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MARRIED TO A GREEK TYCOON
By
Lucy Monroe
©
2003 Lucy Monroe
Chapter One
Failure.
The word loomed in Anna’s mind like the Hollywood sign on the hills
above L.A., each letter as tall as a building, the stark white a perfect
contrast to the darkness of her thoughts.
Soon, the doctor would call and confirm her total failure in the wife
stakes. Because no Greek man wanted a woman who could not bear him
children as his wife, especially not a man as powerful and proud as
Loukas Stefanos. Her husband.
But for how long?
The scent of honeysuckle teased her senses and the sea blue of the
Mediterranean glistened in the distance. A view that usually gave her
pleasure now taunted her with how soon she would be leaving it behind.
She had no choice. She would not burden Loukas with an infertile wife.
It
wouldn’t be fair.
He’d married her because he enjoyed her company and it was a prudent
business move considering who her father was.
It
wasn’t his fault she had fallen in love with her Greek tycoon husband or
that she had been unable to conceive in the two years of their marriage.
His father’s comments at the celebration dinner for their second
anniversary had prompted her to approach her doctor for fertility tests.
***
Yorgos slapped Loukas on the back. “Well, my son. Two years is long
enough for any marriage to get settled. It is time you gave me some
grand children.”
Anna’s stomach knotted with tension as it did every time the subject of
children was raised because contrary to what Yorgos clearly believed,
neither she nor Loukas had ever done anything to prevent conception.
She’d wanted children right away, craving a family different than the
divided household she had grown up in.
A
television actress, her mother had insisted on maintaining her
independent life in Hollywood. Anna’s father, a traditional Greek man,
married more closely to his wealth and power than his wife, had chosen
to live his life in Greece, visiting Hollywood when time permitted.
Loukas smiled at his father, but his hand settled reassuringly on her
knee under the table. “I am in no hurry.”
Yorgos turned his attention to Anna, his expression not quite so
jovial. “What is the matter? Do you not wish to make my son a bampas?”
She hated these questions. How was she supposed to answer? “Yes, of
course I want to make Loukas a father.”
“But there is plenty of time,” her husband smoothly inserted, preventing
his father from asking the question she could see lurking in his gray
eyes.
Why then was she not pregnant?
The comforting hand became a caressing hand and familiar shivers of
sensation almost drowned out the feelings her father-in-law’s words
provoked. Almost, but even the passion that ran red hot between them
could not completely stamp out her sense of failure as a woman.
She wanted to be a mother.
“Perhaps I will have to leave my company to Tanek, heh? He and Cassia
have two strapping boys already and if I am not mistaken, good news
again?”
The older man winked at a now blushing Cassia.
Tanek laughed and kissed his wife’s cheek. “I do not understand how you
know practically before I do, Uncle Yorgos, but Cassia is indeed
pregnant.”
Something shifted across Loukas’s face, an emotion Anna did not want to
name. He removed his hand from her knee to hug his cousin and
congratulate the other man.
Later in the car, she used the cover of darkness to ask the questions
that had been tormenting her for months.
“Loukas, is it really that important for us to have children?”
She didn’t ask if he had any guesses on why they had never conceived.
She had asked that once and he had dismissed her worries with the
assurance that she would become pregnant when God willed it.
“What do you mean?”
“Your father threatened to leave his company to your cousin. Would he
really do that?”
Loukas shrugged. “I do not know. It is possible. It is very important
for a Greek man to know he is leaving a legacy. If he thought I would
not father children to leave the company to, he might do it.”
The knots of tension that had started at dinner tightened until she felt
cramps in her lower abdomen. Her empty womb. “What if you don’t father
any children?”
“That is not going to happen. You will become pregnant when the time is
right.”
“How can you be so sure?”
“I
am right.” Heavens, he was arrogant and she thought he probably didn’t
even realize how much. “Do not worry about it, Anna. We have only been
married for two years. Many couples wait five or six years before
starting a family.”
“Couples that do something to prevent it. We’ve done nothing.”
“Ah, this is not true.” For a moment his dark gaze shifted from the
road to her. “We have done a great deal and will continue this very
pleasurable activity which will bear its natural fruit in due course.”
The passion arced between them and she felt her thigh muscles contract
in anticipation of reaching home.
***
Remembering what they had done upon reaching the villa gave Anna no
comfort now. Soon, she would have to give up the pleasure she found in
her husband’s arms, but worse, she would have to give him up all
together.
The infertility had to lie with her. He was too virile, too much a man,
to be the problem.
So, she sat at the table on the terrace overlooking the sea, the hot
Greek sun beating down on her and waited for her sentence of doom. The
call from her doctor’s office.
From inside the house, she could hear a phone ring.
Seconds later, the housekeeper joined her on the terrace, carrying a
cordless telephone.
“It is for you, Kyria.”
Chapter Two
“Anna? Is that you, dear? I’ve decided to come to Greece after all.
The show’s on hiatus and I’ve turned down the other part. I’m too old
to work fifty-two weeks a year.”
Expecting her doctor’s voice on the other end of the line, it took a
moment for Anna to assimilate her mother’s words. “You’re coming to
Greece?”
“Yes, dear. Isn’t that what I just said?”
Anna could not remember the last time her mother had traveled to
Greece. She’d spoken of it often, but when it came down to it, there
was always another part, another job keeping her away.
“Th-that’s lovely.” Would she even be here? “When?”
“I
thought I’d come over for your father’s birthday. Give him something to
celebrate besides getting older.”
Anna replied, not really paying attention to what she was saying. They
spoke for a few more minutes and then her mother rang off.
Anna went back to her quiet vigil, waiting for the doctor’s office to
call.
“You look deep in thought. What has your interest so entrenched?” Her
husband’s voice brought her out of her blind reverie with a snap.
“Loukas.”
“Yes, it is I, yineka mou.”
His wife, but for how long?
“You’re home very early.”
“I
wanted to spend time with my lovely wife. Is this a problem?” His eyes
spoke a message that turned her insides into melting honey.
“No, of course not. I’m just...” Waiting for a phone call that would
irrevocably change both their lives, but she wasn’t about to say that,
so she let her voice trail into nothingness.
“Waiting for me.” His teeth flashed a grin in his gorgeous face and she
couldn’t help smiling back.
“Always,” she admitted.
She’d never told him she loved him, mostly because she knew that his
feelings for her were limited to desire and fondness. If it had been
otherwise, he would have said something in two years. He never had.
While he frequently called her yineka mou, his wife, he never used the
term for beloved, even in the midst of their deepest passion.
But she thought her deeper feelings for him must be obvious by now.
He
reached down to pull her up into his arms, wrapping her in the spicy,
masculine scent that was uniquely him.
“I
missed you today.”
The words shocked her, but no more than the volatile passion in his
kiss.
***
Loukas devoured his wife’s lips with the intention of wiping that
haunted look from her beautiful blue eyes. She’d been distant from him
since the dinner party celebrating their second anniversary and he
refused to accept it. She was his.
Her body went stiff, as if his ardor surprised her. It should not. He
pulled her into his body so she could feel just how strong that ardor
was.
She moaned, a sexy, feminine sound that had him straining against the
zip of his trousers.
He
wanted her.
Now.
Swinging her slight body up in his arms, he did not break the kiss, but
carried her inside and up the stairs to their bedroom. He would have
been content to make love to her on the terrace, but such an action
would afford them no privacy. And what he wanted to do with his wife
was very private.
He
laid her on the bed, but when he went to pull away so he could undress,
she grabbed him.
Her response to his kiss unexpectedly desperate, she opened her lips and
drew his tongue in to taste the warm sweet nectar of her mouth. She
yanked at his shirt, pulling buttons open with violent urgency. He was
more than happy to help her and undid his pants with one hand while
working her dress up with the other.
She shucked out of her panties, her body bowing beneath him.
He
touched her in that place that was for him alone and shuddered at her
readiness for him.
He
didn’t even have his pants off when she tugged on his hips, silently
demanding he join their bodies. No more willing to wait than she was,
he accomplished it with one long thrust. The ride was wild, tumultuous
and fast.
They reached the pinnacle together with their mouths still locked in an
intimate tasting, every bit as fierce as their kiss of their bodies.
Afterward, he rolled off of her and finished removing both their clothes
before picking her up and carrying her into the en suite. Sitting her
on the side of their oversized jetted tub, he caressed her creamy, pink
tipped breast before he turned the water on.
Silence that had not been broken by words since he had told her he had
missed her today, continued to reign as the tub filled with steaming
water. She leaned over the tub and dumped in some of the fragrant bath
salts she kept in a crystal bowl at one corner.
He
did not complain about the sweet smell because it was more refreshing
than feminine and because the salts turned the water into slippery
warmth that enhanced anything they might want to do in the bath.
He
closed his hands around her small waist, struck anew by how fragile she
was compared to his over six-foot frame. “You are beautiful, yineka mou
and all mine.”
Her eyes filled with a sorrow he did not understand, but then she
reached up and brushed light fingers down the side of his cheek. “And
you are devastating.”
What followed was as tender as the time before had been passionate and
when they finally made it back to their bed, he felt like a man reborn.
A
knock sounded on their bedroom door.
“Yes?” Loukas called out, not wanting the interlude with his wife to
end.
“Kyrios, the kyria has a phone call.”
Anna went absolutely rigid beside him. “I’m not ready. I don’t want to
talk to him.”
“Who?” What person could have his sweet wife so upset? Was his father
pestering her about pregnancy again?
“The doctor.”
Cold fear settled in the pit of his stomach as he remembered how
preoccupied she had been the past week. “Is something wrong with you,
Anna?”
She laughed hollowly. “Nothing terrible...just...”
But she didn’t finish, her throat convulsing as tears washed into her
eyes.
“Take a message,” he barked at the housekeeper through the closed door
and then pulled his wife close into his body. “Tell me what is
bothering you, yineka mou.”
Chapter Three
Anna looked at Loukas and realized she could not say what needed to be
said, not wrapped up securely in his arms, their naked bodies touching.
“I
need to get up.” She tried to get out of bed, but his hold did not
loosen.
“Tell me what is upsetting you.”
“I
can’t. Not like this. I need – I need to be dressed.”
His brown gaze trapped her own with the intense concentration he had
turned on her. “You can put on your robe.”
Another time she would have laughed at the concession and the idea he
thought he could dictate it to her, but right now she felt too lost for
humor. Instead, she tugged out of his arms and gratefully donned her
white toweling robe. Its thick terry fabric felt like a protective
cloak.
How did she say what needed saying?
“The truth is best.” His sardonic drawl let her know she’d asked the
question out loud.
She chewed on her bottom lip until he reached out and gently tapped her
mouth. “Stop that. You will draw blood.”
“You’re always protecting me.” It sounded more like an accusation than
a compliment.
His brows rose. “You are my wife. This is my responsibility.”
“You can’t protect me now. Thinking that way will make this situation
impossible.”
His eyes narrowed and his mouth firmed into a grim line. “Define
impossible.”
“We have to divorce.”
She watched in awed fascination as her always cool, always controlled
husband swelled with the worst fury she had ever seen.
“You dare to say such a thing to me while your body is yet warm from my
lovemaking?” He didn’t shout, but the deadly precision of his tone was
worse than any loud bellowing could have been. “You think you can
convince me you want a divorce after what we have done here in this
bed. You were wild under me.”
She felt heat steal into her cheeks. “I didn’t say I wanted a divorce.”
He
erupted out of the bed and stalked to where she hovered, indecision and
pain making it impossible to be as clear and concise as she needed to
be.
“Then what are you saying?” He towered above her, his stance
intimidating.
Only she did not feel intimidated. This man would never hurt her.
Which was why she had to stand firm.
“I’m infertile. The only solution is for us to end our marriage.”
“What kind of solution is this?” He started haranguing her in Greek,
speaking too fast for even her fluent ear to comprehend.
He
wound down with several curses she’d never heard him utter.
“Whose idea was it for you to take the tests?”
She backed up a step, needing distance to keep what little she had left
of her faculties. “Mine.”
“It was not my father’s?” Loukas’s eyes were narrow with suspicion, his
tone arctic.
“No!” She didn’t want to cause trouble in the warm and affectionate
relationship between the two men.
“Your doctor did not suggest it?”
“I
told you. It was my idea.”
“Why did you have this idea?” He sounded like the fact she’d had the
tests was a personal affront to him.
“Do you remember the dinner party for our anniversary?”
“I
am not in my dotage and am unlikely to forget an event less than a month
previous.”
She frowned at him. “I don’t need you being cute with me. This is hard
enough as it is.”
“If you think to truly try to divorce me, you will discover just how
difficult, pethi mou.”
She believed him. His entire body spoke one message toward her
proclamation. Rejection. Wrong though it might be, the thought that he
would absolutely refuse to let her go buoyed her spirits.
“Can we sit down to finish this discussion?”
“Certainly.”
Then he lifted her in his arms, surprising a yelp from her. She grabbed
his shoulders to steady herself as he carried her out onto their private
balcony. She expected him to place her in one of the outdoor armchairs
and take the other, but he didn’t.
He
lowered his tall body into one, keeping her securely in his lap as he
settled.
“I
can’t discuss divorce sitting in your lap,” she protested.
“You are not discussing divorce at all. Explain to me about the
infertility test.”
“Your father said he’d leave the company to your cousin because Cassia’s
already given him two children and another is on the way.”
“He did not mean it.” Loukas sounded exasperated, like he was talking
to a dull-witted child.
Irritated, she frowned at him. “You said yourself it was a
possibility.”
“And this prompted you to have the tests done?”
“Yes.”
He
turned and gazed out at the sea for almost a full minute before speaking
again.
“When did you learn the results of the tests?”
“I
haven’t. Not yet. That’s what the doctor was calling about earlier,
but I lost my nerve in getting them.”
That had his head snapping back to look at her. “You said you were
infertile.”
“I’m sure I am.”
His expression made his earlier tone of voice seem tame in comparison.
“It makes sense,” she appealed, “what else could explain two years and
no pregnancy?”
“The problem could lie with me, or there could be no problem at all.
Many couples do not conceive immediately.”
“Two years?” It was her turn to sound like she doubted his
intelligence, or his sanity, or both. “You’ve got to see. The only
avenue that makes any sense is divorce.”
He
rose from the chair, dumping her off his lap to stand on her own, and
stepping away from her in one angry movement. “So, you married me only
to have children with me and since you have not realized your dream of
motherhood, you are ready to dismiss me from your life?”
Chapter Four
Loukas could not breathe past the pain in his chest. She’d never said
the words, but he had believed Anna had come to love him. He had never
considered he was no more than a stud in her bed.
The look of horror overcoming her features did nothing to assuage his
male pride.
She wasn’t even positive yet she was infertile, but she was ready to end
their marriage.
“I
don’t want to dump you because you can’t give me a baby. I’m doing this
for you. You must see that. I can’t be responsible for you losing your
inheritance.”
“You think I am such a weakling, I cannot make it on my own, that I must
have my father’s company to survive?”
Was she totally ignorant of his personal wealth, the holdings left him
by his mother’s father?
“No, that’s not it at all.” Again her eyes were filming with tears.
“This isn’t about money. It’s about heritage.”
“Will I stop being my father’s son if you never have our baby? Will I
stop being Greek?”
She shook her head, her throat working and wringing her hands in
agitation.
“This is my heritage. The company can go to Tanek and with my blessing
if my father so chooses, but I will not let you leave me in a misguided
attempt to save it.”
“But you can’t want to stay married to me now.”
“You do not even know you are infertile,” he reminded her, getting angry
all over again when he realized how easily she was willing to be
convinced their marriage had no future.
“That’s true, but...” She shook her head again, seemingly lost for
words.
One truth overshadowed all the rest. “I cannot let you go.”
He
sounded like a needy adolescent, but he loved this woman with everything
in him. He could never let her leave him.
“I
can’t stay.”
He
pulled her back into his arms, hugging her to his body and she let him.
She could not want to leave him, not and cling so tightly to him, like
he was her only lifeline.
“You can and you will.”
“It would be different if you loved me, but—“
“What did you say?” he demanded, interrupting her and pushing her away
so he could see her face.
The misery there almost stopped his heart.
“You don’t love me.”
Shock coursed through him. Could she truly not know? “I love you more
than my own life. Of a certainty, I love you more than any company.”
She turned completely white and swayed. He grabbed her back to him and
kissed lips that had gone cold from shock. “This cannot be such a
surprise to you. I cannot keep my hands off of you. I want always to
be in your company. I go into a decline when I must leave you for
business.”
“You mostly make me come along,” she whispered.
“This is true.”
“You never said you love me, never called me beloved.”
“And on this paltry evidence, you were convinced I felt nothing for
you?” He could not fathom the mind of a woman. “I call you my wife, my
woman, the other half of my soul. That is more real than a word that
alludes only to emotion.”
“I
need the word.” She said it ferociously, her eyes burning into his.
He
nodded, accepting it. “I see now that you do. Forgive me for my
blindness to your need.”
Her hands gripped his biceps, small fingers digging fiercely into his
muscles. “Just say it.”
“I
love you.” He punctuated each word with a kiss on lips that were slowly
regaining their warmth and softness. “Forever. You are mine.”
Her blue eyes turned the color of midnight, her expression becoming so
solemn, he felt humbled. “I love you.” And he realized that to hear
the words was indeed a very fine thing. “I always have and I always
will.”
“No divorce.”
“No divorce,” she repeated.
***
A
year later Anna held the most perfect baby in her arms that God had ever
made. She smiled down at her new daughter and then up at her husband.
“Isn’t she beautiful.”
“As beautiful as her mother,” replied the clearly besotted papa.
“I’m amazed we got an infant so quickly. Our adoption agent said that
some couples wait years for a child.”
“It was meant to be.”
“Yes.”
“Did I not tell you we would have a baby when the good God willed it?”
Laughter burbled up inside her and she nodded, more than happy to let
her arrogant husband have the last word, especially when he followed it
with, “I love you.”
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