One Night 15
It had been the house that she had given most of her mental energy and imagination to lovingly creating, though. A house for a family, a house that wrapped itself lovingly and protectively around you… a house with enough land
for her to have a pony. A house… The house… This house…!
Ran had stopped the Land Rover. Shakily she got out, unable to take her eyes off the house, barely aware of Roth’s expression as he watched her.
Just for a second, seeing that luminous bemused expression on her face, he had been transported back in time… to a time when she had looked at him like that, a time when…
Grimly he reminded himself of what Elena had just said, of the terms she had just set between them. She had made it more than plain, if he had needed it underlining, which he had not, that the only reason she was here in his life wasBelongs to © n0velDrama.Org.
because of her job and that, given the choice, she would far rather be working alongside someone else… anyone else.
The gravel crunched beneath her feet as she walked slowly, as if in a dream, towards the Rectory’s front door.
Already she knew what would lie beyond it-the soft-toned walls of the hallway with its highly polished antique furniture, its glowing wooden floors, its rugs and bowls of country-garden flowers. In her mind’s eye she could see it all as she herself had created it, smell the scent of the flowers… see the contented look in the eyes of the cat who basked illegally on the rug, lying there sunning himself in a warm beam of sunshine, ignoring the fact that his place and his basket were not here but in the kitchen.
Automatically her hand reached out for the door handle and then she realised what she was doing. Self-consciously she stepped back, turning her head away so that she didn’t have to look at Roth as he stepped past her to unlock the door. It was cruelly ironic that Ran, of all people, should own this house that so closely epitomised all that she herself had longed for in a home as a young girl.
The front door was open. Roth paused to allow her to precede him inside but, as she did so, Elena came to an abrupt halt. Faded, unattractive wallpaper and chipped dark brown paint assaulted her disbelieving gaze. In place of the
polished mellow wooden floor she had expected was a carpet, so old and faded that it was no longer possible to even guess at its original colour, but Elena
suspected with disgust that it must have been the same horrendous brown as the paintwork.
True, there was some furniture, old rather than antique, dusted rather than polished, but there were certainly no flowers, no perfumed scent, nor, not surprisingly, was there any casurprisingly, was there any cat.
‘What is it?’ Roth asked her.
Hard on the heels of the acute envy she had felt when she had first seen the exterior of the house came a pang of sadness for its inner neglect. Oh, it was clean enough, if you discounted the air possessing a sharp, almost chemical smell that made her wrinkle her nose a little, but it was a long, long way from the home she had so lovingly mentally created.
She heard Roth moving around in the hall behind her.
‘I’ll take you up to your room,’ he told her. ‘Have you got something for your headache?’
‘Yes, but they’re in my luggage which is in my hire car,’ Elena told him grimly.
In the excitement of seeing the house her headache had abated slightly, but now the strong smell in the hallway had made it return and with interest. She could no longer deny that lying down somewhere dark and quiet had become a
necessity.
‘It’s this way,’ Roth told her unnecessarily as he headed towards the stairs. Once they might have been elegant, although now it was hard to know; the original staircase no longer existed and the monstrosity which had replaced it
made Elena’s shudder in distaste.
The house had a sad, forlorn air about it, she recognised as she reached the large rectangular landing, carpeted again in the same revolting dun-brown as the hallway below.
‘Did your great-uncle live here?’ She asked him curiously.
‘No. It was let out to tenants. When my cousin inherited he moved in here, and after his death… I thought about selling it, but it’s too far off the beaten track to attract the interest of a buyer, and then once I’d made the decision to hang
onto the land and farm it seemed to make sense to move into the house myself. It needs some work doing on it, of course…’
Elena said nothing but her expressive eyes gave her away and Ran continued coldly, ‘Well, yes, I can see that to someone such as yourself, used to only the very best that money can provide, it must be rather a come-down. I’m sorry if the only accommodation I can offer you isn’t up to your usual standards…’ Roth’s eyes darkened as he reflected on the elegance of lucas home and the luxury she
must have enjoyed with Michael, but to Elena, who was remembering how Roth had once seen her living in the most basic and primitive conditions, when she had been part of the group of New Age travellers who had set up camp on Lucas estate, the look he was giving her seemed to be one of taunting mockery ‘You’re down here,’ Roth was saying as he led the way down a corridor with doors off either side of it, pushing one of them open and then standing to one
side as he waited for her to enter.
The bedroom was large, with two long windows that let in the glowing evening sunlight. The old-fashioned wooden furniture, like the tables in the hallway, was spotlessly clean but lacked the warm lustre that it would once have
had from being lovingly polished by several generations of female hands.