Read HIGH TIDE AT MIDNIGHT Online
Authors: Sara Craven,Mineko Yamada
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
fantasy world about her time at Trevennon for some reason best known to
herself. Perhaps she hadn't wanted to face facts either, Morwenna thought
unhappily.
The young man was speaking again. 'Well, if you must rush away, then I
suppose it can't be helped. But do drive carefully. A tree came down on our
road tonight. Jacky Herrick was moving it with his tractor as I drove down,
but there might be others.'
She smiled at him with an effort. 'Perhaps it's just as well that I haven't a car,'
she said, trying to speak lightly. 'I presume there will still be buses on the
main road.'
'Yes, but they're few and far between." He studied her for a moment with
undisguised curiosity, then swung towards Dominic Trevennon who had
been listening to the interchange with a faint sneering smile playing about
his lips.
'Dom, what's going on here? You aren't seriously suggesting that she should
walk all the way back to the main road on a night like this—not when we've
got half a dozen empty bedrooms.'
Oh, please." Morwenna intervened, alarmed. 'I really must be going. I've
made arrangements…'
'Then you must let me take you in my car." He gave her a smile of such
charm that she felt warmed by it in spite of everything that had happened.
'Where are you staying? The Towers in Port Vennor?'
'Er—no.' Morwenna thought rapidly. 'As a matter of fact, I'm staying with
some friends. But you really don't need to put yourself out.'
'I'm not. Dom, don't just stand there. Tell her that she's not putting us to any
trouble. What's the matter with you? You surely weren't going to let her
simply trudge off into the night, for God's sake?'
Dominic Trevennon raised his eyebrows coolly. 'Frankly, it didn't seem to
be any of my concern,' he said offhandedly. 'In any case, Miss Kerslake has
already impressed me as a young lady more than capable of looking after
herself.'
'Miss—Kerslake?'
Dominic Trevennon nodded. 'You heard me correctly— and your
assumption is equally correct. And as introductions now seem to be in order,
Miss Kerslake. this is my younger brother Mark.'
His handshake was warm enough, but Morwenna already sensed a faint air
of withdrawal in his manner. The younger brother had an easy forthright
charm which his elder totally lacked, she thought, smouldering.
She said very sweetly and politely, 'If after my dire identity is disclosed to
you, the offer of a lift is no longer forthcoming, I shall quite understand.'
'What? I mean—oh, no.' Mark Trevennon looked hot with embarrassment.
'I'll take you wherever you wish to go—just as soon as you're ready.'
Without another word or glance in Dominic Trevennon's direction, she
walked into the hall. After a moment Mark joined her and they walked
together to the front door.
A battered-looking Mini was parked in the shadow of the outbuildings.
Mark unlocked the passenger door and helped her in punctiliously, stowing
her rucksack on the back seat.
As he got into the driver's seat, Morwenna said rather awkwardly, 'I'm sorry
about all this. I had no idea until I arrived here this evening that there'd been
any kind of rift.'
He smiled tightly. 'It must have been a nasty shock for you,' he said, turning
on the ignition.
'The thing is,' Morwenna gripped her hands together in her lap, 'I still don't
know what it is my mother is supposed to have done. Mr Trevennon—your
brother—was talking in terms of misery and ruined lives. I can hardly
believe we're talking about the same person. I was only a child when my
mother died, but I just don't remember her as—a destroyer. She was a very
warm, creative person. She drew people to her.'
'Perhaps that was the trouble.' Mark peered forward through the windscreen
frowning a little.
'What do you mean?'
He shrugged uneasily. 'Oh, forget, it. I honestly don't think anything will be
gained by going over old ground. I'm sorry if Dom gave you a tough time,
but things haven't been exactly easy for him, either. Your arrival on the
scene must have seemed the last straw in many ways. Why did you come, by
the way?'
Morwenna bent her head and stared down at her clasped hands. 'I wanted
your brother to store some paintings for me,' she replied tonelessly.
He^ave her a sharp sideways look. 'You mean some of your mother's work?'
When she nodded, he gave a short explosive whistle. 'My God, that would
really have put the cat among the pigeons!'
'And yet I'm never to know why.' Morwenna gave a mirthless smile, and
then paused, pressing her hands against her whitening face. 'I'm
sorry—please, can you turn the car round? I have to go back to the house.'
'Why, for heaven's sake?' Mark braked and brought the Mini to a halt by the
side of the road. He sent her an impatient glance. 'I really don't advise it.'
'I don't need your advice," Morwenna said tautly. 'Believe me, if I had any
choice I would never go near the place again, but it so happens I've left the
paintings there— in the study on your brother's desk. He—he was looking at
them, and later—when all the fuss began—I simply forgot all about them. I
just wanted to get out of the house as quickly as possible."
Mark paused, his brows drawn together in a sharp frown. Then he gave a
little sigh. 'Look, love, I think we'd better stick to the present'plan and get
you to your destination. Dom will deal with any problems at Trevennon, and
we'll bring the paintings over to you first thing in the morning. How's that?'
Morwenna shook her head. 'I'd prefer to fetch them now.' Her voice was flat.
'But it seems that I have no choice.'
'This way is best, believe me.' Mark gave her a placatory smile as he set the
car in motion again.
'Again, I'll just have to take your word for it.' She could not keep a note of
bitterness from her voice. 'I didn't realise I was such a—pariah.'
'You're not. It's nothing to do with you personally at all —oh, hell!' Mark
made a ferocious gear change, revealing that he was not using the necessary
concentration. 'Look, do you know anything about boats?'
Morwenna shook her head. 'Nothing at all. I'm not a sailor.'
He sent her a guarded look. 'Well, did you ever hear the
Lady Laura
mentioned when you were a child?'
Morwenna stared at him. 'Of course not. My mother was Lady Kerslake,
not…'
'No,' he shook his head impatiently. 'You don't understand. The
Lady Laura
wasn't a person. She was a boat, although admittedly she was named for
your mother. She was a very new, almost revolutionary design for a sailing
dinghy, and Uncle Nick designed her. He'd been in the Navy during the war,
and when he came back to Trevennon when it was over he persuaded my
father to go in with him and buy a small boatyard in Port Vennor. I won't
bore you with all the details, but eventually after a number of setbacks they
started to do quite well. But you may know all this already?'
'No—definitely not. My mother told me a lot about this area, but she never
mentioned anything about a boatyard.' She could not prevent the instinctive
wistfulness in her voice. 'She made Trevennon sound wonderful. All her
memories were happy ones.'
'Is that a fact?' Mark raised a wry eyebrow. 'Then she must have had an
endless capacity for self-deception as well.'
'As well as what?'
'As well as the ability to deceive other people.' Mark's voice was hard. 'I'm
sorry if you don't like it, but you did want to know, remember. Laura
Kerslake—Laura War- render as she was when she came to
Trevennon—had an amazing ability to win people over—fascinate them,
accept their affection and their love and then use it against them. See how
much I know about her, and I wasn't even born when she came to
Trevennon. She made—a deep impression on everyone here. We're still
recovering from the effects of it, psychologically and financially.'
Morwenna stared at him, her lips parted. 'I can't believe we're talking about
the same person,' she murmured, half to herself.
'Oh yes, we are,' Mark said almost savagely. 'She grew up here and she
watched the boatyard grow too. When she went, she left Uncle Nick a
broken man and the business in ruins.' He flung his head back. 'Did you
know she was going to marry Uncle Nick?'
'No!' Morwenna was aghast. 'I thought—I always believed my father had
been the only man in her life.'
Mark shrugged. 'Maybe he was. But she had Uncle Nick on a string as well.
The
Lady Laura
was to be his wedding present to her. Everyone knew that,
just as they knew that once it went on the market it would make the fortune
of Trevennon Marine. But then your father came on the scene. He was
spending a holiday locally and they met. He came to the house
regularly—he was a visitor and a welcome one. No one realised there was
anything going on until they ran away together. They didn't even have the
courage to stay and face the music, but that wasn't all. We soon found out
why—or Uncle Nick did when he went down to the yard. The design and
specifications for
Lady Laurt
had vanished from his office.'
'And you think my mother—oh, I don't believe it!'
'Uncle Nick didn't want to believe it either. He insisted that they must have
been mislaid, but he soon discovered his mistake when he went to the Boat
Show and saw
Lady Laura.
Oh, she wasn't called that, naturally, and the
crowd who'd made her—a big concern on the south coast—had used
cheaper materials, but it was Uncle Nick's boat. It went into mass production
shortly afterwards. Legally, of course, Trevennon Marine hadn't a leg to
stand on. Uncle Nick couldn't prove that his design had been pirated, but he
knew and so did the sharks who'd bought it. Their sales manager was
laughing all over his face. All's fair, he told Uncle Nick, in love and
business. Said he ought to be more choosy about his lady-friends.'
'Oh, God!' Morwenna was appalled. 'So—what happened?'
Mark sighed. 'Trevennon Marine nearly went bankrupt. We'd invested
heavily on the strength of the
Lady Laura,
bought up the adjoining
properties so that we could expand, taken on more men. It all had to go. And
there were bank loans to be repaid. My father had to sell off some of our
land. But the hardest thing for Uncle Nick to bear was that this whole mess
had been perpetrated by the woman he loved. He's never really got over it.
So now you can see why your arrival at Trevennon wasn't exactly greeted
with open arms.'
Morwenna was silent for a long time. Then at last she said, 'I don't believe it.
You never knew her—you've admitted as much. She wasn't a—guilty
person. She couldn't have borne a load of mischief like that for all those
years without letting something show. Unless you're trying to suggest my
father was her accomplice and that they both managed to cover up what
they'd done.'
Mark looked uncomfortable. 'We never really knew what part he played in
it. To make matters worse he was on the point of becoming engaged to
someone else—a local girl, a* friend of the family. You can imagine the
scandal this whole thing caused in a small community like this.'
'Yes.' Morwenna felt numb. The situation was swiftly assuming nightmare
proportions, but she made herself hang on to what she believed to be the
reality in spite of anything she had been told. 'I've heard everything you've
said, Mark, and I've tried my best to take it in." She shook her head
helplessly. 'But it's no use. I can't equate the woman I remember—or my
father either—with such sly, needless cruelty. Perhaps they did
elope—people can't always help their feelings, after all—but-they would
never have compounded the injury by selling out Trevennon Marine. There
would have been no need.'Mark made a small defensive gesture. 'The
evidence suggests that they—or rather she—did,' he said quietly.
'Then the evidence is wrong,' Morwenna said fiercely. 'Did anyone ever
contact my mother—ask her for an explanation?'
'No.' Mark gave her a surprised glance. 'As you can imagine, no one in the
family ever wanted to speak to her or hear from her again. Uncle Nick
wouldn't even allow anyone into the room she had used. He locked it up and
took the key away and none of us have been in there since. I think he may
have been in there sometimes—until he became ill, of course.'
'What's the matter with him?'
'He had a slight stroke. There was some paralysis at first, but fortunately it
wasn't too serious and he's been recovering -with physiotherapy. But you
must understand that Dom couldn't allow you to see him. We couldn't risk