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The Giannakis Bride(27)

By:Catherine Spencer


"How crazy?" he muttered at her ear.

She responded by stepping back a pace, stripping away his towel and running her hands down his flanks to cradle him.

He was already hard. Had been from the moment he'd discovered her in his  room. And she seemed fascinated by his arousal, displaying a curiosity  at once naive and bold. "You are so beautiful and strong and perfect,"  she breathed.

Her touch, delicate as butterflies, lethal as fire, almost finished him  off before he'd begun, and he couldn't allow that. Swinging her into his  arms, he carried her to the bed and lowered her to the mattress. He  ached to feel her clench around him, to fuse his body with hers and find  again the release only she could bring, but the satisfaction, though  exquisite, would be all too brief, and it had been such a long, long  time since they'd made love at leisure.

"First, we get rid of these," he said, making short work of the bra and panties.

She lay naked before him in the lamplight, and for the first time since  she'd come back into his life, he was able to look his fill at her naked  body. She was as beautiful as ever, her breasts still small and firm,  the nipples tinted the same dusty rose he remembered from before, her  hips flaring in a graceful, narrow curve, her waist so tiny he could  span it with his hands.                       
       
           



       

The difference was there'd been no hesitation back then, no doubt. She'd  reveled in his scrutiny, offering him all that she was, her hunger as  urgent and all-consuming as his, her flesh pliant and willing. This  time, caution warred with desire and she lay frozen beneath his gaze,  her arms pinned at her sides, her thighs clamped together.

Patiently, persistently, he kissed every exposed inch of her: the slope  of her breasts, the inner curve of her elbow, the arch of her instep,  the back of her knees. And inch by inch, she melted under his  ministrations. Most of her, at least, until, capturing her gaze, he said  softly, "Open your legs, Brianna."

She blinked and swallowed, her mind clearly rebelling at the idea, but  her body had a will of its own and when he blew a damp breath against  the top of her thighs, they fell apart and gave him leave to do what  he'd never done to her before. He put his mouth against her and seduced  her with his tongue, sliding it between the satin folds of her flesh to  search out the hidden nub at her center.

Her skin had the texture of gossamer, the sheen of a pearl, and she  tasted of honey and woman and passion on the verge of explosion. He  delved deep with his tongue, once, twice, three times, and felt the  tremors racing through her. Heard her shocked gasp fade into a long, low  moan as she shattered, her body arching off the bed in mindless  torment, her fists clutching at his hair.

He soothed her, stroking her, kissing her, and when she subsided into  dreamy acquiescence, he seduced her again. And again, she climaxed,  faster, harder this time. She clawed at his shoulders, trying to drag  his body up to cover hers, to accept him between her legs, and all the  while begging amid fractured sobs, "Please, Dimitrios … all of you … now,  please … !"

"I have nothing here … no profilaktiko," he said hoarsely, remembering too  late that he never kept any in the house because if he was going to  spend the night with a woman, she wasn't the kind he'd bring home to  meet his daughter.

"I don't care!" Brianna cried, guiding him deep into the hot, wet temple of her body. "I want to have your baby!"

She didn't really mean it. Just yesterday, she'd worried she might get  pregnant. So he'd be careful. He'd give her the satisfaction she craved,  pleasure himself as much as he dared, then pull out at the last minute.

Just as it took two to come together in complete intimacy, though, so it  took two to agree when the time was right to break apart. And she was  of a different mind, one that rendered him blind to everything but the  driving need to possess her. Fully and completely and forever.

"Thee mou!" he ground out, his lungs burning and the sweat beading his  brow as she climaxed a third time. He was lost, a leaf caught in a  raging river, helpless to direct his own fate. Accepting defeat, he  poured into her, gave her everything he had, everything he was. She'd  stolen his heart years ago. She might as well have the rest of him.

When he could breathe again, he stroked a damp strand of hair from her  face and said, "Someday we're going to take this slowly and make it last  all night. Just don't ask me when. It could take years before I'm able  to pace myself."

She smiled and closed her eyes. "May I ask you something else instead?"

"Anything, calli mou."

"Are you going to kick me out of your bed now and send me back to my own room?"

"Not a chance. You belong here, with me."

"Oh, good," she said, and turning on her side, curled up against him and fell asleep.

He was gone when she awoke the next morning, but a glass of chilled  orange juice stood on the bedside table, and a single perfect red rose  lay next to her on his pillow, proof positive, if proof she needed, that  last night hadn't been a dream.

She brushed the velvety petals against her cheek and inhaled their  delicate fragrance. She couldn't recall the last time she'd slept so  soundly or awoken filled with such joy.

Yesterday's petty anxieties seemed woefully unimportant in the light of  the new day. Dimitrios was right. It was time to banish her  insecurities. Time to let go all the black and bitter memories eating  away at her. The sting of Cecily's betrayal, the pain of her death, were  in the past, but Brianna and Dimitrios, they were the present and the  future. Life wasn't perfect-that would only be the case when Poppy was  well again-but it was good. It was filled with hope again.                       
       
           



       

Throwing back the covers, she put on her robe, took her juice and  stepped through the glass doors that opened onto the deck running the  length of his room. Like hers, it overlooked the sea and pool. To the  left, a crew was at work dismantling the tent and carting away the  tables, chairs and assorted debris from the garden party.

She felt like calling out, take away the gossip and the speculation,  too. They had no place in her life. She was a woman in love; a woman  who'd been well and truly loved by her man. Her mouth was swollen from  his kisses, her body tender and aching in dark and secret places. She  hated the idea of washing away the scent of sex and passion that clung  to her skin, and wished the day would speed to an end so that she could  be alone with Dimitrios and they could make love again.

But others needed her attention first. Poor Hermione waited downstairs,  alone and unsure of what her future held. Poppy waited in her hospital  crib for the aunt who'd become a permanent fixture in her young and  troubled life. And perhaps today Noelle would have good news about the  test results and they could move to the next phase of that precious  child's recovery.

In fact, for a woman who'd surely spent a sleepless night, Hermione  looked remarkably serene and relaxed when Brianna finally ran her to  earth in the courtyard, enjoying a breakfast of fruit and yogurt.

"I've done a lot of thinking since speaking to you at the yacht club,"  she said. "You're so wise, Brianna, and I owe you so much. You made me  see that I have enabled Mihalis by submitting to his demands, and the  sad thing is we've all lost so many years because of my weakness. I  realize now that if I want to see changes, it's up to me to initiate  them. And so I've begun, starting with yesterday."

"By accepting Dimitrios's invitation to come here, you mean?"

"Yes. Uniting my family is my dearest wish, but a week ago, I didn't  think I had the courage to do that. Now I know differently, although I  won't pretend I wasn't horrified by the scene at dinner last night. It  upset me dreadfully. No woman ever wants to see her husband and son go  at each other like that."

"Your husband wasn't badly hurt, Hermione," she said, helping herself to the fruit and yogurt, "Just a little shaken up."

"I know. Dimitrios explained all that. We had a long, frank talk this  morning, before he left for work. Neither of us held anything back. He's  not always right, you know. No one ever is. And his father isn't always  wrong. At bottom, Mihalis is a very good man, but he's proud, and so is  Dimitrios, and that's been the biggest obstacle to their settling their  differences. My mistake has been in letting them carry on this  senseless feud for so long. I should have put my foot down years ago.  Well, what is it they say? Better late than never?"

The woman has more backbone than I've given her credit for, Brianna  thought admiringly, although when it comes to putting her foot down, her  tiny little size sixes won't make much impression on the men in her  family.