"The world could be your oyster. You could travel. You're a clever woman. You could probably find yourself a husband.'
Sarah shuddered as she breathed in deep. Desperate for a man... embittered by her lack of one. Clearly that was how Alex Terzakis saw her. With rigorous determination she suppressed a squirming sense of utter humiliation. He was Greek to the backbone. What Callie called 'unreconstructed man', what Sarah called a Neanderthal primitive. He belonged in a cave, not a civilised society. Or in a museum alongside the dinosaur display.
Even in the depths of the mortification she was struggling to conceal from him she was conscious of a helpless current of grotesque fascination. On the surface, he was so sophisticated... but underneath as earthy and as simplistic in his beliefs about the needs of a woman as any uneducated peasant. He was telling her politely that what she really needed was a man in her bed... Dear lord, even the dinosaur display would be too advanced for him! It would never occur to him that celibacy was a perfectly natural choice for many people.#p#分页标题#e#
Then how could it occur to him? Alex Terzakis had not one but two mistresses. One in Athens, one in Paris. Sarah swallowed back her distaste, repelled by such rampant and unashamed promiscuity. Evidently his sexual appetite was voracious and uncontrolled. In today's society, Alex Terzakis was a prehistoric savage, more to be pitied than anything else, she told herself, raising her chin. That she should have allowed such a barbarian to hurt and embarrass her was ridiculous!
'Nicky is not for sale,' Sarah said very drily, but her cheeks warmed as she dimly questioned her surprisingly intimate thoughts over the past few minutes.'I did not suggest that be was but I hardly think that you would wish to tie yourself down with a young and demanding child when you could make a new life for yourself.'
'But I don't want a new life. I am perfectly happy with the one that I have.'
His striking bone-structure tightened, hooded dark eyes resting on her without any perceptible emotion at all. 'Then you force me to be blunt-----'
'Oh, I don't think you need forcing,' Sarah opined, sweetly sarcastic as she raked him with unhidden derision. 'I would say that being blunt comes very naturally to you. The challenge would be sensitivity.'
'You are a woman of discernment.' Instead of reacting with the anger she had expected, Alex cast her a glittering threat of a smile. 'Although I strive hard to pity you for your lack of femininity, your shrewish tongue and your unashamed malice, I do indeed find it a quite extraordinary challenge.'
Sarah turned crimson and then white in speedy succession. Her loathing for him was magnified into a murderous heat. Her teeth sank into the soft underside of her lower lip and she tasted the sweet tang of her own blood when what she most wanted was his.
'Let us waste no further time. You are telling me that you wish to deprive Nikos of his natural heritage and his father out of spite,' he asserted, icily contemptuous. 'In opposition, what do you offer? A hovel for him to live in! The tag of illegitimacy to carry throughout his life! And the guardianship of a woman who is not of good character. Had you had any decency, you would not have encouraged your teenage sister to continue her relationship with my brother-----'
Sarah was trembling with fury. 'What control did you have over your wretched brother?'
'I was not aware of their affair until it was too late. You knew from the beginning,' Alex condemned. 'Youplayed your own part in your sister's premature death-----'
'God forgive you!' Sarah was stricken to the heart by the charge.
'And, not content with that tragedy, you now seek to destroy my nephew's future. I will not allow you to do it. He belongs with my family. We can give him everything,' he stressed with harsh emphasis. 'An extended family of supportive relatives, quite apart from a loving mother and father of his own...'
Sarah tensed, her fine brows drawing together.
'The finest schools, a beautiful home, the ability to hold his head high wherever he is and in whatever company. He is a Terzakis.' And to be a Terzakis was evidently the very zenith of anyone's worldly ambition, she translated. She was facing a male fired by a powerful pride in bis own blue-blooded, monied heritage. He could probably quote his family tree accurately back at least several generations. Little wonder, she thought, bitterly resentful, that Callie Hartwell, daughter of a factory supervisor and a nurse, had been less than nothing to him. No fancy pedigree there, just good working-class breeding.
Her reflections turned back to something that had puzzled her seconds earlier. She must have misheard him. He could not have said 'a loving mother'. He could not have said that.