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Sinful Nights(3)

By:Penny Jordan


You'd better use the top road,' her father said at last. They've been  doing some roadworks on the other one and there've been traffic jams all  week just this side of Hawick.'

Mentally revising her plans, Sapphire said her goodbyes. She had planned  to drive up the M6 to Carlisle and then take the A7 through Hawick and  Jedburgh, rather than using the top road' which was shorter but which  meant driving along the narrow winding road which crossed and re-crossed  the Cheviots.

That night, too wide-awake to sleep, she acknowledged that hearing  Blake's voice had disturbed her-dangerously so. The sound of it brought  back memories she had struggled to suppress; herself at fourteen  watching with shy adulation while Blake worked. Fresh from university he  had seemed like a god from Olympus to her and she had dogged his  footsteps, hanging on to his every word. Was it then that he had decided  to marry her? It was certainly then that he had started to put into  practice the modern farming techniques he had learned partially at  university and partially during his working holidays in New Zealand into  force. Perhaps it was also then that he had first cast covetous eyes on  Flaws Farm and mentally calculated the benefits to himself of owning  its rich acres in addition to his own. She would never know, but  certainly he had been kind and patient with her, carefully answering all  her shy questions, tactfully ignoring her blushes and coltish  clumsiness. She remembered practically falling off her pony one day  straight into his arms, and how she had felt when they closed round her,  the steady beat of his heart thumping into her thin chest. From that  day on she had started to weave the fantasies about him that had taken  her blissfully into their marriage.    

 



 

At eighteen she had known very little of the world-had only travelled as  far as Edinburgh and Newcastle and had certainly not got the  sophistication to match Blake. He had left the valley when she was  fifteen to join the army and had returned two years later the same and  yet different; harder, even more sure of himself and possessed of a  dangerous tension that sent frissons of awareness coursing over her skin  whenever he looked at her.

The Christmas she was seventeen he had kissed her properly for the first  time in the large living room of Sefton House-the large rambling  building his great-grandfather had built when a fire had gutted the old  farmhouse. There had been a crowd of people there attending a Boxing Day  party and someone had produced a sprig of mistletoe. Even now she could  vividly remember the mixture of anticipation and dread with which she  had awaited Blake's kiss. She had known he would kiss her. He had kissed  all the other girls, but the kiss he gave her was different, or so she  had told herself at the time. Her first grown-up' kiss; the first time  she had experienced the potency of sexual desire. His mouth had been  firm and warm, his lips teasing hers, his tongue probing them apart.

Restlessly, Sapphire sat up in bed, punching her pillow. She must get  some sleep if she was going to be fresh for her drive tomorrow. No doubt  if Blake were to kiss her now she would discover that his kisses were  nothing like as arousing as she remembered. She had been an  impressionable seventeen-year-old to his twenty-five already halfway to  worshipping him, and during the brief spring days he had cashed in on  that adoration, until by summer he filled her every thought. He had  proposed to her one hot summer's day beside the stream that divided  Sefton and Bell land. Blake had wanted to swim, she remembered, in the  deep pool formed by the waterfall that cascaded into it. She had  objected that she hadn't brought her suit and Blake had laughed at her,  saying that neither had he. She had trembled as revealingly as a stalk  of wheat before the reaper, not troubling to hide her reaction. He had  pulled her to him, kissing her; caressing her with what she had naively  taken to be barely restrained passion. God how ridiculous she must have  seemed. Blake's actions couldn't have been more calculated had they been  programmed by computer, and whatever passion there had been had been  for her father's lands and nothing else.

DAMN BLAKE, this is all his fault,' Sapphire muttered direfully the  next morning, as she ate a hurriedly prepared breakfast. Ten o'clock  already, and she had hoped to leave at eight, but she hadn't been able  to get to sleep until the early hours and then when she had done she had  slept restlessly, dreaming of Blake, and of herself as they had been.  Now this morning there was a strange ache in the region of her heart.  She couldn't mourn a love she had never had, she reminded herself as she  had done so often during those first agonising months in London, and  Blake had never loved her. It had been hard to accept that, but best in  the long run. She had once suffered from the delusion that Blake loved  her and the penalty she had paid for that folly had warned her against  the folly of doing so again.

It was eleven o'clock before she finally managed to leave. The day was  crisp and cold, a weak sun breaking through the clouds. February had  always been one of her least favourite months-Christmas long forgotten  and Spring still so far away, and she was looking forward to her  holiday. There was something faintly decadent about going to the  Caribbean in March.

A John Williams tape kept her company until she was clear of the City.  Blake had had very catholic tastes in music and in books, but it was  only since coming to London that her own tastes had developed. Music was  a key that unlocked human emotions she thought as she slowed down to  turn the tape over. Alan's BMW was his pride and joy, and although she  appreciated his thoughtfulness in lending it to her, she was slightly  apprehensive with it.

She had planned to stop for lunch somewhere round Manchester, but  oversleeping had altered her schedule, and she glanced at her watch as  she travelled north and decided instead to press on to Carlisle and stop  there.

She found a pleasant looking pub a few miles off the motorway and pulled  up into the car park, easing her tired body out of the car. As she  walked in the bar she felt the sudden silence descending on the room,  and suppressed a wry grimace. She had forgotten how very conservative  northern men were. Even now very few women up here entered pubs alone,  but she shrugged aside the sudden feeling of uncertainty and instead  headed for the bar, breathing in the appetising smell of cooking food.

The menu when she asked for it proved to be surprisingly varied. She  ordered lasagne and retreated to a small corner table to wait for it to  be served. While she waited she studied the people around her; mostly  groups of men, standing by the bar while their womenfolk sat round the  tables. So much for women's lib, she thought drily, watching them. If  she had stayed at home she could well have been one of these women. And  yet they seemed quite happy; they were fashionably dressed and from the  snatches of conversation she caught even the married ones seemed to have  jobs, which to judge from their comments they enjoyed.    

 



 

A chirpy barmaid brought the lasagne and the coffee she had ordered. The  pasta was mouth-wateringly delicious. She hadn't realised how hungry  she had been, Sapphire reflected as she drank her coffee, reluctant to  leave the warmth of the pub for the raw cold of the February night  outside, but she was already late. At last, reluctantly, she got up and  made her way to the car, unaware of the way several pairs of male eyes  followed her tall, lithe body. She had dressed comfortably for the  journey, copper coloured cords toning with a coffee and copper sweater,  flat-heeled ankle boots in soft suede completing her outfit. She had  always worn her hair long, but in London she had found a hairdresser who  cared about the condition of his clients' hair and now hers shone with  health, curving sleekly down on to her shoulders.

The BMW started first time, its powerful lights picking out the faint  wisps of mist drifting down from the hills. Living in London insulated  one from the elements, Sapphire thought, shivering as she drove out of  the car park, and switched the car heater on to boost. She had to  concentrate carefully on the road so that she didn't miss the turning  which would take her on to the top road' and she exhaled faintly with  relief when she found it. The mist had grown thicker, condensation  making it necessary for her to switch on the windscreen wipers, the  BMW's engine started to whine slightly as the road climbed. She had  forgotten how quickly this road rose; the Cheviots were gentle hills  compared with some, but they still rose to quite a height. It was an  eerie sensation being completely alone on this empty stretch of road,  her lights the only ones to illuminate the darkness of the bare hills.  Here and there her headlights picked out patches of snow and then  visibility would be obscured by the mist that seemed to waft nebulously  around her.

Despite the heater she felt quite cold. Nerves, she told herself  staunchly, automatically checking her speed as the mist started to  thicken. Now she noticed with dismay the patches of mist were longer,  and much, much, denser. In fact they weren't mist at all, but  honest-to-God fog. It was freezing as well. She had thought it might be  several miles back when she felt so cold, but now she felt the BMW's  front wheels slide slightly, and tried not to panic. The BMW had  automatic transmission, but there was a lower gear and she dropped into  it, biting her lip as she crawled down a steep hill.