Authors: Sara Craven
he guessed what she had been up to.
'As you wish,' he fel into step beside her. 'Michaelis wil be grieved that you wish to go
so soon.'
'It isn't real y that soon,' she protested. 'I was only ever coming for a month. And I'l he
back to see him again.'
'When?'
She thought, 'When you're away and gone, and I can be sure I won't have to meet you
and your new wife.'
She shrugged. 'Some time. I—I'l write to him, of course.'
There was a silence. They had reached the edge of the sanctuary, not moving fast,
when Damon said, 'Would it make any difference to your decision to leave if I told you
his lawyers were coming to Phoros next week ?'
'No, it wouldn't!' The exclamation was almost a cry of pain. 'I don't want to know about
that. I'm content with what I have, to be what I am. I don't need a chain of hotels, or
to be an heiress. I don't want it. It's spoiled everything.'
She had
stopped, and Damon turned her to face him, his hands gripping her arms. He
said, 'Michaelis only wants you to be happy. That is al he ever wanted. He thought that
I
could make you so; he stil thinks it. That is why he has agreed to sel the Korialis
chain to the Leandros corporation. If the deal goes through—-if it is truly what you
want, then you wil no longer be an heiress, Eleni mou. I thought then that I would ask
you again to marry me.'
Helen swal owed. She was stil asleep. She was dreaming; she must be.
He said huskily, 'Look at me, Eleni, matia mou, my eyes, my precious one. Speak to me.
Don't torture me like this,'
She said on the merest breath of a whisper, 'But the hotels—the money ...'
'I don't need them, agapi mou. I need you, as I need breath in my body.' He pul ed her
forward into his arms, and his mouth found hers for an endless reeling moment.
At last he lifted his head and looked down at her. He said, 'From the first moment I saw
you in your father's gal ery, that's how it has been with me. How could you not know?'
Helen shook her head, hardly daring to believe what she was hearing, to let the
delirious joy wel ing up inside her to overwhelm her.
'But it was al arranged. Grandfather wanted us to marry because ...'
'Because of your mother and Iorgos? No, my heart, I swear he never thought of it until
I asked him for you. The negotiations over the hotel chain had been going on for
months before, but they were held up because of his il ness. Then, when he knew I
wanted you for my wife, he decided to make the hotels and everything else that he had
your dowry.' His smile was rueful. 'He thought it would please you, that it would suit
your English independence to know that you would not be coming to me empty-
handed.'
'You never told me you loved me,' she said slowly.
'Not in words, perhaps, but then I had only just begun my wooing, and you were so
determined not to let me near you—except that afternoon when I brought you here.'
He gave an unsteady laugh. 'I knew then that I could not trust myself to be alone with
you, and that we must be married as soon as possible. What I did not know was that
Michaelis intended to tel you' that he was making you his heiress, so that any proposal
from me would have sounded completely mercenary and calculated. Your grandfather
and I came nearer to a quarrel over that than at any time in our lives. He is of a
different generation, agapi mou. To him a woman is property like a house or a piece of
land. He thinks we arc both mad. And of course, there was the other alternative.'
'What alternative?' She slid her arms round his neck, smiling into his eyes, deliberately
provocative, loving the way his arms tightened in response, the pressure of his hard
body against hers.
He smiled. 'That you didn't want me, in spite of everything your body was tel ing me,
and that you were using your accusations simply to get rid of me. Or even that you
wanted the money more. There was always that possibility too. After al , you stil have
not told me you love me. M'agapas?'
She said shakily, 'I can't say it in Greek, Damon, my lessons haven't quite got that far.
But I love you with al my heart.'
He said softly, 'We won't embarrass Madame Stavros by asking her to teach you love
words. I prefer to tutor you myself.' He lifted a strand of her hair and brushed it across
his lips. 'Se thelo poll, Eleni mou. I want you very much,'
'And I want you,' she whispered, lifting her mouth to his, her body melting against
his.
When she could think again, she asked, 'Were you jealous of Craig?'
'I am jealous of everyone you speak to and smile at,' he said. 'Kostas was anxious. He
said you talked much together, and that you smiled a great deal.'
'I noticed him disapproving,' she said wryly. 'But Craig never stood a chance, even if fie
was the island Romeo. I think I must have been in love with you then, although I didn't
realise it. But I'd told myself so often that I hated you because of the way you'd treated
me, and made a fool of me, that I had to believe it.' She paused. 'And then of course,
there was Soula. You were with her that day in Athens.'
'I have been with her on many days in Athens, usual y bearing messages from Kyria
Irini. Your great-aunt was endlessly inventive in devising little errands that would bring
us together. Inviting the girl here was an act of desperation,' I think. She knew how
angry your grandfather would be.' He smiled reminiscently. 'I was intended to see how
altogether more suitable Soula would be as a bride.'
'Is that real y al there was in it? There was nothing more between you than that?'
'Nothing, agapi mou. I was content to flirt with her, if by doing so I could obtain some
reaction from you.' His eyes glinted wickedly down at her as she made a muffled sound
of protest. 'But Soula's heart is stil untouched, although her vanity may be a little
dented when we announce our betrothal. She wil make a suitable marriage. You need
not worry about her.'
'Is she an heiress?'
'Yes. Almost as rich an heiress as you, my precious one. And she would not relinquish
one drach of it for any man walking the earth.'
'Money is such
a responsibility,' said Helen. 'And don't laugh at me, Damon, you're used
to it. It's al very wel for you. Wil Grandfather be very hurt, do you suppose, because I
don't want this inheritance?'
'I think he wil recover,' he said sardonical y. 'He intends to discuss with his lawyers the
possibility of setting up a trust fund of some kind for our children-He is as stubborn as
you are, agapi mou
.'
He took off his coat and wrapped it round her. 'Now we wil go
back to the vil a, Eleni, and in the morning we wil tel him that we are going to be
married, but not, I think, about tonight's escapade. It would only worry him.'
'It would convince him we were mad.' She smiled. 'Perhaps I was a little crazy. I didn't
come here to say goodbye; I came to ask Aphrodite for you, even though I didn't have
anything to leave as an offering.'
'No offering was needed,' he said gently. 'I was yours already. Since time began, and
until it ends.' It was like a marriage vow.
She said, 'Since time began, and until it ends, Damon mou,' and lifted her mouth for his
kiss.