Authors: Sara Craven,Chieko Hara
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
Alex gave her a bleak look. 'And it is my wish that you remain
here—until the end of the month at least,' he added, forestalling the
further protest which was already trembling on her lips. 'I have to go
away on business tomorrow, so perhaps we could delay any further
discussion until my return.'
She had assented reluctantly, unable to subdue a swift inward pang at
the news that he was going to be absent, even for a short time. Her
own feelings aside, Alex was very much a bulwark between herself
and the unvarying hostility still evinced towards her by his mother
and aunt. Even in his presence, family mealtimes were an ordeal
where she was made to feel like an unwanted outsider. It was subtly
done, of course. There had been no repetition of the tactics which had
led to her being allocated a room which a servant might have
occupied.
Harriet had guessed from the tension in the atmosphere during the
first few days of her stay that Alex had made his views on that more
than clear. She was more than happy with her new room, and thankful
for it too, because the heat was such that she knew she would never
have got a moment's sleep in the other room, but at the same time she
wished Alex had never found out, because the resultant fuss had just
given his family something extra to resent her for.
It was absurd to feel hurt or even disturbed about that, but she did.
She liked people, and she always had. She had had plenty of friends at
work, even if her social life had become rather curtailed because of
Nicky. She had written a number of letters since she had been at the
villa, all of them giving glowing accounts of her surroundings,
making it all sound more fun than it actually was. Not even to Manda
had she confessed how miserable she really was. Not that she thought
for a moment that anyone at the villa would actually go to the lengths
of steaming open her correspondence to see what she was saying, but
because her unhappiness was somehow more bearable if she didn't
think about it too much. Writing about it might crystallise it in her
mind, and make her life here totally unbearable.
It was easier to keep up the pretence that she was having a wonderful
holiday in the sun in a particularly beautiful corner of the world. A
very restricted corner, she reminded herself wryly. All she had seen
of Corfu, apart from the initial trip across the island, was the villa
garden, and the small beach which she had made her ultimate refuge.
There was little wonder that Alex had placed an embargo on Nicky
going down there, and reinforced it with a gate which had to be kept
bolted at all times. The path leading down there was little better than a
track, steep and stony with a few rock steps provided here and there to
assist with the worst bits and a wooden handrail. Even so anyone
using the path needed to be surefooted and have their wits about
them, and Harriet usually went down there in the middle of the day,
after lunch when Nicky was having his siesta.
There was a small jetty on the beach, and a boatshed containing a
sleek, racy-looking speedboat, as well as a variety of water-skiing
and windsurfing equipment. Harriet supposed that Alex used them,
but she didn't know when. It was certainly never when she was down
at the cove.
She really hadn't had to worry at all about avoiding him, because it
was all being done for her. Until they had clashed over her proposed
return to London, he had been unfailingly civil, but always aloof,
making it tacitly but positively clear that there would be no more
love-making even of the most casual kind.
Harriet tried to tell herself that she should be grateful for this, because
if Alex had ever decided to amuse himself by pursuing her in real
earnest, then she could be in more trouble than she had ever dreamed
of. And he was i. man in need of amusement; she could be in no doubt
of that. The even tenor of life at the villa could not hold him for long.
There were few visitors, and when they did come, they were mostly
older couples, friends of Madame Marcos and her sister.
Alex went out a great deal in the evenings, and Harriet was unable to
blame him. She was thankful she had brought a bag of paperback
books with her to occupy her, usually retiring to her room
immediately after coffee was served each evening. Sometimes she
was woken, her room being at the front of the house, by returning
headlights, and she knew without even consulting her watch that it
was the early hours of the morning, and that Alex was home at last.
None of the defensive arguments against him that she had managed to
marshal could still the ache of longing deep within her which assailed
her every time she saw him. Watching him swimming in the pool, or
lying relaxed in the sun with only the minimal covering on his
bronzed body, or even catching an occasional breath of the cologne
he used as he went past her—all these things had the power to stir her,
to rouse passionately bitter-sweet memories.
If she'd belonged to him, if she'd known what it was like to make love
with him, then sleep in his arms, she couldn't have been more
physically conscious of him. The strength of her emotions, the force
of her awareness bewildered her. She'd never felt like this before. She
didn't know how to handle it, how to subdue her feelings.
She had thought about love, of course. She had had other boy-friends
apart from Roy, and when she had seen how happy Kostas and Becca
were together, she had looked forward from courtship to a marriage
of her own, because even in these uncertain days it seemed that love
and security were still possible and attainable.
It had been a calm, peaceful optimism about the future, but she knew
now that with Alex, she wouldn't care that there could never be any
future just as long as there was a 'now'. She was ashamed of feeling
like that. She had discovered depths within herself she had never
suspected, an ability to desire, to need which had shaken her totally.
In this alien place, far from home, she seemed to have become a
stranger to herself.
She capped the sun-oil bottle and lay back on the sun-lounger,
deliberately making herself relax as the warmth of the sun caressed
her limbs, listening to the somnolent whisper of the sea, only yards
away.
It was difficult to keep troubled thoughts at bay at times like this
when solitude pressed on her. No one had suggested that she might
like to do any . sightseeing while she was here. Well, she could hardly
expect an offer from Alex to show her the island in the circumstances,
but his wasn't the only car, and the driver who had brought them from
the airport wasn't overworked. But she couldn't ask. Any offer would
have to come from Madame Marcos, and would be as unlikely as a
sudden snow shower, she thought ruefully. Madame clearly felt that
sunbathing most of the day, and playing with a small child, was the
most her unwanted visitor could ask for, and Harriet knew that for
many people, a fortnight in these surroundings with nothing to do and
all day to do it in would be a dream holiday.
But she wasn't one of them. She felt restless and on edge. She had
thought Alex's absence would make things easier, but she was wrong.
The tension of actually being in his orbit was more than equalled by
the tension of wondering what he was doing and when he would
return. I can't win, she thought, half-closing her eyes so that the sun
was a golden shimmer through her lashes. ,
And now she had at least an hour to spend before she need/case
herself and go up to the villa to see Nicky. Who could ask for
anything more? she thought with self-mockery, knowing already
what the answer was. She wanted so very much more, and yet, if they
were offered, she would settle for crumbs instead of the proverbial
half-loaf.
She was dozing lightly when she heard the sound of footsteps coming
down the path. Her eyelids flew apart, and she sat up, propping
herself on one elbow. A man's step. It couldn't surely be Alex. She
had no idea how long he was going to be away, but she had formed
the impression that it could be measured in days rather than hours.
And though there was Andonis who worked mainly at the beach,
seeing to the boat and the gear, he wasn't usually around in the
afternoon.
No, the newcomer was a stranger to her. Young, male, wearing a
towelling beach jacket over brief trunks. He was shorter than Alex,
and stockier, with an apparently ready smile which he was aiming
directly at her. As he approached, Harriet felt ridiculously that her
black bikini was too revealing and half-reached for the thin shirt she
had adopted as a cover-up between the villa and the beach, then
stopped, telling herself firmly that she was just being prudish.
He reached her side and stood looking down at her. 'Thespinis
Masters?' His voice was more heavily accented than Alex's. 'I am
Spiro Constantis. My mother told me that we had the pleasure of your
company here for a few weeks. She did not warn me, however, that
you used this beach in the afternoon. I hope I do not intrude.'
Then where do they imagine I get to each day— disappear back into
the woodwork? Harriet managed to refrain from saying.
Aloud, she said 'Of course not. I suppose I should ask you the same
thing, Kyrios Constantis.'
'Spiro, if you please.' He pulled up another lounger and sat down,
'And I will call you Harriet,
nel
It is so?'
Harriet supposed it was. He seemed pleasant enough. Compared with
his maternal relations, he seemed positively charming, but for a
reason she found it difficult to analyse, she didn't want to seem too
forthcoming.
Spiro discarded his jacket, squinting appreciatively at the sky.
'A beautiful day—and a beautiful companion to share it with. I am
fortunate. Usually if there is female company at the villa, I have to
compete with my cousin Alex, and that'—he shrugged with
self-depreciation— 'is no contest at all.'
Harriet smiled rather stiffly. She had no need to be reminded of the
electrifying effect Alex had on women. She had seen it operate in
London, seen the glances which often couldn't even bother to be
discreet or sidelong as he went his arrogant way.
Collecting her thoughts hurriedly, she asked if Spiro worked for the
Marcos Corporation.
'Indeed yes—in the Athens office, but I was owed a few days' leave,
so I thought I would come here and meet my new little cousin.' He
sighed. 'Poor Kostas' son. What a tragedy!'
Harriet looked away, towards the sparkle of the sea. 'I thought it was,'
she said steadily. 'I loved Kostas, and my sister Becca was a super
girl. They were very happy.'
'That is a good thing to know,' Spiro said softly. 'When he was
younger, he caused my aunt many anxious hours.'
'Oh?' Harriet's brows lifted. Kostas might have had wild oats to sow
in the days before she had known him, but she could have sworn he
had never given Becca as much as an anxious moment. She paused,
then said rather woodenly, 'Then it's a pity she never found out what a
good effect his marriage had on him. I—I suppose if it hadn't been for
the accident, they'd have eventually been reconciled.' She made it into
a question, and Spiro's smile faded as he considered it.
'Perhaps,' he said at last. 'Kostas was her favourite son, even if he was
not—a satisfactory one. But I do not think—forgive me—that my
aunt would ever have received your sister. She felt—she still feels
great bitterness. You must understand that she felt— betrayed, and
that your sister contributed to that betrayal,'
Harriet gasped. 'In what way, for heaven's sake?' she demanded
indignantly.
Spiro looked uncomfortable. 'You do not know? But I thought—I
was sure that you would have been in your sister's confidence. Pardon
me, I should not have spoken.'
'No—please.' Harriet spoke urgently. 'If there's something I should
know, something which would help me understand, then I would
prefer to be told.'
He gave a slight shrug. 'Perhaps, but I do not feel it is my place to tell
you. Alex is the head of the family, after all.'
'Don't we know it,' Harriet muttered, and his gaze sharpened.
'So there has been—friction between you. Ah, poor Harriet, but it was
inevitable.' He paused, then said flatly, 'It might have been better if
you had not come here.'
'I had very little choice,' Harriet said defensively. 'Your cousin