Harriet barely heard the rest. Dismayed, she realised that she’d committed herself to moving in with him, living close to him day and night, unable to escape the attraction that threatened to overwhelm her.
She’d been caught unawares, but now it was done and it was too late to undo. She could never bring herself to kill the blazing hope she could see in him. Dazed, she bid Mary farewell, handed over the phone and wandered to the water’s edge.
Then she heard him calling her name, and turned to see him following her. The next moment he’d flung his arms around her.
‘Thank you!’ he said.
He didn’t try to kiss her, just held her with hands that gripped so tight it was almost painful. But she didn’t even think of escape. There was a sweetness in his passionate gratitude that made her heart beat faster.
He drew back and she almost gasped at the sight of his face, lined with emotion, confusion, anguish and a kind of fierce joy that he himself didn’t truly believe existed.
‘Thank you,’ he whispered again. ‘Thank you, thank you.’
Now she knew what she’d done, and nothing in the world would ever make her regret it.
‘I’m going to collect them in London tomorrow,’ he said. ‘Will you come with me?’
‘If I can. I’ll have to call the lifeboat station so that they’ve got a replacement on call. I’ll do it now.’
At the station she was assured that there was no problem. There were plenty of volunteers to fill her place.
‘It doesn’t give you much time to move in,’ Darius said, ‘but I’ll help you. And don’t worry about anything. I know you didn’t mean to live there but you can make everything just as you like it. Your word will be law, and you can choose your room. I won’t trouble you, my word on it, and if you-’
‘Stop, stop!’ she said, laughing and touching his lips gently. ‘You’re babbling.’
He removed her fingers, but not before laying the lightest possible kiss on them, just enough to be felt, not enough for offence.
‘I can’t help it,’ he said humbly. ‘It matters so much, I can’t risk anything going wrong.’
‘Nothing’s going to go wrong,’ she promised. ‘Now, we have a lot of work to do.’
‘Yes, let’s make a start. And you.’ This last was addressed to Phantom, who’d nudged his hand.
‘He’s included?’ Harriet asked eagerly.
‘You don’t think I’d leave him out, do you? The kids will love him. Now I come to think of it, he’s almost more essential than you are.’
She chuckled. ‘I think so too. Let’s go.’
As they walked home his business side reasserted itself.
‘What about your shop? You’ll hardly have any time there for the next few weeks.’
‘My assistant is reliable, and there’s a temporary worker I sometimes use. She’s very good.’
‘Fine, hire her full-time at my expense. I pay her wages, is that clear? No argument.’
‘I wasn’t going to give you one,’ she said. ‘You’re not the only one who can do business.’
She danced ahead of him, whistling.
CHAPTER TEN
HARRIET arranged the extra worker as soon as she got home, while Darius called Kate to alert her about Harriet’s arrival.
They spent the rest of the day moving her things into Giant’s Beacon. Kate ceremoniously showed her round the four available bedrooms, promising to get to work on whichever Harriet chose.
‘You’ll probably prefer the one at the end of the corridor,’ Darius suggested, bland-faced.
It was certainly the most ‘proper’ room, being furthest from his, and having a lock on the door. It was also extremely ugly.
The nicest room was at the front of the house, just above the front door. There were two bay windows, a thick, newly laid carpet and a large comfortable-looking bed.
It was also directly opposite Darius’s room.
‘I wouldn’t choose this if I were you,’ Darius said. ‘It’s much too close to that fellow, and I’ve heard he’s a bad character. Give him a wide berth.’
‘And you’d know him better than anyone else, I suppose,’ she riposted.
‘Definitely. You shouldn’t even have been shown this room, even though it’s the most comfortable, and lovely in the mornings when the sun comes in.’
‘Yes, I noticed it was facing the dawn.’
‘But it doesn’t have a lock on the door,’ he pointed out.
‘Ah, but he’s promised not to trouble me. If he keeps his word, why would I need a lock?’
‘That’s very true.’
‘And if he doesn’t-I’ll set Phantom on him.’
‘There’s a threat to frighten a man.’
‘So I think-’ She threw herself onto the soft mattress, and Phantom jumped up beside her. ‘Yes, I think we’ll have this one.’ She turned to her companion. ‘Do you agree?’
‘Then if everyone’s satisfied,’ Darius said, ‘we’ll call it a day, and be ready to leave early tomorrow.’
The helicopter was there on the dot, sweeping them off to the airport near London. From there a car took them to the house where the children were staying. Mark and Frankie were watching from the window, and yelled with delight when they saw them.
‘Dad! You came!’ Frankie cried.
‘But of course I came. I said I would.’
They didn’t reply, but Harriet wondered how often in the past he hadn’t been there when he said he would.
The housekeeper appeared, saying that their hostess wouldn’t come downstairs because of her illness, but she sent her thanks and best wishes. Darius returned a message of condolence, and they were ready to go.
As they left the house Harriet happened to notice the children exchanging glances, and was almost certain that she heard Mark whisper, ‘I told you she’d come.’
On the journey home they made her talk about Herringdean, yearning for the moment when they could look down at it from high in the air. When that moment finally came they were speechless, gazing open-mouthed at so much beauty. Darius, watching them, understood.
‘That’s what I thought when I first saw it,’ he said. ‘The loveliest place in the world.’
They nodded agreement, but Harriet detected a slight bafflement in their manner. Their father had actually said that? Who was he trying to kid?
At last it was time to land and make their way to Giant’s Beacon. As she had expected, their first meeting with Phantom was joyful. Since he asked nothing better than to be the centre of attention all the time and they had lots of attention to give, they forged an instant three-way friendship.
After supper she and Kate saw them to bed with the promise of plenty of action next day. They were already yawning and climbed into bed without argument.
Downstairs, Darius poured her a glass of wine and raised his own glass in salute.
‘To you,’ he said. ‘Without you, none of this would be happening.’
‘But it is happening. Now it’s up to you to make the best of it.’
‘Did you see their faces when I told them I felt the same as they when I first saw Herringdean? They didn’t really believe I could feel that way.’ He added wryly, ‘Any more than you did.’
‘I wish you’d stop brooding about that. It was a lifetime ago. You’re not the same man.’
‘Maybe not,’ he murmured. ‘But who am I now?’
‘You’ll find that out with them.’