The homestead rose up in front of her. Handsomely sited on a hilltop, it was a wonderful old colonial of mellow rose-hued brick with white columns soaring to the open upper balcony, its broad terrace wrapped around with white wrought-iron lace. There were other buildings ranged all around it and to the rear, but the homestead was set like a jewel in an oasis of jacaranda trees, screening all other buildings from sight. Nearing the house, the driveway went into a loop surrounding a spectacular white marble fountain her great-grandfather had had shipped back from Italy. In her childhood it used to play all the time. Now it was quiet and forlorn in the warm sun, free of the beautiful pink waterlilies that once had festooned the large bowl.
Suzannah stopped the car at the foot of the short flight of stone steps, surprised to see the front door with its splendid side lights and fan lights open. Perhaps the agent was there? Though there was no sign of her car. Had she parked it at the rear? Suzannah still retained her set of keys, making the commitment that the house would be in perfect running order for when the new owners would arrive. Hastily she climbed the steps, putting her hand to the door chimes, calling out the agent’s name.
“Kathleen, is that you?”
Absolute silence, though now that she looked a set of keys was in the lock. At least it wasn’t a burglar, though burglaries in the district were unheard of. “Kathleen?” She advanced into the entrance hall, staring first up the central staircase then walking into the drawing room. What was Kathleen doing if indeed it was she? Checking on the house? She didn’t have to worry. Suzannah made her weekly visit even though it pained her deeply to keep coming back.
The huge L-shaped drawing room, dominated by two carved white marble fireplaces surmounted by identical Georgian giltwood mirrors, was empty. A good deal of the original furnishings had been sold with the house—the heavy antique furniture, the dining-room suite and sideboards, everything in the white-and-gold ballroom, most of the paintings, the oriental screens and rugs. the bronzes. The cottage couldn’t possibly accommodate a quarter of it, let alone the grandeur. Perplexed, she found herself walking to one of the Georgian mirrors, staring at the reflection of a heart-shaped face within a frame of dark hair. It wasn’t a happy face. Even her eyes looked sad.
“Suzannah?” A voice said behind her, making her heart lunge in extreme shock. She put a quaking hand to her breast, then spun sharply, pulling back her shoulders as though confronting a powerful danger.
“God, Nick!” Her magnolia skin lost all colour. “How can you possibly be here?” At first it wouldn’t sink in, then she caught her breath as reasons absorbed her.
Nick had talked of vengeance as a soldier might swear allegiance. “I’ll be back, Mr. Sheffield,” he had promised as Frank Harris bundled him into the police car. “I’ll be back and it will be a bad day for you.”
Suzannah felt a chill like an icy hand to her forehead. “Of course! You bought it, didn’t you? You’re the new owner?” She was convinced she was right.
“My cup runneth over.” He spoke sardonically though pain slashed his heart. Where was her wonderful incandescence? All gone. Yet she was never more lovely, her wonderful hair loose, body thin enough to be breakable, mauve shadows beneath her haunted long-lashed eyes.
“Why didn’t we know?” she agonised.
“I didn’t want you to know,” he said, hard mockery flooding in. “That should be obvious.”
“I mean why didn’t we guess?” Something like anger leapt in her violet eyes. “I’ve always known in my heart you’d get back at Father.”
“And you. Don’t forget you, Suzannah. You’re the one who told me how much you loved me. You’re the one who was going to be my girl forever.”
“Except fate got in the way.” She wrapped her arms around herself, warding off the condemnation that flowed from him.
“You can call it fate if you like,” he said, black eyes brilliantly ironic. “I’d call it treachery, betrayal and blackmail.”
“You’ll never forget.” It made her feel desolate. Terribly alone.
“Did you think I would?”
“My father is a sick man, Nick.”
He shook his dark head. “I didn’t cause his stroke, Suzannah. I didn’t bring his world crashing down on his head. If I didn’t buy Bellemont somebody else would.”
“Why would you want it at all?” she flared. “Your life is elsewhere. Your company, your career. You must be married?” That woman in his car. She’d felt seared by her stare.
“I haven’t had the slightest urge to get married,” he told her curtly. “Unlike you. To answer your question. This is a magnificent property. I’m in need of a country retreat. Somewhere to relax. Bring my friends and overseas guests.”
“A retreat?” That checked her. “You’re not going to return it to a working farm?”
“As a matter of fact I am. If that’s all right with you and your father,” he said, freezing her out.
“You’re so bitter.”
“I most certainly am, but don’t worry about it.” He moved nearer, making her feel she was being backed into a corner. “How are you settling into your new home? I took a run past it last night. The Saunders used to be tenants, didn’t they?”
“So you didn’t arrive this morning.” Her brain seemed to be wrapped in cotton wool.
“No, Suzannah,” he explained patiently. “I drove up from Sydney yesterday. Stayed the night.” In her bedroom where he had made love to her that one time. Trapped her into surrender with his overwhelming passion.
“But where did you sleep?” she asked. The furniture from the guest bedrooms had been sold. They had taken theirs with them.
“What does it matter?” In fact, he had brought a sleeping bag. Dossed down on the floor. “I might ask the questions. What are you doing here, anyway? On my property.” This wasn’t the way it was meant to be but he couldn’t stop himself.
“Making sure it remains in the same condition as it was sold to you.” She flushed.
“You have no obligation to do that.”
“Can’t you stop, Nick?” she begged, knowing nothing would heal the wounds.
“Stop what?”
“Being so hateful.”
That made him smile. A flash of white teeth, no humour at all. “That’s good coming from you. The fact remains, Suzannah, and nothing can change it, you accused me of being a thief.”
“I didn’t.” She had trusted her father who had never lied to her. What she had felt for Nick was an overwhelming pity.
“Your very silence condemned me.”
There was no cure for injustice. “I bitterly regret it, Nick.” Tears came to her eyes. Tears from a deep place inside her. “Can’t you forgive me?”
He turned his handsome head abruptly. “You want the bad news? No. My mother died, did you know that?”
“We heard.” It had come as a tremendous blow. “I wanted to write to you but I thought you would only hate me.”
“I’m afraid you were right,” he answered, very soberly. “She died of a broken heart.”
Suzannah