Read His Forbidden Bride Online
Authors: Sara Craven
he told her softly.
She could feel herself blushing, and glanced hurriedly round the square
instead. The backgammon players were out in force already, she noticed
with amusement.
And among them Uncle Stavros, on his feet, staring at her and then at her
companion, eyes fixed, mouth parted in shock as if he'd seen a ghost.
Zoe tensed, feeling the force of his gaze like a slap across the face. And as
the Jeep moved off again she saw him take a step forward, his stick raised,
his face distorted by a thunderous frown.
'Is something wrong?' Andreas was alerted by her sudden intake of breath.
'No, not a thing.' She was making no more trouble for Stavros' family. But,
all the same, what the hel was the matter with everyone today? she asked
herself in bewilderment.
She hurried into speech, trying to regain her equilibrium, which had been
jolted by the nasty little incident. 'The church is beautiful, isn't it? I visited it yesterday.'
He grinned at her. 'Did you see the icon of the Virgin of the Cave?'
She looked back at him, demurely. 'Not after Sherry had warned me about
it.'
'I doubt that the icon by itself could do much,' Andreas returned pensively.
'Although, natural y, I have never tested its powers,' he added silkily.
'Of course not,' Zoe tried to keep a straight face, and failed abysmal y.
'That's better,' he approved as she began to shake with laughter.
'Sometimes you seem to have al the cares of the world on your shoulders,
pedhi mou
.'
'Perhaps I'm just not used to having holidays.'
Or meeting someone like you.
'Then I shal do my best to make this one special for you,' Andreas told her
quietly. He paused. 'I am glad to see you are wearing shoes you can walk in.
I thought we would go first to Mount Edira before it becomes too hot.'
Zoe thought privately that it was pretty warm already, but she said nothing.
The Jeep sped on. Livassi was far behind them now, and they were climbing
on a road little better than a cart-track, which wound its way upwards
through groves of olive trees, their silver leaves glittering in the sun. Craning
her neck, Zoe could see nets spread on the ground beneath, waiting to
catch the coming harvest.
'I can see the road-surfacing scheme has been a great success,' she
commented breathlessly, nearly jolted out of her seat by one pothole.
'Most of the traffic has four legs,' Andreas returned. 'They manage just fine.'
The track became steeper and the olives yielded to pine trees. The air was
cooler here in their shade and faintly scented with resin. Zoe sniffed
pleasurably, then took it deep into her lungs.
Andreas swung the Jeep off the track, and parked on a rare level stretch
under the trees.
'From here, we walk,' he said. He gave her a wry grin. 'If you are not too
bruised.'
She said lightly, 'I'm tougher than I look. Lead the way.'
She had half expected him to take her hand, but he did not, and in places it
was something of a scramble to fol ow his long, sure stride. But when they
reached the smal concrete viewing platform that had been constructed near
the summit, al owing an all-round view, she forgot everything else, drawing a
breath of sheer wonder.
Her voice shook a little. 'Oh, God, it's just—so beautiful.'
'Yes,' he said. 'Each time I come here, I cannot believe that I spend time
anywhere else.'
Below them was the green of the island itself, dotted with a patchwork of tiny
coloured roofs, edged by faint strips of silvery sand. And beyond was the
sea, stretching to the misty horizon in shades of turquoise and azure, broken
only by the craggy amethyst shapes of the neighbouring islands.
'There is Zakynthos.' Andreas pointed. 'And that is Kefalonia.'
'They look almost close enough to touch.' Zoe shook her head.
'I advise a more conventional approach,' he said lazily. 'We could sail there
one day, if you would like.' When she did not reply immediately, he went on
smoothly, 'And the tiny one near Kefalonia is Ithaca, the place that
Odysseus struggled to return to for so many years.'
'Hmm.' Zoe wrinkled her nose consideringly. 'According to the version I
read, he didn't struggle that hard. In fact, he was constantly allowing himself
to be diverted— general y by beautiful girls.'
Andreas tutted in amused reproof. 'Also by monsters, storms, and the
malice of the old gods, Zoe
mou
. And his wife waited for him, faithful y and patiently through many long years, so he cannot have been all bad if he
could inspire such devotion.'
'Besides, not al the women he met were wel disposed towards him,' he
added. 'After all, Circe turned his men into animals.'
Zoe gave him a limpid look. 'Someone once suggested that Circe was the
first feminist.'
'
Po, po, po
,' he said softly. 'And do you share her view,
agapi mou
, and believe that all men are beasts?'
'No, of course not.' She hesitated. 'Although the pair I encountered
yesterday made me wonder.'
'They have spent too much time away from Thania,' he said, with faint
contempt. 'Working in bars and clubs where foreign girls get drunk, and strip
off their clothes, and encourage men to do the same. So, to their limited
reason, all foreign girls must be like that. But that is not an excuse,' he
added level y.
'No,' Zoe said. She paused awkwardly. 'Andreas—I didn't thank you properly
yesterday for rescuing me, and I want to apologise for that.'
'It's not a problem.' He shrugged. 'You were upset.' He pointed again. 'Do
you see that little bay? That is where legend says Odysseus rested before
the gods allowed him to return at last to his home. I thought maybe we could
swim there this afternoon. That is, of course, if you have brought your
swimming costume.'
'And if I haven't?'
He smiled at her. 'Then we shal stil swim,
matia mou
,' he said softly. 'But I shal keep my eyes closed.' He paused. 'However, I would bet good money
that it will not be necessary. That you are wearing a bikini under those
charming clothes.'
Zoe bit her quivering lip. 'You see altogether too much, Mr Stephanos.'
He shrugged again. 'Perhaps because I like to look. And to look at you, Zoe
mou
, is a pleasure.' His smile widened. 'And what of you?' he questioned
gently. 'Have you seen enough?'
If he meant himself, Zoe thought with a pang, then she would never see
enough. She could go on fil ing her eyes with him for the rest of her life. Not
a realisation to give her much pleasure or peace of mind.
Hurriedly, she swung round, shading her eyes. 'Can we see the Vil a Danaë
from here?'
'Yes, if you have the eyes of a hawk.' His hands descended on her
shoulders, turning her slightly, forcing her to control an involuntary quiver of
response. 'There is the beach, and that little spot of colour is the roof. You
see?'
Zoe peered down. 'And your own home—where is that?'
His brows lifted. 'Are you planning to pay me a visit?'
'No,' she denied quickly. 'Just—curious.'
'It is not easy to distinguish from this height,' Andreas said after a pause.
'The roof tiles are green and a little faded. But one day, soon, I wil show
you—if you wish.'
She said haltingly, 'Wel —perhaps.' Then, 'Shal we go down, now?'
If the climb up had been something of a struggle, the descent was even
more difficult. Even in her flat canvas shoes, Zoe found she was constantly
slipping on the loose earth and pine needles.
And once she lost her footing altogether and cried out as she began to slide
downhil . Andreas, walking ahead, immediately spun round and grabbed
her, holding her against him to steady her. And for a few heart-stopping
seconds she felt the strength of him, and the heat penetrating her thin layer
of clothing as if it did not exist. She was aware of his breath on her face,
drank in the warm scent of his skin with shaking voracity. As his clasp
tightened she thought, He's going to kiss me, and her whole body tingled
with longing and delight.
Then, with abrupt suddenness, she was free. Set at a brief but definite
distance. She could have wept with the disapointment of it. And with the
shock of what, she realised, was a rejection.
Her face burned, and she could not meet his gaze. 'I'm sorry,' she mumbled.
'That was clumsy of me.'
'No,
agapi mou
,' he said. 'The fault is mine. After all, I promised to take care of you.'
He took her hand firmly in his for the rest of the way, helping her over the
steepest sections of the track. But if he'd been a paid guide, his touch could
hardly have been more impersonal.
By the time they got back to the Jeep, Zoe's heart was thumping like a
trip-hammer, but it had nothing to do with the gradient. Because she knew
that her feelings and desires back there on the mountain must have been
shamingly transparent. He could not have missed the blatant signals she'd
been giving out as her body had been pressed to his. So, why had he
chosen to ignore them?
He knew I wanted him, she thought, humiliated. He must have known. I did
everything but put my arms round his neck and draw him down to me.
I shal never ask anything of you
, agapi mou,
that you do not wish to give
.
His own words, stil teasing at her mind—even stinging a little.
But she had wanted to give, she thought wretchedly. She'd needed his arms
to hold her, and his mouth to find hers, and he had turned away—kindly,
courteously, but definitely.
Because, presumably, he was regretting his pursuit of her. He was tired of
the game he'd been playing, and decided to end it.
And now, somehow, she had to deal with her own regrets.
'Are you al right,
pedhi mou
?' He had shut the passenger door of the Jeep, and was regarding her with a faint frown.
Make it mundane, she thought. Bring the situation back to basics, as if a few
moments ago had never happened.
'I'm a little thirsty,' she admitted, sounding half amused, half apologetic.
'Because things were a bit fraught at the hotel, I forgot to bring any water.'
'I have some in a cool-bag,' he said. He paused. 'But I also have a better
idea, if you can wait for a minute or two.'
'Whatever you say.' She achieved a smile. Kept it cool and friendly. 'You're
in charge, after al .'
She'd expected to be driven to a vil age with a
kafeneion
, but at the foot of the track he turned the Jeep onto a path between the olive trees until they
came to a smal , single-storey house, painted white, and almost fiercely neat
in spite of the chickens pecking in the dust outside the only door.
A smal woman emerged from the house, dressed in black, her hair covered
by a scarf, her broad smile revealing gaps in her teeth. As Andreas climbed
out of the Jeep to greet her she burst into a flood of shrill Greek, reaching up
to pat him on the shoulder.
Then she snatched up a pitcher like a flower vase from a rickety table
outside the door, and trotted off round the house with it.
'Come down,
agapi mou
, and meet Androula,' Andreas invited, walking
round to the passenger side. 'She is an old friend, and she has gone to fetch
us some water from her own spring, which comes straight from the
mountain—the nearest we have to nectar.'
Zoe got out of the Jeep. 'Are you sure about this?' She glanced around her.
'Certain we're not imposing on her?'
'She loves company,' he said. 'And she will be delighted that I have brought
you to her.'
'Does she live alone here?' Zoe asked doubtfully. 'It's very isolated.'
'No, she lives with Spiros, her husband, but he wil be off attending to his
melon patch.'
Androula was back, almost at once, her pitcher brimming. Nodding and
smiling, she offered it to Zoe first.
The water was crystal clear, and so cold that it made her gasp. Zoe drank
deeply, thirstily relishing its chil against the burn of her throat.
'Good?' Andreas asked as she lowered the pitcher at last.
'Better than that.'
To her surprise, he took the pitcher from her, and drank in turn while
Androula smiled widely, nodding her approval.
Zoe wasn't sure how she felt about it. In a way, sharing the container was
almost as intimate as a kiss. But perhaps Androula was simply short of
glasses, she told herself. And, anyway, it was no big deal. She could not
allow it to be.
Androula put a small brown hand on her arm, gesturing towards the house
with the other.
'She wishes you to go in, and sample her honey cakes,' Andreas explained.
'A mark of great favour,' he added.
She said lightly, 'Then how can I resist?'
Inside, the house seemed to consist of one spotlessly clean room. Curtained
alcoves built into the thick walls contained beds, and there was also a
fireplace, a stove for cooking, a table and some hard-looking chairs. On the
top of a chest of drawers was an icon of the Virgin and Child, with a votive
light burning beside it.
One wal lit up the rest of the rather gloomy interior, covered as it was from