily. 'Can you imagine hef permitting herself to be
left out of anything—even a works party?'
She tried to smile, but it was a dismal failure. 'I suppose she feels she has the
right now.'
'Right doesn't enter into it. She'd come anyway. Well, shall I tell Dom to
expect you?'
'No.' Her denial was too swift and positive. She could sense his surprise.
'I—I mean I don't think so. I'll just do my shopping and catch the bus back to
Trevennon. Please don't worry about me. Parties aren't much in my line.'
'Saving yourself for tomorrow evening, eh?' He smiled, but his eyes were
still slightly puzzled. 'Please yourself. Now, where do you want me to drop
you?'
She answered him at random and slid out of the car with a feeling of
thankfulness. She wandered up the main street, oblivious of the Christmas
bustle going on around her, stepping off the pavement to avoid the laughing,
chattering groups of children and adults scurrying to complete their
preparations. The shops were brightly lit and decorated with tinsel and
glitter, but Morwenna hardly noticed. Her heart was beating loudly and
painfully and not merely because of the steep climb as she neared the top of
the hill. She knew, because Mark had pointed it out to her, where the Inglis
house was, standing foursquare in its own grounds just where the little town
gave way to the countryside again. It was a Georgian building, of three
storeys, commanding a view right over Port Vennor, and it looked neat and
freshly painted, with the gardens carefully tended. Everything, Morwenna
thought as she pushed open the gate, that Trevennon was not. This was the
house where money had never been a problem or maintenance any particular
anxiety.
Life, it seemed, had always been good to the Inglis family. Generations of
them must have lived here, expecting the best and usually obtaining it,
secure in the assurance of their own worth. It could never have occurred to
Barbie Inglis that Robert Kerslake, the man she had set her heart on, could
possibly prefer another woman. The shock of the elopement must have been
punishing for her—worse even than it had been for Nick—and it must have
made everything she valued seem suddenly meaningless.
So she had lashed back at Laura and at the family who had sheltered and
cherished her for so long. Both of them must suffer because of the wrong
that had been done her. And, ip the end, because malice always turns back
on itself, the one to suffer most had been herself.
Morwenna put her hand on the gate. It swung inwards on well-oiled hinges
and she walked steadily up the path and rang the bell. It was a dark, grey day
and there were lights on inside the house. As she heard approaching feet on
the other side of the door, Morwenna found herself praying it would not be
Karen.
Instead she was confronted by a tall woman in a neat green nylon overall
who gave her an enquiring glance.
'I'd like to see Miss Inglis, please.'
The curiosity in the woman's eyes deepened. 'Madam isn't feeling well
today. She's resting in her room. I think Miss Karen is at home if…'
'No, I'd rather speak to Miss Inglis herself,' Morwenna said firmly. 'I'm sure
she'll see me. I—I have a message from Trevennon for her—a personal
message.'
The woman hesitated. 'Well, miss, I don't know, I'm sure. Madam did say ...
but there, if you've a message for her, I suppose it will be all right. I'll tell her
you're here.'
'No, that's all right,' Morwenna halted her. She swallowed. 'If you'll just
show me where her room is, I'll pop in and give her the message and be off.
It is rather urgent and I'm in a bit of a hurry.'
There was a pause then the other woman said rather stiffly, 'Very well, miss,
though what Madam will say, I don't know. However, if you're certain…'
She led the way up thickly carpeted stairs to a broad gracious landing
running the full length of the house. She led the way briskly to the door at the
end and tapped on it.
'There you are, miss.' She turned away. 'I presume you'll see yourself out
when you've passed on the message.'
There was silence from the room beyond and Morwenna had to steel herself
to open the door and walk in.
The curtains were half drawn across the tall windows, excluding what little
light there was, and for a moment she thought the housekeeper was mistaken
and that the room was empty, and then she saw Barbie Inglis lying on a
chaise- longue close to the window.
'You!' Morwenna thought she had never heard such bitterness conveyed by
one brief monosyllable. 'Who allowed you in here?'
'Your housekeeper, Miss Inglis. But you mustn't be angry with her. She
acted in good faith—I said I had a message for you.' Morwenna forced
herself to walk across the room. She stood looking down at Barbie Inglis.
For a moment she wondered whether she had been doing her an injustice.
She looked genuinely ill, her skin stretched tightly over her cheekbones and
her eyes sunken.
'How dare you force your way in?' There was a handbell on a small table
close at hand and she propped herself upon one elbow to reach for it.
Morwenna quite gently put it out of her reach.
'For Nick's sake,' she said.
'You've brought me a message from Nick?' Barbie Inglis's eyes flashed. 'He
couldn't be so cruel as to use you as a messenger.'
'No.' Morwenna looked steadily at her. 'He has no idea I'm here. He'll
probably be very angry with me—almost as angry as you are, Miss Inglis,
but I have to take that risk. I can't bear this terrible misunderstanding to go
on any longer.'
'There is no misunderstanding,' Barbie Inglis said with a terrible coldness. 'I
simply do not wish to visit a house where the daughter of a woman who
wronged me very deeply is treated as an honoured guest—given privileges
that—friends of many years' standing are denied.' There was almost a choke
in her voice. 'Now go, Miss Kerslake. Leave my house. Nick has made his
choice and you will not busy yourself any1 further.'
Morwenna bit her lip. 'I know you hated my mother, and I can understand it.'
'Thank you.' Barbie Inglis's voice vibrated with sarcasm.
There was a chair nearby, a delicate thing with gilt legs upholstered in the
same striped material as the chaise- longue. Morwenna pulled it forward and
sat down without being invited.
'I've asked you to go!' Miss Inglis's voice was almost hysterical.
'No, not yet.' Morwenna nerved herself. 'You talk of wrongs, Miss Inglis.
But what of the wrong you did? Wasn't that a greater one? To sell the
designs for the
Lady Laura
to a cheap firm like Lackingtons. How much did
they pay you?' She looked round the affluent surroundings of the bedroom. 'I
wouldn't have thought you were in real need of thirty pieces of silver.'
If she had any lingering doubts about the veracity of Barbie's guilt, they
were banished for ever. Under her incredulous eyes, Miss Inglis seemed to
shrink, her eyes widening and glazing in real horror.
Ridiculously, Morwenna found words singing inside her
head—
'The curse is
come upon me,' cried the Lady of Shalott.
When Barbie spoke, her voice was whispering like an old woman's. 'How
did you know? Did—did Laura guess? I've been afraid of this always. From
the moment you came back, I knew why. I've been waiting for you to come
here. What do you want—money? My niece tells me you have none of your
own. She said something about art lessons— trip abroad. Is that what you
want?'
'No, no.' Any anger Morwenna might have felt evaporated under an onrush
of pity. 'You really don't understand, do you? I knew nothing about any of
this until I came to Trevennon. And my mother never told me what had
happened to the
Lady Laura
because she never knew.'
'Then—who did tell you?' There was a dawning realisation in Miss Inglis's
eyes, and a kind of sick dread.
Morwenna hesitated compassionately, but there was no easy way, now she
had embarked on this course. 'Nick told me,' she said at last.
For a moment she thought Barbie Inglis had fainted. The older woman sank
back on her cushions, her eyes closed. Her face was very white and her
mouth looked pinched.
'He knows,' she muttered at last.
'He's always known.' Morwenna leaned forward and took one of the cold
hands between hers, chafing it gently. 'He just wanted you to tell him, that's
all. All these years he's been waiting. Don't you see there's no point in
pretending any longer?' she ended on a note of appeal.
Barbie Inglis struggled upright into a sitting position. 'There's a glass in the
bathroom,' she said. 'Will you get me some water, please?'
She indicated a door on the other side of the room. Morwenna went across
and found herself in a small but luxurious bathroom, probably converted
from the original dressing room. She poured some water into the glass and
took it back to Miss Inglis, who was sitting staring expressionlessly out of
the window.
'Thank you.' She accepted the glass from Morwenna and drank deeply. She
was still very pale, but she appeared to have herself under control once
again.
'What are you going to do?' Morwenna asked as the silence seemed to stretch
out between them.
Barbie Inglis smiled without mirth. 'What can I do? I've been considering
closing the house and going away from here. A cruise perhaps—or a long
holiday in the sun. That seems the obvious choice. I shall think of
something, no doubt.'
'But what about Nick?' Morwenna took the empty glass from her and put it
down.
'Nick?' There was pain in the way Barbie Inglis pronounced his name. 'How
can I face him now, knowing that he's always—known? I could never stand
the shame of it.'
Morwenna stared at her, her heart sinking. 'But you can't mean that. You've
both been so unhappy for so long—and now when you have the chance to be
totally honest with each other....."
Barbie Inglis gave a twisted smile. 'It's too late for that. No, I shall go away
somewhere—after Christmas. That's all that's left to me now.'
'No, it isn't.' Morwenna stared appealingly into her eyes. 'It's just
this—infernal pride of yours and you know it. Nick wants you. He's wanted
you for years, but not with this—thing always between you. Isn't the
sacrifice of a little pride worth all the happiness that might result?'
Barbie Inglis gave a faint smile. 'You're very young, Miss Kerslake.' To the
young, everything is always black and white. Let us accept that you meant
well by coming here; however, I would be grateful if you would go now.'
She leaned back against her cushions and closed her eyes again.
Morwenna got to her feet, slowly and reluctantly. 'Miss Inglis, I feel I've
failed. Please believe me—all you would need to do would be arrive for