Home>>read The Wealthy Greek's Contract Wife free online

The Wealthy Greek's Contract Wife(4)

By:Penny Jordan


‘Everything I owe?' Lizzie objected, her heart sinking. ‘What do you mean? I don't owe anybody anything.'

Her determination to continue lying to him hardened Ilios's resolve to   inflict retribution on her. She was everything he most disliked and   despised in her sex. Dishonest, and attempting to cloak her dishonesty   with an air of pseudo-innocence that manifested itself in the way she   was dressed-simply, in jeans worn with a tee shirt and a plain   jacket-and in her face with its admittedly beautiful bone structure,   free of make-up.

Just as that damn elusive scent she was wearing had made him want to   draw her closer, to pursue it and capture it, so the pink lipstick that   deliberately drew his attention to the fullness of her mouth made him   want to capture her lips to see if they were as soft as they looked.   Where another less skilled woman might have tried to use artifice to   mask her deceit, Elizabeth Wareham used art-the art of appearing modest,   honest, vulnerable. Well, it wouldn't work on him. Anyone who did   business with his cousin had to be as dishonest and scheming as   manipulative as Tino was himself. Like attracted like, after all. She   could try using her sexuality to disarm him as much as she liked. He   wasn't going to be taken in.

When Ilios Manos didn't respond, Lizzie stiffened her spine and her   resolve and repeated, as firmly as she could, ‘I don't owe anyone in   Greece any money, and I don't understand why you think I do.'

‘I don't think you do, Miss Wareham. I know you do-because the person you owe money to is me.'

Lizzie gulped in air and tried not to panic. ‘But that's not possible.'

Ilios was in no mood to let her continue lying to him. ‘You owe me   money, Miss Wareham, because of your involvement with the apartments   built by my cousin on my land. Plus there is also the matter of the   outstanding payments for goods and services provided by local suppliers   to you.'

‘That isn't my fault. The Rainhills were supposed to pay them,' Lizzie defended herself.

‘The contract supplied to me by my cousin states unequivocally that you are to pay them.'

‘No-that can't be possible,' Lizzie repeated

‘I assure you that it is.'

‘I have my copy of the contract here with me, and it states quite   plainly that the owners of the apartments are to pay the suppliers   direct,' Lizzie insisted.

‘Contracts can be altered.'

‘And in this case they obviously have been-but not by me.' Lizzie's face was burning with disbelief and despair.

‘And you can prove this?' Ilios Manos was demanding, the expression on his face making it plain that he did not believe her.

‘I have a contract that states that my clients are responsible for paying the suppliers.'

‘That is not what I asked you. The contract I have states unequivocally   that you are responsible for paying them. And then there is the not so   small matter of your share of the cost of taking down the apartments  and  returning the land to its original state.'                       
       
           



       

‘Taking down the apartments?' Lizzie echoed. ‘But that was nothing to do   with me. You were the one who ordered their destruction-you told me   that yourself … '

Lizzie badly wanted to sit down. She was tired and shocked and   frightened, but she knew she couldn't show those weaknesses in front of   this stone-faced man who looked like a Greek god but spoke to her as   cruelly as Hades himself, intent on her destruction. She was sure he   would never show any sign of human weaknesses himself, or make any   allowances for those who possessed them. But there was nowhere to sit,   nowhere to hide, to escape from the man now watching her with such   determined intention on breaking her on the wheel of his anger.

‘I had no choice. Even if I had wanted to keep them it would have been   impossible, given their lack of sound construction. The truth is that   they were a death trap. A death trap on my land, masquerading as a   building constructed by my company.'

As he spoke Ilios remembered how he had felt on learning how his cousin   had tried to use the good name of the business Ilios had built up quite   literally with his own bare hands for his nefarious purposes, and his   anger intensified.

His company. Lizzie automatically looked at his hard hat and its logo.   She remembered Basil Rainhill smirking when he'd told her that Manos   construction was ‘fronting' the building of the apartments, and that   they had a firstclass reputation. Then she had assumed his smirk was   because of the good deal he has boasted about to her, but now …

‘I don't know anything about how the apartments were built. In fact, I   don't understand what this is about. I was contracted to design the   interiors of the apartments, that's all.'

‘Oh, come, Miss Wareham-do you really expect me to believe that when I   have a contract that stages unequivocally that payment for your work was   to be a twenty per cent interest in the apartment block?'

‘That was only because the Rainhills couldn't pay me. They offered me that in lieu of my fee.'

‘I am not remotely interested in how you came by your share in the   illegal construction my cousin built on my land, only that you pay your   share of the cost of making good the damage as well as what you owe  your  suppliers.'

‘You're making this up,' Lizzie protested.

‘You are daring to call me a liar?' Ilios grabbed hold of her, gripping   her arms as he had done before. How had she dared to accuse him of   lying? His desire to punish her, to force her to take back her   accusation, to kiss her until the only sound to come from her lips was a   soft moan of surrender, pounded through him, crashing through the   barriers of civilized behaviour and forcing him to fight for his   self-control.

She had said the wrong thing, Lizzie knew. Ilios Manos was not the man   to accuse of lying. His pride lay across his features like a brand,   informing every expression that crossed his face-and, Lizzie suspected,   every thought that entered his head.

He was still holding her, and his touch burned her flesh like a small   electrical shock. Her chest lifted with her protesting intake of air.   Immediately his gaze dropped to her body with predatory swiftness-as   though somehow he knew that when he had touched her, her flesh had   responded to his touch in a way that had flung her headlong into a place   she didn't know, brought her face to face with a Lizzie she didn't   know. Her heart was thumping jerkily, her senses intensely aware of him,   and her gaze was drawn to him as though he was a magnet, clinging to   his torso, his throat, his mouth.

She swung dizzily and helplessly between disbelief and a craving to move   closer to him. Beneath her clothes her breasts swelled and ached, in   response to a mastery she was powerless to resist. How could this be   happening to her? How could her body be reacting to Ilios Manos as   though … as though it wanted him? It must be some weird form of shock,   Lizzie decided shakily as he released her, almost thrusting her away   from him.

‘I'm not calling you a liar,' Lizzie denied, feeling obliged to   backtrack, if only to remind herself of the reality of her situation.   ‘I'm just saying that I think you've got some of your facts wrong. And   besides-why aren't you demanding recompense from your cousin, instead of   threatening and bullying me?' she demanded, quickly going on the   attack.

Attack was, after all, the best form of defence, so they said, and she   certainly needed to defend herself against what she had felt when he had   held her. How could that have happened? She simply wasn't like that.   She couldn't be. She had her family to think of. Being sexually aroused   by a man she had only just met, a man who despised and disliked her,   just wasn't the kind of thing she had ever imagined being. Not ever, and   certainly not now.                       
       
           



       

Determinedly she martialled her scattered thoughts and pointed out,   ‘After all, I only owned twenty per cent of the apartment block. Your   cousin, from what the Rainhills told me, owned the land, most of the   apartments and was responsible for the building work. I never even met   him, never mind discussed his business plan with him. I was given the   apartments and made a partner in lieu of payment for the work I'd done.   That's all.'