Authors: Sara Craven
taken on a new secretary. It means I don't have to go near the yard—I don't
have to see Jasmine's empty box.'
'But you didn't do anything. You weren't responsible. Eliot proved that,
surely? He showed you it was impossible for you to have dislodged the bolt
in the way you described.'
'Yes,' Natalie said neutrally. 'He's been—very kind about it all.'
And if kindness had been all she wanted from him, she thought detachedly,
she would have been happy indeed. As it was...
She went on, 'And it's proved something else to me as well. Daddy was right
all along when he said I wasn't / tough enough for his kind of life. It—it
doesn't even seem to matter any more.'
Beattie patted her arm. 'That's because you're having a baby, and that's
absorbing all your attention.' She chuckled. 'It'll be different once it's born.
You'll be in there slugging, fighting for your rights all over again!'
Natalie thought,
I wonder...
'How did your ante-natal check up go?' asked Beat- tie.
Natalie shrugged. 'Fine—apparently. I'm in excellent health, and so's the
baby, although I don't know how they can tell. I haven't even got a bump
yet.'
She flushed slightly as she remembered the doctor's cheerful, 'And it's all
right to resume normal marital relations, Mrs Lang, if you haven't already.
There can be a slight risk in the early weeks sometimes, but that's behind you
now. Be happy. Enjoy your marriage and your pregnancy.'
But that was easier said than done, she thought wretchedly, when Eliot
hadn't even crossed the threshold of their bedroom since the night of
Jasmine's accident.
He was invariably polite when they did encounter each other—considerate
even—but aloof, creating a barrier that she seemed unable to penetrate. And
he never touched her, even accidentally. Indeed, he seemed to go out of his
way to avoid physical contact with her.
Although she had to acknowledge that he had plenty to occupy his mind
these days. A number of owners, including Terence Strang, had been
concerned when a brief story about Jasmine's accident had appeared in the
papers.
In fact Mr Strang had descended on them like a thunderbolt, demanding to
know what kind of set-up allowed valuable horses to roam on main roads in
the early hours, and what guarantee there was that it wouldn't happen again.
A number of others had asked the same thing. And Oriel Prince had removed
her two, insisting that Sharon go with them. Natalie had been really sorry to
see her go, but Sharon had been cheerful enough.
'Going back to Lambourn means I'll be nearer the family,' she said. 'And I
knew she wouldn't leave well alone.' She gave Natalie a cryptic glance. 'Not
once she found out Mr Lang was married. Sort of—removed her incentive.'
Natalie had smiled dutifully, but she thought,
No, it didn't...
And there were other problems too—the continuing publicity about
Midstream and his potential, for one.
'You can't go up on the gallops these days for pressmen with cameras
jumping out of the gorse at you,' Wes said gloomily.
Even Grantham had acceded grudgingly that maybe Micky's fall could be
attributed to being dazzled by a camera lens rather than carelessness.
And in a fortnight Midstream was to compete in his first major race since
coming to Wintersgarth—the Whitstone Cup, and he was already, because
of the newspaper stories, being heavily backed.
As she walked back to the flat, hands tucked into the pockets of her
sheepskin coat, Natalie wondered whether Eliot would ask her to go wjth
him to watch Midstream. He had never suggested, since their marriage, that
she accompany him racing. It seemed that she was the outsider now.
She'd thought he would be up on the gallops for the second exercise of the
day, but when she walked into the kitchen he was sitting at the table.
'Oh.' Natalie halted. 'Did you want to speak to me about something? I'm
sorry—I was up at the house with Beattie.'
'Yes, 1 guessed that. I've just made some coffee. Would you like some?'
She wrinkled her nose. 'Perhaps not. It seems to be the only thing that still
makes me feel a little bit sick.' She paused. 'I saw the doctor this morning.
He says everything's fine.'
'Good.' His tone was polite without any real warmth.
Natalie bit her lip. 'I'll go and change, and make a start on lunch. We're
having goulash today,' she went on, making an effort to speak lightly.
'Beattie's been giving me lessons, you'll be relieved to hear.'
'Will it stretch?' he asked. 'Calum Carmichael's coming down this morning
to have a look at Midstream, and I'd like to be able to offer him a meal
afterwards.'
'Yes, of course.' He couldn't be more formal, Natalie thought miserably, if
she was some newly engaged housekeeper. Except that she'd probably have
had her cards by now. She was still no culinary expert, and although Eliot
offered no overt criticism, he still often cooked the evening meal himself.
'I'll try not to burn anything,' she joked weakly, but he didn't return her smile.
He picked up an envelope and slid it across the table to her. 'Do you know
this house?' he asked.
The envelope contained several typed pages, and a number of photographs
in colour. Natalie's eyes widened incredulously as she spotted an estate
agent's logo.
'But this is Highbeck House!' she exclaimed. 'Surely Mrs Grosvenor isn't
selling?'
'It seems she has to. She's well into her eighties, and she's had a couple of
falls lately, so her daughter is insisting she moves in with them.' Eliot spoke
shortly, as if his mind were elsewhere. He looked at Natalie. 'I was
wondering if you'd be interested in living there?'
Her heart skipped a beat, as she remembered what he'd said about making
other arrangements when the baby was born.
'By myself?'His mouth tightened. 'No, I'd planned on living there too,
although the house is probably big enough for us to maintain separate
establishments, if that's what you want.'
'I didn't say that.' She began to turn over the photographs. 'Poor Mrs
Grosvenor! She'll miss her home, and her lovely garden.'
'Well, think about it, and let me know if you'd like to look round it at least. It
hasn't come on the market yet in the strictest sense, so we have a few days'
leeway. Certainly, we can't go on living here. For one thing, it won't be big
enough when the baby comes. And for another...' He stopped abruptly.
'Yes?' Natalie shuffled the photographs back into the envelope, not looking
at him.
Eliot was silent for a moment, then he said, 'Before we were married, I said
there were no ghosts here. It was a typically arrogant remark, and I apologise
for it, because it's evident that this place does have—hang-ups from the past
for you that I've totally failed to exorcise.' His eyes met hers. 'You'd cleared
away every physical trace of him—of your life together. You weren't even
wearing his ring when I met you—but Drummond's shadow still hangs over
you, doesn't it?'
Natalie sighed harshly. 'Yes,' she admitted, 'I—suppose it does.'
He nodded. 'I can't—I don't blame you for that. You were his wife. Perhaps
he showed you a different side of himself from the one he displayed to the
rest of the world.' He paused, his face hardening. 'Maybe if I'd been able to
like him, I could understand this—continuing loyalty of yours. But he
wouldn't want you to mourn for ever—to waste all your warmth and spirit on
a dead man.' He took a breath. 'I swore to myself I wouldn't pressure
you—that I'd give you all the time you needed.' He laughed harshly. 'I hadn't
realised what sheer hell trying to be noble could be! I don't know how much
longer I can take this—non-life we're living.'
The bleak words jolted Natalie like a blow to the ribs. She stared at him
incredulously, her lips parting in wonder. She said slowly, 'Is—that what
you think?' then stopped, as a laughing voice floated up the stairs.
'Eliot my boy, where the hell are you hiding? Come down and show me this
devil horse I'm to ride for you!'
The breath was expelled explosively from Eliot's lungs. 'Calum,' he said
with resignation. He got up from the table, giving Natalie a frowning,
questioning look as he went to the door. 'We're up here, Cal!'
Calum Carmichael came into the kitchen like a breath of vibrant breeze.
'Well, Mrs Lang.' He grabbed Natalie's hand and raised it to his lips. 'So
you're the poor soul who has the job of turning this reprobate into an honest
man. God, Eliot, but your good taste is sickening!'
Natalie's head was whirling, her emotions in chaos, but a bubble of reluctant
laughter escaped her. Calum's buoyant charm was irresistible.
Eliot was grinning too. 'Subtle as ever, I see! The devil horse in question is
saddled and waiting for you, my son.'
Calum whistled. 'You mean you want me to get on its back now? And I was
thinking I'd make his acquaintance in the parade ring.'
'Then think again,' Eliot advised caustically. He looked over Calum's elegant
tweeds with a raised eyebrow. 'Though how you expect to ride looking like
an ad for Harrods men's department...'
'An envious spirit is a terrible thing,' said Calum sadly. 'As it happens, I have
my gear in the car. I'll tell you what it is, Mrs Lang—this sadist only wants to
put me up on this horse so I'll be thrown on my face in the mud in front of my
fiancee. A nice sedate drive in beautiful countryside is what I promised the
woman.'
'Please won't you call me Natalie?' She smiled at him. 'And if your fiancee's
with you where is she?'
'In the car, learning her place,' Calum said instantly. 'All fillies need the
same treatment—the masterful hand on the reins, the odd touch of the whip.'
He winked at Natalie. 'I say this because she's safely out of earshot, the
harpy. Shall I bring her up to you, then?'
The harpy turned out to be small, chestnut-haired and curvaceous, wrapped
in a fun fur. She kissed Eliot with the ease of an old friend, then turned with
a shy smile to Natalie, introducing herself as Cathy Horton.
When the invitation to lunch had been proffered and accepted she
immediately offered to help with the preparation.
'Aren't you coming to watch me make a fool of myself on this monster?'
Calum demanded reproachfully.
'We'll come up later.' She slapped him affectionately on the rear. 'Off you go,
and if you do fall off, make sure the wretched animal doesn't step on
anything vital. We're getting married at the end of the jumping season,' she
confided to Natalie as they were left alone.
'I hope you'll be very happy.' Natalie thought they would be. They both
seemed to have open, out-going personalities, although Cathy was the
quieter of the two. But the way they looked at each other, the open love
accepted and returned, twisted an envious knife in her soul. She said
curiously, 'Don't you worry—when Calum has to ride a difficult horse?'
'All the time,' Cathy admitted calmly. 'But it's his living, what: he does, so I
have to accept it.' She looked at Natalie questioningly. 'You didn't have the
same problem, did you? You weren't going with Eliot when he was a
jockey.'
'No.' Natalie emptied a tin of tomatoes into a bowl.
'I thought I hadn't see you around,' Cathy mused. 'L knew most of Eliot's
girlfriends.'
Natalie poured olive oil into a pan and began to heat it. Trying to sound
casual, she asked, 'Did you know— the girl he nearly married?'
'Camilla.' Cathy paused in her onion chopping to nod vigorously. 'Yes, I
knew her, and if you ask me he had a lucky escape. She didn't like any of his
friends, and we weren't keen on her either. She was hand in glove with his
mother, trying to make him give up horses and become something in the
City like the rest of his family. Eliot— can you imagine? She was a
lovely-looking girl, though,' she added fairly. 'And very sexy—always
giving Eliot looks as if she wanted him to jump on her there and then. But
they didn't have much going for them apart from sex. She knew he wasn't
going to give up racing and live life on her terms, and that's why she threw
him over. That daft business over Michelle Laidlaw was just an excuse.'
She grinned at Natalie. 'Have I covered everything?'
Natalie flushed. 'You must think I'm awful—pumping you for information
like this.' She began to brown the first cubes of meat.
'It's not awful at all. It's natural you'd want to know.' Cathy brought the
onions over. 'But if you're thinking Eliot married you on any kind of
rebound, forget it. He got over her with indecent haste, as Calum put it.' She