By Request Collection Part 2. Natalie Anderson
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‘Ask someone to translate,’ she suggested wickedly.
‘No translation necessary, believe me,’ Nikos flung back, cold as ice. ‘None at all. But if you think that that was what was happening then you are the one in need of an interpretation. And a reality check.’
‘Oh, yes?’
‘Oh, yes. If you think that all it takes is a flash of those stunning green eyes or a wiggle of your sexy little behind, then you really don’t know me at all.’
‘It felt—’ Sadie began, but Nikos cut in on her, bringing one long-fingered hand down in a slashing gesture to emphasise his interruption.
‘I was fool enough to go that way once before and I have no intention of ever putting my head into the noose all over again.’
‘And you’ve made us pay for it ever since!’
Sadie was beginning to feel as if she was on some dangerous emotional rollercoaster. And it was all her own fault. After all she’d started this, with the pretence that she’d only been playing him along.
Playing him along—hah! That would be the day. She hated to admit it, even to herself, but the truth was that she had been putty in his hands. One kiss, one caress, and she had lost all grip on her sanity and been spun into a world of hot sensation and even hotter need. At least she had had the sense to realise that those casually tossed compliments—stunning green eyes and sexy little behind, indeed!—were not meant at all. They were just the practised flattery of a consummate womaniser. He probably rolled them out to whichever woman he happened to be with, changing the colour of their eyes where appropriate of course.
‘You’ve had five years of taking your revenge. Haven’t you done enough, had enough?’
‘If you want the truth, then the answer is no,’
It was a flat, hard statement, his tone as harshly unyielding as his face, and when she looked into the deep pools of his eyes she saw no spark of warmth, no hint of humanity. Instead they were as cold and unresponsive as ice, his opaque, blanked-off stare shocking and frightening.
‘What more can you have? There’s nothing left. My father’s dead—his fortune, his company are yours. Isn’t that enough for you?’
‘No, it is not.’
Nikos’s golden eyes flicked over her face, catching and locking with her furious gaze just for one moment. Then he looked away again, heavy lids coming down to cut him off from her.
‘I thought it was, but now I find it just won’t do. It isn’t enough. It doesn’t give me the satisfaction that I wanted. I need to find some other way of making sure of that.’
And then she knew. With a terrible, sinking sense of despair she realised just what was going on here. Nikos Konstantos had always been determined to have his revenge for the way that Edwin had ruined his family. He had worked for that and for nothing else all the five years since she had last seen him. He’d taken the Carteret name, the Carteret business and stamped them into the mud, drained them of every last penny they possessed. He was even prepared to take the family home from them and throw her and her mother and little George out into the street.
And she had done the worst thing possible, made the most terrible mistake imaginable, by coming here to plead with him for a chance.
Because that had given Nikos one more chance to exact revenge on the member of the family he had the most personal reasons to hate. The one that he hadn’t yet crushed beneath his heel and laughed in triumph as he did so.
He hadn’t truly had his revenge on Sadie herself. Until now. And now it was strictly personal and totally ruthless. This wasn’t about the house or the past except as it pitted the two of them against each other. This was the last part that would make his campaign of revenge complete.
He had her in his sights and he wasn’t letting go.
‘And the way you’ve found is by making sure that my family don’t have a home to live in. How can you live with that on your conscience?’
‘No problem.’
Nikos’s shrug dismissed the question as being of no importance to him whatsoever. He didn’t care and he had no intention of caring.
‘I live with it as easily as you and your father could walk away from the devastation you made of my life—and my family’s.’
‘And you think that gives you the moral high ground? You were pretty damn good at playing games at that time, if I remember rightly.’
‘Not games, Sadie.’
Nikos shook his head, his expression almost sorrowful, but Sadie knew that sorrow was the furthest thing from what he was feeling. He might hide it well but she knew that deep inside he was probably taking a cruel delight in tormenting her like this, having her with her back to the wall, nowhere to run.
‘Believe me, I was serious. Deadly serious.’
‘Oh, yeah, deadly serious about perpetuating that damn family feud. And look what that did to you. It almost ruined your family.’
‘Almost,’ Nikos echoed with deadly emphasis. ‘Almost— but it did not actually ruin us, did it? Not totally. And now the shoe is very definitely on the other foot.’
‘As I’m only too well aware,’ Sadie muttered belligerently.
She wondered what would happen if she told Nikos that the only reason that ‘almost’ was even there was because of her. Because of the choice she’d made.
He’d probably never believe her. The mood he was in, he wasn’t going to listen to anything she said.
‘So this is checkmate, is it?’ she went on. ‘You must know that I can’t leave it like this—without persuading you to let us stay in Thorn Trees…’
‘That isn’t going to happen,’Nikos stated with cold obduracy.
‘So what do I do?’
Once more those powerful shoulders under the superbly tailored jacket lifted in an unfeeling and dismissive shrug.
‘You said you were prepared to do anything to get what you wanted,’ he drawled heartlessly. ‘Turn those wiles that you were using earlier on someone else and you might have more success with someone who doesn’t know you as well as I do.’
‘Wiles…’ Sadie spluttered in furious indignation. He really thought that she had set out to seduce him as a way to manipulate him into giving her what she wanted. ‘How dare you…?’
But Nikos ignored her angry interjection.
‘Find yourself another rich man and beg him to give you a chance to earn the price of the house. He might not find the offer so distasteful—his standards may not be as high as mine.’
Sadie gritted her teeth against the need to refute the implications