Victoria and the Nightingale

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Victoria and the Nightingale Page 10

by Susan Barrie


  As he smiled down at her a little coolly out of those quiet gray eyes of his, she gathered that he was not merely indifferent to her, but he was completely indifferent.

  “I—I—” she stammered. “I merely thought that it was a little late. . . .”

  “But you do realize that I’ve driven quite a long way to see you? And I want to hear about Johnny! I want to find out how you’ve been managing with your housekeeping, and I want to give you a check—”

  At that she protested violently.

  “I don’t need money!”

  “All the same, I mean to make a small sum over to you.” He opened the door of the cottage, and they walked straight into the living room, where the grandfather clock was ticking at the foot of the stairs. He glanced around him with a look of appreciation on his face as the mellow light in the living room revealed the bowl of roses on the gate-legged table, and another big bowl of flowers on the highly polished sideboard. The small, enclosed space was sweet with the scent of flowers and beeswax, and it also had a lived-in, distinctly ‘homely’ look with Victoria’s knitting lying in the middle of the couch, and the book she had been reading flung down on a small occasional table.

  She had been having a cup of coffee before she went out into the garden, and her coffee cup was standing beside her book. There was also a small book in which she had been totting up her expenditure on food and so forth.

  Sir Peter walked across to her novel and picked it up and looked at it, but he did not touch her accounts-book. Instead he went across to the desk and sat down at it, then drew out a check book from his pocket and a handsome gold pen.

  “How much of your own money have you been spending?” he asked.

  “Not much.”

  “Then you and Johnny have been living on air?”

  “Of course not,” she denied.

  He wrote his check and handed it over to her.

  “You can cash that at the local bank, or pay it into your own account as you think fit. I have added a couple of months’ salary to the amount I estimate you will require for housekeeping, and if you find you need more you can

  always ask for it.”

  He tilted back in his chair and smiled a little peculiarly as he handed over the check.

  Victoria started to protest instantly when she saw the amount of the check. Not merely did it mean she was to receive a very, very generous salary, but it meant she and Johnny were to cost him far more than they were either of them worth—certainly to him, at the present time! Altogether, it was far too much money to receive from a man who didn’t need to act the part of their mutual benefactor, and she told him so.

  “I realize that you want Johnny to have everything you consider he should have, but this is far, far too much!”

  He got up leisurely from the desk and went across to her. He placed his hands on her shoulders.

  “Miss Victoria Wood,” he told her solemnly, “I honestly believe you would look a gift horse in the mouth!”

  She flushed.

  “I haven’t any right to receive a gift horse.”

  “I’ve told you somebody has to be the recipient of this particular gift horse, so why do you object? It simply means that you are now on my payroll—like Hawkins and the rest!”

  She flushed more brilliantly while the light beat down upon her.

  “You relieve my mind of a burden of anxiety,” she declared breathlessly.

  “Do I?”

  There was no expression on his face, but his eyes were cool.

  “In that case you’re rather a foolish young woman!”

  Then she felt his fingers biting into the soft flesh of her shoulders, and for one moment she thought he was actually angry with her.

  “Did you never make a mistake yourself?” he asked, in a carefully controlled manner.

  She looked up at him in bewilderment.

  “A mistake—?”

  “A serious mistake.” He laid one finger lightly on the gold of her hair, and then he let her go. “It’s too late for riddles, isn’t it, so I’ll let you go to bed. But you can tell Johnny I shall be seeing him quite soon, and you can buy him something he wants out of that check.” He moved regretfully toward the door. “This cottage has always appealed to me, and now I find it has a strange attraction.” He turned his head and looked at her over his shoulder.

  For the first time she realized that his eyes were telling her something ... or trying to tell her something. “Goodnight, Victoria ... I’m going to stop calling you Miss Wood. If nightingales can sing for you and Johnny has adopted you I certainly am not going to behave toward you as if you had all the dignity of an ordinary young woman. You are not an ordinary young woman You are very far from being anything of the kind. And tonight I am free and I can say what I like, and I would like you to know that I—consider you fit in beautifully here at the cottage!”

  He smiled at her a little crookedly.

  “When I see you again I shall probably not be free, so if you insist on formality I will then address you as Miss Wood. And we shall remain Miss Wood and Sir Peter Wycherley for the remainder of our lives! But tonight you are Victoria!”

  She moved nearer to him as he opened to door. “Good-night, Sir Peter,” she said quietly.

  One of his eyebrows ascended.

  “What, if I condescend to address you as Victoria won’t you return the compliment by addressing me as Peter? Just for one night! Tomorrow, I assure you, I shall be an engaged man again, and I don’t think my fiancee would like it if you called me Peter. So ... just for tonight! Because we listened to that nightingale together?”

  He took her hand, and she let it lie in his warm brown clasp, and she lifted her eyes to his and obediently said what he wanted her to say: “Good-night, Peter. And—and thank you!”

  “For what?”

  He smiled still more crookedly, gave her back her hand, glanced rapidly round the living room, and then strode out into the waning moonlight.

  She listened to his firm footsteps walking down the garden path to the gate, and it was not until she heard his car starting up—or thought she heard it starting up—that she closed the door.

  But he came hurrying back.

  “Lock it, Victoria,” he ordered. “Lock it and bolt it, do you understand? And make sure all your windows are fastened, and—”

  “But I can’t sleep with a closed window,” she told him breathlessly.

  “Then stay awake with a securely snibbed one! This cottage is far too lonely!” He frowned at her before he himself shut the door, and he waited for her to drive home the bolts. Then he called from outside:

  “Good-night!”

  She called back with a wild feeling of excitement rendering her voice a trifle husky.

  “Good-night!”

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  The next morning he was back with his arms full of parcels and the Bentley left standing in the road in close proximity to the garden gate.

  It was barely eight o’clock, and the kitchen of the cottage was full of the smell of burning toast—which Victoria, most unfortunately, had temporarily forgotten—coffee and scrambled eggs. Johnny was sitting at the table and disposing of a bowl of cereal laced with cream, and Victoria was tying an apron about her slender middle and wondering whether she dared add another rasher to the ones that were sizzling in the pan for her own consumption as well as Johnny’s, or whether it would be wiser to stick to her normal diet of toast and marmalade.

  Both Victoria and Johnny heard the car stop outside the gate, and Johnny let forth a jubilant whoop because he thought it was Hawkins returned to place himself at their disposal for the day. But Victoria recognized the footsteps as soon as she heard them echoing on the flagged path which continued round an angle of the house until it ended up at the kitchen door; and as the kitchen door was standing open to admit the sunshine she was the first to have her suspicions confirmed and to welcome the owner of the cottage when he stood smiling at them somewhat broadly from the sweetn
ess of the morning outside.

  “I hope I’m not interrupting your breakfast,” he said. “But I’ll admit I hoped you would offer me some coffee as I haven’t had any breakfast myself yet.”

  He deposited his parcels on a side table, then stood sniffing the atmosphere appreciatively.

  “Burnt toast! Do you know, I have a weakness for it! Do you think you could spare me a piece?” And he actually robbed the toast rack of one of its most highly carbonized exhibits and proceeded to munch it with appetite. He sat down on the arm of a chair and winked at Johnny.

  “Have a look at my parcels,” he said. “There are one or two things among them that might interest you.”

  While Johnny rushed at the parcels Victoria hastily set another place at the table for their unexpected visitor, and then attempted to deprive him of the remains of his burnt toast.

  “You can’t possibly eat that,” she declared. “It’s practically black! For goodness’ sake, if you’re hungry, sit down and have a proper breakfast.”

  He grinned at her. His teeth were amazingly white in the strong sunshine, and although it was so early in the morning and it had been fairly late when he left the cottage the night before he was beautifully shaved and impeccably groomed as always.

  “Thank you, that’s what I mean to do,” he told her. He pulled out his own chair at the table and sat down while she was still frantically calculating whether she had enough sausages and bacon in the refrigerator to provide him with a really substantial breakfast. His voice dropped to a lower key, and was suddenly very soft. “Don’t tell me I’m not welcome?”

  “Of course.” She hardly knew what she was saying, and for some reason she felt quite ridiculously confused. She was also having the strange experience of someone who was making new discoveries ... how indolent his gray eyes were, and yet how attractively bright. His eyelashes were far too long and thick to be the possession of a mere man, and when he smiled his eyes crinkled up at the corners and he appeared to be studying her through the fringes of his eyelashes. His mouth was exceptionally shapely, and his chin reassuringly square. There was a brightness about his hair, and yet in patches it was very dark—dark as a blackbird’s plumage.

  “Well?” As she stood there looking down at him as if something about him had had a stupefying effect on her senses he smiled in a somewhat peculiar manner. “Am I welcome? Or would you rather I went?”

  “No, no, no!” In her eagerness to convince him she actually laid a hand on his shoulder. “Of course I don’t want you to go. I mean—”

  “Splendid.” The softness—it could even have been a caressing note—was back in his voice again, and a completely relaxed look overspread his features. “Then I’ll stay.”

  As Johnny danced about the kitchen delightedly with a new transistor radio swinging from one hand and a beautifully bound book on butterflies held aloft in the other, Victoria dived into the larder, and when she reappeared Sir Peter was helping himself to cornflakes. Johnny poured cream over them for him.

  “We always have breakfast in the kitchen,” Victoria apologized, still not quite certain what she was saying, or why she was saying it.

  “And why not?” Certainly the check cloth was very bright, and the flowers in the small Wedgwood jar in the middle of it a gay and attractive centerpiece. “It reminds me of my nursery days.”

  She glanced at him.

  “I didn’t expect to see you this morning. I—I imagined you would have other things to do.”

  “Such as?”

  He was buttering a roll while she slid some more slices of bread under the grill.

  She flushed. He had lifted his eyes to her and they were dancing with amusement. Despite Johnny’s presence he persisted in attempting to elicit from her what she thought he should have been doing instead of paying another visit to the cottage.

  “Are you rather inclined to the opinion that the very first thing I should have done this morning is get in touch with a certain person by telephone and offer her my abject apologies? Because if that’s what you really think I should have done I’m afraid I have to disappoint you.”

  “You mean you didn’t telephone?”

  “I didn’t even send a hurried note round by Hawkins saying how very sorry I am for everything.”

  “But. . . .” She prodded a sausage that was sizzling in the pan, and he asked politely if he couldn’t have two sausages—three if she could manage it. “You can’t mean that you—that you don’t intend to—to—”

  “At the moment I’m free, and I’m enjoying my freedom. It’s because I’m free that I’m here. Didn’t I say to you last night that so long as I was free—” Johnny interrupted with a wide-eyed look.

  “I didn’t know you were here last night!”

  His guardian dismissed him amiably.

  “If you’ve finished your breakfast, old chap, do go outside and get some fresh air. You can polish up the car for me if you like. I’m sure Victoria’s got a duster in the drawer.” Johnny was enchanted by the notion, and departed, taking his transistor with him. Victoria placed a heaped plateful of eggs, bacon, sausages and mushrooms in front of Sir Peter, and then stood looking down at him a trifle censoriously.

  “Last night,” she reminded him, “you said I was to call you Peter because today you were going to do the right thing and apologize to Miss Islesworth and make everything up with her. You assured me that after last night everything would be as it was again.”

  “And that was why I wanted to hear you call me Peter?” “Y-yes.”

  “A condemned man’s last request before sentence was carried out!”

  “I—I don’t understand you!”

  She sat down at the kitchen table, and while he applied himself to his breakfast in a businesslike fashion—ever afterward she was to hold the belief very close to her heart that unless an Englishman is fed he is unapproachable—she played with the butter knife and watched him. He occasionally smiled at her in a detached manner, and finally agreed that they would discuss the problem later on.

  “But for the time being I’m feeling too replete. Your cooking is excellent, Victoria.”

  “You mean that you—you’re going to stay here?”

  “I’m not going back immediately. As a matter of fact, I thought we’d have another picnic today—as it’s such a fine day. Would you like to pay another visit to the spot where we had our other picnic?”

  “I—But do you think you ought to waste the time?”

  “You forget that Johnny is my ward, and nothing is wasted on him. But wouldn’t you like it yourself?”

  She carefully avoided his eyes, for the simple reason that this morning she didn’t dare to meet them fully ... or at any rate, not for long.

  “Of course I’d like it. But you have other things to do!”

  “The ‘other things’ can wait.”

  For an instant she did meet his eyes, and to her astonishment the gray depths were pleading with her.

  “Victoria.” He laid his hand over hers where it rested on the tablecloth. “Victoria, I want to forget everything today—everything but the things I wish particularly to remember. And among the things I wish to remember are the way you looked last night and the extraordinary effect moonlight has on your hair. Victoria!” He bent nearer to her, and she caught the fragrance of his shaving lotion. “Victoria,” a trifle huskily, “it’s such an absurdly formal name for such a scrap of informal young womanhood, but in my ears it has acquired a certain music. Will you take compassion on the condemned man today and accompany him back to that green bank where we disported ourselves before, and where Johnny ate so many sausage rolls and cheese straws and drank so much ginger pop that I thought he’d explode in the car when he got back into it? Will you, Victoria?”

  She said breathlessly:

  “My father used to call me Vicky.”

  “I still prefer Victoria!”

  “And you did say that after last night—”

  “Forget what I said last nig
ht. Let’s go to the river, Victoria!”

  She rose, half laughing, half protesting still.

  “But what about food?”

  “I have it in the car. Another hamper for the special delight of Johnny. How long will it take you to wash up? Or can you leave these things on the table as they are?”

  “No, no, I’ll clear everything away and tidy up before we leave.”

  “I thought you’d say that.”

  “This doesn’t happen to be Mrs. Wavertree’s day.”

  He smiled at her and she smiled back. For the first time she felt as if she had known him for the whole of her life. “I’ll wait outside,” he said.

  In the road beyond the garden gate Johnny was working hard. With a yellow duster and a great deal of elbow grease he was achieving miracles ... although it was true the car had looked very bright and shining to start with.

  When he heard about the picnic Johnny reacted, as always, in a completely normal manner. He wanted to start off immediately, but Victoria insisted on completing her normal round of housework before slipping into a cool, clean cotton dress that was an enchanting shade of apple-blossom pink and declaring she was ready to lock up the cottage.

  Sir Peter looked at her, long and hard, as she turned the front door key, and he seemed to have some difficulty on concentrating on driving when they set off. Johnny had insisted on occupying the seat beside him at the wheel, and that meant that Victoria was once more relegated to the back, which didn’t seem to please Sir Peter at all.

  “I do think, Johnny,” he said, “that you should allow a lady to exercise the power of choice. For all you know to the contrary Victoria may dislike sitting alone in the back of the car, and I may dislike having a small boy bouncing about in the seat beside me. Quite honestly, if I could choose, I’d prefer to have Victoria sitting beside me.” Johnny instantly looked dashed.

  “But you said you’d teach me to drive a car—”

  “One day I will,” his guardian promised. “But at the moment you’re far too small.”

  Victoria protested from the back of the car.

  “I’m perfectly comfortable where I am.”

 

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