Authors: Sara Craven,Chieko Hara
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
Harriet, who had been fumbling with the catch on her seatbelt for no
very coherent reason, sank back in her seat with a gasp. 'Tonight you
are having dinner with me.'
'And my wishes don't matter, I suppose.' She stared down at her hands
clamped rigidly together in her lap.
'On this occasion, no. We have things to discuss, Harriet, and privacy
at my home is not always easy to achieve.'
She smoothed a fold of her dress. 'I—see. I suppose you want to talk
about Nicky—and when I'm going home.-'
'Those are among the topics we shall be considering,' he said drily.
'Or did you imagine that life was going to pursue its present course
indefinitely?'
'Of course not.' She kept her head bent. 'As a matter of fact, I think
Nicky's settled down amazingly well. I'm quite ready to leave
whenever you say the word. There's—just one thing.' She paused,
biting her lip.
'You've spent a lot of time with him lately. I think he's going to feel
rather bereft—when you're away such a great deal. He might find the
periods of separation easier to take, if you didn't pay him quite so
much attention.'
He said coldly, 'I have no intention of being separated from Nicky for
long periods, at least until he is old enough to go to school.'
She was taken aback. 'But you can hardly trail him round the world in
your wake with a nursemaid in tow,' she protested. 'What kind of
security is that?'
His brows lifted. 'Nicos will be with my wife, and my wife will be
with me. A child's true security does not lie within four walls as much
as in the love and warmth of those who care for him. We shall be his
home.'
Harriet wanted to ask bitterly, 'Have you discussed this with Maria,
and established her point of view?' But it seemed safer to remain
silent. His words suggested that he wasn't entering marriage quite as
cynically as Spiro had indicated. In fact they created a curiously
intimate picture, considering he didn't appear to be in love with
Maria. But then, she thought, Alex had always taken his
responsibilities to the Marcos Corporation very seriously. Why
should she imagine he would adopt a different attitude to his eventual
marriage? Even the most dedicated playboy must surely tire of that
kind of existence in the end.
'You are very quiet,' he said. 'Does my explanation not satisfy you?'
'It's—perfectly satisfactory.' She swallowed painfully. 'I—I hope
you'll be very happy.'
'Do you, Harriet?' He laughed. 'I had formed the impression you
would rather see me boiled in oil.'
'Perhaps so,' she said. 'But that wouldn't be the best thing for Nicky.'
He said, 'His happiness is what matters most to you still, Harriet. Is
that not so?'
No, she thought. God help me, it's you that matters most. You matter
more to me than anything in my life. She said quietly, 'That's right.'
She hesitated. 'I'm glad that your mother is—well—beginning. . . .'
'You need not struggle for words. I know what you are trying to say,
and I am also glad. I had begun to wonder if she would ever be able to
reconcile her need for Nicos with the unhappy memories his arrival
was bound to revive.'
She bit her lip. 'You don't have to hedge round the subject, Alex.
Spiro told me what was supposed to have happened.'
There was a silence, then in a voice shaken with anger Alex said, 'He
had no right. . . .'
'I persuaded him,' she interrupted. 'I made him tell me. I had to
know—for Nicky's sake. You must see that.' She paused, then added,
'And I don't believe a word of it.'
He said evenly, 'You are hardly in a position to say that. You were not
here at the time.'
'I didn't have to be. I knew Kostas too. I never knew him to do
anything mean or despicable, and I can't understand why—as his
brother—you should have been so ready to condemn him.'
Alex pulled on the wheel, swerving the car off the road on to the
verge beneath some trees, and stopping the engine.
'Is that what you think, Harriet? How little you know! Condemning
Kostas, as you put it, was the hardest decision I have ever made. Yes,
it was out of character for him to do such a thing, but that night he was
not himself. He was more angry than I had ever seen him. He had
quarrelled with our mother most bitterly ."He had demanded the ring
from her, and when she refused --' he shrugged, 'I can only presume
he decided to take the law into his own hands. When I found the safe
it had been rifled—every box had been opened, but only the ring had
gone. That and the documents which had provided him with an
excuse for going to the safe in the first place,' he added grimly.
'I don't care.' Stubbornly Harriet shook her head. 'I still won't believe
it. If he felt he was entitled to this ring for Becca, then why didn't he
give it to her?'
His glance was cynical. 'He did not?'
'No!' she almost exploded.
He shrugged. 'A belated sense of shame, perhaps. Perhaps he
honoured your sister by believing she would not be ready to ally
herself with someone who would stoop to steal from his own family.
Or would she?' His tone sharpened.
'Of course not,' she said wretchedly. 'The very least idea, and Becca
would have had a fit!'
'My mother, of course, believes that he stole the ring at her urging.'
'So Spiro said. And that isn't true either. Becca may not have been the
heiress your mother wanted for her son, but she was no gold-digger.'
She glared at him. 'But I see now why you were so ready to offer me
money to give up Nicky. You thought that we were— tarred with the
same brush.'
'What do you want of me?' Alex asked softly. 'An insincere denial?
Or my assurance that it is some time since I have speculated in those
terms about either you or your late sister?'
'I don't give a damn what you think,' she said shakily. 'But if that's
how it was, then why the hell did you bring me here?'
He said, 'I think you know why.'
His hands reached for her, lifting her bodily towards him out of her
seat with an irresistible force. He turned her harshly so that she lay
across his body, helpless in the crook of his arm, her eyes dilating
with mingled alarm and excitement as his head came down towards
her. He began to kiss her, lightly at first, the merest brushing of his
mouth against her cheekbones, her temples and her startled eyes.
When at last his lips took hers, it was in a kind of agony, as if he was
dying, and she was an elixir that could bring him to life. Her mouth
parted of its own volition and blind instinct took over, prompting a
response as fierce and pagan as his own demand of her. Her hands
locked tightly behind his head, drawing him down to her, holding him
close. The touch of him, the taste of him was a sensual enslavement,
and her body arched towards him in a silent offering of utter
completeness.
He began to caress her, his fingers stroking her hair, then moving
down to her throat and the soft sensitive hollows beneath her ears. His
fingers were gentle, but they brought every nerve-ending to raw,
aching life.
She heard herself whimper against his lips, but it was with pleasure,
not protest, as he tugged open the little blue cords, and his hand slid
under the soft cling of her neckline in intimate exploration. Her whole
body seemed to clench as his thumb stroked delicately across the
budding rose of her nipple, sending shafts of white- hot sensation
through the very core of her being.
Nothing seemed to exist in the world but the heat of his body
enfolding her, the warm draining languor of his mouth, and the sheer
scorch of pleasure that his slow expert caresses were creating for her.
Her breath shuddered in her throat as he lifted his mouth from hers at
last, pressing featherlight kisses down the smooth flesh of her neck to
the curve of her shoulder. His lips brushed the soft veil of material
away from her breasts, and her body was convulsed in yearning as his
mouth took possession of the aroused rosy peaks, the insistent flick of
his tongue against her flesh increasing her excitement almost to the
point of frenzy.
She was touching him in her turn, her hands sliding over ^his body
without inhibition, discovering the warmth of his skin, the play of
muscle beneath the elegant clothes.
She was hungry for him as if, starved" all her life, she had suddenly
been offered a banquet. She loved Alex, and wanted him, and the
need to tell him so was slowly overwhelming her.
Her lips moved to speak his name, but instead she cried out,
frightened, because the whole world was suddenly enveloped in
blue-white light, and as the darkness rolled back, an immense crack
of thunder exploded around them. And with the thunder came ram,
drumming on the roof and splashing the windscreen.
Alex lifted himself away from her with evident reluctance, to close
the window at his side. Harriet huddled back into her own seat,
thankful that the shadows concealed her burning face. The shock of
the lightning had restored her to a kind of shamed sanity, and she
fumbled with her dress fastenings as she struggled for composure.
She had let him hold her, kiss her, explore her body with his hands
and mouth when only a short while before he had spoken openly
about his forthcoming marriage. A sense of decency at least should
have made her fight him, reject his caresses, she thought, feeling sick.
The window adjusted to his satisfaction, he turned to her, and she
spoke in a small strained voice. 'Will you take me back to the villa,
please.'
He said slowly, 'The storm will pass. And we are supposed to be
having dinner.'
'I hate storms. I'm terrified of them.' She certainly sounded as if she
was, she thought detachedly. Her voice was almost cracking. 'Nicky
hates them too, and I want to make sure he's all right. And I don't want
any dinner. I—I couldn't eat anything,' she ended on a little rush of
words.
'Well, that at least may be true,' he said, his voice hardening with
contempt. 'I seem to have lost my appetite—for food—myself. As for
your fear of storms, Harriet
mou,
—you're not a physical coward,
merely a moral one. Yet you need not have worried. Seducing
inexperienced girls in cars is a callow trick which has never appealed
to me.'
The car engine started with a roar, and he turned the vehicle with
almost savage expertise, and sent them rocketing back the way they
had come, while the thunder growled and rumbled above their heads.
As he drew up at the entrance, Alex said with scarcely controlled
impatience, 'Do you wish to wait here while I fetch some
covering—an umbrella, perhaps?'
'N-no,' Harriet stammered. 'I'll be fine, honestly.'
'Honestly?' he echoed. 'I doubt if you know the meaning of the word.
You had better run, then.'
Run she did, head bent, not glancing behind to see if he was
following. She took the stairs two at a time, and went straight to
Nicky's room. It was quite true, he hated storms—when he was
awake. But it was extremely doubtful if the thunder would have
woken him.
His door was standing ajar, which surprised her. Perhaps he had
woken after all, and Yannina was with him, she thought, as she
stopped inside.
But there was no comforting figure at Nicky's bedside, and the bed
itself was empty.
Harriet stood very still, lower lip caught in her teeth, while she
registered this.
She walked over to the baby alarm above" the bed, and saw it was
switched off. She turned it on and said, 'Yannina—is Nicky with
you?' Then she sank down on the bedside chair and waited, trying not
to panic.
It seemed a long time later, but it was actually only seconds, that feet
came flying down the passage and Yannina burst into the room, her
startled gaze seeking the empty bed. The expression on her face told
Harriet all she needed to know.
She said carefully, 'It's all right, Yannina. He probably woke and was
frightened by the storm and went downstairs.'
Yannina's eyes were round. 'But the handle on the door,
thespinis.
It
is too high, and too stiff for him to manage, as you yourself know
well. How could he have left the r'oom? You did not leave the door
open.'
No, thought Harriet, and the alarm was switched on, because I
checked it as I always do.
She tried to smile. 'Well, someone came in—perhaps his
grandmother—and took him downstairs because he was frightened.'
Nicky had never been a wakeful child at nights, nor a wanderer, she