by Robyn Donald
Without looking at her he said, ‘Kelt told you his news?’
‘Yes. It’s lovely for them both, isn’t it.’
‘Is that why you were crying?’
Rosie flinched, then looked up anxiously. He’d turned and was watching her, but she could gain nothing from his expression. ‘No,’ she said too quickly. ‘No, of course it’s not. I’m thrilled for them. Hani’s always said she wanted four children.’
She very much wanted to get to her feet, to draw herself up to her full height, but she didn’t trust her legs to sustain her.
Anyway, she thought wearily, who was she kidding? Her full height was far from impressive.
Gerd said, ‘I thought you’d got over Kelt.’
CHAPTER TEN
AT FIRST Gerd’s words didn’t register. Oh, Rosie heard them, but their meaning escaped her. ‘What?’
He shrugged. ‘It was always obvious you had a terrific crush on him.’
Rosie went white. It was so ludicrous an idea, so distant from what he must—surely—know already?
He went on, ‘I admired the fact that you took his marriage to Hani so well. Was it because you knew you had to if you were going to be able to stay as close to him?’
Stunned, she said, ‘No!’
His brows lifted. Dispassionately he went on, ‘Because you must know by now that it’s no use. He and Hani are not just husband and wife, they’re lovers and soul-mates.’
‘I know that.’ Afraid that she sounded defensive rather than convincing, she hurried on, ‘But you’re utterly wrong—couldn’t be more wrong. I’ve never been in love with Kelt.’
He said tersely, ‘Don’t lie to me, Rosemary. I can cope with almost anything but lies, and we made a promise to be honest with each other, remember?’
A kind of wild hope mingled with enough anger to revive Rosie. Scrambling up, she said in a rough voice, ‘I am being totally and completely honest with you! Of course I love Kelt—he’s the big brother I didn’t have, almost the father I didn’t have! He’s always been there for me. But in love with him? Where on earth did you get that idea?’
‘I always knew you had a crush on him, but what clinched the fact was that the morning after we kissed—you and I—I came out onto the terrace at the home stead and saw you and Kelt walking up from the horse paddock.’ His voice was chilling and detached. ‘You hurled yourself into his arms and kissed him passionately.’
The colour drained from her skin, then flooded back. ‘Oh, hell,’ she said, and then started to laugh. It came too close to turning into a sob, but she managed to choke it back and meet his eyes defiantly. ‘I was conducting a scientific experiment.’
He said blankly, ‘What?’
‘You heard.’ She dragged in a breath and explained, ‘You’d kissed me the night before, and—well, I was eighteen, but I’d never experienced anything like it before.’ She spread her hands helplessly. ‘Bells rang and skyrockets soared and stars exploded, and I was—I was trans ported. But I didn’t know anything about grown-up kisses, and after worrying about it all night I decided to kiss Kelt and see if it happened all over again.’
Gerd’s face was a mixture of emotions, none of which she could read. When he spoke his voice was hard and demanding. ‘And what did happen?’
‘Nothing,’ she said simply. ‘Nothing at all. It was creepy, actually. And he was shocked until I told him what I was doing it for, and then he laughed, but he told me not to let myself get too interested in you because I was far too young for you.’
‘And he warned me off,’ Gerd said harshly. ‘We were talking at cross purposes, of course, and I thought he was interested in you.’
‘He met Hani just after that, so you must have realised then he wasn’t,’ she pointed out, a cautious hope warming her heart.
‘And you weren’t in love with him?’
‘No,’ she said explosively. ‘Of course I wasn’t—never have been! OK, I can understand how that incident the night after we kissed must have looked—I’ll bet you thought I was a little tramp—but you must have known that for me Kelt has only ever been my substitute brother.’
‘It just seemed…logical. As you say, he looked out for you. It would have been unusual if you didn’t see him as your particular hero. And you’ve always been openly affectionate with him.’
‘Well, yes, but it never meant anything! Surely—’
‘When he and Hani left after the coronation you were upset.’
‘Of course, I was sad to see them go.’ She was talking too fast, the words tumbling over each other. Afraid to allow herself to hope, she willed him to believe her. ‘I’ve been almost part of their family—a sort of feckless younger sister, really.’
She scanned his handsome face for any sign of softening.
Not a thing. Still in that cool, judicial voice, he said, ‘So why were you crying? I know Kelt rang you especially to tell you Hani is pregnant.’
Torn, Rosie almost put her emotions into words, but instinct warned her that it would be too dangerous to reveal her love for him, her abject reliance on him…
Lamely she said, ‘There are happy tears as well as sad ones.’
‘You can go,’ he said abruptly.
Her heart turned to lead. She stared disbelievingly at him, over whelmed with such anguish she could barely form the words. ‘What…where?’
‘Go home.’ His words were delivered precisely, as icy as the metallic gold in his eyes.
‘But I can’t.’ The foolish words barely registered in her mind. Pain sliced through her, numbing her brain, freezing her soul.
‘You can. I’ll organise a flight for you out of the country tomorrow.’ And when she didn’t move he said stonily, ‘It’s not going to work, so it’s better to cut our losses now—before it’s too late.’
Unable to respond, she stared at his ruthless, in flexible face.
He lifted one clenched fist and slammed it down on the windowsill. ‘Go,’ he said between his teeth. ‘Go now, before—’
The flicker of hope encouraged her enough to say unevenly, ‘Before what?’
‘It doesn’t matter. I’ll ring your maid—’
She fanned that tiny glimmer of courage. This was too important for her not to fight for what she wanted. ‘I need to know,’ she said. ‘Before what?’
‘Before we end up hating each other.’
He wasn’t looking at her, but his stance, his coiled strength, revealed a man with every muscle on the alert. ‘Gerd,’ she said, risking everything, ‘tell me one thing—and remember our promise of honesty to each other. What do you feel for me?’
White-lipped, he stared at her. Rosie’s breath stopped in her throat but she didn’t dare back down. This was too important.
‘You really want your pound of flesh, don’t you?’ he ground out eventually. ‘Very well, then, you deserve to know. I love you.’
Rosie’s incandescent blaze of joy was dowsed when he went on grimly, ‘I love you desperately enough to have abandoned all my principles and more or less forced you into an engagement you didn’t want, and a life I knew you hated the thought of. I told myself you couldn’t respond so passionately to me if you didn’t feel something more than lust. I knew it was less than love, but I was prepared to accept what I could get from you.’
How blind he was! Unsteadily she asked, ‘So if you love me, why are you sending me away?’
CHAPTER ELEVEN
GERD’S head came up. In his most arrogant tone he said, ‘I love you too much—I can’t bear to see you unhappy. Your tears rip my heart out.’
Sheer ecstasy burst through Rosie like a nova, the glory of his words wiping out everything else. Unable to speak, she stared at him with dilating eyes.
Even more harshly he went on, ‘I find in myself a certain distaste for pleading. But I have an even greater distaste of forcing you into a situation that causes you such misery.’ He paused, then went on in the same level tone, ‘Therefore I release you from your promise, and I wish
you every happiness in the future.’
Gazing at his face—still pale beneath the tan, its framework boldly angular and forceful—she realised she’d managed to hide her feelings so well he had no idea of them. Somehow she had to convince him that his love, given with such reluctance, was matched and returned by her. ‘Gerd, you idiot!’ she said when she could control her voice. ‘I was crying because Hani is pregnant, and I wasn’t.’
He looked at her as though she were mad. ‘What has that to do with anything?’
‘I envy them like crazy, and I was wishing it was the same for us—that no-holds-barred kind of love and trust and respect.’ Freed from anguish now, she said, ‘I love you! How could you not know that? And if you send me away, I’ll probably end up like my mother.’
‘What the hell do you mean by that?’ he demanded. ‘You’re nothing like your mother.’
She took a deep breath. ‘Maybe not, but she did love my father in the beginning.’
‘So she says,’ he said caustically, and then, ‘And what on earth has she to do with us?’
‘I believe her,’ Rosie told him. ‘He couldn’t return her love, so she left him. If you send me away I won’t set off on a useless search for a love to replace the one I can’t have. But I’ll never marry anyone else, never love anyone as I love you. So if you don’t want me to be your wife and have your children—’
‘Don’t want you?’ he demanded in a voice she’d never heard before. ‘I want you so much it’s eating my heart out.’ He made a quick, unconsidered gesture and said something low and angry before striding across the room towards her.
Not knowing what to expect, Rosie quivered, but she held her head high and met his eyes without flinching. Everything, she thought, hinged on these moments. Her whole life…
He stopped a pace away. In a raw, undisciplined voice he said, ‘I don’t dare believe you.’
‘I’m feeling the same way.’ She reached out a hand and laid it on his chest, welcoming the solid thunder of his life-force beneath her palm with a relief so intense it made her giddy.
From some final reserve of strength she summoned a smile. ‘If you love me, why on earth have you kept away from me ever since we became engaged?’
His hand came up to cover hers and hold it clamped beneath his. She saw belief light his eyes to fire, relax the stark lines of his face, and joy lifted her so high she felt she was flying.
Although Gerd didn’t smile, there was a note of humour in his voice when he said, ‘Because I’m an idiot! Right at the start, you were so determined to keep our affair without strings that I was sure you couldn’t love me.’
‘I didn’t want you to know I loved you. It seemed so—so needy! Especially,’ she accused with spirit, ‘when you so clearly didn’t love me!’
He laughed deeply and began to pull her towards him, his eyes narrowing in the way she’d come to recognise. Her pulse beat heavily, erratically, in her ears.
When they were so close she could feel the warmth of his body, he said, ‘But I did—and do—love you. And I want you to be needy where I’m concerned. Because I need you more than the breath in my body, more than anything I have ever coveted.’
‘I wish you’d told me,’ she said huskily.
His smile was brief and sardonic. ‘I wish I’d had the courage,’ he admitted. ‘Blame it on my pride. I hoped that passion would be enough to break your reliance on Kelt. And that once you had learned to trust me you might learn to love me.’
She shook her head, no longer embarrassed by the bob of her curls around her face. ‘Even after seeing me kiss him, I don’t know how you could mistake my feelings for Kelt for anything more serious than affection!’
‘I was jealous,’ he admitted with a wry glance. ‘Jealous people don’t reason terribly well, and when I’m thinking about you logic and common sense seem to fly out the window. Even when my plan seemed to be working, there was always that stab of jealousy, although I was happy on the island, and you seemed to be too.’
‘Oh, yes,’ she sighed, colouring. ‘Until I got too bold,’ she said ruefully.
His swift smile was sexy and reminiscent. ‘I liked what you did very much. One day—or night—you’ll have to repeat it.’ He sobered then, and went on, ‘And then I blew it. When I saw the chance to make you mine I couldn’t resist. For the first time ever I didn’t even care about Carathia; I just used it ruthlessly to persuade you. But you fought the idea with everything you had, and I realised that I’d been fooling myself about your feelings. You truly didn’t want to marry me.’
‘Oh, no,’ she said, her voice trembling. ‘I desperately want to marry you. I just didn’t want it to be the sensible thing to do—a marriage for reasons of state was so cold, so impersonal.’
He gave a snort. ‘Impersonal?’
Rosie frowned up at him. ‘Well, you made it seem so,’ she said forth rightly. ‘I wanted to marry you because we loved each other enough to spend the rest of our lives together. It hurt to think it was for convenience.’
‘Convenience?’ he said incredulously. ‘You’ve thrown my life into disarray, come between me and everything I’ve been brought up to believe were the most important things in my life, and you call it convenient?’ He brushed an errant curl back from her face. ‘I’ve never come across a less convenient woman. If I could take you to bed right now I’d show you exactly how I feel, but I don’t dare do anything—in fact, I shouldn’t even be touching you—because in ten minutes or so I’m due to take a call from the Chief Minister about the latest news on the economic fallout, and if I do more than kiss the tip of your nose I won’t make it.’
‘Far be it from me to keep you away from affairs of state,’ she said demurely and stepped back.
‘But after that,’ he threatened, eyes hot with promise, ‘all bets are off.’
Laughing, Rosie watched him go, then hugged herself with incandescent joy. It was too much to take in. After all the pain, the resolution had been so simple, so miraculously inevitable.
She went across to the window and looked out at the mountains. This place would always be precious to her because Gerd had confessed his love for her here.
Somewhere up on those high peaks the white lily bloomed—a link with New Zealand’s high country. And on the island in the sunny Adriatic, myrtle bloomed around Aphrodite’s temple—another link.
Appropriate that they should be flowers. Her desire for a flower shop seemed a distant, rapidly fading dream now, one she didn’t regret. Loving Gerd was enough. And as his wife she’d look for a chance to do something in her favoured field.
She let the drape fall and settled down to write to Hani. If she hadn’t loved her before, she thought as she sent the email, she’d love her now for being the—albeit unwitting—cause of this delicious happiness.
Two hours later Gerd came back to a supper table set for two with candles and flowers. He examined the table then said calmly, ‘When is this being served?’
‘In half an hour,’ Rosie said. ‘I thought we should drink some champagne first, so I told the butler to find the very best vintage in the cellar.’
Gerd checked the bottle. ‘Ah, yes, that’s perfect,’ he said, and allowed his eyes to linger on her. She was dressed in a silky little shift, her hair pulled back into a ridiculous bobble of curls at the back to reveal the tender, innocent nape of her neck.
He said suddenly, ‘Twelve years seemed such a hell of a difference when you were eighteen and I was thirty. It didn’t seem so much a couple of hours ago, but right now you look like youth and joy and delight, and that makes me feel old and jaded and rakish.’
‘You’re none of those things,’ she said indignantly. ‘Shall we make another promise to each other? Shall we decide never to talk about the difference in ages again? I don’t care about it and I don’t see why you should.’ She laughed up at him, the sunshiny girl he’d fallen in love with so many years before, and said, ‘I plan to keep you young, anyway.’
Gerd’s dou
bts fled, leaving him with a deep, intense joy he’d never thought to experience, a feeling of utter rightness. ‘I’m more than happy to drink to that,’ he said, and popped the cork on the champagne bottle. As he handed her one of the flutes he said, ‘I think I must have fallen in love with you when I first kissed you.’
Rosie took a tiny sip. ‘If you did, you wasted an awful lot of time before you did anything about it, and even then you had to be seduced into it.’
‘I seduced you,’ he said promptly, the hawk eyes gleaming gold. ‘As for wasting time—no, I don’t think so. You were a child. The years between us put me very definitely in the too-old category. Now they don’t matter so much.’
‘They don’t matter at all,’ she said quietly. ‘The only thing in the world that does matter is that you love me and I love you. And I will love you forever.’
In the raw, stripped voice of deepest emotion, Gerd said, ‘We’re well matched, then, because that’s exactly how long I plan to love you.’
Later, much later, when they were lying in bed entwined in the delicious, languorous after math of passion, Rosie smoothed a hand over his shoulder. ‘I’m sorry I bit you. I didn’t mean to.’
‘Honourable scars,’ he said complacently. ‘You can bite me any time you want to. Just don’t break the skin.’
After she’d kissed the marks better she asked, ‘Why have you been so aloof and cold?’
He hugged her closer, and she felt his body tense against her. ‘Because I was trying—too late and rather foolishly—to keep what was left of my mind clear during the year it’s going to take us to get married.’ His chest lifted as he laughed quietly. ‘For all the good it did me. And partly to give you room—you were not happy, and I knew I’d forced you into this. I thought you needed time.’
‘I needed you,’ she told him trenchantly. ‘Are we going to have to be discreet until we’re married?’