He felt his body kick with pleasure at looking at her. As of their own volition, his eyes wandered downwards again, past that slender neck framed by that glorious hair, down over full, swelling breasts, superbly moulded by the tight-fitting jacket she wore, nipping in to a deliciously spannable waist, and then ripening outwards to softly rounded hips, before descending down long, long legs.

He frowned. She was wearing trousers. The sight offended him. With legs that long she sh

ould be wearing a short, tight skirt that hugged those splendid thighs and clung lovingly to the lush, rounded bottom he felt sure a woman like that must have...

Who the hell was she?

His brain interrupted his body's visceral contemplation of the female's physical attributes. What was a woman this lush, this drop-dead gorgeous, this damn sexy, doing here in Yiorgos Coustakis's house?

The answer came like a blow to the gut. There was only one reason a woman who looked like this would be swarming around Old Man Coustakis's private residence, and that was because she was a private guest. Very private.

All of Athens knew that Yiorgos Coustakis liked to keep a stable of women. He was renowned for it, even from long before his wife became an invalid.

And they'd always been young women—even as he'd got older.

Even now, apparently.

Distaste filled Nikos's mouth. OK, so maybe the old man was still up for it, even at his age, but the idea of the man of seventy-eight keeping a woman who couldn't be more than twenty-five, if that, as his mistress was repugnant in the ex­treme.

Andrea blinked, momentarily blinded by the bright light after the dim shade of the interior of the huge house she had been deposited at barely five minutes ago by the lush limo that had met her at the airport.

Then, as her vision cleared, she saw someone was already on the terrace. She took in an impression of height, and dark­ness. Black hair, a sleek, powerful-looking business suit, an immaculately knotted tie—and a face that made her stop dead.

The skin tone was Mediterranean; there was no doubt about that. But what struck her incongruously was the pair of piercing steel-grey eyes that blazed at her. She felt her stomach lurch, and blinked again. She went on staring, taking in, once she could drag her eyes away from those penetrating grey ones, a strong, straight nose, high cheekbones and a wide, firm mouth.

She shook her head slightly, as if to make sure the man she was staring at was really there.

Suddenly Andrea saw the man's expression change. Harden with disapproval. And something more than disapproval. Disdain. Something flared inside her—and it was nothing to do with the unmistakable frisson that had sizzled through her like a jolt of electricity in the face of the blatant appraisal this startlingly breath-catching man had just subjected her to. She would have been blind not to have registered the look of out­right sexual attraction in the man's face when he'd first set eyes on her a handful of seconds ago. She was used to that reaction in men. For the most part it was annoying more than anything, and over the years she had learnt to dress down, concealing the ripeness of her figure beneath loose, baggy clothes, confining her glowing hair into a subdued plait, and seldom bothering with make-up. Besides—a familiar shaft of bitterness stabbed at her—she knew all too well that any initial sexual attraction men showed in her would not last—not when they saw the rest of her...

She pulled her mind away, washing out bitterness with an even more familiar upsurge of raw, desperate gratitude—to her mother, to fate, to any providential power, to everyone who had helped her along her faltering way in the long, painful years until she had emerged to take her place as a functioning adult in the world. Considering what the alternatives might have been, she had no cause for bitterness—none at all.

And if she felt bitter about the man who was her father's lather—well, that was not on her own behalf, only her mother's. For her mother's sake only she was here, now, stand­ing on this terrace, over a thousand miles from home—being looked at disdainfully by a man she could not drag her eyes from.

It had been a hard decision to make. It had been her friends Tony and Linda who had helped her make it.

'But why is he doing this?' she'd asked them, for the doz­enth time. 'He's up to something and I don't know what—and thai worries me!'

'Maybe he just wants to get to know you, Andy,' said Linda peaceably. 'Maybe he's old, and ill, and wants to make up for how he treated you.'

'Oh, so that's why I've been getting letters just about or­dering me to go and dance attendance on him! And not a dickey-bird about Mum, either! No, if he'd really wanted to make up he'd have written more politely—and to Mum, not me.'

'If you want my advice I think you should go out there,' said Linda's husband, Tony. 'Like Linda said, he might be after a reconciliation, but even if he isn't, suppose he wants to use you for his own nefarious ends in some way? That, you know, puts you in a strong position. Have you thought of that?'

Andrea frowned.

Tony went on. 'Look, if he does want you for something, then if he doesn't want you to refuse he's going to have to do something you want.'

'Like what?' Andrea snorted. 'He doesn't have a thing I want!'

'He's got money, Andy,' Tony said quietly. 'Shed-loads of it.’

Andrea's eyes narrowed to angry slits. 'He can choke on it for all I care! I don't want a penny from him!'

'But what about your mum, Andy?' said Tony, even more quietly.

Andrea stilled. Tony pressed on, leaning forward. 'What if he forked out enough for her to clear her debts—and move to Spain?'

Andrea's breath seemed tight in her chest. As tight as her mother's breath was, day in, day out. Instantly in her mind she heard her mother's dry, asthmatic cough, saw her pause by the sink, breathing slowly and painfully, her frail body hunched.


Tags: Julia James Billionaire Romance