Authors: Sara Craven,Chieko Hara
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
pretending to be asleep, closing her eyes and steadying her
constricted breathing to a quiet rhythm.
She heard the engine roar to a stop and men's voices speaking in
Greek, some laughter. They were approaching, walking up the beach
and she felt a mass of tensions, and had to make herself relax.
But when the first cool drops descended on her back, she could
maintain the pretence no longer, her eyes flying open as she propped
herself up slightly and looked over her shoulder.
She had assumed it was Spiro, perhaps with a handful of seawater,
but it was Alex,' and he was holding her bottle of sun lotion in his
hand. As their eyes met, he crouched lithely beside her and again she
felt that delicious coolness on her warm skin, and realised that he was
using the lotion on her. She moved restively.
'Keep still,' he ordered, it's a fool's trick to fall asleep in the sun. You
could have been badly burned.'
She was burning now. As his hand stroked across her flesh, tiny fires
were igniting all over her. And as his fingers moved downwards and
began to apply the lotion to her lower spine and the gentle curve of
her hips above her line of her bikini briefs, she had to sink her teeth
into the soft flesh inside her lower lip to prevent herself from crying
out.
Oh God, what kind of a state was she in, that his lightest touch could
produce such pleasure and such pain at the same time? she wondered
wildly.
When he had finished and was re-capping the bottle, Harriet,
jnurmured an awkward 'Thank you,' avoiding his gaze, aware that her
cheeks were hectically flushed. Aware too that Spiro was standing
only a few yards away, brows raised as he assimilated what was going
on.
Her blush deepened. She said inanely, 'Hello. Did you catch
anything?'
'Enough, I think,' he said drily.
Alex had turned, dropping the bottle of lotion on to the sand beside
her lounger, and moving away to speak to Andonis, who was
unloading the fishing gear from the boat at the small jetty.
Spiro walked across to the lounger and looked down at her. 'So we'll
eat at the villa tonight,
ne?
'
'Yes,' she agreed brightly, fixing her eyes on him, rejecting the
impulse to look round for Alex.
Spiro grinned at her, and his hand snaked down towards her catching
her completely off guard. She had lifted herself on to her elbows, and
before she could stop him he had twitched the bra of her bikini away
from under her body and walked away with it.
'Spiro!' She sat up, wrapping her arms round her half-naked body.
'Bring that back here at once!'
His grin widened. 'Come and get it,
kougla mou.'
With teasing
precision, he hung the strip of material from the branch of a
convenient olive tree.
Angry and embarrassed, she hesitated, measuring the , distance, and
wondering if Spiro intended to allow her to retrieve the bra or
whether he would simply make off with it again, forcing her to
follow. The thought of perhaps having to chase after him through the
gardens with only her hands to cover her -had no appeal whatsoever.
She said entreatingly, 'Spiro—please?' and heard him laugh
tauntingly.
Alex's shadow fell over her. She glanced up at him, her heart
thudding with sudden apprehension as she registered the cold rage in
his face. He looked almost murderous as he glared at Spiro, snarling
something at him in Greek.
For a moment Harriet thought Spiro was going to defy his cousin, and
she tensed as Alex took one long stride towards him, then Spiro
shrugged almost ruefully, unhooked her top from the branch, and
tossed it to him.
Alex turned and almost flung it at her. 'Cover yourself!' he ordered
furiously.
She wasn't uncovered. Her folded arms hid more than the few inches
of top had ever done, but she sensed that now was not the time to
argue, and she turned her back while she fumbled the bra back into
place, and fastened its clip.
When she turned back, Alex had gone, but Spiro was still there,
gazing up the path with an odd, reflective little smile playing round
his mouth.
She said sharply, 'Are you out of your mind? What possessed you to
do such a thing?'
'It was an experiment, that is all.' He laughed at the outrage in her
face. 'Oh, my poor Harriet, don't look like that! There is no need for
you to be angry. Alex has already been angry enough for both of you.'
'I thought he was going to kill you,' she said with a little shiver.
'So did I,' he admitted candidly, and she caught a glimpse of that odd
smile again.
Harriet sighed. 'I suppose you know best, Spiro, but as you work
for—for your cousin, perhaps it might be better not to—to upset him.'
'I promise not to make a habit of it.' His voice sounded almost
lighthearted. 'But perhaps we would be wiser to go without the
delicious fresh fish that Alex's chef will be serving tonight, and eat
out after all. What do you say?'
She said, 'Yes.' She wasn't hungry. That little incident had deprived
her of appetite, but she couldn't bear the thought of encountering Alex
again in that mood, and letting Spiro take her to dinner would be the
best way she knew of avoiding him.
He Jiad no reason to look at her like that—with such a blaze of
contempt in his eyes, she thought stormily, particularly when only
minutes before he had been putting lotion on her back, and
presumably quite well aware that she wasn't wearing her top.
He operates a hell of a double standard, she thought fuming,
wondering how many girls he had seen not merely topless but totally
nude. And what would he have done if she'd been one of the confident
beauties she'd seen parading at Dassia and Sidari on some of her trips
with Spiro? Probably exactly the same, she acknowledged with a
sigh.
She collected her things together and went slowly up to the villa. She
found Nicky in his room, and he welcomed her with an exuberant hug
and a kiss sticky with lemonade and honey, and she stayed with him
while he had his evening meal, unwinding as she listened to his
excited and not always intelligible chatter. He was a bright child, and
each day he seemed to pick up more Greek words. By the time he
went to school, he would probably be bi-lingual, and farther apart
from her than any distance could ever achieve. She had to treasure
these moments when she was alone with him, because his new family
were beginning to close him in with them, and there was no place for
her in that small tight circle of wealth and power.
She bathed Nicky herself that, evening, and he squealed and splashed
with all the old delight as they played once familiar games under
Yannina's benevolently smiling gaze. As she wrapped the bath sheet
round his small dripping body, Harriet held him very close for a
moment, aware of a terrible tightness in her throat, as if she was
already saying goodbye to him. The moment he began to struggle a
little, alarmed by the confining pressure of her arms, she let him go,
tickling him through the folds of towel, and playing 'Round and round
the garden' and 'This little piggy' until he relapsed into his usual
happy giggles.
She sat by his bed, waiting for him to fall asleep, and only when his
eyelids had finally drooped did she relinquish her post and go to her
own room to get ready for her dinner with Spiro.
She had replenished her small wardrobe in Corfu town, buying
several of the inexpensive cotton dresses falling in masses of pleats
from a brief crocheted yoke, but tonight she decided to wear one of
the few dresses she had bought that she hadn't put on before. It was
a
favourite of hers, and she supposed she'd been saving it for some
special occasion. Well, tonight was probably going to be about as
special as she was likely to get, she thought, throwing it across the
bed. It was made from fine floating Indian cotton in shades of blue
and gold, full-skirted and wide-sleeved. The bodice fitted closely,
and the deeply slashed neckline was fastened at the throat and
halfway to her breasts with delicate blue cords, finished off with tiny
gilded tassels.
It was a romantic dress, a dress for a girl with happy dreams in her
eyes—not the look of strain that she could disguise behind dark
glasses during the daytime, but which made her totally vulnerable
when evening came.
She applied her make-up with a light hand—a dusting of shadow for
her eyelids, and the merest touch of colour on her mouth. The natural
glow which the sun had bestowed on her skin needed no extra
embellishment.
She had intended to wear her hair up in a coil, or at least tied back, but
at the last minute she decided to leave it loose on her shoulders.
She was spraying scent on to her throat and wrists when there was an
abrupt knock on the door and Androula came in.
'I'm asked to say the car is at the door,
thespinis.''
Her voice was as
unfriendly as her face.
Harriet swallowed as the woman's gaze flickered disapprovingly over
her. 'Please tell the
kyrios
that I'll be down right away.'
Androula nodded silently and vanished.
Harriet gave herself a last searching look, decided it was all the best
she could do, and started downstairs. Halfway along the corridor she
met Madame Constantis. She was surprised to see her, as the older
woman's room was in a different part of the house, and she had rarely
encountered her on the upper floor.
She glanced at Zoe Constantis, expecting the acid twitch of the lips
which passed for a smile with her, but not even that was forthcoming.
The look which reached her from under the heavy lids was pure
venom—no longer even a pretence at friendliness and acceptance,
and Harriet almost recoiled physically as if an actual blow had been
aimed at her. She glanced back over her shoulder as she reached the
corner, watching the thin upright figure move out of sight, like some
kind of ancient Fury in her black dress, and had to pause for a
moment to try and recover her composure.
She had never been wholly convinced about Madame Constantis'
apparent change of attitude towards her, but she hadn't expected to
have her suspicions so blightingly confirmed either.
Not for the first time, she wondered how such a grim woman could
ever have given birth to such a pleasant easy-going son as Spiro.
The car was parked just outside the circle of light which spilled from
the villa's open doors, and as Harriet crossed towards it, she heard in
the distance the first rumble of thunder. It seemed the storm she had
predicted was on its way.
The passenger door was already open, and she slipped into her seat,
tucking her skirt protectively away from the door before she closed it.
The engine was already running, she realised, purring like some big
cat. Spiro was in a hurry to be off. Perhaps he had also had an
encounter with his mother, and wanted to escape.
She said with a little gasp as the car moved forward, 'I'm sorry I'm
late. I've been putting Nicky to bed and .. .' Her voice stopped
abruptly, as she turned and looked at her companion for the first time.
Alex smiled sardonically at the frank shock in her. eyes. 'And as
always, Harriet
mou,
you are worth waiting for.'
'What are you doing here?' she demanded heatedly. 'Where is Spiro?'
'On his way back to Athens. His holiday is over for a while.'
For a moment she was unable to speak, then she said, 'Was that really
necessary? What happened on the beach was only a joke, after all.'
His laugh had a bite to it. 'You flatter yourself! Spiro's tasteless
horseplay has no connection with his departure. A minor problem has
developed in the Athens office which I hope he can deal with before it
blows up into a minor crisis, that is all. I am sorry he did not have time
to explain in person, or say goodbye to you in the manner you would
wish.'
'There's no need for that.' Her voice was stiff. 'A simple message
telling me that the evening was off would have been sufficient.'
'But you're my guest, Harriet
mou
,
' he said silkily. 'And a good host
would not allow you to be deprived of an evening's pleasure when it
is in his power to fill the inevitable void which Spiro's departure must
create.'
'That's very kind of you,' she said woodenly. 'But I'd really prefer to
go back to the villa, if you don't mind.'
'But I do mind,' he retorted. The car seemed to leap forward and