‘Don’t be so ridiculous, you can’t own a person!’ she exclaimed witheringly. ‘Slavery was abolished some time back—or hadn’t you heard?’
‘Well, I’ve just reinstated it on this island, which I happen to own—or hadn’t you heard?’
He was laughing as he spoke, displaying strong white and, needless to say, perfect teeth as he did so. And his hands had begun sliding slowly down from her shoulders and were now caressing her back in a way that was affecting both her mind and body quite disastrously.
‘But all that’s completely irrelevant,’ he whispered seductively, drawing her body another fraction closer while stopping short of actual contact. ‘You see, I’m not the sort of man who would ever dream of forcing his attentions on a woman.’
Hardly something for him to be boasting about, thought Lindy fuzzily, her head swimming with the almost unbearable tension of the excitement gripping her—the problem was far more likely to be one of women forcing their attentions on him.
‘And, of course, you’ll have your own bedroom in this suite until such time as you start sharing my bed—a time which will come only when you choose.’
‘If that’s the case, that time will never come,’ retorted Lindy, trotting out the words in which she had little or no faith simply because she felt the occasion demanded them, and also because they afforded her a few seconds’ distraction from the overwhelming effect his nearness was having on her.
‘Perhaps I’ll remind you of those words when you come, eager and impatient, to my arms…or perhaps then I’ll be too distracted even to recall them.’
‘Stop it,’ she pleaded, the words coming out in a high-pitched squeak that dismayed her.
‘Of course I’ll stop,’ he placated her, while at the same time his head lowered to hers. ‘But first I should like to kiss you.’
‘Why?’ she squeaked inanely, and emitted an even stranger sound as she attempted to clear her throat.
‘Because I’d like to; perversely, perhaps, given that I know you’ll derive no pleasure whatever from it. But, as I say, there’s nothing I enjoy more than a challenge, and your lack of response now will make the passion I shall soon taste on your lips all the sweeter.’
It was then that he drew her fully into his arms, and then that her own rose instinctively to cling around him. Her immediate reaction was of disappointment, and one she instantly transformed into a more acceptable feeling of surprise. It was the unexpected chasteness of his kiss that she found so disconcerting and that made her realise just how terrified she had been of how she might respond. Almost light-headed with relief at finding her fears ungrounded, she felt her rigid muscles relax as the crippling tension that had gripped her for so long swiftly left her. And it was then that he made his move; his arms sliding down her body, his touch electrifying as he moulded her to him, his lips parting hers till his tongue gained entry to plunder and explore the melting guilelessness of her mouth.
And it was in that one fatal moment of relaxation that his body began dictating with impunity to hers; inflaming it into a violence of response far more powerful than anything she had feared. So totally attuned had her body instantly become to his that the urgent swiftness with which potent desire leapt in him neither shocked nor alarmed her. From the start there had been a primitive instinct within her, something that had tried to warn her of what this man was capable of awakening in her and which she was capable of comprehending only when it was too late. But now her body was singing out in reckless joy, marvelling in its magical ability to evoke so unbridled and powerful a response in his.
When, without so much as an instant of warning, he wrenched her from his arms and strode across the room to the huge plate-glass doors leading out to the balcony her reaction was one of such profound disorientation that the only thing she was even vaguely aware of was the sound of her own laboured breathing rasping in her ears.
‘Well, as I said,’ his disembodied and only marginally breathless voice came to her, ‘the next time you’ll enjoy it…perhaps a little more.’
The sarcasm oozing from his every syllable brought the stinging heat of humiliation crawling over her body. Never in her entire twenty-three years had she experienced anything like this…anything as utterly degrading as this! She had allowed herself to be manipulated by an experienced man of the world and had actually thought she was affecting him as devastatingly as he was her!
Anyone would have thought she had never been kissed before! But she had, and with some men had thoroughly enjoyed it…yet never once had she come close to losing control of herself, and nothing she had ever experienced could have prepared her for what had happened to her just now.
She raised her hands and pressed them against her burning cheeks as the sickening thought occurred to her that it wasn’t even a question of having allowed herself to be manipulated by him…she had been nothing more than putty in his hands.
‘My, my, don’t tell me you found kissing me so nauseating that you’re incapable of speech,’ he taunted. ‘Never mind, there’s always next time to look forward to.’
‘Don’t bank on it!’ she flung at him in childish despair, then, wishing she had had the sense to keep her mouth shut and simply leave, she turned and walked from the room, tears of rage and humiliation stinging her eyes as the sound of his mocking laughter floated softly to her ears.
CHAPTER TWO
‘JUST where the hell have you been?’ demanded Lindy, her aggressive words bringing Niko’s complaint about her language flashing back to her as she confronted Tim Russell on opening the door to the office.
‘Close the door,’ he ordered sharply, glancing furtively past her.
‘I have every intention of closing it,’ she retorted, slamming the door hard behind her. ‘Because I don’t intend the guests hearing the earful I intend letting you have, you low-down creep! I——’
‘I suggest you shut up and listen to what I have to say, because I’ve only a few minutes.’
‘What do you mean—you’ve only a few minutes?’ she demanded, her eyes sweeping contemptuously over his bleary-eyed, ill-shaven features. ‘You’ll just——’
‘It means I’ve a boatman waiting to take me off this damned island,’ he informed her, crouching down to the holdall at his feet and closing it.
Lindy’s eyes widened in startled disbelief. In the two months she had been here, as his petty moodiness had hardened to vindictive hectoring and she had lost all memory of the man she had once believed him to be, she had grown to despise him. As for his qualifications for the job, she had yet to puzzle out whether he was very good at hotel management or simply adept at delegating most things, as he invariably did, to the highly trained staff at his disposal. Her friends had been right in their belief that he was expecting more from her than he had admitted, and she recognised his unpleasant behaviour towards her as his way of trying to punish her for so naively having believed him—behaviour she responded to with open contempt. This vindictive specimen of manhood she could handle with ease, she told herself, but Niko Leandros was another matter altogether, and for that reason Tim Russell was going nowhere without her!
‘Right—let’s go,’ she stated, anger searing through her as he began laughing derisively. ‘If you’re worried about honouring your gambling debts I suggest you send Mr Leandros a fiver when we get back to England—that should just about cover my worth, shouldn’t it?’
‘If I’d known Leandros was likely to be part of it I’d never have got involved in that particular card school,’ he muttered, rising to his feet and hooking the holdall over his shoulder. ‘Unfortunately I’d had a bit too much to drink by the time he put in his unexpected appearance.’
‘Oh, I see. You were drunk, and that makes it perfectly all right for me to be left to the mercies of a self-opinionated playboy, is that it?’
‘Who do you think you’re kidding, Lindy?’ he jeered. ‘You fancy him like mad and make no effort to hide it—a fact that makes me see red when I think of the “I wish men would leave me alone” routine you’ve been dishing out to me. But I’d say Leandros can’t exactly be described as impervious to you, as he’s the one who suggested I stake you.’
‘And how many of you were there in this card game?’ demanded Lindy frigidly, refusing even to acknowledge his opening gibes. ‘Tell me, Tim, how many other of the degenerate gambling fraternity had the opportunity to win me?’
‘He bought the rest of them out of the game—it was just the two of us.’ His gaze hardened visibly. ‘Damn it, Lindy, none of this would have happened if you’d behaved like a normal woman towards me. And don’t try telling me you expected things to carry on between us as they had in England, because even I refuse to believe you could be that stupid!’
‘Sorry to disappoint you,’ she rounded on him, trying desperately not to lose her temper, ‘but that’s exactly what I believed—and what you led me to believe. And to blame me for your bouts of drunkenness, your womanising and your——’
‘I hate to interrupt this litany of praise,’ he snapped, ‘but I really have to get a move on.’
‘We have to get a move on,’ she informed him coldly.
‘I’m afraid you’re going nowhere while Leandros has your passport.’
Lindy’s eyes flew to the safe, in which her passport should have been, uncertainty mixed with horror filling them.
‘Sorry, but Leandros insisted on sending one of his henchmen back here for it as a sort of bond,’ explained Tim with no discernible trace of remorse.
‘I don’t believe you,’ she croaked weakly. ‘My God, you really are the most loathsome apology for a man I’ve ever had the misfortune to come across!’
He gave a harsh laugh. ‘And how would you describe the dashing young Leandros heir?’ he sneered. ‘I’m sure you’ll be only too willing to drop your virginal airs where he’s concerned and wheedle your way——’
‘I shan’t need to wheedle,’ she informed him, her’ words hoarse with disgust. ‘Because I intend going to him right this minute and telling him the truth.’
‘Oh, yes?’ he enquired, his expression mocking. ‘You fancy a spell in a Greek gaol, do you? Because that’s where he’d have the two of us slapped, make no mistake about that.’
‘We haven’t broken any laws!’ exclaimed Lindy, thrown by a momentary flash of fear darting through her. ‘None that could warrant gaol, anyway,’ she added uncertainly.
‘You have some experience with Greek law, have you?’ he sneered, then paused as though savouring an idea. ‘Mind you, if the pair of us ended up inside perhaps I’d get an uninterrupted chance to show you exactly the lines along which I’d planned our relationship to develop …though I can no longer guarantee my intentions would be as honourable as they once were.’ He smiled wolfishly, hitching the holdall more securely on his shoulder as he did so. ‘So yes, why don’t you go ahead and confide all in Leandros? It might just have some very interesting repercussions.’
‘Get out of here!’ she spat at him, trembling with rage, yet startled to detect fear flashing through her once more.
‘Yes—I suppose I should, if that’s your answer.’ He sighed with false regret. ‘And I really shouldn’t keep that boatman waiting, even though I am paying him a small fortune to get me discreetly over to the mainland…your entire share of our salary, in fact. But I’m sure that, if you play your cards better than I did with Leandros, money won’t be one of your worries—the guy’s loaded.’
He had actually managed to frighten her with his talk of prison, she admitted bemusedly to herself as the door closed behind him and silence began filling the room with an almost palpable oppressiveness. She frowned, trying to examine that fleeting, puzzling fear, only to find it had disappeared along with the loathsome Tim. Her frown deepened as she remembered how her friends had tried to warn her of how naïve she was being where Tim was concerned. She gave a small shudder as she wondered what their reaction would be to the way things had now turned out—not one of them, she was certain, would have envisaged anything remotely as bad as this. How could she have been so incredibly pig-headed?
‘With embarrassing ease,’ she gloomily answered herself aloud, suddenly acutely conscious of how completely bereft she was of someone to confide in. Her status as the manager’s wife had erected an intangible barrier between herself and the rest of the staff, most of whom spoke quite good English and were unanimously friendly—but it was a friendliness that stopped short of allowing her to seek the actual friendship someone of her open and outgoing nature would naturally have sought. And she had to admit that it had troubled her, she thought unhappily, gazing around the room and frowning suddenly as her attention was caught by the unusual dimness of the light.
She turned and looked behind her, her gaze falling on the graceful marble-pillared lampstand in the corner, the single source lighting the room. She walked over to it, her frown deepening as she removed the heavy manila file balanced on top of the shade which had so dimmed the amount of light being emitted. So, she pondered, mystified and wary, Tim had been sneaking around almost in the dark—obviously intent on slipping in and out unnoticed.
After a few moments’ bemused thought she gave a dismissive shrug and tossed the file on to one of the cabinets, gazing around her once more in the now improved light. One thing was for sure, she thought wryly: she wouldn’t be taking on the little amount of work Tim hadn’t managed to delegate—her lack of Greek ensured that. In fact, though she had found plenty to do in the way of work to keep herself occupied, there had been few specific duties for her to perform. At first, Tim had taken delight in delegating menial tasks to her whenever an opportunity had arisen, though his pleasure had soon diminished with the unconcerned enthusiasm with which she would turn her hand even to something as dull as making beds.
But what was she to do now he was gone? she wondered apprehensively…Her job, non-existent though it was, had been part and parcel of his.
But what was very much more to the point…what was she going to do right now?
Pulling a small face, she switched off the lamp and stumbled her way in the dark to the door—trying to comfort herself with imagining Tim Russell barking his shins on the furniture as he had made the same journey in reverse.
She took the lift to the top floor, her heart thudding painfully in her chest and her thoughts drifting everywhere except to the man she was about to face once more. Had Tim taken only the holdall he had been carrying, or had he had his other things stashed away, ready for a speedy departure? She managed to keep her mind on similarly dredged-up thoughts until the lift doors had opened, knowing that the answers didn’t interest her in the least.
Resisting a strong urge to step back into the lift and ride up and down in it all night if it came to it, she strode to the door of Niko’s suite and knocked loudly on it before she had a chance to weaken.
‘It was unlocked anyway,’ he informed her as he opened the door. ‘In future, all you have to do is walk in.’
‘How was I to know that?’ she demanded icily, allowing her eyes to rise no higher than his silk-shirted shoulder-line as she stepped inside. ‘Which is my room?’
‘I’ll take you to it,’ he murmured, his face coming disconcertingly into her line of vision as he gave a small, mocking bow. ‘I don’t suppose your errant husband has turned up, has he?’ he asked as he led her through an archway and down a corridor, his words bringing a startled flush of guilt to her face.
‘I’ve really no idea,’ she muttered, her words sounding alarmingly strained and reluctant to her ears.
He drew to a halt outside one of the panelled oak doors leading off the corridor.
‘When did you last see him?’ he asked, turning to face her.
Lindy had begun lowering her eyes the moment they had spotted him turning. ‘I can’t remember,’ she lied, without the slightest glimmer of hope of being believed. ‘After what he’s done to me, I honestly wouldn’t care if I never saw him again!’
‘And I doubt very much whether you will—at least, not on this island,’ he murmured, his shrewdly watchful eyes never once leaving her face.
‘Good,’ muttered Lindy. ‘Now—is this my room?’
She took a step towards the door outside which they had stopped and found her path blocked by the bulk of his body.
‘How long have you been married?’
Lindy bit back an exclamation of irritation, yet as she did so she also experienced the niggling beginnings of alarm. She should have prepared herself for this, she thought nervously. The need for her and Tim to provide any details of their alleged marriage had never arisen, and they had never really discussed concocting any. If she started lying off the top of her head in her present state of tense exhaustion she knew she was perfectly capable of forgetting every lie she had uttered come tomorrow…detailed lying had never been her forte, even at the best of times.
‘If you don’t mind, I’d rather we didn’t even mention the man’s name,’ she said, striving to sound blasé.
She flinched as his hands descended on her shoulders, and promptly closed her eyes—simply because she couldn’t trust them not to betray her one way or another.
‘Russell stated in his application form that you were getting married around the middle of August. Given that we’re now approaching November, I can’t honestly say your attitude reflects that expected of a bride of just over two months.’
With considerable difficulty Lindy forced her mind not to dwell on this further evidence of Tim’s calculating duplicity.
‘If you already knew—why did you ask?’ she snapped, then, realising that that sort of retort would get her nowhere, added hastily, ‘If you must know, I married Tim on the rebound.’
She felt like awarding herself a medal for such a gratifying display of mental dexterity.
‘Really? Yet you and Russell applied for the job in the spring—I was under the impression that marriages on the rebound took place within a matter of days rather than months.’
‘Well, you were wrong,’ Lindy retorted, still not daring to open her eyes—especially not now that the faint yet distinctive aroma that was so unmistakably his had started working its way past her nostrils and into her senses. It was a smell that was no more than the vague fragrance of freshly laundered silk, combined with a delicate spiciness, far too subtle to be aftershave—yet it was a smell that was exclusively his and which now seemed to have the power to affect her like a seductive caress.
‘Lindy, if you insist on standing here with your eyes closed I shall only kiss you.’
She opened her eyes, not as quickly as she had intended simply because they had reacted to her efforts as though held together by glue. By the time they were fully open his features were a blur before them and her lips were already unconsciously parting to savour the impact of his.
Her arms reached out to embrace him as her mouth leapt to eager life beneath the intoxicating ministrations of his. But it was only her hands that made contact with his silk-shirted torso, and as she attempted to draw nearer, her arms straining to encircle him, realisation slowly began penetrating the fog of excited confusion clouding her mind that she was being deliberately held at arm’s length. And it was that belatedly dawning realisation that stung her into finding the strength to break free. What she found doubly humiliating was that he made no effort to stop her, merely lifting his hands from her shoulders as she twisted away from him, and it was with considerable difficulty that she restrained herself from burying her face in her hands in utter mortification.
‘It’s not fair,’ she panted hoarsely in an attempt to salvage at least a shred of her tattered pride. ‘You’re taking advantage of me when I’m practically dead on my feet with nervous exhaustion!’
‘Why on earth should you be in a state of nervous exhaustion?’ he asked, his tone amused as he opened the door, then swung her round and propelled her through it. ‘Surely not over that husband of yours, whose name you don’t even wish to hear?’
‘No doubt you find this all highly amusing,’ she flung at him, then found herself having to stifle an exclamation of sheer delight as the room was suddenly bathed in soft light.
It was a large room, airy and uncluttered, and with delicate splashes of buttery yellow here and there warming the dazzling whiteness of it. As in the main living area, this room had an outer wall consisting entirely of huge plate-glass sliding doors, one of which was opened to let the soft night breezes billow and dance through the curtains now drawn across them.
In the middle of the room was a huge canopied bed, its crocheted cotton covering so exquisitely worked that it was as though the bed had been shrouded in dazzling white lace.
Suddenly aware that she was being watched, Lindy brought the infatuated rovings of her eyes to an abrupt halt.
‘Why should I find any of this in the least amusing?’ he enquired, as though prompting her to continue her onslaught.
‘Because you’re not a poor defenceless woman who’s been used as a poker chip—that’s why!’ she instantly obliged, anger flashing in her eyes as she spun round to face him. ‘You wouldn’t find it nearly amusing if you were me, I can assure you!’
The expression on his face proclaimed all too clearly his undoubted amusement and the struggle he was having concealing it, which made her suspect that her ‘poor defenceless woman’ claim might have been overdoing it a little.
‘If I happened to be you I suspect I’d be thanking my lucky stars I’d been won by a man with whom I’m so obviously sexually compatible.’
Lindy was stunned into stupefied silence…she couldn’t possibly have heard him correctly!
‘And I’d be shuddering at the thought of all the other men who could have won me—none of them, admittedly, as grossly disfigured as I am, but several of them old enough to be your grandfather.’
‘You liar! You——’ She bit back the words with a ferocity that could have amputated her tongue. She had just been about to let slip she knew it had been a game between himself and Tim alone!
‘You were saying?’ he drawled, the anger blazing in his eyes a startling contrast to the total lack of expression on his face.
‘I was saying you were a liar,’ croaked Lindy, suddenly very frightened. ‘You…you wouldn’t be thinking any of those things if you were me, you’d just be terrified and…and nervously exhausted,’ she finished off lamely.
‘I’d say you were the liar,’ he informed her in chillingly quiet tones, ‘because you’re not in the least terrified of me…something that could turn out to be a dangerous error of judgement on your part.’ He turned and walked to the door. ‘There are some matters I should like to discuss with you later, so I’ll have food brought up for us in half an hour and I shall expect you to join me then. There’s a bathroom leading off the dressing-room—and, if there’s anything you find you need, just ask and it will be provided.’
His head dropped in the most minimal of bows before he closed the door behind him.
That bow was typical of him, thought Lindy dazedly, taking leaden steps towards the bed; it was the sort of gesture that only the super-confident—and usually abundantly wealthy—could afford to make. In the lowly, a bow was an act of obeisance—in men such as Niko Leandros it was a none too subtle statement of their feelings of total superiority.
She gazed down at the bed, on which she had been about to sit, and decided its coverings were far too grand for such treatment; instead she made her way over to the dainty gondola chair in front of the dressing-table and sat down.
The sight of her own possessions neatly arranged before her sent a small frisson of alarmed awareness winging through her. She opened a couple of the drawers and again found her own possessions neatly stacked inside.