'Yes.' She gazed far down the deserted beach toward the tiny palmetto-thatched cottage. 'I asked Jeffrey to send him as soon as he could.' Her smile was bitter. 'He won't like it. He prefers people to come to him.'
He looked out over the horizon. 'You hate him?'
'I did once. Now… I don't know. He's a terrible man, and I'll never understand how he can do the things he does, but he has some qualities I admire. He's brilliant, you know. He's one of the foremost financial advisers and bankers in England and, as far as I know, his business deals are entirely honest. It's only in personal relationships that he's completely ruthless. What he can't control, he has to destroy. He has to own the people in his world.' She turned and came back to stand before him. 'I cut the strings, but he made me pay the price. I didn't know until I came back to you how high that price had been. I thought I'd shot my bushwhacker, but I hadn't, I'd only run away from him.'
She sat on the beach at his feet, her bare toes digging in the sand. 'I'd like to tell you all about it.' She smiled crookedly. 'I know it's a little late. Do you still want to hear it?'
'I want to hear it,' he murmured. 'I think it's important I know.'
'I think so too.' She picked up a handful of sand and let it sift slowly through her fingers. 'For one thing, it will illustrate how wrong you were to think you had anything to learn from my friends or family, any polish to acquire from them. You're so far ahead they'd never catch up in a hundred years.' She paused. 'I guess I should start with my mother. There's no real harm in her. She's just weak and selfish and can only see as far as her checkbook. I think she may even have loved my father; she always spoke of him as if she did. He was a race car driver and after he died…' She trailed off. 'She likes money. She
'What were you doing while all this was going on?' Gideon asked. 'Were you fond of Marlbrent while you were growing up?'
She shook her head. 'He could be very charming, but he didn't waste it on me. I was away at school during their short marriage, and only saw them on those few holidays during that brief time.' Her face softened. 'But I was wild with joy when Dane was born. I'd always been a lonely child and I thought at last I'd have someone of my own to love. Of course, it didn't work out that way.' Her face clouded. 'No, I don't think my stepfather knew I existed as a human being.' She paused. 'Until he decided he could make use of me.'
Gideon reached down and took her hand, holding it without speaking.
'I was seventeen and attending a convent school in Switzerland. I was very naive, incredibly so.' She laughed mirthlessly. 'You can't imagine how stupid I was. My stepfather appeared at the convent one day and whisked me away on a holiday to Italy. I was thrilled and happy and-I told you how charming he could be. I thought he actually
'You were running to me.' Gideon's voice was velvet with tenderness. 'It was the time for us to come together.'
She met his eyes. 'I believe that now, but that night I was confused and upset. I had suffered a shock that had shaken me to the foundations and sent me in a daze wandering through Mariba. I don't even know how I got into that bar where you found me. Oh, I was brimful of a convent idea of sin. I'd taken a marriage vow and, even if I'd been duped, I couldn't reconcile myself to the idea of breaking that vow.' She shook her head in wonder as she looked back on that bewildered child. 'Perhaps my stepfather even relied on that convent training. It wouldn't surprise me.'
'You shouldn't have left me. We could have worked everything out if we'd been together.'
'He would have destroyed you,' she said simply. 'I didn't dare even mention you. I told you, what he couldn't control, he destroyed. He was a very powerful man and you were just getting started. That night I lay awake and tried to think of a way out, but I knew there was only one solution. I had to let them use me, until I could gather the strength to break free.' She determinedly blinked back the tears. 'That first year was bad. I wanted to run back to you a hundred times a day.'
'But you didn't.'
'No, I started to close you out instead.' She lifted his palm and cradled it against her cheek. 'Remember when I told you that everything I love becomes an obsession with me? When I came to you, I was starved for affection and you gave me everything I'd ever dreamed about. I had been alone and suddenly you held out the promise that I'd never be alone again. I loved you so
'You managed very well.' Gideon's voice held a thread of pain.
She shook her head. 'I thought I had, but it all fell apart when I saw you. Though I still had a king-size hang-up from repressing what I felt for you all those years. I think that was why I had trouble making a commitment.' Her lips lovingly brushed his palm. 'I finished my education and then made a deal with my stepfather. I would stay married to Antonio on two conditions-that I didn't have to live with them and that he would give me custody of Dane.'
'He went along with it?'
'He loved Antonio. I think perhaps Antonio was the only person he ever really did love.' Her lips curled. 'And Dane was no personal loss to him. He'd been shipped away to schools since he was practically an infant. My stepfather probably thought I'd come crawling back to him when I found myself facing the world without a dime in my pocket.'
'But you didn't go back to him?'
'No, but you were right, I gave up a few things. My work… and you.' She kissed his palm again. 'But you wouldn't stay in the nice little slot in my past where I had put you. You're a very obstinate man, Gideon Brandt, and I'll thank God for it every day for the rest of my life.' She raised her eyes and finished gravely. 'I love you and you'd better get accustomed to the idea that I'll never give up this particular obsession until the day I die.'
'I can hardly wait.' The long crescent lines in his cheeks deepened as he smiled down at her. 'I've never been