The Greek's Secret Passion. Sharon Kendrick
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Название: The Greek's Secret Passion

Автор: Sharon Kendrick

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Современная зарубежная литература

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isbn: 9781408941348

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СКАЧАТЬ that she discovered he made every English girl who visited Pondiki feel the same way, but by then it was too late. If only someone had told her—yet if they had, would she have listened?

      ‘Who is that?’ she whispered.

      ‘It is Dimitri,’ whispered Elena, as if indeed it really were the devil himself.

      ‘Dimitri who?’

      But Elena shook her head, because he was striding towards them. He completely ignored Molly and let out a torrent of furious Greek which was directed solely at Elena.

      Molly listened uncomprehendingly for a moment or two. ‘What’s the problem?’

      Dimitri stopped speaking and turned to look at her, his heart beating fast, and it was more than his usual instinctive and hot-blooded reaction to a beautiful blonde. She was English. He had heard about her, of course, but he had been too busy helping his father to go looking for himself, and this was the first time he had seen her.

      He was Greek through and through and he loved beautiful women. He took and enjoyed what was on offer, but it lasted only as long as his interest—which was never long.

      Yet there was something indefinably different about this woman. A goddess of a woman, her icy-blue eyes almost on a level with his own, with a beauty he found almost overwhelming. But he saw the returning spark of interest in her eyes and this normal state of play was enough to allow his naturally arrogant masculine superiority to reassert itself.

      ‘Are you crazy?’ he hissed, in English, from between clenched white teeth.

      As an opening gambit, she had heard better, but Molly didn’t care. She had never seen anyone like this before—with his flashing black eyes and his perfect body and an air of strength and devil-may-careness that you simply didn’t get with Englishmen.

      ‘Sometimes.’ She smiled at him, and cocked an eyebrow. ‘Aren’t you?’ she said gravely. ‘Crazy is good.’

      He was expecting a tongue-tied and stumbling answer—not a cool retort in a voice as confident as his own.

      There was a moment’s pause—a heartbeat and a lifetime of a pause—before he began to laugh, and it sounded as delicious as the sprinkle of fresh water on sun-baked stone.

      But then his eyes grew serious.

      ‘You are not wearing helmets,’ he growled. ‘These roads are not like your English roads.’

      ‘You can say that again,’ murmured Molly. She thought of the fumes and the bad-tempered drivers back home, and compared them to Pondiki’s clean and silent beauty.

      He narrowed his eyes. ‘You will both come with me,’ he ordered abruptly. ‘And you will wear helmets back.’

      It was ironic that if anyone else had spoken to her like that, then Molly would probably have refused, on principle. But now that she had found him, she didn’t want to lose sight of him and, quite honestly, if he had told her that she was going to be put in handcuffs for the return journey, then she couldn’t have seen herself uttering a word of objection.

      He ordered coffee and they drank it on the terrace of his father’s hotel, with its breathtaking views over the sea. Only Molly found it hard to concentrate on the view.

      So did Dimitri. He shook himself slightly, as if trying to shake off the inexplicable spell she seemed to have cast over him.

      Beautiful young women came to his island every summer and he was no innocent. Greek men lived very defined lives. Greek women were strictly out of bounds until marriage. If a man had trouble-free temptations of the flesh, then why not enjoy them while he could?

      But this Molly was different, and he could not work out why. It was not just her pure, clean beauty, nor the sparkle of mischief which lit her ice-blue eyes. She had something which he wanted, something which made him ache unbearably.

      He gave them helmets and saw them safely away, but just before Molly put hers on he lifted a hand to lightly brush a stray strand of hair away from her brow and their eyes met in a long, spine-tingling moment.

      It felt like the most erotic thing which had ever happened to her, but then maybe it was—for what fumbled kisses could compare to the touch of a man like Dimitri?

      ‘Can I take you for a drive some time?’ he said, and felt her tremble.

      She didn’t hesitate. She wouldn’t play games. Games were a waste of time when she only had six weeks on this island and she wasn’t going to squander a single moment of them.

      ‘Oh, yes, please,’ she answered.

      ‘Tomorrow?’

      ‘Tomorrow,’ she agreed.

      And that was how it started.

      She slept with him that very first day—she couldn’t not have done—and afterwards she wept with sheer pleasure as he held her tightly, his expression fierce as he looked down at her, smoothing his palms over her damp skin, his eyes burning as brightly as lanterns.

      ‘You were a virgin,’ he stated, and his voice sounded strained.

      ‘Not any more.’ She touched her lips to his arm.

      He closed his eyes, his feelings confused. He hadn’t been expecting that, not from someone who looked like her. And he wondered if her virginity had been the indefinable something he had wanted. He had never slept with a virgin before, even though one day his wife would inevitably be one. And somehow it made it different. It shouldn’t do, but it did. His kisses were tender on her eyelids and he pulled her closer against his bare skin.

      ‘Sweet Molly,’ he said softly.

      ‘Sweet Dimitri,’ she said drowsily.

      She was slipping in deep and then deeper still, and maybe it showed because Elena tried to warn her. ‘Molly, you know that Dimitri—’

      ‘Yes, I know. Believe me, I know. He’s Greek. I’m English.’ She saw Elena’s concerned face and smiled. ‘I’m only here for the summer,’ Molly said gently. ‘Then I’m off to university. Don’t worry, Elena—I’m not expecting to buy a white dress and have the people of Pondiki pin money onto it!’

      Yet it was funny how you could know something on an intellectual level, but that didn’t stop your foolish heart yearning for more. But she never showed it. Not to Dimitri, nor to Elena. She even tried to deny it to herself. And even though she sometimes wove little fantasies which involved her changing her university course to read Greek and returning here to help Dimitri run his hotel, she just tried to live each day for what it was. Paradise.

      His parents, naturally enough, disliked her. She had never actually been introduced to them, but the couple of times she saw his mother at the weekday market in the square she was met with a stony-eyed look of hostility. But she understood that, too. They probably thought that she was some kind of loose-moralled tourist out for a summer of hot sex and there were enough of those on the island. She could hardly go up and explain that her son had captured her heart as well as her body, could she?

      And there was a girl, too—a beautiful dark-eyed girl with a curtain of raven hair which fell to her slender waist. Molly СКАЧАТЬ