His scandalised tone made her smile briefly.

‘Yes, I’m afraid it is instant,’ she said. ‘I realise that to an Italian that’s a kind of blasphemy.’

‘You’re a quarter-Italian,’ he said severely. ‘Your grandmother’s spirit should rise up and reproach you.’

‘She does, but she gets drowned out by the rest of me. I don’t keep all my food in here. Fresh vegetables are stored outside, where it’s cooler.’

He remembered that outside, attached to the wall, was a small cupboard, made of brick, except for the wooden door. This too had been scrubbed out, and fresh newspaper laid on the shelves, where there was an array of vegetables.

‘No meat?’ he asked.

‘I’d have to keep going into the village to buy it fresh.’

He grunted something, and went back inside.

She poured him another cup of tea, which he drank appreciatively.

‘This is good,’ he said. ‘And it doesn’t taste of soot. Whenever I’ve been here and made coffee, I’ve always ended up regretting it.’

‘Have you returned very often?’ she asked.

‘Now and then. I come back and cut the weeds, but they’ve always grown again by the next time.’

‘I wonder why you haven’t rebuilt it.’

He made a vague gesture. ‘I kept meaning to.’

‘Why did you come here today?’

He shrugged. ‘I was in the area. I didn’t know you were here, if that’s what you mean.’

It would have been natural, then, to ask her why she’d taken refuge in this spot, when there were so many more comfortable places, but for some reason he was overcome with awkwardness, and concentrated on his tea.

‘You’ve done wonders here,’ he said at last, ‘but it’s still very rough. If anything happened, who could help you?’

She shrugged. ‘I’m content.’

‘Just the same, I don’t like you being here alone. It’s better if you…’

He stopped. She was looking at him, and he had the dismaying sense that her face had closed against him. It was like moving through a nightmare. He had been here before.

‘I’m only concerned for you,’ he said abruptly.

‘Thank you, but there’s no need,’ she said politely. ‘Luca, do you want me to leave? I realise that it’s your house.’

He shot her a look of reproach.

‘You know you don’t have to ask me that,’ he said. ‘It’s yours for as long as you want.’

‘Thank you.’

He walked outside and strode around to where the bike and trailer were parked.

‘Is that thing of real use?’ he demanded.

‘Oh, yes, if I persevere.’ She smiled unexpectedly. ‘And I couldn’t bring the wood for the range up in a car.’

‘You’ll be needing some more soon,’ he observed, looking at the small pile by the wall. Then he said hastily, ‘I’ll be going now. Goodbye.’

He walked away and got into his car without another word. A brief gesture of farewell, and he was gone. Rebecca stood watching him until the car had vanished.

CHAPTER NINE

SHE tried to sort out her feelings. It had been a shock to see Luca, even though the sound of his voice, calling from outside the cottage, had half prepared her. He had looked nothing like she’d expected. He was thinner, and instead of anger there had been confusion in his eyes. It had been hard, at that moment, to remember that they were enemies.

And, after all, what was there to say? They were civilised people. She could not have said ‘You used me, deceived me, and tried to trick me into having your child’. And he could not have said ‘You made a fool of me with a pretence of love that was really a display of power’.

They could not have said these things, but the words had been there between them, in the stunned silence.

Their meeting had been less of a strain than it might have been. He had asked no awkward or intrusive questions, and, except for one moment, had not disturbed her tranquillity.

She told herself that she was glad to see him go, but the cottage looked lonely without him. It was his personality, of course, so big that it filled the place and left an emptiness when he departed. When he had been gone for a while the sensation would cease.

She shivered a little and pulled her jacket around her. The weather had cooled rapidly and the place was rather less snug than she had claimed. The last few evenings she had stayed up late because the kitchen, with the range, was the only warm room in the house. She had tried leaving the door to the bedroom open, but the heat went straight through the open roof.

She began to prepare some vegetables for her evening meal. When she’d finished she realised that she was running low on water, and took a jug out into the yard, to the pump. She hated this part because the pump was old and stiff, and needed all her strength. But the water it gave was sweet and pure.

She was just about to press down on the handle when she saw that a car was approaching in the distance. After a moment she realised that it was Luca, returning.

Setting down the jug, she watched as the car came up the track until it reached the cottage. Luca got out, nodded to her briefly, and began hauling something from the back seat that he then carried into the cottage. Following, Rebecca saw him go right through to the bedroom, and dump a load of parcels on the bed.

He seemed to have raided the village for sheets, blankets and pillows.

‘I shall only be here a moment and then I’m going,’ he said brusquely before she could speak.

He headed back to the car at once, delving inside again and emerging with a cardboard box, which he brought in and set on the table. This time the contents were food, fresh vegetables but also tins.

‘Luca-’

‘That’s it,’ he said, and hurried through the front door.

But instead of getting into the car he went to the pump and began to work it vigorously, making the water pour out into the jug.

‘One jug won’t last long,’ he said tersely. ‘Better fetch any other container you’ve got.’

She fetched two more jugs and when he had filled those too he carried them inside.

‘Luca-’

‘I just don’t want you on my conscience,’ he said hurriedly. Then, as she opened her mouth, with a touch of desperation, ‘Be quiet!’

Silence.

‘Can I say thank you?’ she asked at last.

‘No need,’ he snapped and walked out before she had time to say more.

Through the car window he grunted something that might have been a goodbye, and in another moment she could see his tail lights growing smaller. Then he was gone altogether.

In the bedroom she began to go through the pile of bed linen and realised that there was enough here to ward off the night chills. None of it was very expensive, nothing to overwhelm her, just the gift of a thoughtful friend, if she wanted to take it that way.

But then she remembered the box of food, and something made her hurry back to the kitchen to begin turning it out and examining the contents.

When she did not find what she was looking for her search became feverish, though whether she was trying to prove him better or worse than her suspicions she could not have said.

There were several cartons of fresh milk, for which she was genuinely thankful, tea, a box of shortbread biscuits, fresh bread, butter, ham, eggs and several tins of fruit. And two large, juicy steaks.

But no sugar.

No real, fresh coffee.

Either of those things would have told her that he intended to return. Their absence left her not knowing what to think.

She cooked one of the steaks that evening, and ate it with bread and butter, washed down with a large mug of tea.

She made up the bed, not sorry to exchange the rough sheets for the smooth new ones and pile on the blankets, although she replaced the brightly coloured quilt on top.

Before retiring she treated herself to fresh tea and shortbread, then slipped blissfully between the sheets. She had expected to lie awake for a long time, puzzling about Luca’s sudden appearance, but she fell asleep almost at once, and slept soundly for eight hours.

In the morning she felt more refreshed than she had for months. She had been planning to go into the village to stock up, but Luca’s gift had made this unnecessary. She could keep her privacy a little longer, and spend today enjoying her favourite occupation, reading one of the books she had brought with her.

She wondered if she ought to do some thorough housework first, in case he returned. She didn’t want him to feel that she was neglecting his property.

So she cleared everything away, swept the floor and did a thorough dusting. But still she did not hear his car approaching, and the house began to feel very quiet.

There was a patch of grass in the garden that caught the sun well, and where she could place her chair and read to her heart’s content. It also had the advantage that she could not see the track up which he would come, if he came.

It was as well to be free of that kind of temptation, so she chose this spot. After a while, she moved.

When she did finally see a vehicle it was not Luca’s expensive car, but an old van that lurched drunkenly along the rough track, until it came to a standstill just outside the gap in the fence that served as a gate. Luca’s head appeared through the cab window.

‘Have I got room?’ he yelled to her.

She studied the gap. ‘I don’t think so.’

He jumped down and came to see for himself.

‘No, it’s too narrow by six inches. OK, I’ll put that right.’

He went to the back of the van and returned with a large hammer, which he swung at the wood until it gave way. He was dressed in jeans and a shirt, and looked like a different man from the one she had known recently.

One hefty kick completed the demolition of the wood, enabling him to bring the van further in and halt near the front door. He jumped down and looked up into the sky, then at his watch.