Bought For The Billionaire's Revenge. Clare Connelly
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СКАЧАТЬ approved of.’

      ‘That’s what they wanted. I just wanted you.’

      ‘Not enough.’ He sobered, his mouth a grim slash.

      Frustrated, she tried to appeal to the man he’d once been: the man who had known her better than anyone on earth. ‘God, Nikos. You know what my life was like then. We’d just buried Libby. We were all in mourning. I couldn’t upset them like you wanted me to. I couldn’t. Don’t you dare think for a moment it was because I thought you weren’t good enough.’

      ‘You thought as your parents wished you to,’ he said with coldness, shrugging as though it no longer mattered. ‘But they will shortly come to realise there is one thing that carries more sway than birth and breeding. And when you are as broke as your father that is money.’

      His words fell like bricks against her chest.

      ‘Now you will marry me, and he will have to spend the rest of his life knowing it was me—the man he wouldn’t have in his house—who was his salvation.’

      The sheer fury of his words whipped her like a rope. ‘Nikos,’ she said, surprised at how calm she could sound in the midst of his stormy declaration. ‘He should never have made you feel like that.’

      ‘Your father could have called me every name under the sun for all I cared, agape. It was you I expected more of.’

      She swallowed. Expectations were not new to Marnie. Her parents’. Her sister’s. Her own.

      ‘And now you will marry me.’

      Anticipation formed a cliff’s edge and she was tumbling over it, free-falling from a great height. She shook her head, but they both knew it was denial for the sake of it.

      ‘No more waiting,’ he intoned darkly, crushing his mouth to hers in a kiss that stole her breath and coloured her soul.

      His tongue clashed with hers. It was a kiss of slavish possession, a kiss designed to challenge and disarm. He blew away every defence she had, reminding her that his body had always been able to manipulate hers. A single look had always been enough to make her break out in a cold sweat of need.

      ‘No more waiting.’

      ‘You can’t still want me,’ she said into his mouth, wrapping her hands around his back. ‘You’ve hardly lived the life of a monk. I would have thought I’d lost all appeal by now.’

      ‘Call it unfinished business,’ he responded, breaking the kiss to scrape his lips down her neck, nipping at her shoulder.

      She pushed her hips forward, instinctively wanting more. Wanting everything.

      Her brain was wrapped in cotton wool, foggy and filled with questions softened by confusion. ‘It was six years ago.’

      ‘Yes. And still you’re the only woman I have ever believed myself in love with. The only woman I have ever wanted a future with. Once upon a time for love.’

      ‘And now?’

      ‘For...less noble reasons.’

      He stepped away, breaking their kiss so easily it made her head spin.

      ‘Your father isn’t the only one I intend to prove wrong.’

      She narrowed her eyes, her heart racing. ‘What does that mean?’

      His laugh was without humour. ‘You said I didn’t mean anything to you. That I had been merely a distraction when you needed to escape grief.’

      He brought his face closer to hers once more—so close that she could see the thousands of tiny prisms of light that danced in his eyes.

      ‘You told me you didn’t want me.’

      ‘I...’ She squeezed her eyes shut. ‘I don’t remember saying that,’ she lied.

      ‘You said it. And I will delight in showing you how wrong you were.’

      He stepped away, leaving her cresting a wave of emotion. Striving to sound cool, she said, ‘So you’ve been...what? Pining for me for six years? Give me a break, Nikos. You moved on pretty damned fast, so it’s a little disingenuous to be playing the heartbroken ex-lover now.’

      ‘We were never lovers, agape.’

      Her stomach churned; her cheeks were pink. ‘That’s not the point I’m making.’

      ‘Whatever point it is you are attempting to make it is irrelevant to me.’

      She sucked in an indignant breath but he continued. ‘I have not been pining for you. But I am an opportunist.’ His smile was almost cruel—at least it looked it to Marnie. ‘Your father’s situation presented me with an opportunity I felt I couldn’t resist.’

      ‘Oh, yeah?’ she snapped, trying desperately to think of a way out. A way to make him realise how foolhardy this was!

      ‘You will spend every day of our marriage faced with the reality of just how wrong you were.’

      Speechless, she fidgeted with her ring, her mind unable to grasp exactly what was going on.

      Seemingly he took her silence as a form of agreement. ‘A licence can be arranged within fifteen days. I have engaged a wedding planner to oversee the details. Her card is on my desk; take it when you leave.’

      She shook her head as the words he was saying tumbled over her. She needed to process what was going on. ‘Wait a second. It’s too sudden. Too soon.’

      He arched a single thick brow. ‘Any delay will make it impossible for me to help your father in time.’

      ‘You’re saying we have to actually be married before you’ll help him?’

      His lip twisted in a smile of cynical derision. ‘It would hardly make sense to prop him up before the pleasure of having you... As my wife.’

      To Marnie, his slight pause implied that he meant something else altogether. That he wanted to sleep with her before money changed hands. It made her feel instantly dirty, and she shifted away from the window, crossing her arms in an attempt to stem the pain that was perforating her heart.

      ‘Do you think I’d renege on our deal?’ she asked, realising only after posing the question that it showed her acquiescence when she hadn’t actually intended to agree...yet.

      ‘I think you will do whatever pleases you—as you always have done.’ His eyes narrowed. ‘Forgive me—what is the expression? Having been bitten, I am...?’

      ‘Once bitten, twice shy.’ She sucked in an unsteady breath, waiting for relief to calm her lungs. But still they burned painfully. She tried to salvage her pride. ‘If I agree to do this, I will go through with it.’

      ‘I’m not sure I can put much stock in your assurances,’ he said with a shrug. ‘I credit you and your father for my scepticism. Were it not for you, perhaps I would have continued to take promises at face value. Now I live and die by contracts.’

      ‘That’s СКАЧАТЬ