A Stormy Spanish Summer

Free A Stormy Spanish Summer by Penny Jordan

Book: A Stormy Spanish Summer by Penny Jordan Read Free Book Online
Authors: Penny Jordan
Thankfully there was no sign of Vidal, and the library door remained firmly closed. She asked the maid how best she could get into the courtyard, thanking her whenshe explained that a corridor accessed from the rear of the hallway had a set of doors that opened into it.
    While she was out she’d taken the opportunity to go shopping and buy some clothes to supplement those she had brought with her. Now that she was staying with the Salvetore family, rather than the hotel she’d booked, she realised she would need some more. After trying on a variety of things she had settled on a loosely gathered cotton dress in her favourite shade of cream, because it felt so light and cool, adding a simple linen shift in pale blue, a pair of tan cut-offs and a couple of softly shaped tops—cool, practical, easy-to-wear clothes in which she would feel much more comfortable than jeans and her city skirt.
    In her bedroom, after a quick shower, she put on the cream dress. Simply styled, it was tiered in pleats from a square neckline banded with crunchy cotton lace. Worn with the flip-flops she had brought with her, the dress felt pleasantly cool and airy.
    Back downstairs, she quickly found the corridor the maid had described to her, and the doors from it that led into the cloistered walkway that she could now see ran the full width of the courtyard. As she came out of the darkness of the corridor into the brightness of the sunlight beyond, momentarily dazzled by the light, Fliss came to an abrupt and self-conscious halt. She realised that she hadn’t got the courtyard to herself.
    The woman she could see seated at an ornate wrought-iron table, drinking a cup of coffee, had to be Vidal’s mother. They had the same eyes—although in Vidal’smother’s case their gaze was warm and gentle rather than cold and filled with contempt.
    ‘You are Annabel’s daughter, of course,’ the Duchess said, before Fliss could retreat, adding, ‘You are very like her. But I think you have something of your father’s blood as well. I can see it in your expression. Please—come and sit here beside me,’ she invited, patting the empty chair next to her own.
    Hesitantly Fliss made her way towards her.
    Tall and slender, her dark hair streaked with grey and worn in the kind of elegant, formal style that suited Spanish women so well, Vidal’s mother smiled at her and apologised. ‘I’m sorry I wasn’t able to be here to welcome you yesterday. Vidal will have explained that I have a dear friend who is not very well.’
    A small shadow darkened her eyes, causing Fliss to enquire politely, ‘I hope your friend is feeling better?’
    ‘She is very brave. She has Parkinson’s disease, but she makes light of it. We were at school together and have known one another all our lives. Vidal tells me that he is taking you tomorrow to see your father’s house? I would have liked to go with you, but my friend’s husband was called away unexpectedly on urgent business and I have promised to keep her company until he returns.’
    ‘It’s all right. I mean, I understand …’ Fliss told her truthfully. She stopped talking when she realised that the Duchess was looking past her into the shadows of the house, her smile deepening as she exclaimed, ‘Ah, Vidal, there you are! I was just saying to Fliss how sorry I am that I shan’t be able to accompany you to the
castillo.’
    Vidal.
    Why was that quiver of sensation racing down her spine? Why did she suddenly feel so aware of her own body and its reactions, its womanhood and its sensuality? She must stop reacting like this. She must ignore these unwanted feelings instead of focusing on them.
    ‘I’m sure Felicity understands why, Mamá. How is Cecilia?’
    Immediately she registered Vidal’s voice. Fliss’s heart went into a flurry of small frantic beats that made her feel more breathless than she liked. It was because she hated him so much, she assured herself. Because she hated him for betraying her

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