His Child: The Mistress's Child / Nathan's Child / D'Alessandro's Child. Catherine Spencer
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He watched her warm the pot and then make the tea. He had been lucky in a way, he guessed. She could have been the kind of mother who didn’t care—who saw Tim as a mistake who had taken away her youth and her freedom. But she had created a home for him, a warm and loving home, he realised.
She was right. You had only to look at the child to see that he was happy and contented and well cared for. Stimulated, too—to judge from his conversation.
‘Can I do anything?’ he asked.
She couldn’t resist it. ‘Better go back in and keep your eye on Tim,’ she said sweetly. ‘I can manage here.’
He nodded, and his gaze swept over her, beguiling her and capturing her in its intense green light. ‘And we’ll tell him?’
Lisi swallowed. She couldn’t keep putting it off. They couldn’t keep putting it off. ‘I have no choice, do I?’ she asked quietly, but noticed that he didn’t bother answering that—he didn’t need to—just turned away and walked back into the sitting room.
She carried the tea-tray through and brought in Christmas cake and mince pies and slices of Stollen.
Philip looked up as she began to unload it all onto the table and gave a rueful smile. ‘Not sure if I can eat again—at least until the New Year.’
She forced herself to be conversational. They were shortly to drop the biggest bombshell into Tim’s life—let him see that his mother and his father didn’t actually hate one another.
‘Did your mother feed you up?’
He nodded. ‘It’s my first Christmas here for years—in Maraban they don’t celebrate it.’
Tim looked up. ‘Where’s Malaban?’ he chirped.
‘Maraban,’ corrected Philip, and his eyes softened as he looked down at the interested face of his son. ‘It’s a country in the Middle East. A beautiful land with a great big desert—do you know what a desert is, Tim?’
He shook his dark head, mesmerised.
‘It’s made of sand—lots of sand—and only the very toughest of plants can grow there.’
‘What telse?’ asked Tim. ‘In Malaban?’
Philip smiled. ‘Oh, there are fig trees and wild walnut trees, and the mountain slopes are covered in forests of juniper and pistachio trees—’
‘What’s st-stachio tree?’ piped up Tim. ‘Like an apple tree?’
Philip shook his head. ‘Not really. A pistachio is a nut,’ he explained. ‘A delicious pale green nut in a little shell—’
‘He’s too young for nuts!’ put in Lisi immediately.
He guessed that he deserved that, and nodded. ‘Oh, and there are lots of animals there, too,’ he said. ‘Jackals and wild boar and rare, pink deer.’
Tim’s eyes were like saucers, thought Lisi. He probably thought that Philip was concocting a wonderful fairy-tale land, and, come to think of it, that was exactly what it sounded like.
‘Do you live there?’ asked Tim.
‘I did. But not any more.’
‘Why?’
‘Because it was time for me to come back to England.’
‘Why?’
‘Tim—’ began Lisi, but Philip shook his head.
‘I used to work for a prince.’
Lisi looked at Tim—now he really did think that this was a story!
‘A real prince?’
‘Uh-huh. Prince Khalim. Only the prince got married and so it was time for me to move on.’
Tim nodded solemnly. ‘Will you play trains with me?’
He met her eyes across the room. Now, they urged her, and Lisi knew that she must begin this particular story. She took time pouring tea, and gave Tim a beaker of juice, and then she went to sit down on the floor next to both of them and cleared her throat.
‘Tim, darling?’
A train was chugged along the track by a small, chubby finger.
‘Tim? Look at Mummy, darling.’
His long-lashed eyes locked on hers and she felt the almost painfully overwhelming love of motherhood. She steadied her breathing. ‘Do you remember that once you asked me why you hadn’t got a daddy?’
Philip stilled as Tim nodded.
‘And I told you that he had gone away a long time ago and that I wasn’t sure if he was ever coming back?’
Again Tim nodded, but this time Philip flinched.
‘Well…’ She hesitated, but in her heart she knew that there was no way to say this other than using clear and truthful words which a three-year-old would understand. ‘Well, he did come back, darling and…’
Tim was staring up at Philip. ‘Are you my daddy?’
He felt the prick of tears at the back of his eyes as he nodded. ‘Yes, Tim,’ he answered, his voice thickening. ‘I am.’
Tim nodded, and bent his head to push the train around the track once more.
‘Tim?’ questioned Lisi tentatively, because she couldn’t see the expression on his face, and when he lifted it it was unusually calm and accepting, as if he were told things like this every day of the week.
‘An’ are you going ’way again? To Malaban?’ he asked casually, as if it didn’t really matter, but Lisi could tell from that oddly fierce look of concentration on his little face that it did.
Philip shook his head, unable to speak for a moment. ‘No, Tim,’ he said eventually. ‘I’m not going anywhere. I’m going to buy a house in the village and see you as many weekends as your mummy will let me.’
He met her gaze with a question in his eyes.
So if I don’t let him, then I’m the big, bad witch, she thought bitterly.
‘An’ are you and Mummy getting married?’
The silence which greeted this remark made Lisi as uncomfortable as she had ever felt in her life. She shook her head. ‘Oh, no, darling—nothing like that!’