To look after her mother and know she had this as an occasional reward?
She lay naked beneath him and he was so unabashed by her nakedness, so delighted by her, and wicked too, for he picked up the oil and squeezed it where her thighs were clamped closed, like her mind, trying to keep delicious prospects out, trying not to be seduced again by all Zander Kargas offered.
Except his fingers slid in, welcome if uninvited, and she kept her thighs closed but that offered no deterrent. She bit on her lip as he watched her, and she opened her eyes to the beauty of him and could not say no, did not want to say no, so she said nothing, her silence her consent.
He bought her to orgasm so easily.
Too easily almost. It made her feel ashamed, the kettle he could flick on at whim, not that a man like Zander had any need for a kettle. She wanted it all, even if it was impossible. She could not be at his bidding, for her sanity’s sake.
‘No.’ Her hand was reaching out for him, for the supposed best bit, but she pulled it back for she wanted more, wanted the man that came with it, wanted his heart.
‘You don’t know me.’ She thought of her life back home.
‘I don’t need to.’
And it was cruel but it was his truth.
She could play dress-up once maybe twice a month, escape to a fabulous hotel.
Inhabit a small corner of his life.
And it would be beyond cruel, Charlotte realised.
He did not offer escape. Instead, Zander offered prison, for she would be locked for ever with feelings she could not release. That was what held her hand back.
That made her say no.
‘I can’t.’ She was completely honest. ‘I want more than that.’
‘There can be no more.’
‘There has to be.’
‘I don’t understand what you want.’ He was brutally honest. ‘We have known each other one weekend. Isn’t it a bit soon to be demanding for ever?’
‘That’s not what I’m saying.’
‘What, then? I am offering you a chance for us to get to know each other better and to remove from you the division of loyalty you have working for Nico. I don’t give out rings, Charlotte. I’m offering you now all I will ever give.’ He made it completely clear, and she could only admire him for that—he warned her upfront that he would break her heart, and for Charlotte it made the final choice painful but easy.
‘Then I choose to live with my head in the clouds. To believe that one day—’
‘Someone better than me will come along.’ It was his trump card and he played it. He was possibly the only man who could ever play it, for he had driven her to the edge in bed, and to the deepest places in her mind; he was exquisite and beautiful and there could be no better, for her heart had met his on that first phone call and they would forever be joined. He was the best, and it almost killed her to stay strong as he looked down at her naked, flushed body, a body that had just come at his command, and even think there could be someone better.
‘He might,’ Charlotte said.
‘I told you—you blush when you lie. You know there can be no better than what we have.’
‘And do you retain exclusive rights?’
‘Of course.’
‘Do I get the same privilege?’ She watched as his tongue rolled in his cheek. She would rather be alone than share him and would go no further with this ridiculous conversation. She was stronger than she’d known, stronger even than Nico, for she could do what his identical twin could not—she could end the painful contact with him, could give up now the hope that things might one day change.
‘Can you take me back now, please?’
She stood. Putting on a bikini seemed too complicated with a head that was spinning and hands that were shaking, so she fled down below, pulled on her new clothes from her new bag, and went back to her old heart.
To the one that had the dream that life could one day be different,.
That he was somehow waiting.
And clearly it wasn’t a dream that Zander shared, for as she sat on a bed she would never sleep in, she heard the engine, felt the movement of the boat as Zander took her back to shore.
Zander spent the hour sailing towards Xanos wrestling with his thoughts.
He sailed the yacht past Lathira, the place his brother had been raised, and then he aimed towards Xanos, to the hell he had hated. Yet it was with new eyes he saw it now.
He saw the beach where he had met her, where they had walked and talked.
He saw the balcony of Ravels where they had kissed and the blackened windows where he had held her.
He saw his island through different eyes, new images made by Charlotte.
He had hurt her, had assumed she could take it, had not recognised her innocence, for he had none himself. He had hurt others too—he had looked at the land he had transformed with no thought to its history, or the people.
The seagulls were loud as the boat neared land, swirling overhead and finally daring to swoop onto the deck, screeching as they squabbled over the remnants of the meal, eating with far more relish than Charlotte had the delicacies he had ordered for her. Still they squawked for more, still, when they should be full, there was hunger, greed that was never satisfied—like his endless quest for a revenge.
For the first time he saw a future that was different, one that did not stink of the past, one that was better, one where he could be with her.
Maybe he did have a heart to give.
Maybe there could be trust.
Someone there for him, someone who did not leave.
He needed to think, he needed the safety of dry land and the solitude of his room before he made the most difficult decision of his life. Then she came up to the deck in shorts and a T-shirt, her hair down and her eyes shielded by glasses again.
‘It was a lovely offer, but completely impossible, even if you did give out rings. You don’t know my life …’
He wanted to, though.
For the first time he wanted someone in a way he never had. He wanted to know her, about her, to be there for her, to accept the baggage that came with her, instead of hurling it back to defend a black heart.
The sun must have been too strong, he thought. The sky was orange and he wanted it black. He wanted a safe, dark world that was bitter, but he was tired of strangers on his pillow.
‘Here.’ He handed her the signed contract of sale for the land that Nico wanted. He could not read her expression behind her dark glasses, but from the shake of her hand when he spoke, he guessed that she understood, for with his signature she was no longer obliged to see him for Nico’s sake.
‘Meet me.’ He wanted her now, but he made himself wait. Till he was sure, till he had talked himself out of it perhaps …
Till the time was right.
‘Ring Nico when we get back. Tell him you have my signature.’ Then he looked at her and he tried for haughty, for assuming, for the arrogance that usually dripped from each word, but instead his eyes implored. ‘Meet me tonight, not on behalf of Nico. Hear what I have to say.’ And he turned his back to her, for more than anything he hated weakness. ‘Meet me for dinner.’
He was a skilled seducer, Charlotte reminded herself. He had said, and would again, anything to get her to his bed.
It was hard to remember the hurt, though,