Authors: Sara Craven,Chieko Hara
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
softened a little as he said, 'You cannot pretend that you wish to spend
the rest of your life in this way—looking after someone else's child.
You are young. You should be planning a life of your own—children
of your own.'
'I'm perfectly content as I am,' Harriet said woodenly.
'You do not wish to marry?' His mouth curled slightly in satirical
amusement. 'That is hard to believe. Are you afraid of men?'
Harriet gasped. 'Of course not! How dare you imply....' Her voice
tailed away rather helplessly.
He shrugged. 'What else is one to think? You must be aware that you
do not lack—attraction.'
His eyes went over her in one swift, sexual assessment which brought
the colour roaring into her face.
She didn't know whether to be angrier with him for looking at her like
that, or herself for blushing so stupidly. After all, she was reasonably
used to being looked over like that. You could hardly work in a large
office and avoid it, and Harriet supposed it was part of the 'sexual
harassment' that so many women complained of nowadays. But while
it remained tacit, and at a distance, she had never felt it was worth
complaining about.
gut then, she thought furiously, she had never been so frankly or so
completely mentally undressed by any man. He had a skin-tingling
expertise which rocked her on her heels and made her feel
tremblingly vulnerable.
The sound of the kettle's piercing whistle rescued her, and she had to
force herself to walk out of the room, not run, with at least a
semblance of composure. In the kitchen, she fought for complete
control, setting the mugs on a tray and pouring milk into a jug, and
sugar into a basin, instead of-serving them in their respective
containers, as she felt inclined.
It was his constant, unnerving scrutiny which was getting to her, she
told herself as she added boiling water to the coffee granules, and not
just the sensual element which had intervened. She disliked the
knowledge that every detail of her environment, every facet of her
life, the way she dressed, moved, spoke and looked, was being
continuously judged by a total stranger. If he was looking for faults,
he wouldn't have to look far, she thought crossly.
As she carried the tray into the room, he came and took it from her,
placing it on a small table in front of the studio couch. He declined
both sugar and milk, so her efforts had been a waste of time as she
took it black too.
He remained standing, obviously waiting for her to sit down beside
him on the studio couch, which made sense as it was the only really
comfortable form of seating in the room. She had two high-backed
wooden dining chairs tucked back against the wall with her small
drop-leaf table, and she wished she had the nerve to go and fetch one
of them to establish some kind of independence, but something
warned her that he would not interpret her action in that way, and that
she might simply be exposing herself to more mocking comments
about feminine fears. But she made a point of seating herself as far
from him as the width of the couch would permit, and ignored the
slightly derisive twist of his lips.
He said silkily, 'Let us return to the subject of Nicos. It is clear that
this present situation cannot continue. As he becomes older and more
active, these surroundings will become impossible.'
Harriet said' coolly, 'I've already been considering that.' And
panicking about it, she thought, but he didn't have to know that.
'And what conclusions have you come to?'
She hedged. 'Well, clearly I'll need a bigger flat—a ground floor one,
preferably—with a garden.' Or a castle in Spain, she added silently
and hysterically.
Alex Marcos drank some of the coffee. 'You have somewhere in
mind, perhaps?' He sounded politely interested, but Harriet was not
deceived.
She said with a sigh, 'You know I haven't.'
He nodded, 'And even if such a haven were to present itself, the rent
would be beyond your means—is it not so?'
'Yes.' Damn you, she thought. Damn you!
There was a silence. She had begun to shake again inside, and she
gulped at the transient comfort the hot coffee gave her, although in
terms of Dutch courage she might have done better to opt for the
sherry, she thought.
He said at last, 'Miss Masters—if this unhappy business between us
were to become a legal battle— what do you imagine a judge would
say about the circumstances in which you are trying to raise my
nephew?'
Harrier did not meet his gaze. 'I believe—I hope that he would say I
was doing my best,' she said wearily.
'I do not doubt that for a moment. But is that what you truly want—a
battle in the courts—to make Nicos the subject of gossip and
speculation and lurid newspaper stories?'
'I'd have thought you would be used to such things.'
'But I am not the subject under discussion,' he said too softly. 'We are
speaking of a two-year-old child, who may one day be embarrassed
and emotionally torn by our past battles.'
She gave him an incredulous glance. 'That's blackmail!'
He shrugged. 'I would prefer to describe it as a valid possibility. He is
already old enough to sense conflict and be disturbed by it.'
'And therefore I should just be prepared to hand him over,' Harriet
said bitterly. 'I think not, Mr Marcos. Doesn't it occur to you that
Nicky might one day wonder why I let him go so easily, and be hurt
by it? You're not denying that you intend to separate us permanently?'
'No,' he said. 'That has always been my intention.'
'At least we understand each other,' she said huskily. 'I refuse to let
Nicky go under such circumstances.'
'What are you hoping for?' His voice was suddenly harsh. 'A place
under my roof for yourself? A more generous financial offer than the
one already made? If so, you will be disappointed.'
'I want nothing from you,' Harriet said vehemently. 'The fact that
we've even met is your doing, not mine.'
He gave her a weary look. 'Why are you being so stubborn? You are
scarcely more than a child yourself. You cannot wish to bear such a
burden unaided for perhaps twenty years longer.'
Put like that, it sounded daunting, but Harriet had always faced up to
what her responsibilities to Nicky would entail.
'I might ask you the same thing,' she countered. 'All this time you
haven't displayed the slightest interest in Nicky. We could both have
starved or been homeless for all you knew. Yet now you want
him—why?'
'Because it is my duty to care for him,' he said. 'Kostas would have
expected it, whatever the .relations were between us. The child is of
my blood.'
'And mine.'
'Nevertheless,' he said, 'if Kostas had wished you to have charge of
the boy, he would have left a document—a will, even a letter saying
so. Yet he did not—is it not so?'
Harriet finished her coffee and put the mug down. 'No, there was
nothing,' she said after a pause. 'They were so young—too young to
be thinking about wills— anything of that kind.'Alex Marcos' mouth
twisted. 'When one has responsibilities Thespinis Masters, one is
never too young, and it is never too soon to make provision for the
future. Kostas knew, in fact, that if the worst happened, I would take
charge of Nicos. He was always happy to shelve his responsibilities.'
Harriet was uneasily aware that her own solicitor had deplored the
absence of a will, but she had been too fond of her late brother-in-law
to meekly hear him criticised.
'Kostas was too busy being happy and making my sister happy to
worry about the worst happening. He was a warm, loving man, so
what does it matter if he wasn't perhaps the greatest businessman in
the world?'
'If he had stayed with the Marcos Corporation, then it might have
mattered a great deal,' Alex Marcos said coldly. 'But we stray towards
matters that do not concern you. You will do well to reflect, Miss
Masters. At the moment, you claim that Nicky has your whole heart.
That is—commendable. But with the money I have offered you, you
could buy a new wardrobe—go perhaps for a cruise round the
world—meet someone who would make you glad that you are
young—and without encumbrances.'
'God, you're insulting!' Harriet muttered between her teeth.
The dark brows rose in exaggerated surprise. 'Why? Because I imply
that if you had more time to yourself, you would have little difficulty
in attracting a man? I am paying you a compliment.'
.'Not as far as I'm concerned. Oddly enough, I quite like my life—and
my present
wardrobe.
Marriage isn't the be-all and end-all in my life.'
He smiled. 'So I was right,' he said lazily. 'You are afrayi of men.'
'That's ridiculous!'
'What is more,' he said slowly, his eyes never leaving her face, 'you
are afraid of me.'
'Nonsense!' said Harriet with a robust conviction she was far from
feeling.
His smile widened. His eyes travelled slowly downwards, over the
soft swell of her breasts, rising and falling more quickly than she
could control under the crisp blouse, then on down to the smooth line
of her thighs outlined by the cling of the trim navy skirt, then back,
swiftly, to her face where spots of outraged colour were now burning
in each cheek.
He said very softly, 'And all this because I—look. What would you do
if I touched?'
'Nothing at all,' said Harriet very quickly. 'I'm not afraid, Mr Marcos,
just not interested. I expect in your own circle, you find that women
are pushovers. Probably a lot of very wealthy men find the same
thing. But I don't belong to your circle, I'm not bothered about your
money—and frankly, Mr Marcos, you leave me cold.' She paused,
aware that her breathing was constricted, and that there was an odd
tightening in her throat.
She saw the amusement fade from his eyes, to be replaced by
something deeper and more dangerous, saw a muscle jerk in his
cheek, and wished desperately that she'd kept quiet. But it was too
late to retract or even apologise. He was already reaching for her, his
hands not gentle as they pulled her across his hard body.
He said something quietly in his own language, and then he bent his
head, putting his mouth on hers with an almost soulless precision.
At first she fought, her lips clamped tight against any deeper invasion,
but even then she was aware of other factors subtly undermining her
instinctive resistance. Her hands were imprisoned helplessly between
their bodies, her palms flat against the wall of his chest, deepening
her consciousness of his warm muscularity. The scent of his skin was
in her nostrils, emphasised by the faint muskiness of some cologne. If
she opened her eyes he would fill her vision, and they seemed
enveloped in a cone of silence broken only by their own uneven
breathing. Harriet had been kissed before, but she had never before
known a domination overpowering her every sense. Ultimately, she
had always known she was in control.
Yet now -- Her lips parted on a little sigh of capitulation that had
nothing to do with coercion suddenly, because she was as eager as he
was, as greedy for the deeper intimacy he was already seeking, his
teeth grazing the softness of her inner lip, his tongue delicately and
erotically exploring all the soft moist contours of her mouth.
Gently his hand freed the blouse from her waistband, and his warm
fingers moved caressingly on her back, tracing the length of her spine
with a featherlight touch that had her arching against him in unspoken
delight.
For the first time in her life, Harriet knew need, knew the simple and
unequivocal ache for fulfilment. And knew how easy it would be to
release the last hold on sanity and let herself drift inevitably on this
warm tide of pleasure.
And then from the corner, behind the sheltering screen she heard a
small whimpering cry, 'Harry!'
Nicky was awake,, and suddenly so was she—jolted out of her
dangerous dream and back in reality.
Alex Marcos had heard the child too. He was no longer holding her so
tightly, and she was able to sit up and draw away from him, combing
shaking fingers through her fair hair.
Her legs were trembling, but she made herself stand up, nervously
ramming her disordered blouse back into the waist of her skirt. She
stole a sidelong glance at him, biting her lip.
He was leaning back watching her. His tie was loosened, and the
black hair was dishevelled. His dark eyes were brilliant, not with
thwarted passion, but with stinging, cynical mockery.