Название: One Summer at Deer’s Leap
Автор: Elizabeth Elgin
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Зарубежные любовные романы
isbn: 9780007397983
isbn:
‘I’d rather walk.’ I wanted him out of the house.
‘OK. If that’s what it takes.’
He got carefully to his feet, shrugging his jacket straight, indicating the door with an exaggerated, after-you gesture and I thought yet again he should have been an actor. I locked the back door behind me and slipped the key into my pocket. ‘This way,’ I murmured, deliberately walking past the outhouse.
Hector snarled as we passed, and threw himself at the door, and I knew Piers had got the message.
‘Isn’t it beautiful?’ I waved an arm at the distant hills.
‘Very pretty, Cassandra.’ He was leaning, arms folded, against the dry-stone wall now, his boredom turning down the corners of his mouth. ‘So what have you to say to me?’
He didn’t yawn. I expected him to, but he spared me that and I was glad, because I think I’d have hit him if he had.
I drew in a breath, then said, ‘You and I have come to the end of the road, Piers. We aren’t right together. I don’t want to see you any more. It’s over.’
‘What’s over, Cassandra?’
‘Us. You and me. We couldn’t make a go of it.’
‘But I never thought we could! Your heart was never in it, even when we were in bed. To you it was just something else to put in a book – how it’s done, I mean.’
‘And you, Piers, made love to me simply because I was there and available. Another virginal scalp to hang on your belt, was I?’
‘I thought you’d enjoyed it …’
‘I did – at the time.’ I had to be fair. ‘It was afterwards, though, that I didn’t like.’
‘What do you mean – afterwards?’ He was actually scowling.
‘When it was over, Piers. I looked at you and found I didn’t like you. Oh, it was good at the time, but I think that when two people have made love they shouldn’t feel as I did – afterwards.’
‘Cassandra! You’re making it into a big deal! It was an act of sex, for Pete’s sake! You were willing enough. Curious, were you?’
‘Yes, I’ll admit I was and I was quite relieved it went so well. I was afraid I’d make a mess of it. I’d wondered a lot what it would be like, first time. But I think it isn’t any use being in love with a man if you don’t love him too.’
‘There’s a difference?’ He was looking piqued.
‘For me there is. Look, Piers – you and I grew up together. All the girls in the village fancied you. Then you went away to university and when you came back to Rowbeck you singled me out. I was flattered.’
‘I didn’t have a lot of choice. Rowbeck wasn’t exactly heaving with talent!’
‘Point taken!’ Piers was himself again! ‘But I always thought that the first time I slept with a man, he’d be the one, you see. And it seems you aren’t.’
‘Why aren’t I?’
‘I don’t know.’
Oh, but I did. He wasn’t young and vulnerable and fair. And his hair wasn’t always getting in his eyes – he wouldn’t let it! And he wasn’t desperately in love with me either, and sick with fear that each time we parted would be the last.
‘Piers!’ I gasped, because he was staring ahead and not seeing one bit of the beautiful view. ‘I just want us to be friends like when we were kids.’
‘But we aren’t kids. You aren’t all teeth and freckles, Cassandra, and mad at being called Carrots. You’ve grown up quite beautifully, as a matter of fact.’
‘Thanks,’ I said primly. ‘Flattery will get you everywhere – but not today. Sorry, but that’s the way it is. I really must work.’
‘Work? You don’t know the meaning of the word.’
He said it like a grown-up indulging a child and I knew I had made my point at last. I held out my hand.
‘Friends, then?’
‘OK.’ He smiled his rueful smile, then kissed my cheek. ‘My, but you’ve changed, Cassie Johns. Is there another bloke, by the way?’
‘No.’ I shook my head firmly. ‘And you’d best not tell Mum you’ve been. She’d be upset if she thought she’d given my whereabouts away.’
‘So you said she mustn’t let me have your address?’
‘Yes. I didn’t want any interruptions.’
‘I see. Would you mind, Cassandra, if I gave you a word of advice? Don’t take this writing business too seriously?’
‘I won’t,’ I said evenly, amazed he seemed no longer able to annoy me. ‘You’ll want to be on your way, Piers …?’
‘Mm. Thought I might take a look at Lancaster, get a spot of lunch.’
‘I believe it’s a nice place,’ I said as we climbed the stile in the wall. ‘They used to hang witches there.’
‘You haven’t seen it? Come with me – just for old times’ sake – a fond farewell?’
‘Thanks, but no.’ Deliberately I took the path that led to the kissing gate. ‘And thanks for being so understanding – about us, I mean, and me breaking it off.’
He got into his car, then let down the window.
‘There was never anything to break off, Cassandra. Like you said, another scalp …’
I stood for what seemed like a long time after he had driven down the dirt road in a cloud of dust thinking that, as always, he’d had the last word. But I could get along without him. I shrugged, closing the kissing gate behind me.
I let go a small sigh, straightened my shoulders then walked, nose in air, to let Hector out.
All at once, I was desperate for a cheese and pickle sandwich.
Page two hundred and fifty, and the end of chapter seventeen. I rotated my head, hands in the small of my back. Cassie Johns her own woman again, Firedance ahead of schedule and the mantel clock telling me it was time for tea and a biscuit.
I felt a surge of contentment, a kind of calm after this morning’s storm, waiting patiently for the kettle to boil, gazing arms folded through the window to the hills and the purple haze of heather coming into flower.
I would miss the space, the wideness of the sky, the utter peace of Deer’s Leap СКАЧАТЬ