The Santorini Bride. Anne McAllister

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asked suspiciously.

      “How did I get in?” It was Martha’s turn to stare. She nudged the duffel bag with her toe. “With my key. I live here.”

      “The hell you do!”

      “Well, not always,” Martha admitted. “But I could if I wanted to. My name is Martha Antonides. My family owns this house.”

      His expression cleared as if by magic. “Not anymore,” he said cheerfully. “I do.”

      “What?” Surely she hadn’t heard him right. Did she have heat stroke? God knew it was hot enough, and she was exhausted enough, and what she’d just heard didn’t make a lick of sense. “What are you talking about? What do you mean, not anymore? Who the hell are you?”

      “Theo Savas.”

      As if that was supposed to mean something. She just looked at him blankly. “So?”

      “So, this is my house now. I own it.”

      “No,” Martha said firmly, as confident about that as she was about the world being round. “I’m sorry. You don’t. I don’t know what house you think you own, but it’s not this one. This is our house. It has been for generations.”

      “Was,” Theo Savas said easily. “Past tense. As in ‘used to be.’ Sorry,” he added, though he didn’t sound sorry in the least. He sounded as smug and righteous as Julian had when he’d informed her that it was her fault he’d been showering with another woman!

      “Prove it,” Martha snapped.

      “Whatever you want.” Theo Savas gave a light shrug, then turned and stalked into the room that her father called his office—not that he had ever done a lick of work there. Now she watched as he opened a drawer of her father’s desk and plucked out a piece of paper from a folder.

      He came back to thrust it into her hands, then stepped back, waiting and watching as she read it. It was an agreement between her father and someone named Socrates Savas.

      “My father,” Theo Savas said before she could ask.

      Irritated, Martha pressed her lips together and read on. It was the silliest thing she’d ever seen.

      “This is about a golf game!” she protested. Something about the winner of the golf game getting to name the president of Antonides Marine International, the company that her great-grandfather had begun, the one her grandfather had developed, the one her father had almost run into the ground, the one that her brother Elias had saved from bankruptcy.

      “Keep reading,” Theo Savas advised.

      “What’s your father got to do with our company?” she demanded, still reading, the words on the page swirling before her eyes.

      “Your father sold him forty percent of it.”

      Martha’s head jerked up. She opened her mouth to deny it, to insist that her father would do no such thing!

      But the unfortunate truth was, her father might have.

      In some horrible misguided effort to help Elias and to prove to his son that he wasn’t a complete disaster as a businessman, Aeolus Antonides might actually have done something as idiotic as that.

      Now Martha’s jaw clenched and her fingers tightened on the paper so tightly that they were trembling.

      “He lost the golf game,” she said through her teeth. It wasn’t a question. It was right there in black and white.

      Theo Savas merely inclined his head. And waited.

      Martha, feeling a muscle in her temple tick with tension, turned her attention back to the paper in her hand. The second part of the document was even odder. As if the golf game weren’t enough, this part had to do with a sailboat race—her father’s beloved Argo against Socrates Savas’s Penelope—and stipulated that the winner of said race got possession of the other’s island home.

      “I won,” her dark-haired nemesis said unnecessarily.

      Martha couldn’t breathe. She stood there, stunned and disbelieving. How could her father have bet their generations-old family home against some weekend cottage on a Maine island?

      Furious, she thrust the paper back at the man smiling his smug superior smile at her. “It’s absurd!”

      “Pretty much,” the annoying Theo Savas agreed. “But it’s legal. I won the race, therefore I won the house. So I think, Ms. Antonides,” he added pointedly, “that it’s you who needs to leave.”

      Martha digested that. Considered it. And reached a conclusion. She hadn’t spent her last dime and traveled halfway around the world to get away from one pompous, idiotic male only to let another one push her around now.

      She looked Theo Savas straight in the eye. “No.”

      “What do you mean, no?” He sounded as if no one had ever said the word to him in his entire life.

      Well, it was time someone did.

      Martha shrugged with all the indifference she could muster. “Which letter didn’t you understand? N? O? It’s a big house, Mr. Savas. I won’t bother you. Forget I’m here. I have every intention of forgetting you are!” So saying, she picked up her duffel bag, stepped neatly around him, then headed up the stairs.

      “Wait a damn minute!” Footsteps pounded after her. He grabbed at her arm, but Martha twisted out of his grasp and kept right on going.

      “You can’t stay here!”

      “Of course I can.”

      “I don’t want company,” he informed her, dogging her heels.

      “Tough.” She reached the room that she had always shared with her sister, Cristina, pushed open the door, then turned to face him defiantly. “What are you going to do? Throw me out?”

      The house might not belong to her family anymore, but it was her furniture in the bedroom, her childhood books on the shelves. She lifted her chin and dared him to lay a hand on her.

      His fingers ball into fists. A muscle pulsed in his jaw and she could swear she heard his teeth grinding. But he didn’t touch her, just glared.

      Martha glared back.

      “Look,” he said after a moment, “there are tons of hotel rooms.”

      “Can’t afford one.”

      “I’ll pay for it.”

      “No way. I’m not having everyone on Santorini think I’m your kept woman.”

      It was one thing to make up her mind to sleep with Julian. Idiot that she was, she’d believed she loved him. It was something else entirely to let a man pay for her room on the island. That might be fine for those who came on week-long holidays and then went home never to reappear. But she was enough of a local that she would scandalize all the gossipy old women.

      “And

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