Man of Destiny

Home > Other > Man of Destiny > Page 13
Man of Destiny Page 13

by Rose Burghley


  She had never seen such coldly resentful eyes.

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  CAROLINE had been asleep for some time when some unaccountable sound awoke her.

  She had been dreaming, and her dreams were peculiarly vivid ... perhaps because she had found it difficult to get to sleep, and her senses had been over-stimulated.

  She had watched Ilse get ready for Dom Vasco’s dinner-party, and later she had watched her departure, on the arm of the Marques, for Dom Vasco’s house. It was not far away, and the night was particularly fine and warm—sensuously warm, with great stars wheeling in the sky above them, and a lovely lemon light low down on the horizon where the sun had disappeared—but Ilse had wanted a wrap in case the temperature dropped suddenly, and Caroline had been sent speeding back into the house to fetch it.

  When she returned the Marques had looked at her regretfully.

  “Are you sure we can’t persuade you to come with us after all, Miss Worth?” he had said in his pleasant, kindly voice. “It doesn’t seem quite right leaving a young woman of your age behind, and Dom Vasco’s house is very unusual. I’m sure he would show you over it, and be delighted to hear you admire all its unique features, if you would change your mind and accompany us after all.”

  And there was a queer note of insistence in his voice which surprised Caroline, and she thought about afterwards, because it was almost as if he understood perfectly how she was feeling and sympathised with her. There was even a certain amount of actual sympathy in his handsome hazel-grey eyes.

  But Ilse spoke with a note of sharpness from inside the car, reminding him that Miss Worth had already declined an invitation, and Dom Vasco’s arrangements would almost certainly be upset by her last-minute inclusion. So the elderly Portuguese nobleman got into the car regretfully, but before they drove away Caroline, who was still standing on the drive, received a smile of extraordinary sweetness from him. And a wave of the hand.

  Ilse lay back against the seat and smiled at the Marques, one of her green-eyed, red-lipped, very feminine smiles. She was not prepared to waste such a smile on a mere nursery-governess.

  Caroline went back into the house and up to Richard’s room, to make certain he was asleep. His room was now in the same corridor as his mother’s suite, and fairly far removed from the nursery wing. Caroline missed having him near her, but she realised that the nursery wing was not really fit for him, and the washing arrangements were certainly not ideal for the heir to a marquisate. But for herself, they were quite adequate. She was sure Ilse thought they were more than adequate, and Dom Vasco knew now that she would be going home to England very soon, so he wouldn’t bother to press Carmelita to go ahead with her improvements. Or he needn’t bother. She would make that more clear to him when she saw him again.

  But why had he been so furiously angry with, her when she refused his invitation to help swell the numbers at his dinner-party? And he had been angry. There was nothing assumed about that glittering, black-eyed wrath. And when he flung away and left her she had felt as if he had slammed a door in her face.

  The door would never open again ... she felt drearily certain of that. Not even when his anger evaporated. They had been strangely close sometimes since that first moment of their meeting on board the ship at Lisbon, but now they would never have a chance to be—really close! Her breath caught as she thought of all that being really close to Vasco de Capuchos could mean, and she wondered now that she had had the strength of mind to make a decision that would cut her off from ever seeing him again. Home to England ... But she had no home, and England would be a desolation without him. Life would be a desolation without him!

  The one thing she felt happy about as, cold and miserable despite the warmth of the night, she undressed and prepared herself for bed, was that Vasco had no idea how she felt. If he had ... Well, if he had she couldn’t bear it!

  In her dreams his voice was calling to her, and it was curiously insistent.

  “Caroline! Where are you, Caroline ... Caroline!”

  It must have been that dream voice that awakened her—that or the strange crackling noise that was happening near at hand.

  She sat up dazedly in bed. The room was full of moonlight, but it was also full of smoke. Choking, acrid-smelling smoke that set her coughing, while she groped for her dressing-gown and then tried to fight her way through it to the door.

  Outside it was still a perfectly wonderful night, full of the chirping of cicadas and the scent of flowers; but inside the nursery wing of the house the most terrifying thing was happening. The place was on fire, and already there was a loud crackling noise that was growing louder every second, and a roaring and a feeling of intense heat that she felt almost certain would deprive her of her senses unless she could get outside into the long corridor that separated the wing from the main part of the house and breathe the cooler atmosphere. And even then she would have to find the strength to make her way along the corridor and thrust open the outer door.

  It stuck sometimes; and at others the handle was difficult to turn. And tonight she might even have turned the key, feeling the need to be quite alone. She had never forgotten that unfortunate intrusion when Dom Vasco and Ilse had burst upon her while she was still wearing her bath-robe, and literally shining with perspiration, while her hair hung in a wet cloak about her shoulders.

  What sort of an impression had she made on Dom Vasco that night?

  The smoke was filling her lungs, and bursting them. That awful roaring sound was in her ears, and her eyes were streaming with water. She staggered out into the corridor, and ahead of her stretched the faded carpet that covered it. Somehow she must reach that outer door, but a billow of smoke surged out from behind her, and she could see nothing and hear only the roaring as it enveloped her like a mantle.

  She tripped over the old-fashioned cord of her dressing-gown, and hit the floor with a thud. Dazedly she lay there for a moment, aware that her senses were leaving her, and she was quite literally fighting for the strength to get up on to her feet once more when the outer door burst inwards, and someone picked her up and carried her out into a miraculously sweet-scented night.

  There were flowers, and paths, and trees that dripped coolness. There was a flight of steps, and a terrace, and ornamental couches grouped near a piano. There were stars looking in at the windows from a violet-blue sky, and someone who knelt beside her on the marble floor and cushioned her head in the crook of his arm, and said things to her in a slightly cracked and really quite unfamiliar voice, although she knew it was Vasco, and somehow she wasn’t at all surprised.

  He had been calling to her in her dreams ... and he had come to her when she needed him most! She declined to sip the brandy he was trying to get her to swallow, but she wanted him to go on telling her the things that were meat and drink and life and hope and happiness in its most exquisite form ... and far more revivifying than brandy!

  “Why did you leave your party?” she asked huskily. “What made you come here, when there was no one here but ... me?”

  There was a grimy smudge on one of her cheeks, and her hair was singed and disordered. But her eyes were like bewildered blue stars as she gazed up at him. He wiped the smudge from her cheek with an exquisitely gentle hand, and then bent his head and touched one of the scorched places in her hair with a shaken mouth.

  “Because there was no one else here but you,” he replied. “Because I knew that something was wrong ... terribly wrong! Oh, my darling,” thrilling her with the words as she had never been thrilled in her life before, and holding her with the tenderness of a mother, although she could sense his need to forget how carefully she had to be handled just then, “it was such a nightmare dinner, and all the time I had the feeling of disaster! It was so strong that in the end I left them all and walked out, and fortunately my car was standing on the drive ... But if it hadn’t been I’d have borrowed one of the others!”

  “You were so sure that something was wrong here?”

&n
bsp; “Absolutely sure!” His long fingers stroked her hair. “The bond between you and me must be quite unique, because I felt as if part of me was dying as I turned the car in this direction, and then saw the flames rising against the sky! If I hadn’t got here in time...!”

  He stopped, and she saw the muscles of his throat quiver.

  She sank against him contentedly.

  “But you did! And I’m perfectly all right ... I really am!” She made an attempt to sit up and prove it, but he wouldn’t allow her. He snatched her back hungrily into his arms.

  “Lie still, little one! Senhora Lopes is bringing a tray of tea for you—very hot and strong and sweet!—and the doctor is on his way. When he has had an opportunity to examine you I’ll feel happier. But I do think I got to you in time ... although only just! You must have tripped over something, and were lying on the floor when I got the suite door open. If only I’d listened to Carmelita about that suite, and had refused to allow you to occupy it...”

  Her eyes were growing brighter and brighter, bearing a closer resemblance to stars with every second that passed, as she kept them fixed on his face.

  “I thought you were going to marry her,” she said simply ... although what she had intended to do was ask him how the fire had occurred.

  He took her face between his hands, and she could feel them trembling as his lustrous eyes searched those lavender-blue stars that told him everything he needed to know that was of any importance to him just then. And such vital importance!

  “I’m going to marry you, my sweetheart—my beloved!—if you’ll have me,” he told her. “That was decided in the beginning, even when I treated you so badly. You should have guessed!”

  “Oh, Vasco,” she sighed, and there was a bubbling note like laughter in her sigh. “How could I guess when you did treat me so badly? ... So very badly! Why, you even tried to get rid of me!”

  That was too much like actual provocation, especially as laughter was glistening in her eyes, and he forgot that she was in a somewhat delicate condition and caught her close and forced her mouth to meet his in the fiercest, wildest kiss she had ever dreamed about ... and which set her heart thundering and her pulses roaring in her ears, as if the entire house was being consumed by flames around them. Then, when he realised she was gasping for breath, he held her from him for a moment and looked at her with ravaged, night-black eyes.

  “I love you, I love you, I love you!” he told her. The eyes lit with flame, and then softened in such a miraculous way that she shivered in a kind of ecstasy. “You are small, and obstinate, and lovely and adorable ... and all my life I will love you as no man ever loved a woman before! But you will have to love me, too ... and never stop!”

  She wound her arms about his neck, and once more her heart beat against his while his mouth exacted a kind of toll ... And then his lips were laid against her eyelids, her cheeks, her hair, and her throat, and all at once they were so tender that it was almost like healing balm.

  “My little dove,” he called her, “my precious Caroline!”

  She whispered against his shaven cheek:

  “But I was so certain that it was Carmelita—although I like Carmelita! And then I thought it was Ilse—”

  “That woman!” he exclaimed, his voice almost brutal in its harshness. “She is the most unsuitable mother I have ever met, stupid, vain, selfish, impossible! When we are married we will have Ricardo with us, and perhaps she will find someone who will marry her and take her back to England, for she is not good for Ricardo.”

  That caused Caroline to remember her charge. She was horrified because she hadn’t remembered him before. But Vasco soothed and reassured her. "

  “He is safe—quite safe,” he told her. “As a matter of fact, there was never any danger for the occupants of the main house. It is only the nursery wing that has been destroyed. And as Duarte is unlikely to marry I doubt whether it will ever be rebuilt.”

  “I like the Marques,” she said softly.

  “And the Marques likes you!” His face grew a little grim, although his eyes were teasing, as he considered her. “But for me, I think it is true that he might have married you ... or tried to marry you. It would have all depended upon your willingness!”

  Her arms refused to leave his neck. She felt she could never be held close enough to him

  “You know,” she said, her voice rather more shattered than shaken, “that there could never be anyone but you!” She sighed as she gave him her lips. “Only you, Vasco! Always and always, only you!”

  “That is how it had better be,” he replied, and then folded her against his heart as if he was receiving her into a part of his being. The midnight darkness of his eyes was like midnight velvet wrapping itself around her.

  “Say it,” he implored her. “Say ‘I love you, Vasco.’ ”

  “I love you, Vasco...!”

  Senhora Lopes came in with the tray of tea, and because Vasco did not release Caroline immediately she discreetly averted her eyes. She brought with her the information that the Marques was outside, and Senhorita de Capuchos was waiting, too ... to be of assistance to Miss Worth when she needed her. She proposed driving her to her own house for the night, when the doctor had seen her.

  Caroline looked down at her scorched dressing-gown, and for the first time she realised how wild must be her appearance.

  “I have nothing else to put on—” she said, appalled.

  But Senhora Lopes, who had poured her tea for her and was ready to support the cup if necessary, smilingly contradicted her.

  “Senhorita de Capuchos has everything you need, senhorita. But she will not disturb you until you are ready.”

  Caroline smiled mistily up at Vasco.

  “What tact,” she murmured.

  Dom Vasco dismissed the housekeeper with a wave of the hand.

  “Supreme tact,” he murmured back. “But that is like Carmelita. You will like her very well when you get to know her. And, until the doctor comes, Senhora Lopes,” barely glancing at her, “no more interruptions!”

  Senhora Lopes withdrew immediately, quite unruffled because she was more or less ignored. Outside she confided to her employer, the Marques de Fonteira, and to Carmelita, that she did not think Miss Worth’s condition was serious. There would be little for the doctor, when he arrived, to do that Dom Vasco had not already done. And most successfully, apparently!

  “I think it would be as well if they are left alone for a while,” she advised, and Carmelita and the Marques exchanged smiles.

  “An excellent idea,” the Marques applauded. “Instead of a doctor we should, perhaps, have ordered champagne. When he comes we will get him to drink a toast with us.”

 

 

 


‹ Prev