can tell me himself, and I’ll open my hands and let him go. I will not try to keep a stranglehold on him, and you don’t have to buy me off. Is that clear?’
Amos Falcon’s response was a genial smile that made her want to murder him.
‘Perfectly clear and I respect your strength of mind, but you should allow me to show that respect by purchasing your shop at twice its value. You won’t get such an offer again.’
‘You’re crazy,’ she breathed. ‘You think everyone’s for sale.’
‘No, I simply think you should be considering the long-term implications. After the appalling way your husband treated you, you should be protecting yourself.’
His words were like a douche of ice.
‘The appalling way-? Darius told you about that?’
‘Not at all. I told him.’
Suddenly the world had turned into a nightmare through which she could only stumble.
‘You told-? When?’
‘At the wedding. I discovered I knew rather more about you than he did, so I brought him up to date.’
Now she couldn’t speak at all, only look at him from wide, horrified eyes.
‘He was very chivalrous,’ Amos went on. ‘He said it was entirely a matter for you if you wanted to keep your secrets, which, of course, is right. But I think he was a little disturbed to discover that you’d been holding him off while pretending to be close to him.’
Harriet’s head swam. There in her mind was the sweet moment when she’d confided in Darius what she’d told nobody else, meaning in this way to prove her trust in him.
But he’d known all the time, and never told her.
‘Get out,’ she breathed. ‘Get out now, if you know what’s good for you.’
‘He doesn’t,’ said a voice from the door. ‘He’s never known what was good for him.’
Shocked, they both turned to see Darius standing there, a look of dark fury on his face.
‘You heard her,’ he told his father. ‘Get out. Get off this island and don’t ever come back.’
‘What are you doing here?’ Amos shouted.
‘When I found out where you’d gone I came after you as fast as I could. I knew you’d try something like this. Luckily, I arrived in time to spike your guns.’
‘I was only trying to do my best for you,’ Amos growled. ‘You’ve done so well these past few days.’
‘Yes, I’ve put a lot of things right, not everything but enough to survive. And now I’m coming back here to stay. For good. I’m moving my centre of operations here permanently. From now on I’ll operate out of Giant’s Beacon, with the help of my wife.’
‘Your wife!’ Amos snapped. ‘You mean you’ve asked her? Of all the damn fool-’
‘No, I haven’t asked her,’ Darius said with a glance at Harriet. ‘And after what you’ve told her I wouldn’t give much for my chances. But I’m a man who doesn’t give up. When I want something I keep on and on until I get it.
‘It won’t be easy. Why should any woman in her right mind want to marry into this family? But I’ll keep going until she forgives me for keeping that little matter of her husband to myself, and understands that I can’t live without her. Then, perhaps she’ll take pity on me.’
Harriet tried to speak but she couldn’t. Her eyes were blinded with tears and something was almost choking her.
‘Now go,’ Darius said quietly.
Amos knew when he was beaten. With a scowl at them both, he stormed out of the door and they heard his footsteps thundering on the stairs.
‘I meant every word of it,’ Darius said, coming to stand before her. ‘I love you. I want to have you with me always. That’s why I went to London, to set up the arrangements that would make it possible for me to move here permanently. I suppose I ought to have told you first-
‘Harriet, Harriet, don’t cry. I don’t mean it. I’ll do anything to marry you. You’ll just have to be a little patient with me. Don’t cry, my darling, please.’
But she couldn’t stop crying. Tears of joy, of hope, of released tension, they all came flooding out, making it impossible for her to speak. Mysteriously, he also found that words had deserted him, so he abandoned them altogether, carried her into the bedroom and revealed his love in other ways. She responded with heartfelt tenderness, and they found that their mutual understanding was once more perfect.
‘I can’t believe the way you stood up to my father,’ he murmured as they lay together afterwards. ‘The world is littered with strong men he crushed beneath his feet, but he didn’t stand a chance against you.’
‘He tried to turn me against you,’ she said. ‘How dare he!’
‘I heard him tell you that he and I had had several meetings while I was in London, but he didn’t tell you what those meetings were about. He tried again to get me to marry Freya, offered me money, all useless. Freya was cheering me on, and actually drove me to the airport. The last thing she said to me was, “Go for it. Don’t let her escape!”
‘Mary said much the same thing. There’ll be a huge cheer when I tell them that we’re engaged.’ Suddenly, he sounded uncertain. ‘Harriet, we are engaged, aren’t we?’
‘I thought you weren’t going to take no for an answer.’
‘I’m not.’
‘And neither am I.’ She drew him close.
‘That old man thought he was being clever when he found out about your husband,’ Darius said, ‘but it just made me angry with him. It only affected me in that I longed for you to confide in me willingly, and when you did-I wanted to tell you that I already knew, but I was afraid to spoil what was happening between us. Say you forgive me.’
‘There’s nothing to forgive,’ she whispered.
‘And we’ll marry as soon as possible?’
‘I want to, of course I do. I love you. I thought I’d never love another man, but you’re different from them all. But can you really give up your old life to come and live here? Aren’t we being unrealistic?’
‘I shan’t have to give it up completely. I’m going to have to downsize, but that suits me. My London home is up for sale and I’ll be selling quite a few other properties. I’ll pay off some debts, reschedule others, and what’s left can be controlled just as easily from here as from London.’
‘But can you do it all alone?’
‘I won’t have to. I have staff who are willing to move here permanently. I couldn’t ask them before because I didn’t know where I’d be myself, but now it can all be arranged. I’ve got plans to create a little village for them.’
‘And they won’t mind leaving London for such a quiet place?’
‘Mind? They were falling over themselves to volunteer. This will be a whole new life for a lot of people. It isn’t going to be the “great financial empire” I once had. It’ll be about a third of the size, but that’s fine with me. Then I’ll have more time to spend with my wife and our children.’
‘Our children?’
‘If that’s what you’d like.’ He was silenced suddenly as she took him into a fierce embrace.
‘That’s what I’d like,’ she whispered at last. ‘Oh, yes, that’s what I’d like, as soon as possible.’
‘Then we’ll have a dozen children, and I’ll spend my time pottering about the house, and sometimes helping you in the shop.’
‘Now you’re getting carried away,’ she warned.
‘So what’s wrong with being carried away?’
‘Nothing,’ she sighed blissfully. ‘Nothing at all.’
‘And I’m going to do my best to make Herringdean glad I’m here. There must be things I can do for the community. I expect they’ll come and suggest them to you soon, and you can tell me. I’m going to have a good look at that wind farm. There may be some arrangement I can make to get a good electricity price for the island.’
‘Do you really think you can?’
‘I don’t know.’ His voice rose to a note of exhilaration. ‘I simply don’t know.’