Purchased for Passion. Julia James

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Purchased for Passion - Julia James Mills & Boon By Request

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heavy-lidded eyes glanced down at her.

      ‘Would you like to meet him?’

      ‘I’m sure he’s quite bored enough with people gushing all over him,’ she said dismissively.

      ‘Somehow,’ Leo Makarios murmured, ‘I can’t see you gushing over anyone.’ His voice became dryer suddenly, more critical. ‘You are certainly quite unimpressed to be wearing jewels that every woman here envies you wearing.’

      Anna looked up at him.

      ‘They’re just carbon crystals—valued only because they are rare. Lots of other common crystals are just as beautiful. Diamonds are only worth money—’

      ‘They are the Levantsky diamonds! Works of art in their own right,’ Leo said sharply.

      She shrugged. ‘So is Mozart’s music—and that doesn’t cost millions to enjoy!’

      The dark eyes rested on her. She watched them narrow very slightly. She did not look away. Why should she?

      ‘I was told,’ he said softly—and it was that same softness that had raised the hair on the nape of her neck earlier ‘—that you have an attitude issue. Lose it.’

      She smiled sweetly up at him. She could feel adrenaline start to run in her.

      ‘Is that another of your instructions, Mr Makarios?’

      For a long moment he looked at her. She felt the adrenaline curl around every cell in her body.

      ‘What is your problem, Ms Delane?’ he asked, in that same soft, deadly voice.

      You, she wanted to say. You’re the problem.

      Then, even as she stared defiantly back at him, her false smile straightening to a thin, pressed line, something changed in his eyes.

      He seemed to move minutely, as if closing her off from the rest of the room.

      The lashes swept down over his eyes, and she felt the breath in her throat tighten.

      ‘Don’t fight me,’ he said in a low voice. Then she could see it. Something else came into his eyes, something that made a hollow where her stomach usually was. ‘You really are,’ he added slowly, ‘quite incredibly beautiful…’

      Anna felt the hollow where her stomach had been turn slowly over.

      No. She didn’t want this happening. She didn’t.

      She opened her mouth to say so. Say something. Anything. But all she could do was stare. The room disappeared; the people disappeared; everything vanished. She was just standing, looking up at the man—letting him look at her. Look at her with those powerful heavy-lidded eyes, over which those long dark lashes were sweeping down.

      The hollow where her stomach had been pooled with heat—heat that was starting to spread out through the veins in her body, carried by her treacherous beating heart.

      She saw him see it. See the way the heat was starting to flow through her body. The eyes, so dark, so lambent, narrowed. A smile curved along his wide, mobile mouth. It was a smile of acknowledgement, satisfaction.

      Anticipation.

      He murmured something to her. So quietly that in the buzz of noise and conversation all around Anna thought she must have imagined it.

      Of course she had imagined it.

      But for a moment she thought he had murmured, ‘Later…’

      Then, in an instant, his expression changed, becoming smooth and bland.

      ‘Ah, Minister…’

      The perambulation resumed. And Leo Makarios still kept Anna at his side.

      Anna kicked off her shoes with a sense of relief. Then she peeled off the long black satin gloves, dropping them onto the dressing table stool in her room. Hooking her now bare fingers round her back, she started to undo the painstakingly fastened together dress. The diamonds had been handed back into the care of the security company, and finally the models had been free to go up to their rooms. Anna had hardly been able to wait.

      God, the evening had been endless!

      And more than that. Her nerves were shredded, stretched to breaking point.

      Being touted around by Leo Makarios had been excruciating.

      She could feel the tension racking up in her.

      He was getting to her, and she didn’t like it. Not one bit.

      Her lips pressed together. Spending time with the man the way she had should have desensitised her to him. Should have made her get past that ridiculous disturbing rush she’d felt when he’d first walked in on the shoot and had such an impact on her. By now she should simply be able to see him abstractly, as a good-looking man. Exceptionally so, for a rich man—the combination was as rare as hen’s teeth in her experience—but nothing more. Certainly not a man who should have the slightest effect on her.

      Such as making her breath catch in her throat.

      Heat flush through her.

      Nerves quicken in awareness.

      Electricity shoot through her.

       No!

      Grimly she stared at herself in the mirror over the dressing table.

      Yes, she was slightly flushed; her eyes were a little wider than usual. But that was just because it had been a long day and a longer evening. She was tired, that was all.

      She looked at her reflection defiantly.

      Out of the glass stared back a familiar image. The black hair, the pale skin and the green eyes. Probably inherited from your dad—whoever he was—her gran had always told her. The dramatic, eye-catching features an accidental meshing of DNA that had just happened to produce a face that was beautiful.

      But her beauty was just a commodity. She sold it, day after day, to anyone who paid the right price for it.

       And that’s all I sell.

      Too many men thought otherwise. Thought she was also selling the right for them to look her up and down, strip her naked with their eyes, wonder what she was like in bed, offer to find out…

      She turned away from the mirror sharply, continuing to undo, hook by hook, the simple but beautifully made dress.

      At least she was free of the diamonds. The whole ridiculous glitter of them. Her eyes hardened again. Had Leo Makarios really not been able to see how overdone the whole lot was when worn together like that? That the sum was less than the individual pieces?

      She shook her head in impatience. Who cared what Leo Makarios thought? About his wretched Levantsky diamonds or about her.

      Or, she told herself doggedly, what she thought

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