Clare Connelly

Bought For The Billionaire's Revenge


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smile was grim. ‘Yes.’

      So Arthur had given her boyfriend money to get out of her life? A chill ran the length of her spine. It seemed like a step too far. Pressuring her to end it was one thing, but actually forcing Nikos out?

      ‘I’m sorry he got involved like that. It wasn’t his place to...to pay you off.’

      ‘Not when you’d already done his bidding,’ Nikos responded with a lift of his shoulders. ‘Your father forbade you from seeing me and, like a good little Lady Heiress, you jumped when he clicked his fingers.’

      ‘Don’t call me that,’ she said distractedly, hating the tabloid press’s moniker for her.

      It wasn’t that it was cruelly meant, only that they mistook her natural reserve for something far more grandiose: snobbery. Pretension. Airs and graces. The kind of aristocratic aspirations that Marnie had never fallen in line with despite the value her parents put on them. The values that had been at the root of their disapproval of Nikos.

      ‘So this is revenge?’ she murmured, her eyes clashing fiercely with his. Pain lanced through her.

      ‘Yes.’

      ‘A dish best served cold?’ She shook her head sadly, dislodging his hand. ‘You’ve waited six years for this.’

      ‘Yes.’ He brought his body closer, crushing her with his strong thighs, his broad chest. ‘But there will be nothing cold about our marriage.’

      Desire lurched through her. The world began to spin wildly off its axis. ‘There won’t be a marriage,’ she said, with a confidence that was completely forged. Already the options were closing in around her. ‘And there certainly won’t be...what you’re...suggesting.’

      ‘What’s the matter, agape mou? Do you worry that we won’t still feel as we did then?’

      He ground his hips against her and she groaned as sensations that had long since been relegated to the past flared in her belly. Of their own volition her fingers curled into the fabric of his shirt, the warmth from his chest a balm to her fraught nerves.

      ‘Do you remember how I respected your innocence?’ He brought his mouth close to hers, so that his words were a breath on her lips. ‘How I told you we should wait until we were married, or at least engaged?’

      Shame, desire, misery and despair slid through her like a headless snake, twisting and writhing in her heart. She pulled her lower lip between her teeth and nodded once.

      ‘How, even though I had kissed your body all over, and you had begged me to take you, I insisted that I wanted to wait? Because I thought I loved you and that it mattered.’

      He dropped his hands to her hips, holding her still as he pushed against her once more. She tilted her head back as far as she could, the window’s glass providing a hard barrier.

      ‘Do you remember how you laughed in my face and told me you’d never marry someone like me?’

      Those words! How she’d hated saying them! She’d rehearsed them for days, and when the moment had come only the belief that she was doing the right thing for her family had spurred her on to say them. It was the most difficult thing she’d ever done. Even now, six years later, she wondered at the way she’d been led away from him despite the intensity of her feelings.

      ‘Do you?’ he demanded, scraping his lips against her neck, sending her pulse rioting out of control.

      ‘Yes!’ She groaned as desire and memory weakened her body.

      ‘I have met many people like you in my life—like your father. Snobs who value centuries-old fortune above all else.’

      ‘That isn’t me,’ she said with quiet determination.

      ‘Of course it is.’ He almost laughed. ‘You broke up with me because you knew your destiny was to marry someone like you. Somebody that your parents approved of.’

      ‘That’s what they wanted. I just wanted you.’

      ‘Not enough.’ He sobered, his mouth a grim slash.

      Frustrated, she tried to appeal to the man he’d once been: the man who had known her better than anyone on earth. ‘God, Nikos. You know what my life was like then. We’d just buried Libby. We were all in mourning. I couldn’t upset them like you wanted me to. I couldn’t. Don’t you dare think for a moment it was because I thought you weren’t good enough.’

      ‘You thought as your parents wished you to,’ he said with coldness, shrugging as though it no longer mattered. ‘But they will shortly come to realise there is one thing that carries more sway than birth and breeding. And when you are as broke as your father that is money.’

      His words fell like bricks against her chest.

      ‘Now you will marry me, and he will have to spend the rest of his life knowing it was me—the man he wouldn’t have in his house—who was his salvation.’

      The sheer fury of his words whipped her like a rope. ‘Nikos,’ she said, surprised at how calm she could sound in the midst of his stormy declaration. ‘He should never have made you feel like that.’

      ‘Your father could have called me every name under the sun for all I cared, agape. It was you I expected more of.’

      She swallowed. Expectations were not new to Marnie. Her parents’. Her sister’s. Her own.

      ‘And now you will marry me.’

      Anticipation formed a cliff’s edge and she was tumbling over it, free-falling from a great height. She shook her head, but they both knew it was denial for the sake of it.

      ‘No more waiting,’ he intoned darkly, crushing his mouth to hers in a kiss that stole her breath and coloured her soul.

      His tongue clashed with hers. It was a kiss of slavish possession, a kiss designed to challenge and disarm. He blew away every defence she had, reminding her that his body had always been able to manipulate hers. A single look had always been enough to make her break out in a cold sweat of need.

      ‘No more waiting.’

      ‘You can’t still want me,’ she said into his mouth, wrapping her hands around his back. ‘You’ve hardly lived the life of a monk. I would have thought I’d lost all appeal by now.’

      ‘Call it unfinished business,’ he responded, breaking the kiss to scrape his lips down her neck, nipping at her shoulder.

      She pushed her hips forward, instinctively wanting more. Wanting everything.

      Her brain was wrapped in cotton wool, foggy and filled with questions softened by confusion. ‘It was six years ago.’

      ‘Yes. And still you’re the only woman I have ever believed myself in love with. The only woman I have ever wanted a future with. Once upon a time for love.’

      ‘And now?’

      ‘For...less noble reasons.’

      He stepped away, breaking their kiss so easily it made her head spin.

      ‘Your father isn’t the only one I intend to prove wrong.’

      She narrowed her eyes, her heart racing. ‘What does that mean?’

      His laugh was without humour. ‘You said I didn’t mean anything to you. That I had been merely a distraction when you needed to escape grief.’

      He brought his face closer to hers once more—so close that she could see the thousands of tiny prisms of light that danced in his eyes.

      ‘You told me you didn’t want me.’

      ‘I...’ She squeezed her eyes shut. ‘I don’t remember saying that,’ she lied.

      ‘You said it. And I will delight in showing you how wrong you were.’

      He stepped away, leaving