At The Greek Boss's Bidding. Jane Porter

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without seeing her.

      Mr. Koumantaros said he didn’t care about being polite.

      Elizabeth’s mouth curved wryly as the butler urged Mr. Koumantaros to at least offer her some refreshment.

      Her wry smile disappeared as she heard Mr. Koumantaros answer that as most nurses from First Class Rehab were large women Ms. Hatchet could probably benefit from passing on an afternoon snack.

      “Kyrios,” Pano persisted, “she’s brought a suitcase. Luggage. Ms. Hatchet intends to stay.”

      “Stay?” Koumantaros roared.

      “Yes, kyrios.” The elderly Greek’s tone couldn’t have been any more apologetic, but his words had the effect of sending Kristian into another litany of curses.

      “For God’s sake, Pano, leave the damn glass alone and dispense with her. Throw her a bone. Get her a donkey. I don’t care. Just do it. Now.”

      “But she’s traveled from London—”

      “I don’t care if she flew from the moon. She had no business coming here. I left a message two weeks ago with the service. That woman knows perfectly well I’ve fired them. I didn’t ask her to come. And it’s not my problem she wasted her time.”

      Speaking of which, Elizabeth thought, rubbing at the back of her neck to ease the pinch of pain, she was wasting time standing here. It was time to introduce herself, get the meeting underway.

      Shoulders squared, Elizabeth took a deep breath and pushed the tall door open. As she entered the room, her low heels made a faint clicking sound on the hardwood floor.

      “Good afternoon, Mr. Koumantaros,” she said. Her narrowed gaze flashed across the shuttered windows, cluttered coffee table, newspapers stacked computer-high on a corner desk. Had to be a month’s newspapers piled there, unread.

      “You’re trespassing, and eavesdropping.” Kristian jerked upright in his wheelchair, his deep voice vibrating with fury.

      She barely glanced his way, heading instead for the small table filled with prescription bottles. “You were shouting, Mr. Koumantaros. I didn’t need to eavesdrop. And I’d be trespassing if your care weren’t my responsibility, but it is, so you’re going to have to deal with me.”

      At the table, Elizabeth picked up one of the medicine bottles to check the label, and then the others. It was an old habit, an automatic habit. The first thing a medical professional needed to know was what, if anything, the patient was taking.

      Kristian’s hunched figure in the wheelchair shuddered as he tried to follow the sound of her movements, his eyes shielded by a white gauze bandage wrapped around his head, the white gauze a brilliant contrast to his thick onyx hair. “Your services have already been terminated,” he said tersely.

      “You’ve been overruled,” Elizabeth answered, returning the bottles to the table to study him. The bandages swathing his eyes exposed the hard, carved contours of his face. He had chiseled cheekbones, a firm chin and strong jaw shadowed with a rough black beard. From the look of it, he hadn’t shaved since the last nurse had been sent packing.

      “By whom?” he demanded, leaning crookedly in his chair.

      “Your physicians.”

      “My physicians?”

      “Yes, indeed. We’re in daily contact with them, Mr. Koumantaros, and these past several months have made them question your mental soundness.”

      “You must be joking.”

      “Not at all. There is a discussion that perhaps you’d be better cared for in a facility—”

      “Get out!” he demanded, pointing at the door. “Get out now.”

      Elizabeth didn’t move. Instead she cocked her head, coolly examining him. He looked impossibly unkempt, nothing like the sophisticated powerful tycoon he’d reportedly been, with castles and estates scattered all over the world and a gorgeous mistress tucked enticingly in each.

      “They fear for you, Mr. Koumantaros,” she added quietly, “and so do I. You need help.”

      “That’s absurd. If my doctors were so concerned, they’d be here. And you…you don’t know me. You can’t drop in here and make assessments based on two minutes of observation.”

      “I can, because I’ve managed your case from day one, when you were released from the hospital. No one knows more about you and your day-to-day care than I do. And if you’d always been this despondent we’d see it as a personality issue, but your despair is new—”

      “There’s no despair. I’m just tired.”

      “Then let’s address that, shall we?” Elizabeth flipped open her leather portfolio and scribbled some notes. One couldn’t be too careful these days. She had to protect the agency, not to mention her staff. She’d learned early to document everything. “It’s tragic you’re still in your present condition—tragic to isolate yourself here on Taygetos when there are people waiting for you in Athens, people wanting you to come home.”

      “I live here permanently now.”

      She glanced up at him. “You’ve no intention of returning?”

      “I spent years renovating this monastery, updating and converting it into a modern home to meet my needs.”

      “That was before you were injured. It’s not practical for you to live here now. You can’t fly—”

      “Don’t tell me what I can’t do.”

      She swallowed, tried again. “It’s not easy for your friends or family to see you. You’re absolutely secluded here—”

      “As I wish to be.”

      “But how can you fully recover when you’re so alone in what is undoubtedly one of the most remote places in Greece?”

      He averted his head, giving her a glimpse of a very strong, very proud profile. “This is my home,” he repeated stubbornly, his tone colder, flintier.

      “And what of your company? The businesses? Have you given those up along with your friends and family?”

      “If this is your bedside manner—”

      “Oh, it is,” she assured him unapologetically. “Mr. Koumantaros, I’m not here to coddle you. Nor to say pretty things and try to make you laugh. I’m here to get you on your feet again.”

      “It’s not going to happen.”

      “Because you like being helpless, or because you’re afraid of pain?”

      For a moment he said nothing, his face growing paler against the white gauze bandaging his head. Finally he found his voice. “How dare you?” he demanded. “How dare you waltz into my home—?”

      “It wasn’t exactly a waltz, Mr. Koumantaros. It took me two days to get here and that included planes, taxis, buses and asses.” She smiled thinly. This was the last

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