Read His Forbidden Bride Online
Authors: Sara Craven
She was wearing a thin, floating sundress, sleeveless and scoop-necked, in
gentian-blue, over a matching bikini, and her hair was piled up in a loose
knot on top of her head.
She rounded a steep bend in the track, and saw, beyond the shelter of the
olive grove, the more vivid green of grass and colourful splashes of flowers.
Not the desolate wilderness she'd half expected. And a little further on, set
like a jewel in the, encircling garden, was the house, all immaculate white
wal s and terracotta roof.
Zoe paused, her hand tightening unconsciously round the strap of her bag.
Immediately in front of her was the turquoise gleam of a swimming pool,
from which a flight of broad, shal ow steps led up to sliding glass doors.
Behind these was a low, pil ared room like an atrium, cool with marble and
towering green plants, and furnished with comfortable white chairs and
loungers.
Trying not to feel too much like an intruder, Zoe skirted the pool, climbed the
steps and tried the doors, but they were securely locked.
It's like looking into a showcase, she thought as she walked on. You can
admire, but not touch.
And halted abruptly, her heart jolting as she reached the foot of another
flight of steps, so immediately familiar she could have climbed them in her
sleep. Pale steps, she recognised breathlessly, dusty with the faded
blossoms of the bougainvil ea that cascaded down the side of the house.
Steps that led up to a terrace, its balustrade supporting a large stone urn,
heavy with clustering flowers. As she'd known there would be. And beyond
that the dreamy azure of the sea.
She steadied herself, then, quietly and cautiously, she climbed up to the
terrace. She found herself standing on a broad sweep of creamy marble that
ran the entire length of the house. Stone troughs massed with more flowers
marked the length of the waist-high balustrade, while below it, from a gated
opening, another curved flight of steps led down through cypress trees
standing like sentries to a perfect horseshoe of pale sand, and the vivid blue
ripple of the sea.
Behind her, shuttered glass doors masked the ground floor rooms
completely. But what had she expected? The place laid open for her
inspection, and a welcome mat waiting?
I should have gone to see a lawyer, she told herself restively, walking along
the terrace. Had the whole legal situation checked out. Approaches made.
She found the main entrance round the corner, a solid wooden door, heavily
carved, and growing beside it, in festoons of blooms that softened the dark
wood and white wal s, an exquisite climbing rose, its petals shading from
creamy yel ow to deep gold.
Zoe found herself thinking of the shower of radiance in which Zeus had
come to Danaë in the legend, then told herself she was being fanciful.
Whoever had planted the garden had simply loved roses, that was al . The
troughs and urns along the terrace had been fragrant with them, and she
could see even more in the beds that bordered the lawn. And sexual
predators in Greek mythology had nothing to do with it.
Without knowing why, she stretched out a hand and touched one of the
heavy golden heads, almost as if it were a lucky charm. Then she reached
for the heavy iron door handle and tried it.
To her amazement, it yielded, and the door opened silently on wel -oiled
hinges. The Vil a Danaë was welcoming her, after al .
She stepped inside and closed the door behind her, standing for a moment,
listening intently for a footfal , a door closing, a cough. The sound of a
human presence to explain the unlocked door. But there was nothing.
She found herself in a wide hal , confronted by a sweep of staircase leading
up to a gal eried landing. On one side of it was the glass wal of the atrium.
On the other were more conventional doors leading to a long living room,
where chairs and sofas were grouped round an empty fire-place. A deep
alcove at the far end of the room contained a dining table and chairs.
Everything was in pristine condition. No one had ever lounged on those
cushions, she thought, or lit a fire in that hearth, or eaten a meal at the table.
On the atrium side, she found a tiled and fully fitted kitchen, with a walk-in
food store, and a laundry room leading off it, al of them bare as if they'd
been somehow frozen in time, and were waiting for the spel to be broken.
Taking a deep breath, Zoe went upstairs, annoyed to find she was tiptoeing.
The first room she came to was the master bedroom, dim and cool behind
its shutters. She trod across the floor, unlatched the heavy wooden slats and
pulled them open, then turned, catching her breath.
It was a vast and luxurious room, with apricot walls and an ivory tiled floor.
The silk bed covering was ivory, too, as were the voile drapes that hung at
the windows.
There was a bathroom with a screened-off shower cubicle, and a sunken
bath with taps like smiling dolphins, and a dressing room as wel . There
were toiletries on the tiled surfaces, and fluffy towels on the rails. Everything
in its place—an enchanted palace waiting for its princess. But for how long?
Zoe walked slowly back to the window, and slid it open with care, then
stepped out onto the balcony, lifting her face to the slight breeze. Before her
were the misty shapes of other islands rising put of the unruffled blue of the
Ionian sea.
More roses here, too, she saw, spil ing over the balcony rail from their
pottery tubs in a cascade of cream and gold. Their scent reached her softly,
and she breathed it in, feeling herself become part of the enchantment.
She thought, Can this real y be mine?
And in the same heartbeat, realised she was not alone after all. That there
was someone below her on the terrace.
She froze, then peered with infinite caution over the balcony rail.
A man, she registered, with his back to her, moving unhurriedly along the
terrace, removing the dead heads from the blossoms in the stone troughs.
The gardener, she thought with relief. Only the gardener. One of the support
team employed to keep Vil a Danaë in this immaculate condition.
He was tal , with a mane of curling black hair that gleamed like silk in the
sunlight, his skin like burnished bronze against the brief pair of elderly white
shorts that were al he was wearing. She saw broad shoulders, and a
muscular back, narrowing to lean hips, and long, sinewy legs.
The kind of Adonis, she thought, with a faint catch of the breath, that Adele
had warned her about.
Of course, she could only see his back view, so he might wel have a squint,
a crooked nose, and dribble. But somehow she didn't think so.
And anyway, his looks were not her concern. What she needed to do was
get out of here before he looked up and saw her.
With infinite caution, she backed away into the room. She dragged at the
windows, tugging them together. They came with a whisper, but, to Zoe's
overwrought imagination, it seemed like a rumble of thunder in the stillness
of the morning. She waited for a shout from below. The sound of an alarm
being given, but there was nothing, and, biting her lip, she closed the
shutters, too. So far, so good, she thought with a tiny sigh of relief.
His work seemed to be taking him to the far end of the terrace, away from
the main door, so if she was quick she could be out of the vil a and back into
the shelter of the olive grove before she ran any real risk of discovery.
And she would content herself with just this one visit, she promised herself
silently as she let herself out of the bedroom and closed the door quietly
behind her. After all, she had seen everything she needed to see.
From now on she would stick firmly to the town beach, and let her lawyer
investigate whether or not the Vil a Danaë was her inheritance.
Wel , she thought, smiling. I can dream, I suppose.
She had taken three steps down the stairs before she realised she was not
alone. And just who was standing at the bottom of the flight, leaning casual y
on the polished rail, watching her—waiting for her, a faint grim smile playing
round his mouth:
She checked with a gasp, turned to stone at the sight of him. Her instinct
was to turn and run back the way she'd come, but common sense prevented
her. This staircase was the only way out, and the last thing she wanted was
to find herself trapped in a bedroom with this half-naked stranger in pursuit.
She was frightened, but at the same time—incredibly— her senses were
registering other things. Tel ing her that the man confronting her with such
cool arrogance was as seriously attractive as her instinct had suggested.
Not conventional y handsome, maybe. His high-bridged nose was too thin,
and his mouth and chin too hard for that: And his eyes were darkness.
Meeting his gaze was like staring into impenetrable night, she thought,
tension tautening her throat.
But, at the same time, she knew instinctively that there wasn't a woman in
the world who would take one glance and not want to look again—and
again. Because he was totally and compel ingly male.
He said quietly, '
Kalimera
.'
Maybe, she thought breathlessly. Maybe there was a way she could bluff her
way out of this.
She spread her hands. Tried an apologetic laugh. 'I'm sorry—I don't
understand. I don't speak Greek.'
He shrugged. 'Then we will speak in English. It's not a problem,' he added
drily as her face fel . 'Tel me what you are doing here.'
She said swiftly, 'I'm not a thief.'
'No,' he agreed thoughtfully. 'Because there is nothing here that you could
conveniently steal.' The dark glance swept her, assessing the flimsy blue
dress, the canvas beach bag. 'Or hide,' he added.
He looked her over again, more searchingly. 'So, I ask again—what is your
reason for being here?'
'Someone mentioned there was a house for sale round here,' Zoe
improvised swiftly. 'I thought it might be this one, as it's obviously empty.'
'No,' he said. 'It is not this house.' He paused, his gaze steady and ironic.
'And no one would have told you that it was.' His voice was low-pitched but
crisp.
'You don't think the owner might have put it on the market and not told you?'
she parried.
'No,' he said. 'That would not happen either.'
'Wel , it's still a fabulous house.' Zoe lifted her chin. 'Maybe the owner would
be prepared to rent it out.'
His brows rose. 'You have nowhere to stay?'
'Yes,' she said. 'Of course I have. But this is such a lovely island. Perhaps I
could come back—stay longer.'
'You arrived—when?' His mouth twisted. 'Yesterday?'
'It doesn't take long,' she said 'To find something— beautiful. And decide
you want more.'
The dark eyes looked her up and down again with mockery in their
depths—and something infinitely more disturbing. 'Wel , we agree on
something at least,' he drawled, and laughed as the sudden colour drenched
her skin.
She was suddenly stingingly aware of al that tanned bare skin, so
negligently displayed, and also how little she herself was wearing. And how
this had not escaped him for a minute.
She wished with al her heart that she were sitting at her table under the vine
leaves, finishing breakfast, and contemplating nothing more risky than a day
on the town beach.
Because she was in danger. Every nerve in her body was tel ing her so.
Just let me get out of here, relatively unscathed, she prayed silently and
wildly.
'Now let me tel you how I see the situation,' he went on, almost casual y. 'I
think you are staying at the Hotel Stavros. That Stavros' wife has told you
the cove that belongs to the house is good to bathe from, and that she
comes here herself—not often but enough, and thinks that no one knows.
And that once here, because you are a woman, you could not control your
curiosity. So, you found an open door, and came in.'
She hated herself for blushing. Hated him more for having made her do it.
She said coldly, 'You're right, up to a point. But I was intrigued to hear the
house was empty, because I might actual y be interested in—acquiring it.
'And I have told you,' he said. 'It is not for sale.'
'Really?' She shrugged a shoulder. 'Wel , that's not something I choose to
discuss with the hired help.' She paused to al ow that to sink in, and was
annoyed to see his smile widen. 'Is the owner on Thania at present?'
'No,' he said. 'Athens.'
She wanted to say, That's what you think, and wave the deed of gift in his
face, yet caution prevailed.
But, there will come a time, she promised herself. And anticipation wil make
it al the sweeter. Because the first Greek phrase I shal learn is 'You're
fired'.
She al owed herself a slight frown. Regaining lost ground, she told herself.
Deliberately establishing a formal distance between them. Someone with
business to transact dealing with a minor member of staff. That was how to
handle things.
'That's a pity,' she said. 'But I suppose there's someone on the island who
can tel me how I could contact him.'