Authors: Sara Craven,Chieko Hara
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
But let me assure you that my—companions of the night have all
been women and not immature children incapable of knowing their
own minds—or their own bodies. Does that satisfy you?'
Harriet felt as if she had been slapped across her face.
In a thickened tone, she said, 'Perfectly. Now, if you would be good
enough to call your housekeeper, I'd rather like to get dressed.'
The dark eyes swept her lightly covered body with casual lack of
interest, then Alex lifted one shoulder in a shrug which told her quite
explicitly, without any further words being needed, that it would
make no difference to him if she were stark naked.
Theft he turned, and she heard the sound of his stride taking him
across the room, and the distant slam of the bedroom door.
Harriet sank back against the cushions, staring unseeingly in front of
her as the glorious view dissolved into a thousand shimmering
fragments. Convulsively she closed her eyes, refusing to let the
painful tears fall.
Only a few moments ago she had thought she was in paradise. Now
she knew to her cost just how bitter paradise could be.
BY an almost superhuman effort, Harriet was still managing .to
control her unhappiness when a frankly sulky-looking Androula
came to fetch her a few minutes later.
Hardly had they left Alex's room when the woman began to chatter in
her own language. Harriet couldn't understand what was being said,
but she could recognise recrimination and self-justification when she
heard it. It was. obvious Androula had received a tongue-lashing
from the master of the house over the standard of the accommodation
assigned to his guest, and Harriet guessed wryly that a rough
translation of Androula's remarks would have amounted to the fact
that she was only obeying orders.
The room she was taken to was only slightly smaller than the one she
had just left, and lacking nothing in' luxury. When Androula had
taken her still-aggrieved departure, Harriet discovered that her
clothes had already been brought and unpacked for her. It was such a
contrast to the treatment she had received the previous day that she
could almost have laughed out loud.
That is if she hadn't been feeling so miserable, she amended inwardly.
But she wouldn't have been natural if she hadn't experienced some lift
of the heart brought about by her new surroundings. She took a long,
warm, scented bath, then dressed in cool, simple clothes—a cotton
wrap- round skirt featuring giant poppies on a navy background, and
a navy cotton tee shirt, short-sleeved and scoop-necked.
She was stroking a brush through her hair when there was a knock at
the door, and a beaming Yannina ushered Nicky into the room.'Oh.'
Harriet dropped the brush and held out her arms to him. 'I was just
coming to find you.'
He scrambled on to her lap, burying his face in her shoulder. 'I find
you,' he said in a muffled voice.
'He slept well,
thespinis
,' Yannina informed her. She shook her head.
'But he would eat no breakfast.'
'Oh, Nicky!' Harriet gently detached his clinging hands. 'You must eat
your meals.'
The small face was mutinous. 'Don't want it,' he muttered. 'Too hot.
Don't like it.'
'Just wait a day or two,' Harriet soothed him. 'It will seem as if you've
been here all your life. We're going to have a wonderful holiday—a
lovely time with Uncle Alex. You'll see.'
She had to resist the impulse to hug him to her fiercely. This was all
part of the letting-go process she was committed to. It had to be. But it
would be so easy to play the traitor—to encourage Nicky in his
quibbles about his new surroundings, to re-establish herself as the
indispensable factor in his life. It would be easy— and balm for the
ache inside her. But in the end, what would she gain?
Yannina was intervening, smiling again. 'Come, little one. Kyrios
Alexandros is waiting to see you. We must not keep him waiting.'
God forbid, Harriet thought savagely, picking up her brush and
attacking her unfortunate hair as if it was a dirty carpet.
She said, 'I'll see you later, Nicky. Perhaps we'll have a swim in the
pool, hm?'
Nicky assented cautiously, and went off hand in hand with, Yannina.
As the door closed behind them, Harriet expelled her breath on a little
sigh as the unnaturally bright smile faded from her lips. Oh God, the
next few weeks were going to be so hard—worse than her most
pessimistic imaginings. The gradual parting from Nicky would have
been bad enough alone, without this foolish, ill-judged passion which
Alex had engendered in her, and the overt hostility from the Marcos
women.
She supposed reluctantly that as the morning was half over, it was
more than time she presented herself downstairs. She rose and looked
at herself critically in the mirror, fiddling with the sash tie of her skirt,
and an errant tress of hair. But she was simply procrastinating, she
knew, and there was no point in trying to present herself as some kind
of fashion plate when, to the women downstairs^ she would never be
anything more than Nicky's poor relation.
She was able to take in more of her surroundings in the warm, golden
light of day, and she found the cool, spacious layout of the villa very
much to her taste, accented as it was towards simplicity, the walls
washed in plain colours, and natural fibres used alongside stone and
wood.
When she arrived in the hall, all the doors opening from it were shut,
and the place seemed deserted apart from one maid sweeping the
floor. When she saw Harriet, the girl propped her broom against the
wall and gestured that Harriet should accompany her, leading the way
towards the room where Madame Marcos had received her the
previous evening. Harriet wiped the suddenly damp palms of her
hands down her skirt, tension filling her at the prospect of another
inimical encounter, but when the door swung open there was only Mr
Philippides, putting down the newspaper he had been glancing
through and rising to meet her with a broad smile.
'Kalimera
, Thespinis Masters,' he greeted her. 'I am so glad to have
this opportunity to say goodbye to you before I return to London.'
'You're going back?' Harriet was dismayed. Mr Philippides was the
closest she had to an ally in the house, apart from Yannina, and she
had hope he would be there to help her through the first awkward
days.
'I must,
thespinis
.' Perhaps Mr Philippides sensed her disquiet,
because he looked at her sympathetically. 'Ihave meetings
planned—business to transact which has already had to be delayed.'
'I didn't realise you'd made a special journey to escort us here,' Harriet
said slowly. 'I—I'm sorry to have put you to so much trouble.'
'No trouble, but my pleasure, Thespinis Masters. You and the little
Nicky will be safe and happy here in the care of Kyrios Marcos. It is a
beautiful house,
ne?'
'Very beautiful,' Harriet acknowledged woodenly. 'But at the same
time I think it was a mistake for me to come here. Would—would
there be room on your flight for me, do you suppose?'
Mr Philippides gave her a shocked glance. 'You distress me,
thespinis.
It would be an insult to Kyrios Marcos to leave so soon.' He
paused, and gave an almost furtive look round to ensure that they
were not being overheard. 'If you are disturbed by the coolness of
your reception by Madame Marcos and Madame Constantis—this I
can understand. It is very difficult, but I am sure that if you
are—patient, then the situation will improve.'
'Thanks for the reassurance,' Harriet said caustically. 'I'm glad you
understand what's going on, because I certainly don't. And if his
mother and his aunt have these sort of feelings, then perhaps Mr
Marcos should think again about bringing Nicky up here.'
Mr Philippides sighed. 'You—and the child, Thespinis Masters—are
a reminder of an unhappy time in their lives. It will take time, but the
ladies' attitude will mellow, I am sure. Or at least towards the little
Nicos,' he added with a slightly apologetic note in his voice.
And, jf it ever mellows towards me, it isn't too important, because my
stay here is only temporary anyway, Harriet supplied wryly and
silently.
Aloud she said, 'But why do they fee 1 like this, Mr Philippides, do
you know?'
He looked instantly embarrassed, moving his shoulders defensively,
and murmuring something about a private family matter, but Harriet
was unconvinced.
Their dealings in London had shown her that Mr Philippides enjoyed
a high degree of Alex Marcos' confidence, and there wouldn't be
many family secrets kept from him. But such trust implied an equal
amount of discretion, Harriet realised with a little inward sigh.
Whatever secret had poisoned Kostas' relationship with his family,
and still shadowed his memory, it was a mystery from which she was
excluded.
And yet for Becca's sake, and perhaps more importantly for Nicky's,
she felt it was something which should be solved. Yet not, she
thought regretfully, through the agency of Mr Philippides.
She thanked him colourlessly for all his help in escorting her to
Corfu, and for his kindness to them both, and said a quick goodbye,
escaping out through the patio doors because she could hear female
voices approaching through the hall.
Coward, she apostrophised herself when she was safely out of sight
of the villa. You should have stayed and faced them, and demanded
an explanation. She smiled then ruefully, trying to imagine anyone
demanding anything of the stately Madame Marcos. Oddly enough,
she thought, it was the vindictive-seeming Madame Constantis who
seemed the less formidable of the pair, perhaps because her hostility
was so open. Under Madame Marcos' cool civility, Harriet had
detected something implacable and chilling. Perhaps Alex hadn't
inherited all his ruthlessness from his father.
She stopped and looked round her almost curiously, as if it had
suddenly occurred to her just how alien this environment was from
any experience she had ever had. She liked flowers. She had always
kept plants in her room at home, but there wasn't one brilliant shrub
thrusting its way out of the raw-coloured earth that she could have put
a name to. It was all new and strange, and she was alone in the midst
of it.
She felt the strength of the sun beating down on her, and suddenly
shivered as if a cold wind had blown on her, or an unknown hand
touched her shoulder. Harriet reached for the bottle of oil and began
to smooth another coating over her legs. Her tan was coming along
nicely—even and golden brown, but that, she thought drily, was
hardly surprising as she had little to do but work on it over the past
two weeks.
For the first few days of their stay, Nicky had been querulous, shy of
the new faces and unaccustomed attention, and fractious because of
the heat and change of diet. Harriet had been able to feel that her
presence at the villa was at least justified, but now she was not so
sure. Nicky had begun to turn more and more to the devoted Yannina
for his needs, and Harriet had realised ruefully that much of the time
he was hardly aware if she herself was there or not. But she couldn't
blame him if that was so, she kept reminding herself. That, after all,
was the whole purpose of the exercise, and it seemed that Nicky's
settling down process was going to be more painless than they could
ever have hoped or anticipated.
But when she had suggested quite diffidently to Alex that this might
be a good time to take her departure, she had received a brisk rebuff.
Nicky, his uncle thought, was merely charmed by the novelty of his
surroundings and Yannina's uncritical solicitude. Sooner or later the
novelty would wear off, and Harriet's presence would be necessary to
him again.
Harriet had attempted to argue the point, spurred on by her own
private reasons for not wishing to remain on Corfu a day longer than
she had to, but Alex had only grown coldly angry.
'I thought that you were devoted to Nicos' well- being, or so you
would have me believe when we met in London,' he said with icy
sarcasm. 'Why are you now so ready to shirk your responsibilities?'
Harriet gasped. 'I'm not shirking anything,' she responded warmly. 'I
simply don't feel I'm fulfilling any real purpose by remaining.'
'You will kindly allow me to be the judge of that.'