and his face betrayed a lack of sleep. She bit her lip as her reason
told her the obvious explanation.
'I don't want to hear them,' she said in a low voice. 'I have some
good advice to pass on to you, Santino. Learn to be a good loser.'
She went on up the stairs, leaving him standing there, and there was
nothing in the world that would have made her look back.
'Juliet darling.' Her mother shook her shoulder gently. 'It's past eight
o'clock. Didn't you hear your alarm? I've brought you a cup of tea.'
'Oh, heavens!' Juliet sat up wearily, pushing her hair back. 'Thanks,
Mim, you're an angel, but I've hardly got time to drink it.'
'Oh, yes, you have,' Mrs Laurence said firmly. 'You may have
dropped the habit of having breakfast these days- which I don't
approve of, by the way-but you're not leaving this house without
at least a hot drink inside you, my girl, and that's final.'
Juliet smiled up into her mother's lovingly exasperated countenance.
'To hear is to obey, O Queen,' she murmured wickedly.
'That's more like it.' Mrs Laurence sat down on the edge of the bed
and contemplated her daughter, her eyes filled with -an anxiety she
no longer took any pains to conceal. 'I've been wondering over the
past few weeks whether I'd ever see you smile again.'
'Oh, Mim!' Juliet sipped at the hot tea. 'Surely, it hasn't been that
bad?'
Mrs Laurence smiled slightly. 'It has from where I've been standing,'
she said gently. 'Darling, would it help if we talked about
it-whatever it is? I gather it must be something that happened
while you were abroad, considering that's been a taboo subject
since you returned.'
Juliet set down her cup and saucer on the bedside table. 'There's
really nothing to discuss,' she said too brightly. 'And I must be
getting up. I'm late as it is and ...'
Her mother pushed her gently back against the pillows. Then an
extra five minutes won't make much difference either way,' she
decreed. 'All I know is that after living with a stranger all this time,
I caught a glimpse of the old Juliet, and I want her back-for good.'
Juliet sighed. 'I don't think she exists any more, Mim,' she said
rather drearily.
'Then what happened to her?' Mrs Laurence pressed. 'My daughter
comes home from what should have been the holiday of a lifetime
like a ghost of her former self. I haven't heard you laugh since
you've been back. I've barely seen you smile. I can't imagine what
poor Barry must be thinking.'
Juliet bent her head. 'I'm afraid that doesn't particularly concern me,'
she said quietly.
'I see.' Her mother gave her a sharp glance. 'So it's a man. Are you
going to tell me who he is?'
Juliet shook her head. 'There-there's no point. I shan't be seeing
him again.'
'Don't you want to?'
'It isn't a question of what I want,' Juliet said tiredly. 'We want
different things, that's all.' She tried to smile. 'And I soon found I
wasn't on his list.'
'Oh, darling!' Mrs Laurence laid her hand over Juliet's. There were
tears in her eyes. 'Why in the world did I ever persuade you to go?'
Juliet squeezed her mother's fingers. 'I'm glad you did. It-it's been
a salutory experience if nothing else.' She smiled waveringly.
'Actually, I made rather a fool of myself. I let myself fall for him
without really knowing him. You can't be in love with
someone-the kind of love that matters anyway-in the space of a
few hours, can you?'
'I knew I was in love with your father twenty-four hours after I met
him,' Mrs Laurence said surprisingly. 'It took him a little longer,' she
added, a smile of tender reminiscence lighting her eyes.
Juliet swallowed. 'But there was nothing to prevent your marrying
Daddy, was there? There were no-obstacles?'
'No.' Her mother frowned, trying to remember. 'The usual tiffs and
misunderstandings, of course, but ...' She stopped and her eyes
came to rest on Juliet with a worried expression. 'Oh, darling.
He-he isn't married?'
'No,' Juliet hastened to reassure her. 'Nor likely to be. He-he isn't
the marrying kind,' she added after a brief pause.
'I never knew a man that was,' Mrs Laurence said rather drily. 'Are
you so sure that there's ho hope? I can't believe that the kind of
fly-by-night relationship you've portrayed would be enough to wipe
the light out of your eyes. You've lost weight. You've shadows
under your eyes. If it wasn't for your tan, you'd be looking ill. It will
be half-term in a few weeks,' she went on hesitatingly. 'Why don't
you go back-see him? Settle this thing, or get him out of your
system once and for all.'
'No!' Juliet was aghast. 'No-I can never go back. I wish I could
explain, Mim,' she added wretchedly, a sob rising in her throat. 'But
I can't, so please don't say any more.'
'It's Jan, isn't it?' Mrs Laurence asked, a touch of grimness in her
voice. 'You've barely mentioned her either since you've been home.
Is it her fault that it's gone wrong for you?'
Caught off guard by her mother's perceptiveness, Juliet parried,
'I-I don't know what you mean.'
'So I'm right.' Mrs Laurence shook her head. 'Oh, my dear, I'm
sorry.'
Juliet gave a humourless laugh. 'There's nothing to be sorry about.
It's hardly odd that he should prefer her.' She bit her lip as an image
of Jan, triumphantly beautiful after her night in Rome with Santino,
in the salotto of the castello, rose up in front of her. 'She is-very
lovely.'
'And very selfish-and very greedy.' Mrs Laurence stifled a sigh as
Juliet gave her a quick amazed stare. 'You surely didn't imagine I
thought she was perfect? I know her faults, as well as I know my
own, but I thought she would have spared you-her own sister.'
Juliet moved restlessly. 'Let's not talk about it any more,' she
appealed with difficulty. 'I must get up now, Mim. I have to get
ready for school.'
As she washed and dressed, Juliet found her thoughts unwillingly
returning to that last night she had spent under Santino's roof.
Sometimes she wondered what would have happened if she had
turned and looked at him, and she fantasised that he might have
held his arms out to her. And what would she have done? Well, she
knew the answer to that. She would have gone to him unthinkingly,
uncaringly, in spite of everything that lay between them.
As it was, she had gone to her room and bolted the door, and she
did not open it all that long wakeful night, although someone who
might have been Annunziata came and knocked very gently about
an hour later.
She had spent much of the night worrying about how she was going
to get back to Rome. Bravado was one thing, but reality and
common sense quite another. But in the morning, like a small
elegant good fairy, the Signora had arrived, and almost before she
knew what was happening Juliet found herself ensconced in the
back of Signor Peretto's luxurious car, with the castello a dwindling
speck in the distance behind her.
Of Santino there had been no sign, and she had no means of
knowing what the Signora had said to him, or whether she had said
anything at all. She was thankful to have her bag with her money
and passport and return air ticket, and told herself all she had to
worry about now was finding a seat on a flight home. But even here
all her problems were smoothed away. She guessed afterwards that
Signor Peretto had pulled some strings, because a seat on the first
flight out miraculously became available. He and the Signora had
been very kind, she thought, but at the same time it was more than
evident that they wanted to be rid of her. Nor could she particularly
blame them for that in the light of all that had happened.
Her reunion with Mim had been an ordeal in many ways. There was
so much that had to be left unsaid, but until this morning she had
thought she had made a skilful enough job of the half-truths and
evasions she had been forced to employ.
Work, she'd told herself, was what she needed, and with only a few
days to collect together the material she needed for the start of term,
she wouldn't have time to think. But it hadn't worked out that way.
Even when she was absorbed in what she was doing, and later,
when she had got the children busy and interested, she would find
her thoughts suddenly straying back to the castello, and its dark
imperious owner, and the agony would begin again as her
imagination ran riot, painting pictures of Jan and Santino intimately
alone at the castello.
And it was an agony, such as she had never known, although she
had caught a glimpse of it that night when she had sat alone and
known that they were staying in Rome together. But that was
nothing to what she had suffered since. Had she really thought, that
distance and separation would help to drive him out of her mind and
heart? She must have been mad even to entertain such a wild hope.
All it meant was that she relived over and over again in her memory
every moment she had spent with him, every word he had said. But
it was the moments when his lovemaking returned to torment her
that were the hardest of all to bear, especially when she knew there
would never be a consummation of that lovemaking-that she