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Authors: Iris Danbury

Tags: #Harlequin Romance 1971

Island of Mermaids (19 page)

BOOK: Island of Mermaids
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So you won

t be returning to England in the autumn?

Her heart lifted for an instant as she wondered if he were fishing for information. Did he mean he might want to continue their friendship in England? On the other hand, he might want to know her plans for the very reason of being able to avoid her.


No. Only for brief business visits on behalf of my father,

she answered. His reflective silence emboldened her to send the ball into his court.

And you? Are you returning soon?


I

m going next week as a matter of fact,

he replied casually.

I have a restoration job, an old Elizabethan manor, that needs my attention and the owners will be away so that they can escape all the discomfort of alterations.


Then you won

t be here for my father

s wedding?


Oh, I may make a flying trip for that. Where

s it to be? And when?


I

m not sure of the date, but it will take place in Naples.

That seems to be the easiest meeting point for the friends and relations.


I see. Let me know the date when it

s fixed.

Then, after a pause, he said,

Let

s go down the Phoenician steps to the shore. You haven

t been, I suppose?

She shook her head.


Then I

ll take you. I don

t want you tempting fate by taking a header down the cliffside.


Can

t you ever forget that once I tripped over a stone in your so-called garden?

she demanded crossly.


One day you

ll take back that insulting description of my garden when it

s a vista of beauty, of pergolas and arbours and arches. Five years from now, perhaps.

Five years, she thought. Where would she be in five years

time? In England? Or still in Capri handling fabrics in the shop? Who would be Kent

s companion here in five years? She could not visualise Carla flitting about the garden or strolling along its shady paths, but equally she could not imagine herself. Not once had Kent divulged anything of his background in England, except his business interests, but it would be ludicrous to believe that his life held no place for women. Possibly he had made no mention of that one woman who meant everything to him for the very reason that he regarded Carla and Althea and probably half a dozen other girls as feminine acquaintances, companions of his leisure hours in Capri. What right had she, Althea, or any others to know the essentials of his private life?


Well?

His voice recalled her.

Are you coming or aren

t you? You

ve been debating in your mind long enough.


Sorry. I was thinking of something else.


Obviously,

he retorted drily.

I wonder if I know him.

She ignored this joke.

Yes, of course I

ll come down the steps. I hope I

m not dragging you away from your work.

He was looking at her shoes.

Go back to your villa and change into sandals. If you flatter yourself you

ll be missed at dinner, tell someone you won

t be home. We

ll have something at the Marina Grande.

She obeyed him without question. This was to be in the nature of a farewell clamber down the cliff, followed by a parting meal. She might as well accept amiably. On the way back to the villa, she hoped she would not be noticed and, for once, her luck held. She took the opportunity to change her dress, remembering that for a cliff scramble, it must not be too fragile, but she had a coral and grey patterned cotton that was fairly sturdy. She brushed her corn-coloured hair, renewed her make-up and put on a pair of strong sandals with flat heels. She left a brief note for her father.

Again, she skulked between the orange and lemon trees of the Villa Stefano, avoiding one group of relatives who sat at the far end of the terrace. Then she saw Carla coming towards her.


Come and meet some new cousins
,’
invited the girl.

First I must ask Rosanna for some more coffee and cakes
.’


I can do that
,’
offered Althea, seizing the chance. She took the coffee pot from Carla

s hands and dashed into the side door that led to the kitchen. While she waited for the coffee, she noticed that Carla had returned to the party round the table.


Rosanna, will you take the coffee and cakes when they

re ready?

she asked.

I have to go now.


Si, si,
signorina
,

agreed Rosanna, rolling her eyes comically.

Caffe,
sempre caffe, dolce e biscotti.’

Althea laughed sympathetically. Indeed, with all these visitors, Rosanna was constantly preparing coffee and cakes, lunches and dinners.

Without further delay, Althea hurried off, congratulating herself when she was clear of the Villa Stefano that there had been no other encounters. What amusing thoughts were running through her head at this clandestine appointment! She dismissed them abruptly. No need to become sentimental over the mundane matter of changing one

s shoes.


Heavens, I thought you

d taken a trip to Naples!

Kent greeted her.


I haven

t been long
,’
she protested, glancing at her watch.

Not more than half an hour—and anyway, I was delayed. I met Carla
.’


Did you tell her where we were going?

he asked, a trifle sharply, she thought.

‘N
o. I was invited to meet yet another batch of cousins, but I dodged it this time.


Good for you.

He gave her a slanting grin.

She turned her head away sharply, for the warm, friendly expression in his dark-blue eyes undermined her
stern
resolve to keep her relation with him on a cool, friendly basis and nothing more.

They walked together a short distance down the road towards Capri, before taking the winding rough path that led down a steep escarpment. Steps were cut in the solid rock, but now that so little use was made of this route from Marina Grande to Anacapri, they had become overgrown with bushes and tangled weeds.


How many steps did you say there were?

she asked
him
.


Seven hundred and seventy-seven, so they say, but that was when they went right into Anacapri, before the road was made. This is the worst part. It gets better farther down.

He took her hand to help her in the roughest places and once, when she slipped on a crumbling stone, he grasped her elbow.


Have you often made this trip?

she asked, trying to appear completely casual and unaware of his nearness.


Two or three times,

he replied.

She longed to ask him if he had been alone or accompanied by other girls, but restrained her questions.

Halfway down, he suggested they should rest and admire the view.

‘Y
es, the view,

she murmured. All my life I shall remember the view, she thought. He sat on the step below her, leaning on one elbow, his long legs stretched out. He plucked a grass stem and chewed the end. His chestnut head was within reach of her hand, but she clasped her fingers
tightly
in her lap and concentrated on the view. This lovely scene needed no imprinting on her memory, the clustered buildings around the harbour, the angular finger of the jetty projecting into the bay like a bent letter T.

. A comparatively new feature, the jetty had been constructed for ease of landing, mostly for the tourist trade, for the islanders were accustomed to landing in small boats. Beyond Marina Grande was the rocky coast, multi-coloured and dappled on the top with the green of vineyards and gardens, rising to Monte Tiberio.

Then the dark mauve sea stretching out into the enormous Bay of Naples—the Bay of Sirens, to give it its old name

the cone of Vesuvius with its rosy plume of smoke, Naples and its suburbs strung out along the shore. Yes, it was a view to cherish.

When they started again on the way, Kent pointed out the road that wound tortuously from the piazza in Capri to the shore.

We can go round that curve on the road, if you like,

he suggested,

but the Scala Fenicia still goes on and cuts across it again. Or I suppose you could say it

s the road that cuts across.


What an effort this must have been for man and donkey at one time,

she remarked.

Either up or down would be strenuous.


Oh, Capri was no place for weaklings. Those who came didn

t just laze about in the sun.


All the various invaders must have found it hard going

Saracens, Lombards, Spaniards and so on.

Kent grinned as he turned towards her.

Even the French and the British had a go, besides a few other nationalities.

She was silent for a few moments. Then she asked,

D

you think all these various invaders leave some mark on the inhabitants? Surely there must be a few men left behind every time and they stay and become integrated with the islanders?


Yes, I think that

s probable. It

s hard to distinguish particular racial characteristics in a
modern
population, but there are a few quite fair-skinned people who might be descended from the Normans when they were here.

They had reached the road and waited for several cars to screech round the precipitous bend.


I

d rather keep off this dangerous road,

she said.

Let

s take the path.

After they had crossed the road a second time, there was only a short distance before they reached the shore.

She sat down and took off her sandals.


Tired?

he enquired.


Not particularly. Coming down all those steps makes my calf muscles ache.


You

re too used to lifts. That

s your trouble,

he told her unsympathetically.

The Marina Grande appealed to her and she had come down on the funicular several times just for the pleasure of gazing at the tall old houses with their balconies and Moorish arches, their outside staircases and, almost immediately in front of them, the brightly painted boats drawn up on the shingle. Instead of pavement cafes, several restaurants had square wooden structures with awnings or roofs built out on supports on the beach.

Kent chose one of these for refreshment.

What d

you want? Coffee? Wine? Cold drink?


Coffee, please.

She peered over the railings, painted blue, red and green.

It

s almost like sitting in a seaside bandstand, isn

t it?


It

s a case of making the most of the available space, with the mountainous background almost pushing you into the sea.

The last steamer of the day was just about to cast off and a few latecomers hurried from the funicular or clambered out of taxis to dash along the quay, ignoring the vendors of balloons and souvenirs, sticky cakes and shady hats.

The stall-owners ceased to shout and began to pack up their wares. The shore became gradually quieter.


Isn

t it astonishing how quiet these parts of Capri become as soon as the day-trippers leave?

she remarked.

This is when I like it best, although I know that tourists must come for prosperity

s sake. I

d be a day-tripper myself no doubt if I weren

t living here for the time being.

Kent gave her a sudden glance.

Would you like to live here permanently?


It

s as good a spot as any that I

ve visited,

she answered non-committally.

BOOK: Island of Mermaids
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