Authors: Sara Craven,Chieko Hara
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
wanted to make Nicky's transfer to his new life and surroundings as
easy as possible, and so... .'
'I see.' Spiro looked at her sympathetically. 'He is not with you today,
the little Nicos?'
'No.' Harriet shook her head-. 'I don't bring him down here often. The
path is too steep and dangerous, for one thing, and he finds the sea
rather overwhelming after the shallow end of the pool.'
'But he can swim?'
Harriet smiled. 'After a fashion. He loves splashing about.'
'You are clearly very fond of him. He is a fortunate child. To have the
devotion of so lovely a girl and then—one day —to own all this.' He
waved his hand around him. 'Unless of course Alex grants his
mother's dearest wish by marrying and having children of his own,' he
added casually.
Harriet experienced a pang so sharp she nearly cried out. The thought
of Alex with another woman, looking with pride and satisfaction at
the son she had borne him, was frankly intolerable. And she would
know about it. There was no escape from that. The marriage of Alex
Marcos, the birth of an heir to the Marcos Corporation, were events
which the gossip columns of the world would hardly fail to record.
But at least she wouldn't have to be here to see it. She'd be a thousand
miles away, making a life for herself, trying to expunge the
bitter-sweetness of this Corfu summer from her mind, something she
had to do if she was ever to have any peace again.
She said with an admirable attempt at coolness, 'He's hardly likely to
remain single.'
Spiro grimaced. 'He has escaped so far, but my aunt, I think hopes
that he will make amends to the Xandreou family by marrying Maria.'
'Why should he do any such thing?' Harriet asked with unguarded
sharpness. She immediately tried to dissemble. 'I mean, it's a pretty
drastic way of making amends.'
'Not,' Spiro said gently, 'to the girl whom Kostas jilted to marry your
sister. Something else you did not know,
ne?'
'I didn't know he was actually engaged.'
Spiro shrugged. 'There was an understanding—an arrangement
between the families. It was as binding, or should have been, as a
formal engagement. Kostas'— defection was a humiliation for both
families.'
Harriet could feel sympathy with this unknown Maria, but at the same
time she had never found it in her heart to blame Kostas for escaping
while he could from such a cold-blooded arrangement. And no one
who had seen him with Becca, who had experienced their happiness
would have blamed him either, she thought"
Except here. Here there was resentment, and a deep- seated grudge
which might have hung over their lives and cast a shadow over that
happiness.
She said slowly, 'So now there's another— arrangement with Alex?'
'Of a kind. Alex has never been the marrying kind, but he has a keen
sense of family honour, and Maria is his mother's godchild, so they
are often in each other's company.' His mouth twisted slightly. 'She is
coming to stay , here tomorrow, so you will be able to judge for
yourself.'
Wonderful, Harriet thought wretchedly. Just what I want.
Aloud, she said, 'It won't be much of a judgment unless I see them
together—and Alex is away.'
Spiro laughed. 'That is true—but he will return. You will see, little
English Harriet.'
She forced herself to smile in return, as if he had said something very
amusing. 'If he's prepared to cut short a business trip, then he must be
serious.'
Spiro was still laughing. 'A business trip? Well, it is an excellent
excuse. A little family life here at the villa is enough for Alex. Sooner
or later he becomes bored, restricted, and he takes off for brighter
lights. He has a mistress in Athens, you understand.'
She was hurting again badly, which was ridiculous because a man
like Alex would have women wherever and whenever he wanted
them. She couldn't pretend the news came as any surprise, she
thought, remembering that phone call at the hotel in London, and
Vicky Hanlon's voluptuous charm.
She said brightly, 'I hope his future wife doesn't know.'
Spiro's mouth twisted. 'Maria is a sensible girl. She would consider
turning a blind eye to Alex's other interests a small price to pay for
becoming the new Madame Marcos—for marrying the Marcos
millions.'
'Then they should be perfect for each other,' Harriet said grimly. A
small price, she thought incredulously. If she were in Maria's place,
even the slightest hint of infidelity on Alex's part would be like losing
a piece of herself.
If he was opting for marriage, it was small wonder he had decided on
an arrangement with a Greek girl who would be 'sensible'. The last
thing he would want would be a wife who clung and complained, and
demanded all his attention.'You are very quiet,' Spiro commented.
Harriet looked at him and saw him watching her, his eyes frankly
assessing her body, its curves barely concealed by the scraps of
bikini. She had a ridiculous impulse to cover herself with her hands,
because she suddenly realised she didn't want Spiro looking at her. In
fact it occurred to her that although he was good-looking and seemed
friendly, she didn't really like Spiro very much, but that was probably
because he had told her things she didn't want to hear. They had
executed messengers who brought bad news in the old days, and, just
at the moment, it seemed like a good system.
She said stilted!^, 'I'd better go back to the house. Nicky will be
waking up.'
'And he likes you to be there. I cannot blame him.'
The words sounded fulsome, and she said, embarrassed, 'He's only a
baby really. For a while, I was all he had.'
He laughed. 'Of course. I said he was a fortunate child.'
She smiled uncertainly, reaching for her shirt and pulling it on, even
fastening a couple of the buttons. Her hands were steady enough, but
she was shaking inside.
She needed to get to the house, to her room, so she could fall to bits in
private.
Spiro said, 'I hope to see you later,' and she mumbled something in
reply as she made for the path. Once on it, she made herself slow
down, picking her way carefully because she didn't want to fall, and it
was too hot for running anyway.
I can't run, she thought. There's no escape. No way out. I'm trapped
here until Alex chooses to release me. And tomorrow she'll be
here—this Maria—and he'll be here too/and I shall have to watch
them together.
She wanted to lift her hands in despair to the sky, shout something
savage at the sun, but she knew she could still be seen from the beach,
knew without turning her head that Spiro was watching her departure,
so she thrust her balled fists into the pockets of her shirt, and went on
Climbing, her head bent, and her eyes fixed with a kind of
desperation on the rough stones beneath her feet.
'RUN, run as fast as you can --' Harriet paused, waiting for Nicky to
join her joyously in the second half of the couplet. '"You can't catch
me—I'm the gingerbread man!"'
But there was no response and when she looked at him, Nicky's small
face was unsmiling, his bottom lip pouting slightly.
Harriet sighed. 'I thought you liked this story?'
'Don't want a story,' he said rebelliously. 'Want swimming.'
Harriet closed the book, and put it to one side. She'd tried all his
favourites—The Little Red Hen, Three Billy Goats Gruff—in turn,
but all to no avail, yet usually he listened entranced.
She had decided against the swimming pool that day because
Yannina had reported that Nicky had been coughing a little in the
night, and she thought herself he looked a trifle flushed as if he might
be developing a slight temperature. But Nicky had become
accustomed to his daily splash in the pool, and had made it clear from
the outset that staying indoors and being read to was no substitute at
all.
He seemed perfectly all right again too, she thought, eyeing him, with
not a trace of a cough or a sniffle. There really seemed no valid reason
to deny him his wish, and keep him in the villa—except.. . .
This time her sigh was inward. Except that Maria would be down at
the pool, she thought wryly, and that was an ideal motive for keeping
as far away as possible.
She had made all kinds of resolutions before Maria's arrival, mentally
rehearsing the way she should behave, the things she should say, but
she had wasted her time. Because from the moment she had entered
the villa a week earlier, Maria had made it quite clear that she shared
the view of her hostess, and that Harriet, and to a lesser extent Nicky,
was less than the dust beneath her chariot wheels.
They had been introduced—Spiro had seen to that— and Maria had
looked her over briefly and frowningly, then turned away after a
perfunctory greeting which fell little short of overt rudeness. After
that she behaved for the most part as if Harriet did not exist.
But in that, Harriet admitted drily to herself, her behaviour was a little
different from the remainder of the household. No one wanted her
there, and in Alex's absence they took little trouble to conceal it.
Conversation at mealtimes was conducted wholly in Greek, and the-
only time that English was spoken to any extent in her presence was
during Nicky's daily sessions with his grandmother, from which
Harriet excused herself as often as possible.
Watching Madame Marcos struggling to entertain the child formed a
poignant contrast to Harriet's memories of her own mother. Rachel
Masters would not have sat on a sofa, stitching tapestry and holding a
stilted conversation with a largely uncomprehending Nicky as he
played at her feet. She would have been down there with him, among
the building blocks and wind-up toys, uncaring about her appearance
or dignity, and Madame Marcos, Harriet thought, was someone who
would be positively improved by a little tomboyish ruffling.
In many ways, it was sad, because at times she watched Nicky with
real yearning in her eyes. But although she insisted that he should be
brought to the
saloni
each day after his afternoon nap, she still held
him at arms' length, and in his turn Nicky regarded this black-clad
stranger with caution still.
But at least he did not show her the aversion he felt for Maciame
Constantis. He had called her a . witch once, but fortunately only
Harriet had heard, or at least understood him. Harriet wondered
sometimes if Madame Marcos could have relaxed more with the child
if her sister had not constantly been present, inhibiting her. Madame
Constantis made no secret of the fact that she did not approve of
Nicky's presence in the household, and the reason was not hard to
guess at, Harriet had realised with wry amusement. With Kostas
gone, the doting mother had decided that her Spiro was the rightful
heir if Alex persisted in remaining a bachelor, and she openly
resented the small intruder who had upset her cherished plan.
She acquitted Spiro of sharing his mother's ambitions. He seemed
half embarrassed, half amused by some of her pointed remarks, and
he more than made up for her marked indifference to Nicky.
In fact; Harriet had found herself warming to him as the days went by.
His simple, uncomplex personality was a much-needed palliative to
all the other tensions and hostility in the villa, and she realised that
her earlier reservations about him had only existed because she was
unconsciously comparing him with his cousin, to his detriment.
But she had ended up liking him in his own right, particularly because
of his unswerving friendliness in the face of his mother's disapproval.
And it was amusing to watch Madame Constantis' unsubtle and
unavailing attempts to get him to desert herself, and pay all his
attention to Maria.
Madame Marcos might have decided that she would be the ideal bride
for Alex, but it was clear that her sister thought the Xandreou heiress
would suit her own son much better. And it was equally clear that
Spiro wanted no part of it.
Maria was a pretty girl, Harriet fair-mindedly admitted, and she
would have been even more attractive without the petulant expression
which marred her features so often. She had a spectacular figure
which she showed off to the best advantage in a series of minuscule
bikinis, each with its matching wrap or
pareu.
Even her sandals, with
their incredibly highgilded heels, matched, as did the soft kid bags in
which she carried her cosmetics and sunglasses.
Maria Xandreou, in fact, Harriet decided, was not short of the good