Authors: Sara Craven,Chieko Hara
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
hospitality. There will be no more such misunderstandings,' he added
grimly, and she knew that he was not merely referring to the room she
had been given.
A brief formal 'goodnight' and the door closed behind him. Harriet
sank down on the edge of the bed, trying to catch her thoughts and
bring them together into some kind of coherent pattern.
She was still shaking in the aftermath of that confrontation beside the
swimming pool, her body tingling in expectation of a consummation
which would not be realised. She closed her eyes, trying to shutter the
memory of the way Alex's mouth had moved against her breasts, the
expert feather-light caresses which had brought undreamed of needs
into shattering life.
She shivered, running the tip of her tongue over suddenly dry lips.
Alex had spoken of misunderstandings—had admitted he had
believed she had deliberately followed him to the swimming pool, but
could she really blame him for his cynical attempt to exploit the
situation? Her denials had been feeble enough in all conscience—and
what had she done to fight him off— to convince him that he was
quite wrong in his assessment?
Nothing at all, she thought wearily. On the contrary, she had fallen
with passionate eagerness into his arms, behaved without pride or
self-control—and that was what he would finally remember—not her
denials, but the shaming truth of her surrender.
And his own admission that he had momentarily forgotten the reason
for her being here on Corfu brought her no comfort either.
Because when Alex touched her, when Alex kissed her, it was all too
fatally easy to forget why she was here, to forget all the reasons she
had to hate him.
But for her own safety, her own peace of mind, those were the things
she had to remember.
Just for a moment, when she woke the next morning, she thought she
was still dreaming, and that if she closed her eyes again these
brilliantly alien surroundings would shrink and compress themselves
into her bedsitter in London.
But when she looked again, shafts of bright sunshine were still
spilling across the tiled floor from between the shutters, and the huge
bed still held her in its luxurious embrace.
Harriet sat up slowly, pushing the tumbled hair out of her eyes as the
events of the previous night came scrambling back into her mind. An
alarmed glance at her watch showed her that it was almost ten
o'clock, and rather hesitantly, remembering Alex's instructions, she
pressed the bell on the console which would order breakfast.
She climbed off the bed, and picking up her toilet bag wandered
towards the bathroom, taking in with amazed appreciation the dark
vivid blue of the tiles and appointments, the mirrored walls, and the
deep sunken bath. 'Real colour supplement stuff, she thought, amused
by the reflections of half a dozen Harriets all vigorously cleaning
their teeth.
The notion of using a bath the size of a small swimming pool was an
intriguing one too, and she smiled as she began to look in the
cupboards for bath oil.
There were certainly plenty of toiletries to choose from, she
discovered, but all of them had a distinctly masculine orientation.
With growing puzzlement, she searched through the remaining
cupboards, finding cologne, aftershave, brushes and razors. She
slammed the last door, and stood looking round her with a sudden
chill of awareness. Up to then, she hadn't noticed the black silk robe
hanging on the back of the door, but she sdw it now, and she stared at
it frowningly, her mind trying to reject the obvious conclusion.
She dismissed the idea of having a bath and walked back into the
bedroom.
This was Alex's room, she thought. It had to be. It was the only
answer.
There was another door adjoining that of the bathroom, and she
opened it and looked in. It was a dressing room, its walls lined with
fitted closets. She tugged open the nearest door, registering with
almost ludicrous dismay the row of expensive suits it contained.
There was a brief knock at the bedroom door, and a young maid
entered carrying a tray. As she saw Harriet, her eyes grew round, and
her jaw dropped. It was obvious she believed the breakfast she had
brought was for the master of the house, and not for some female
guest, and Harriet felt a wave of reluctant colour rise in her face.
Her gaze primly averted, as if she was afraid that at any moment Alex
Marcos himself might appear and confirm her worst suspicions, the
girl carried the tray across the room and set it down on a convenient
table for.a moment while she unfastened the shutters and slid back the
big glass doors which gave access to the balcony. Then she carried
the tray through into the sunlight and set it down somewhere out of
sight.
Harriet knew a burning desire to beat a strategic retreat into the
bathroom in order to avoid the girl's knowing look on her return
journey, but a small interior voice told her that she owed it to herself
to stand her ground. After all, it wasn't true, she thought defensively.
Nothing had happened. And yet—and yet no one who had chanced to
witness their encounter by the swimming pool would ever believe it,
she realised with sudden embarrassment.
The maid reappeared, her eyes flickering momentarily
to
the tumbled
width of the huge bed. Harriet's teeth sank into the soft inner flesh of
her lower lip, but she managed with an effort to say, 'Thank you.'
'Parakalo,'
the girl returned almost indifferently, and was gone.
Harriet found herself wondering how many times Alex Marcos had
been found with a female companion when his breakfast tray had
been summoned. The maid had clearly been surprised at first, but the
reason for that wasn't far to seek, Harriet decided ruefully as she
glimpsed her reflection in a full- length mirror facing her. She looked
ruffled and absurdly young, and not in the least like a
femme fatale
while her choice of nightwear, although quite pretty, was practical
and discreet, rather than glamorous. For a moment, her brows met m a
frown of unconscious dissatisfaction, and she lifted her heavy fall of
hair on to the top of her head, twisting it into one of the casual knots
which she so much admired on other girls but which never seemed to
work with her. It didn't really work this time either, she thought with a
little sigh. It made her look slightly older, but that was only an
illusion. She would never possess the true sophistication that
someone like Alex Marcos would look for in a woman.
For a moment she allowed fantasy to run riot, pretending that he was
there with her, taking imaginary pins and combs from her hair, and
letting it spill softly on her shoulders. She shivered involuntarily,
remembering the way his hands had held her, his fingers subtly
caressing, arousing, tantalising. ...
Harriet took a deep uneven breath. That was something she could not
afford to remember. To remind herself that Alex Marcos was an
experienced man who knew exactly how to make a woman's body
respond to him was to do herself a deliberate hurt.
She turned away from the mirror and walked out into the sunshine.
The tiles were already warm under her feet as she made her way
across to a thickly cushioned wicker chair. She wasn't particularly
hungry, but the breakfast awaiting her looked delectable enough to
tempt anyone, she thought with unwilling appreciation, eyeing the
bread rolls still warm from the oven wrapped in a snowy napkin, with
their accompanying curls of creamy butter and assortment of
preserves. Freshly squeezed orange juice to begin with too, and to
round the meal off, a small wicker basket of huge golden peaches.
Later, as she licked peach juice from her fingers, she realised that she
had had more appetite than she thought. All her life, she decided, she
would remember this first breakfast on Corfu. Alex's room was
situated at the back of the villa and the balcony looked out over the
gardens to the sea. The view was incredible. Somewhere there had to
be a horizon, but it was impossible to tell where, she thought," as sky
and sea blurred together in a distant fusion of exquisite misty blue,
while, nearer, the short the gentle swell of the water formed an
amalgam of colours from jade to azure, and from turquoise to
amethyst.
Beneath the balcony, hidden in the riot of flowering shrubs and trees,
the cicadas were already raspingly busy, and behind Harriet's head a
bee worked with a kind of drowsy industry in the tangle of
bougainvillea which clung to the bright wall and draped its brilliant
blossom over the balcony rail. The air was full of scents—citrus,
roses and warm earth vying with each other.
And this would be Nicky's home, Harriet thought with a pang that she
was not ashamed to recognise as envy. This was the beauty which
would surround him as he grew up. No more battles with the many
uglinesses of city life for him! And now could Kostas, who had
presumably been brought up here himself, have abandoned it with
such readiness, settling instead for the very ordinary suburban house
he had shared with Becca, and the vicissitudes of the English climate?
Harriet found herself speculating once again on the nature of the rift
which had separated her brother-in- law from his family, and left such
an incomprehensible residue of bitterness, some of which was bound
to spill over towards her. That' of course was why she had been given
that cupboard of a room. It was a deliberate slight designed to make it
plain to her how little she was regarded or wanted. But she couldn't
pretend that she had not been warned.
Harriet sighed. This corner of Corfu was paradise, but every paradise
had its secret serpent, hiding in the grass, waiting for an opportunity
to turn everything sour, to pervert and destroy.
Alex said, 'You look very serious, Harriet
mou.
What are you
thinking?'
She twisted hastily on the cushions. He was lounging against the
window opening, casually dressed this morning, she noticed, in pale
linen slacks and a dark short-sleeved sports shirt unfastened almost to
the waist.
He said smoothly, 'I came and helped myself to some clothes earlier.
You were asleep, so I was unable to ask your permission. I hope you
passed a comfortable night.'
'Oh, extremely comfortable.' Her tone was ironic. 'That of course was
before I realised that I was sleeping in your bed.'
His mouth still smiled, but his eyes hardened. 'Are you afraid you
have been contaminated in some way? Allow me to reassure you. The
room may have been prepared for me, but I've only used it to shower
and change jny clothes.'
'That isn't what I meant,' she said hurriedly. 'I'm objecting to the fact
that you gave the room to me. It wasn't necessary.'
'You think not? I am afraid I must disagree with you,' he said coolly.
'What I mean is—there must surely be other rooms. By putting me in
here, you've placed me in a very difficult position. I—I don't know
what your staff— your family will think.'
'They already know exactly what to think, because I have made the
position more than clear to them.' His glance was almost
contemptuous. 'And—yes, of course there are other rooms, but none
of them were prepared last night as this was. Or did you wish me to
wake Androula and the maids in the middle of the night to make an
alternative ready for you? Finding us together at that hour,
dressed—or rather undressed as we were— might have begun exactly
the kind of speculation you seem so anxious to avoid.'
'Yes, I see that,' Harriet said reluctantly, beginning to wish she had
said nothing.
'I hope you do,' Alex returned sardonically. 'If it will placate your fear
of scandal, perhaps I should say that your new room should now be
ready, and I will call Androula to conduct you there.'
He was making her sound like a prude and an idiot, she realised with
exasperation. However real her embarrassment had seemed to her, it
was clearly foolish to him. But it was impossible for her to try and
explain the reasoning behind her objection in case unwittingly she
gave too much away.
Avoiding his glance, she said stiltedly, 'I'm sorry— but the
maid—she clearly thought ... I mean, it was obvious it wasn't the first
time. . . .' She halted in total confusion.
'Not the first time I have had a woman in my room— in my bed?' he
finished for her with awful courtesy. 'I won't deny it. Why should I?