AS SOON as Becky was certain, she hurried to tell Luca the news. He was thrilled.
‘A baby? Our own little bambino! Half you, half me.’
‘Your very own son and heir,’ she said, snuggling blissfully in his arms.
How he laughed.
‘I’m just a common labourer. Labourers don’t have heirs. Besides, I want a girl-just like you. I want another Becky.’
Her pregnancy brought out the best in him, and she discovered again that he was a marvellous man, loving, tender, considerate as few men knew how to be. Later, when joy was replaced by anguish, it was his tenderness that Rebecca remembered most wistfully. How gently he took care of her, how worried he always was about her health. Nothing was ever too much trouble for him to do for her.
Her father was away a lot that summer, visiting his various interests, and there was little chance to tell him. When he did return it was only for a few days, filled with phone calls. Becky didn’t want to break the news until she was sure of having all his attention, so she waited until she knew he would be home for at least two weeks. By that time she was three months gone.
‘And you will tell him this time?’ Luca asked.
‘Of course. I only want everything to be right when I do.’
‘I want to be with you. I won’t have you face his anger alone.’
‘What anger? Dad will be thrilled,’ she predicted blithely. ‘He loves babies.’
It was true. Like many bullies Frank Solway had a streak of sentimentality. He cooed over babies and the world said what a delightful man he was.
‘Honestly, darling,’ Becky said, ‘this will make everything all right.’
How stupid could you be?
Her father was almost out of his mind with rage.
‘You got yourself knocked up by that…?’ He finished on a stream of profanity.
‘Dad, I didn’t get “knocked up”. I got pregnant by a man I love. Please don’t try to make it sound like something dirty.’
‘It is dirty. How dare he lay a finger on you?’
‘Because I wanted him to. To put it plainly, I dragged him into bed, not the other way around.’
‘Don’t ever let me hear you say that again,’ he shouted.
‘It’s true! I love Luca and I’m going to marry him.’
‘You think I’m going to allow that? You think my daughter is going to marry that low-life? The sooner this is fixed the better.’
‘I’m going to have my baby.’
‘The hell you are!’
She ran away that night. Frank followed her to Luca’s house and tried to buy her back. But the mention of money only made Luca roar with laughter. Later Becky was to realise what her father heard in that laughter. It was the roar of the young lion telling the old lion that he no longer ruled. Perhaps her father’s real hatred dated from that moment.
He tried to enlist the help of the locals, but he was thwarted. Frank Solway was powerful but Luca was one of them, and nobody was ready to raise their hand against him.
But Becky knew he wouldn’t give up, and in the end it was she who suggested they leave.
‘Just for a while, darling. Dad’ll feel better about it when he’s a grandfather.’
He sighed. ‘I hate running away, but all this quarrelling is bad for you and the baby. We’ll go for the sake of some peace.’
They fled south to stay with his friends in Naples. After two weeks he bought an old car, repaired it himself, and they set off again, heading south to Calabria. Two weeks there, then north again.
They talked about marriage but never stayed anywhere long enough to complete the formalities, just in case Frank’s tentacles reached them. Wherever they went his skilled hands found him work. It was a good life.
Becky had not known that such happiness was possible. She was over the first sickness of pregnancy, feeling well and strong, spending her life with the man she adored. Their love was the unquestioning, uncomplicated kind that inspired songs and stories, with a happy-ever-after always promised at the end. She loved him, he loved her, and their baby would arrive soon. What more was there?
The thought of Frank was always there in the background, but as week followed week with no sign of him he faded and became unreal, a ‘maybe’ rather than a genuine threat.
She began to understand Luca better, and herself. It was Luca who revealed her body to her, its fierce responses, its eagerness for physical love. But it was also through him, and the life they lived, that she was able to stand outside herself, and look with critical eyes. What she saw did not please her.
‘I was horrid,’ she said to him once. ‘A real spoilt brat, taking everything for granted, letting Dad indulge me and never wondering where the money came from. But it actually came from men like the ones who stopped me that day. He practically stole from them. You can’t really blame them, can you?’
‘You can’t blame yourself, either,’ he insisted. ‘You were so young, how could it occur to you to ask questions about your father’s methods? But when your eyes were opened you didn’t try to look away. My Becky is too brave for that.’
There was always a special note in his voice when he said ‘my Becky’, as though all the best in her was a personal gift to himself, to be treasured. It made her feel like the most important person in the world. And in the world they made together, that was true.
She gradually came to understand that Luca was one person to her, and a different man to everyone else. The attackers who had fled him, filled with fear, had seen the side of him that others saw.
He was a potentially frightening man who carried with him an aura of being always on the edge of ruthlessness, even violence. It took time for Becky to understand this, because he never showed that side of himself to her.
They had their arguments, even outright rows, but he fought fair, never turning his ferocity on her, and always bringing the spat to a speedy end, often by simply giving in. It hurt him to be at odds with her.
In their daily life he was tender, loving and gentle, setting her on a pedestal and asserting, by his actions, that she was different from all other human beings on earth.
His love for her carried a hint of worship that awed and delighted her, even while it sometimes made him over-protective to the point of being dictatorial. It was he who decided, in her sixth month, that their lovemaking must cease until after the baby was born, and she had fully recovered.
Torn by desire, she wept and pleaded. ‘It’s too soon. The doctor says we’ve time yet.’
‘The doctor is not the father of your baby. I am, and I have decided that it is time to stop,’ he declared in the most arrogant statement she had yet heard from him.
‘But what will you do? It’s months and months, and you’ll-well, you know.’
‘What are you saying? That you don’t trust me to be faithful to you?’
‘Well, I don’t know, do I?’ she cried.
There was a flash of temper on his face, for he had never given her a moment’s cause for anxiety. But anger was gone in a instant, dissolved in laughter.
‘Oh, stop that,’ she said, thumping him in frustration.
But he roared aloud with laughter, holding her carefully against him.
‘Amor mia, I promise to be home at the proper time every evening, and you may put a collar and lead about my neck,’ he said with a grin.
‘And every man in the place will say you’re living under my thumb, and laugh at you.’
‘But I don’t care what they think, only what you think,’ he said, serious again. ‘You and our child are everything in life to me.’
He stuck to his resolve, keeping an iron control over himself, and spending all his spare time at home. Becky, talking to other expectant mothers in doctors’ waiting rooms, knew just how lucky she was.
For most of the time she could push serious matters aside to enjoy their life. Everything was fun. Being poor, learning how to shop so that she got the best out of his wages, living in old jeans and letting them out as she put on weight-all this was fun.
It was Luca who finally decided that they should settle in one spot. She was now more than six months gone, and he said, ‘I want you under the care of the same doctor from now on.’
They had reached Carenna, a small town near Florence, where he had found work with a local builder. It was a pleasant place to put down roots. He located a good doctor, found some birth classes, and attended them with her, mastering all the exercises, to her tender amusement. At home they practised together until they collapsed with laughter.
Perhaps so much happiness could never last. Sometimes it seemed as though she’d used up her life-time’s allowance in those few glorious months.
Philip Steyne’s house was on the edge of London. As befitted his money, it was a mansion, set in its own grounds, with far more rooms than he needed.
The dinner party was for twenty, a number just large enough to allow a mix, but small enough for the right people to home in on each other.
Rebecca knew what was expected of her and dressed accordingly in a dress of wine-red velvet that hugged her slender figure. Black silk stockings sheathed her legs, finishing in dainty black sandals. Tonight she let her long blonde hair flow freely in a ‘natural’ style that had taken the beauty parlour three hours to perfect, and which set the seal on her glamour. Her solid gold necklace and earrings were Danvers’ gift ‘to mark the occasion’.
‘We still don’t know who’s actually coming tonight,’ he remarked as the car purred into the drive. ‘Raditore has played coy as to whether it’ll be the chairman, chief executive or managing director.’
‘Does it matter?’ she asked. ‘I know my job, and I it’ll be much the same whoever it is.’
‘That’s right. Just make his head spin. I must say, you’re dressed for it. I’ve never seen you looking so good.’
‘Thank you.’
‘I’m always proud of you.’
‘Thank you,’ she said again, speaking mechanically. It was hard to respond in any way, since Danvers paid compliments as though ticking off a list.
The car glided silently through the gate, down the long drive to the house. When they were nearly there Rebecca had a moment of strange and disturbing consciousness.
Suddenly the luxurious car was every luxurious car she had ever journeyed in, the huge, moneyed house was the end of a long line of moneyed houses, the dinner party to meet rich men, and charm them, was indistinguishable from so many-too many-others.
There was the house, the front door being pulled open, her hosts coming out onto the step, welcoming smiles in place. Philip Steyne’s suit had been tailored in Savile Row, his wife’s dress was haute couture. Like so many others.
‘Danvers, Rebecca, how lovely to see you. Come in, come-Rebecca, you look lovely as always-what a lovely dress…’
The same words said a hundred times by a hundred people. And her own response, indistinguishable from before. The same smiles, the same laughter, the same emptiness.
Philip Steyne murmured in her ear, ‘Well done. You’ll reduce him to jelly.’
‘Is he here?’
‘Arrived ten minutes ago. Just through here.’
Again, just as before. But then, thankfully, the moment passed and she was free again to live her life on the surface, without thinking or feeling too much. Because only in that way was existence tolerable.
It had been a bad few minutes, but she was all right again now.
It was in this mood that she walked into the next room and saw Luca Montese for the first time in fifteen years.
Now they were settled they could plan the wedding.
‘Carissima, you don’t mind a simple ceremony with no gorgeous bridal gown?’
She chuckled. ‘I’d look a bit odd in a gorgeous bridal gown and a seven-month bulge. And I don’t want fuss. I just want you.’
They were going to bed and he tucked her up, then knelt down beside her, taking her hands in his and speaking in a low, reverent voice that she had never heard before.
‘The day after tomorrow we will be married. We shall stand before God and make sacred promises. But I tell you that none of them will be as sacred as those I make to you now. I promise you that my heart, my love and my whole life belong to you, and always will.’
He spoke like a man uttering a prayer.
‘Do you understand?’ he urged. ‘Whether my life be long or short, every moment of it will be spent in your service.’
He laid his hand gently over her bulge.
‘And you, little one-you too I will love and protect in every way. You will be safe and happy, because your mama and papa love you.’
Becky tried to answer him, but no words would come through her tears.
‘Oh, Luca,’ she managed to say at last, ‘if I could only tell you-’
‘Hush, carissima. You do not need to tell me what I see in your eyes.’
He took her face between his hands and looked down at her searchingly.
‘You will always be to me as you are at this moment,’ he whispered before kissing her with heart-stopping gentleness.
She slept in his arms that night, and awoke to his kiss in the early morning. He was going to work sooner than usual, so that he could come home early to help with last-minute preparations for their wedding.
Becky spent the day tidying the house, and making sure they had enough food and wine for their friends. She was just putting the kettle on for a much needed cup of tea when the doorbell rang.
It was almost a relief to find Frank standing there. She felt safer now, because surely her bulge would make him accept the inevitable?
‘Hello, Dad.’
‘Hello, Becky. Can I come in?’
He entered without seeming to notice her shape. He had a gift for not noticing what didn’t suit him.
‘You’re on your own, I see. Got tired of you already, has he?’
‘Dad, it’s three in the afternoon. He’s at work, but he’ll be home any minute.’
‘So you say.’
She’d known then that it wasn’t going to be easy after all. But she tried.
‘It’s nice to see you-’
‘Yes, I expect you’re fed up with all this.’
‘No, I’m not. This is my life. Look around you at all this food and wine. It’s for our wedding reception tomorrow.’
He shot her a sharp look.
‘So you’re not married? Good, then I’m in time.’
‘I’m having Luca’s baby, and I’m going to marry him,’ she said firmly. ‘Won’t you come to the wedding and drink our health, and be our friend?’
He looked down at her with an expression that might have been tenderness.
‘Darling, you’re living in a dream world. Trust me, I know what’s best for you. He’s deluded you.’
‘Dad-’
‘But I’m here to make it right. Just let me take care of you. Everything will be fine as soon as we’re home.’
‘This is my home.’
‘This-this hovel? You think I’m leaving you here? Stop arguing and come on.’
Abruptly he dropped the pretence of kindness, and seized her arm. She shrieked. Luca, approaching the house, heard her and rushed the rest of the way, flinging open the door to find them struggling.
‘Let her go,’ he roared.
‘Get out of my way,’ Frank snapped.
Luca stood there, barring the door. ‘I said let her go.’
Frank ignored him, trying to drag her towards the back door by sheer force. Becky struggled as hard as she could, but her size made it difficult.
With a curse Luca strode forward and placed one powerful hand on Frank’s arm.
‘Don’t dare touch her,’ he said, and there was the same menace in his eyes that she had seen before, when they had first met.
‘I’m taking her home,’ Frank repeated.
Luca’s voice was infused with contempt.
‘You are not only a bully but a deeply stupid man. Only a cretino would do this, knowing that he was threatening the well-being of the child she carries.’
Frank’s answer was to try again to drag Becky away. Luca did not move, but his hand, grasping the other man’s arm, was impossible to dislodge.
‘Luca, don’t let him take me,’ she begged.
That sent Frank over the edge, and he began to rant and rave. Luca said nothing, merely standing silent and immovable. Perhaps it was that quiet dignity that infuriated Frank most, for he shoved Becky aside to contend with Luca.
Then the nightmare started. Heaving with distress, Becky suddenly found the world retreating and returning alarmingly. Everything seemed to spin around, culminating in a feeling of knives searing through her.
She screamed and doubled over as agony engulfed her like a furnace. The sound got through to the two men, halting their fight, although even then Frank had to put himself centre stage. Her last clear sight was of him shouldering his way ahead of Luca to lean over her.
But it was Luca she wanted. She reached out, calling his name, but Frank was there, leaning close, grasping her tightly, imprisoning her, blocking out everything but himself.
‘Luca,’ she screamed. ‘Luca!’
But suddenly he vanished. She never saw him again.
An ambulance came to whisk her off to hospital. Her daughter was born quickly and died within a few hours.
When the physical pain ceased there was another pain waiting, in her mind. Fire turned to ice as a merciless darkness enclosed her. The only thing she knew for sure was that she called repeatedly for Luca, but he was never there.
How could he not be there? His daughter had been born, and had died without his ever holding her in his arms. He had promised to love and protect her, but he hadn’t been there when she needed him.
‘She was so little and helpless,’ she whispered into the void. ‘She needed her father.’
But he did not hear. The darkness had swallowed him up.
Scenes changed about her. Somehow she knew that she was back in England, and living in a new place, a large, pleasant house where there were people in white coats and everyone spoke in kindly voices.
Sometimes the voices were brisk and hearty. ‘How are we feeling today? A little better? That’s good.’
She never answered, but they didn’t seem to mind. They treated her like a doll, brushing her hair and talking about her as though she wasn’t there.
‘There’s no way of knowing how long she’ll be like this, Mr Solway. She has profound post-natal depression, aggravated by terrible inner wounds, and they need time to heal.’
She never reminded them that she was a living being with thoughts and feelings, because she no longer felt like one. It was easier this way because they didn’t expect her to respond, and the soul-deep exhaustion that possessed her made answering seem like climbing a mountain.
Often the words she heard were a meaningless jabber, but one day the world righted itself and she began to hear and see it normally. Frank was in the middle of one of his monologues, and the words made sense.
‘…Not easy coming back to England-wrong time of the financial year-left me with a hefty tax bill, but I said only the best was good enough for my girl. And this place is the best. Oh, yes, no skimping.’
‘Where is he? Where’s Luca? Why doesn’t he come to see me?’
‘Because he’s gone, for good. I bought him off.’
She turned her head slowly and stared at him with a look that made even that thick-skinned man flinch.
‘What do you mean?’ Even to her own ears her voice sounded dead and metallic.
‘I mean I bought him off. He demanded money to go away and never trouble you again.’
‘I-don’t-believe-you.’ The words came out like hammer taps.
‘Then I’ll prove it.’
His proof was a cheque for the euro equivalent of fifty thousand pounds, made out to Luca Montese, with the record, on the back, of the bank where it had been cashed.
She wanted to say that it was false, it proved nothing. But she knew the bank Luca used in Tuscany, and it was the same one.
Whether my life be long or short, every moment of it will be spent in your service.
How long after saying those words had he sold her back to her father for cash?
She had thought she was dead already, but there must still have been some feeling left alive, because she sensed the last remnants die at that moment. And was glad of it.
Everyone agreed that the meal was superb. The wine was a hundred-year-old vintage and the brandy even older.
Luca Montese had been the centre of attention from the start. As the guests entered, one by one, they were introduced to him-presented to him, Rebecca thought-in a way that left no doubt he was the guest of honour. But even without that he would have held attention by the magnetism that seemed to surround him like a force field.
His eyes were like flint. His smile was wolfish. He was a predator, coolly surveying the prey around him, counting them off in order of their importance to him. They all knew it, of course they did. And each of them was courting him.
Except herself.
‘Luca,’ Philip Steyne said jovially, ‘let me introduce you to one of my favourite people, Rebecca Hanley, who takes care of PR for the Allingham.’
‘Then Mrs Hanley is a most important person to me,’ Luca responded at once.
‘Good evening, Signor Montese,’ Rebecca replied coolly.
He felt different. The hand that engulfed hers was no longer the rough paw that had held her in passion and tenderness, and which she had loved. It was smooth and manicured, a rich man’s hand. A stranger’s.
She forced herself to meet his eyes, and found nothing there. No warmth, no alarm, no amazement, no recognition. Nothing.
Relief and disappointment warred, but neither won.
She disengaged her hand at once and murmured something about the pleasure of meeting him. There were people behind her, agog for an introduction, and they provided an excuse for her not to linger.
‘You might have been a bit more gracious,’ Danvers complained under his breath when he too had been introduced and passed on. ‘These self-made men can be so touchy if they think they’re being patronised.’
‘But you’re the one who’s patronising him,’ she pointed out.
‘What?’
‘The way you said “these self-made men” was deeply patronising. As though they’re all alike.’
‘They are, more or less. Full of themselves. Always wanting to tell you how they did it.’
Rebecca maintained a diplomatic silence. It would have been ill-natured to point out that Danvers had been born to money and therefore had nothing to tell.
She was getting her second wind. There had been the shock of meeting him without warning, but that was over now, and she could study him while he talked with somebody else.
She would hardly have known him. His height and breadth of shoulder were the same, but his hair, which had always been shaggy, tempting her to run her fingers through it, was cut back neat and short, revealing the lines of his face. The large nose with the hint of a hook was the one she knew, but the rest was strange.
‘A rough diamond,’ Philip Steyne murmured in her ear. ‘But very rich. And when you think that he came from nowhere, and started with nothing!’
‘Nobody really starts with nothing,’ Danvers observed. ‘Somehow, somewhere he got his hands on a lump sum of money to begin with. One can only speculate on what he had to do to get it.’
‘Perhaps he’ll tell you,’ Rebecca said sharply. ‘That’s what “self-made men” do, isn’t it?’
Danvers shared a grin with Steyne. ‘Maybe it’s best if we don’t know,’ he observed. ‘He looks as though he could be an ugly customer.’
Rebecca said no more. She knew what Luca had done to get his start.
She had last seen him penniless. Now he was so rich and powerful that one of the biggest merchant banks in the country put itself out for him.
That alone revealed part of the story. She had mixed with financiers long enough to know the kind of men who prospered in that atmosphere. Luca’s success told her that he had become everything he had once despised.
What his prosperity didn’t tell her, his face did. The open, generous candour that had made him lovable was gone. In its place was hardness, even ruthlessness, eyes that glinted with suspicion where once they had shone with joy. An ugly customer.
Her father had said, ‘He demanded money to go away and never trouble you again.’
Even after seeing the cheque she had sometimes repeated to herself that it couldn’t be true. If he had returned she would gladly have believed any explanation. But she never heard from him again, and at last she had stopped crying the words into the darkness.
Seeing him now, she knew that the worst was true. Luca had needed money, and he had sold their love to get it.
As they entered the dining room she braced herself, knowing that she would be sitting next to him.
The bait in the trap, she thought wearily. Oh, what does it matter?
He did everything correctly, like a man used to dining amid wealth. After making a few brief, meaningless observations to her, he paid courteous attention to the lady on his other side, who was his hostess.
So far, so good. Nothing to alarm her.
Then Philip Steyne said jovially, ‘Luca, in case you’re wondering why we sat you next to Rebecca, it’s because she speaks Italian, even Tuscan.’
‘That was very kind of you,’ Luca said. ‘So, signora,’ he turned his attention to Rebecca and slipped into Tuscan to say, ‘are we going to go all evening pretending not to know each other?’