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      been suddenly, violently sick, and when she came back

      from her desperate race to the bathroom, she had found

      him gone, and Sophia waiting with cool water and

      gentle, soothing hands.

      Her eyes closed. She preferred to forget what had

      happened yesterday. It had been a traumatic experience.

      The next few days were quiet and peaceful. Pallas and

      Sam came in every morning. Sometimes they played

      cards with her, or just sat and talked. Sometimes she

      slept for most of the day. The burning sensation had

      lessened gradually. Her skin was now merely hot and

      dry. In places it was beginning to peel, and she watched

      it discontentedly. She was going to look a sight when it

      flaked off on her back. She would not be able to wear her

      bikini for the rest of the holiday.

      On the Friday morning the doctor said she could now

      get up. “But,” he warned sternly, “no more sunbathing.

      No exertion.”

      She promised eagerly. “It’s been such a waste of a

      holiday,” she said to Sam.

      He was looking pleasantly tanned, his freckles

      merging with his healthy brown skin.

      He gave her his hand. “Come on,” he said, “I’ll help

      you downstairs.”

      “I’m not an invalid,” she protested.

      Sam grinned at her. “You’ve been acting the part jolly

      well, then!”

      To give herself confidence Kate had put on one of her

      new dresses, a cool white voile, very feminine and

      delicate, with a full skirt which reached half-way down

      her calf, soft frills which left her throat bare, and tight-

      fitting sleeves.

      She met Mrs. Lillitos as she and Sam were going

      down, and the older woman smiled delightedly.

      “My dear child, how enchanting you look! A vision

      from the past. But you need a hat.” She smiled. “I have

      just the hat you need, ma chere.” She walked stiffly

      back to her room, leaning on her cane, and returned in a

      short time with a large picture hat of white straw,

      trimmed with one very floppy pink rose.

      Kate stood still while Mrs. Lillitos adjusted it. Sam

      watched, smiling.

      “Great, kid,” he enthused. “You look ...” he hesitated,

      lost for words.

      “Beautiful?” Mrs. Lillitos suggested teasingly.

      Sam grinned. “You took the word out of my mouth,

      Mrs. Lillitos.”

      “And it covers up my sunburn,” Kate told them

      confidentially. “My back and arms are still very un-

      sightly. I wanted to hide them.”

      They sat on the verandah, out of the treacherous sun,

      until lunchtime. There was no sign of Marc, and Kate did

      not dare to ask after him, but she gathered later that he

      had been engrossed in business during her illness, and

      had rarely emerged from his office, which was at the far

      side of the house.

      They were about to move in for lunch when Marc came

      out on to the verandah. He stopped dead, catching sight

      of Kate, and stared at her in silence for a moment, then

      said politely, “You look much better. How do you feel?”

      She murmured a vague reply. Sam and Pallas dis-

      creetly wandered into the house, leaving them alone.

      Kate stood up, feeling ridiculously overdressed. Marc

      was wearing a light blue shirt and casual grey slacks.

      “I went up to the temple and told your fiancé about

      your illness,” he said abruptly.

      “That was very kind of you,” she said stiffly.

      “He would have come down to see you, but he had to

      finish his survey, and as sunburn is hardly a dangerous

      illness ...”

      “I see his point,” she said, quickly breaking in. “Of

      course he wouldn’t come until he had finished.”

      Marc’s lip curled. “You don’t mind?” he asked. “You

      lack the usual feminine vanity, then. Doesn’t it worry

      you that he couldn’t care less whether you are ill or not?”

      “You don’t understand Peter,” she said hurriedly. During

      her illness she had had plenty of time in which to think

      about herself, and she had come to a decision about

      Peter. She had made up her mind to

      ask him if he would release her from their engagement.

      But she had no intention of letting Marc Lillitos know

      that. She did not want to discuss the subject with him.

      Marc was watching her, with narrowed eyes. “Do you

      understand Peter Hardy?” he asked her coolly. “Do you

      realise what a selfish, irresponsible, coldblooded fish he

      really is?”

      She flushed and walked past him without answering.

      She was still engaged to Peter. She would not be disloyal

      to him now.

      That afternoon, the other visitors arrived, and Marc

      drove down to the airfield to meet them.

      Pallas was sulky as she sat with her mother and Sam,

      waiting for the black car to return. Mrs. Lillitos kept a

      stern eye upon her and checked an attempt she made to

      escape with Sam to play tennis, while Kate sat back,

      watching, wondering why Pallas was in such a strange

      mood.

      The visitors arrived, talking in French which sounded

      like machine guns rattling away, and Kate hoped that

      they spoke some English, or the rest of the holiday was

      going to become a nightmare.

      Marc came in, ushering two women before him,

      smiling down at one with great charm and courtesy.

      She looked round and gave a little cry, “Madam!”

      Mrs. Lillitos held out her arms, and the other woman

      hugged her warmly. “Ma belle Helene,” murmured Mrs.

      Lillitos, smiling.

      She was a tall, slender woman, with deep brown hair,

      brown eyes and a look of quiet sophistication. Her coat

      and dress were cut very plainly, but with exquisite taste,

      in a striking violet. They looked superb on her.

      Mrs. Lillitos looked past her to the other woman,

      standing beside Marc, one hand clinging to his sleeve,

      smiling up at him from wide brown eyes fringed by very

      thick black lashes. Her eyes were too heavily made up,

      giving her the appearance of a panda, with her thick

      white skin and black hair. She wore a figure-hugging

      black suit, very demure and yet very sexy. There was no

      blouse beneath it and the deep v-lapels revealed the

      white curve of her breasts and her slim white throat.

      She was whispering to Marc and he bent his head,

      seeming amused, his eyes flickering over her apprais-

      ingly.

      “Marie-Louise, ma chere,” said Mrs. Lillitos firmly,

      and the other woman turned and walked over to her,

      still holding Marc’s arm.

      Kate stared at her. Was this, then, the French model

      with whom Marc was in love? She could not understand

      why he felt uncertain of her. She seemed madly in love

      with him, if one judged by her practised arch looks, her

      smiles and her air of possession.

      She was very attractive, Kate had to admit. The silky

      dark hair was sleek and straight, drawn back from her

      face in a chignon.
    Her mouth was painted glistening red,

      her chiselled cheeks almost classically perfect. Yet there

      was a falseness, a coldness about her which made Kate

      dislike her.

      Mrs. Lillitos introduced Sam and Kate to them, and

      Marie-Louise stared at her with insolence.

      “A schoolteacher?” she repeated, then laughed, look-

      ing at Marc. She turned her head aside and whispered to

      him. Kate caught the words, “How irritating for you to

      have to put up with them, mon cher.”

      Marc did not reply. A man had come up the steps into

      the house and stood, watching them all with a smile. He

      was tall, dark and about twenty-four, with curly hair,

      pleasant brown eyes and a relaxed air.

      “Jean-Paul,” said Marc, “come and meet my sister’s

      friends.”

      Pallas sat like a frozen statue, staring at her feet. The

      newcomer glanced at her, then at her brother, his brown

      eyes enquiring.

      Marc said Kate and Sam’s names. “This is Jean-Paul

      Filbert,” he told them, “a cousin of ours.”

      He smiled at them, but his eyes rested longest on

      Sam, with curiosity and intentness. Sam was rather red,

      Kate saw. She wondered, suddenly, if this could be the

      man Pallas had told her about—the man Marc intended

      her to marry when she left college. Surely not? she

      thought. He’s much older than Pallas. But she knew

      that, even these days, arranged marriages were common

      enough in Greece. And families always liked to keep

      their money in safe hands.

      “Marc darling,” drawled Marie-Louise, “give me a

      cigarette. I’ve run out.”

      He brought out his cigarette case and held it out to

      her. She took one and put it into her bright red mouth.

      Marc flicked open his cigarette lighter and held it to her

      cigarette, bending down. She took his hand in hers and

      held it steady, gazing up at him with provocative eyes.

      “Thanks, angel,” she murmured, leaning back. Marc

      straightened. “Now you must excuse me. I am expecting

      a phone call from New York.”

      “Angel, you’ll kill yourself,” complained Marie-Louise.

      “Work and no play, you know. You don’t want to be a dull

      boy, do you?” Her lashes flickered teasingly. “Why don’t

      you relax and enjoy life?”

      “I cannot afford to,” he said, lifting his shoulders in a

      shrug. “Money, like children, needs constant attention.”

      “But so do I, my darling,” she said, opening her eyes

      wide. “I am going to compete like mad, Marc. Business

      must be prepared for a battle.”

      “With me as the prize?” he asked lightly, grinning.

      “Of course!” she said softly, “and a very valuable one. I

      will not share your attention with anything, especially

      not a telephone!”

      Marc laughed. As he walked towards the door he

      passed Kate. Their eyes met. Hers were deliberately

      blank. He gave her a mocking, derisive flicker of a smile.

      She understood what he meant without needing it put

      into words. That is how a feminine woman behaves, he

      was telling her. That is how a man wants his woman—

      flirtatious, flattering, attentive.

      Mrs. Lillitos rose soon after Marc had gone, and said

      that she was going to her room to rest.

      “I will come with you, Maman,” said Helene, slipping

      an arm around her. “We have so much to talk about, you

      and I.”

      Marie-Louise yawned. “I might as well have a nap

      myself. If Marc is going to be boring, I might as well not

      have come.”

      Sam and Pallas stood up, too, as Mrs. Lillitos walked

      slowly out of the room. Pallas said, “A game of tennis,

      Sam?” and Sam nodded.

      Kate was taken back to find herself thus left alone

      with Jean-Paul.

      “You are also going to sleep?” he asked her, as she rose

      instinctively.

      She shook her head, smiling. “I think I’ll take a stroll

      in the garden. I’ve been ill for a few days and I need the

      fresh air ”

      “May I come, too?” he asked, head to one side,

      scrutinising her.

      “Why not?” she returned politely, and they went out

      into the garden.

      They walked beneath an arched trellis, hanging with

      vines, out on to the lawn. The cypress trees and flower

      beds gave a quiet grace to the little garden, which was

      framed in a close-set hedge.

      “Tell me about yourself,” said Jean-Paul. “A

      schoolteacher, Marc said—how did you come to meet

      him?”

      “I teach Pallas,” she explained. “I teach music at her

      school, Cheddall.”

      He shot her a sidelong look. “Ah, yes, Pallas. And do

      you get on with her?”

      “Very well,” Kate said. “That’s why I am here.”

      “And ... the young man? He is your brother? Is that

      why he is here? Because of Pallas?”

      “They’re friends,” she said carefully.

      Jean-Paul lit a cigarette, after offering them to her.

      For a while he smoked in silence. Then he said, “Pallas

      thinks herself in love with him, perhaps?” His tone was

      diffident, almost embarrassed.

      She shrugged. “I really couldn’t say. I don’t have her

      confidence in this matter.”

      He looked sharply at her. Kate met his gaze directly

      and frankly.

      He sighed. “I see. But perhaps you have your

      brother’s?”

      “No,” said Kate firmly, “I’ve never discussed her with

      Sam. After all, it’s a very private subject.”

      He laughed incredulously. “Love is never private,

      Miss Caulfield. It is, above all else, a family matter. That

      is why, as soon as I knew I loved Pallas, I spoke to her

      brother upon the subject.”

      She came to a halt and stared at him, with total

      disbelief. “You love Pallas? But she’s only sixteen; years

      younger than you. Almost a child, still.”

      “She will be seventeen in two months,” he said. “My

      mother was married when she was sixteen. I was born

      when she was seventeen.”

      “You are Marie-Louise’s brother, though, aren’t you?”

      she asked, puzzled. She had been sure Marie-Louise was

      older than him.

      “I am her half-brother,” he said. “My mother was

      Greek, a Lillitos. Her mother was French. Marie-Louise

      is five years older than me.”

      “Oh.” Kate considered the information for a moment,

      then went back to Pallas. “Does Pallas know you love

      her?”

      “She knows I wish to marry her,” he said quietly. “I

      have not, of course, approached her alone. It would not

      be fitting.”

      Kate almost reeled with hilarious incredulity. “I can’t

      believe it!” she exclaimed. “You talk like a Victorian

      novel!”

      He flushed. “You are laughing at me,” he said.

      “I’m sorry, but I can’t help it. No wonder Pallas was

      so awkward when you arrived!”

      He was silent for a moment. Then he said, �
    �You think

      she does not like me? Finds me unattractive?”

      She looked at him, embarrassed, and saw the hurt

      look in his brown eyes., “Look,” she said frankly, “Pallas

      is a modern girl. She doesn’t want to be married off like

      a prize cow. She wants to ...” she gestured vaguely, “live

      her own life.”

      “And I am not part of the life she wants?” he asked

      quietly.

      “How do I know? How does she know, when she’s

      never given the chance to choose freely? Perhaps you

      may be the man for her. But if you marry her against

      her will you’ll never know if you are.”

      “I see,” he said slowly. “You think I should back out

      now? Tell Marc I have changed my mind?”

      “I shouldn’t really advise you,” she said. “You may

      think me prejudiced on my brother’s behalf. To be

      honest, I don’t believe that he and Pallas are in love. I

      don’t believe they will ever be in love. But I think that if

      Pallas feels under pressure from you and Marc, she may

      convince herself she does love Sam, and that will be a

      disaster for everybody, including my brother, because I

      think Sam is the wrong man for Pallas. They’re good

      friends, but they are too far apart for anything more

      intimate.”

      “O wise young judge,” he said gently, taking her hand

      between both his and kissing it. “Thank you. I will speak

      to Marc tonight.”

      “And make sure he passes the word to Pallas,” she

      said. “Insist on that being done immediately. Marc is

      capable of playing it by ear, and that might push Pallas

      too far.”

      He nodded. “I will be firm with him. And I am grateful

      to you for your advice. Several things Marc had said to

      me in his letters had made me suspicious of some other

      intervention. I was not surprised to see a young man

      here.”

      “Marc didn’t tell you?”

      “He never mentioned Sam to me,” he said. Then, by

      common consent, they dropped the subject, and walked

      round, talking of the weather, Kate’s sunburn, the world

      situation and other very natural subjects.

      Dinner that evening was a far more lively occasion.

      The two new arrivals, Helene and Marie-Louise, talked

      to Marc throughout the meal, ignoring everybody else.

      Pallas and Sam ate silently, and Jean-Paul devoted

      himself to Kate.

      Their frank discussion had left them on a compara-

      tively intimate level of friendship. He had discovered a

     


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