Authors: Sara Craven
for any kind of flight because his arms were round her, drawing her against him, and
his mouth was searching hers with a hunger he did not even attempt to dissemble. Her
head fel back helplessly, her lips parting beneath the onslaught of his kiss. Earth and
sky swung round her in a dizzying arc, and she closed her eyes involuntarily as his kiss
deepened and her body melted, dissolved into pure sensation.
Her last coherent thought was that this was what she had been afraid of, what she had
known she must not al ow to happen at al costs, and then she was no longer thinking
because instincts she had not even guessed she possessed had taken over, and her
hands were sliding compulsively up to Damon's muscular shoulders, while her mouth,
mindlessly wil ing, responded to every intimate demand that his made of her.
His lingers found the single button on her shirt and slipped it free of its loop. The
almost paralysing grip that she had been held in slackened perceptibly, and his hand
began to move on her body, his fingers circling smoothly, tantalising on her bare
midriff, before seeking the supple
indentation of her waist. His other hand moved to the
nape of her neck, stroking it gently, lifting the pale strands of hair and letting them drift
like silk through his fingers. Shivering with pleasure, she arched her throat towards him
and his mouth left hers in immediate response to explore its long curve and linger on
her frantic pulse, before moving downwards inexorably, inevitably to her breasts.
His hand slid down her spine, and the catch on her bikini top gave way. Helen gasped
helplessly, but it was too late for protest. His lips had already brushed the narrow straps
from her shoulders, and his dark head was bending to take what plunder he would.
His mouth might have been ruthless before, but it was like velvet, like silk as he kissed
her breasts, his tongue tracing tiny spirals of delight on her burning skin. Her fingers
twined almost convulsively in the soft thickness of his hair, and she felt an involuntary
moan of pleasure rising in her throat.
The time spun, endlessly, exquisitely past as Helen sank deeper and deeper into the
spel of Damon's lovemaking. His hands and mouth were making havoc of al her
previous imaginings of what passion could be, and she whispered his name Soundlessly
over and over again as her body awoke under the lingering sensuality of his
exploration.
At some time, an eternity before, he had stripped off his shirt and thrown it to the
ground, before pul ing her down beside him. She had surrendered eagerly, wil ingly,
her hands beginning their own tentative journey of discovery.
'Agapi mou,' his voice was incredibly husky, his eyes dark with desire as he stared down
at her. 'Se thelo poli. I want you so much, my sunlit goddess.'
Her immediate impulse was to draw him down to her, to let the wild world of the
senses drown her in surrender. She knew she had never wanted anything so much in
her life. She wanted Damon, wanted his arms around her, his mouth on hers as he
initiated her into the ultimate ways of love. But it was as if. his muttered words had
broken the ring of sensual enchantment which had enclosed her, because suddenly she
remembered what else he had said before he had begun to make love to her—that she
was ripe for love as her mother had been before her. Would the consummation he was
urging her to be an act of love, or simply an act of possession in order to ensure that a
chosen bride of the Leandros family did not escape a second time?
She said on a little gasp, 'No—Damon, I—I can’t. Please ...' Her hands came up not to
ding but to push him away as he leaned over her, a slight smile curving the harsh lines
of his mouth.
He whispered, 'Don't be frightened of me, matia mou. I'l make it beautiful for you. I'l
make it beautiful for us both. You wil see.'
'No!' There was panic in her voice. The skin of his chest and shoulders was warm silk
under her fingers as she tried ineffectual y to thrust him away from her, but beneath
was the
hardness of bone and muscle, and she was just beginning to realise how alone
they were in this isolated spot, and that if Damon chose to use force there would be
little she could do to resist him.
She said again, 'No,' and then, desperately, 'There— there's someone coming. Listen!'
His mouth twisted in amused scepticism as if he recognised the age-old feminine ploy,
but he rolled away from her a little and half sat up, listening.
They both heard it at the same moment—the tiny jangle of a bel somewhere near at
hand, and seconds later, voices. Children's voices.
Damon swore furiously, then reached across Helen urgently, snatching up her shirt and
bikini top and pushing them at her. Her hands were shaking so much that she could
hardly cope with the fastening, but at last she was covered again, and slipping her arms
into the sleeves of her shirt.
It was a strange little procession which came into view on the other side of the hollow.
It was led by a nannygoat with a kid at her heels. She wore a bel round her neck and
Helen found herself wondering if it was al a weird coincidence born of her own desper-
ation, or whether she had been aware of the sound of the bel in some recess of her
mind even before it was in earshot.
Saved by the bel , she thought, and had an insane desire to go into hysterics.
The children followed. Three of them—two boys and a girl, who was wearing a dark red
dress which had obviously been cut down from a garment belonging to some much
older member of the family. They smiled shyly when they saw Helen and Damon, and
cal ed out a greeting in their own tongue which he returned.
Helen stole a glance at him. He had moved right away from her and was sitting on one
of the shaped stones which had once been part of a column, lighting another cheroot.
He looked cool, and total y in command of himself and the situation. The events of the
last few minutes al seemed like some strange erotic fantasy.
Helen got to her feet. Reaction was beginning to set in, and the relentless ache of
frustrated desire, but even that was nothing to the
sense of shame and anger which
was starting to overwhelm her.
If Damon had not spoken when he did, given her time to think, she would have been
his by now, total y and mindlessly. She sank her teeth into her bottom lip until she
could taste blood.
So now she knew how frantical y, fatal y easy it was to be carried away by passion. She
had not imagined she could be so easily aroused, so easily brought to the point of
surrender. She had not imagined, although she had suspected, how Damon's
lovemaking would overcome her inhibitions and reduce her to eager sensuous
compliance.
She thought
savagely, 'I don't even like him.' But the words echoed emptily in her mind,
and at the back of her brain a new realisation was being formed, unwanted and
unwelcome but growing in strength and conviction no matter how desperately she tried
to shut it out.
Suddenly she knew the truth, beyond al reason, al denial. And soundlessly she
whispered to herself, 'Oh, God! I've fal en in love with him.'
HELEN paced restlessly up and down her bedroom, pausing at intervals to glance at the
pendant watch which she wore on a long gold chain round her neck. It would soon be
time to go down to dinner, and she was frankly dreading the prospect. Because at
dinner she would have to face Damon again.
She had not spoken to him, or even looked at him after that burning moment of self-
revelation in the temple. She had been too afraid that she might betray herself utterly if
she did. She was too newly aware, too vulnerable to be able to mask her feelings.
So she had walked past him in silence, her eyes fixed on the uneven floor, and followed
the giggling, talking children and the bleating goats up the slope and away to safety.
She had been half afraid that Damon might attempt to detain her, or at least to come
after her, especial y when the children's path diverged from her own at last, and they
went off waving gaily, their white teeth flashing in cheerful grins. But the vil a was in
sight by then, and she was stil alone, she realised with a thankful glance over her
shoulder.
No one saw her as she entered the house and slipped up to her room, and she was
glad of it. The last thing she wanted was for someone to notice her dishevel ed hair, her
swollen mouth, and the dust that liberal y streaked her shirt, and draw their own
conclusions.
She dropped the shirt and the bikini on the bathroom floor and stepped under the
shower, gasping as the freshness of the water touched her heated body. Her skin and
hair were dean and tingling when she had finished, but she had not managed to scrub
Damon's touch from her body or clear the memory of his kisses and caresses from her
mind as she had hoped. As indeed, she had needed to do.
It would be so easy
,
she thought despairingly, to simply go with the tide to accede to
whatever demands, whatever plans were being made for her without further struggle.
Merely the thought of becoming Damon's wife was enough to make her body suffuse
with heat, and her pulses quicken and flutter, and if al she had wanted was the
gratification of her newly-awakened body, then she would not have hesitated.
But that wasn't enough. It couldn't be enough, she told herself over and over again as
she walked her bedroom floor. Sexual attunement was important in marriage, but it
was not al -important. And what did she real y know of Damon, except that he had
taken command of her senses and emotions? He was just the man her grandfather
wanted her to marry, because years before her mother had refused point-blank to
marry his brother. This would have been a severe slight to the rich and powerful
Leandros family, she could understand that. She could understand too that they would
want compensation for the loss of Maria and her dowry, as wel as for being made to
look ridiculous, but surely the recompense could have been made in money and not in
flesh and blood years later.
She had to admit that from the moment she had laid eyes on Damon Leandros, she had
had to fight her unwil ing attraction to him. Had her unconscious mind been warning
her even then of what her consciousness had tried to reject as ludicrous—that Damon,
if he wished, could exert total and complete control over her mind, body and soul?
But she didn't want to be owned, as if she was some new piece of stock to be acquired
on the open market.
Because that was al this marriage would mean to Damon. She had no idea of the
extent of the business dealings between the two families, but she knew that her
mother's intended marriage to Iorgos had been intended to consolidate this.
And now, because Iorgos was dead—and not, she had any reason to believe, from a
broken heart over his lost bride—Damon was prepared to take over. It was al so
horribly cold-blooded—so inhuman.
She knew, of course, what the compensations would be—Damon's money to spend,
travel, the kind of life other girls dreamed about. He would make love to her as and
when he chose, until the novelty wore off, she thought, gnawing her lip savagely, and
eventual y she would bear him a child. And that, she supposed, would have to be
enough. If she was honest, for many women it probably would be enough. A girl from
his own country would accept the limitations of such a marriage and find her own
happiness in it. But it would not be enough for her. Loving him, how could she agree to
marry him, knowing the most she could hope for would be a corner of his mind, and
none of his heart?
He had told her he wanted her, but he had never said he loved her. With his technique
as a lover he probably never needed to say it, she thought cynical y. Craig Lassiter had
said something too about Damon being able to have any woman he wanted, and from
what Damon himself had hinted about his late brother, womanising seemed to be a
family proclivity, Helen thought unhappily.
And after the marriage, was she intended to think that al that side of his life would
simply be relegated to oblivion, or would Damon expect to go on playing the field in the
world's
capitals while she sat at home like—like faithful Penelope?
Temper rose within her, and she looked round furiously for something to smash, but
she could find nothing, except a bottle of her favourite scent, and she was loath to
sacrifice that in the cause of bad temper. Of course, she told herself, her anger waning
as the humour of the situation struck her, if she became Madame Damon Leandros,
then she could have a whole row of bottles fil ed with the most expensive Parisian frag-
rances to smash whenever the fancy took her. The thought was so ludicrous that she
smiled involuntarily, the smile fading as she heard a knock at the door.
She tensed, staring at the panels, as if she was trying to conjure up the face, the