looked helplessly at Maggie.
‘All right,’ Maggie sighed, recognising the inevitable. ‘I’ll come with you.’ She met Sebastian’s eyes. ‘I can always leave later.’
‘To be sure,’ he said ironically. ‘My bride will magically become strong-minded and responsible, won’t she?’
In the flurry of departure she didn’t need to answer this. Downstairs the paramedics eased Isabella gently inside the waiting ambulance. Sebastian followed, nodding towards a car just behind.
‘Follow us to the Santa Maria Infirmary,’ he said curtly. Maggie’s eyes widened at the name of the most expensive private hospital in London.
‘Of course,’ Catalina said, when they were seated side by side in the back of the chauffeur driven car. ‘Isabella is one of his family. He feels responsible for her.’
‘He must do if he’s gone in the ambulance,’ Maggie mused. ‘Most men would die, rather. But you should have gone, my dear.’
‘I hate sickness,’ Catalina wailed. She saw Maggie looking at her in exasperation and added shrewdly, ‘Besides, Sebastian is the one she wants. He makes her feel safe.’
‘Yes, I noticed.’
Maggie had been unwillingly impressed by the kindness and patience he had shown the old woman, and the way she had clung to him, as though to a rock. However overbearing Sebastian might be, he clearly took his patriarchal duties seriously.
At the Santa Maria Infirmary, doctors were waiting for Isabella. As they prepared to wheel her away she cried out to Sebastian. ‘No, no! You promised not to leave me.’
‘And he won’t,’ Maggie said at once, taking the old woman’s outstretched hand. ‘But he must stay out here a moment to give them your details, and I shall come with you. You and I are friends, aren’t we?’
Isabella gave a weak smile of assent, but her eyes rolled to Sebastian. At once he clasped her other hand.
‘Señora Cortez will be my deputy,’ he said. ‘Trust her as you do me, and it is as if I myself were by your side.’
Isabella gave a sigh and allowed herself to be wheeled into the cubicle. Now her eyes never left Maggie and it was clear she regarded the transfer of trust very seriously.
It took only a brief examination to confirm that Isabella had acute appendicitis, requiring an immediate operation. The word brought her terror rushing back.
‘Why are you so afraid?’ Maggie asked gently.
‘My husband, Antonio, had an operation in a hospital. And he died.’
‘When was that?’
‘Forty years ago.’
‘A lot of people died then who wouldn’t die now. You will recover, and be well again.’
She continued talking in this way, glad to see that the old woman was gradually relaxing. There was a shadow in the doorway and Sebastian looked in. He was smiling in a way that transformed him, and his manner to Isabella was almost teasing.
‘Not long now,’ he said to her. ‘And then all will be well.’
‘And I won’t die? You promise.’
‘You won’t die. Word of a Santiago.’
He leaned down and placed a gentle kiss on Isabella’s forehead. Her eyes remained on him as she was wheeled away, until she was out of sight.
‘I must stress the dangers of surgery on a lady of her age and weight,’ the surgeon explained. ‘But there is no choice.’
‘I take full responsibility,’ Sebastian said at once.
The doctor left. Almost to himself, Sebastian murmured, ‘I have given a promise I had no right to give.’
‘But there was nothing else you could do,’ Maggie said. ‘It was her only chance.’
‘True. But if she dies—when she trusted me—?’
‘She would have died if she had not trusted you,’ Maggie insisted. ‘You did the right thing.’
‘Thank you for saying that. I needed to know that someone—’ He stopped and looked at her with surprise, as though he’d only just realised what he was saying, and to whom. His face became reserved again, but he said, ‘I mean—that I must thank you for what you did for her. It was kind. You have the gift.’
He didn’t elaborate and she looked at him with a frown.
‘It is a gift that some have,’ he said quietly. ‘They calm fear and inspire trust.’
‘It seems that you have the gift yourself.’
‘It’s natural for her to trust the head of her family. She trusts you for yourself.’
Then he seemed to become embarrassed, and looked around for Catalina. They found her sitting in a corner, playing with a small child who was waiting with his mother.
‘I think I’d better be going,’ Maggie said.
‘No,’ Sebastian said at once. ‘Isabella will look for you when she comes round. You must stay here with us.’
Maggie was silent, confused. Despite their truce she still felt an instinctive need to get right away from him. While she hesitated he added gravely, ‘I would be grateful if you would oblige me.’
‘Very well. But only until I know Isabella is safe.’
He gave her a curt nod. ‘I shan’t ask you to endure my company longer than that.’
CHAPTER THREE
DESPITE the surgeon’s fears Isabella came through the operation well, and awoke in the early hours. The three who had waited for the news emerged into the dawn, tired and slightly disorientated. Sebastian hailed a cab and urged Maggie into it.
‘I should go home,’ she said, yawning.
‘Later. We have matters to discuss.’
In the short distance back to the hotel she slipped into a half doze. Through it she could just hear Catalina prattling away in a non-stop monologue, punctuated by Sebastian’s bored ‘Really?’, ‘Indeed!’ and ‘Quite!’
At the hotel he ordered breakfast to be sent up. While he made phone calls the two women went to Catalina’s room, where she stripped off and announced that she was going to have a bath. Maggie would have liked to do the same but she had to settle for borrowing one of Isabella’s ‘granny’ cardigans in a shade of deadly grey, which she slipped on over her bare shoulders.
When she returned to the sitting room, breakfast had arrived. Sebastian grimaced at the sight of her dowdy attire. ‘It suits Isabella better,’ he said wryly. ‘She is past being attractive to men.’
‘And I,’ Maggie retorted with spirit, ‘am indifferent to men.’
‘That is a lie and we both know it,’ he asserted calmly. ‘But this is neither the time nor the place to discuss that.’
‘Never and nowhere! That’s the time and place to discuss it.’
‘Sit down and eat. We have to decide what to do.’
‘We?’ Maggie enquired ironically.
He refused to rise to her bait. ‘Catalina and I will leave for Spain tomorrow. I need you to come with us and remain until the wedding.’
‘Certainly not!’ Maggie said without hesitation. ‘And leave Isabella alone here where she doesn’t know anyone? How can you be so inconsiderate?’
‘If you would allow me to finish,’ he said with some asperity, ‘I could tell you that while you were out of the room I arranged for her sister to fly