The twisty road took them past the turning for Villa Melina, her family villa, and continued east across the top of the island in the direction of Villa Heleneâhome to Lukas and his father, Stavros, now deceased.
It was a road Calista knew wellâprobably a distance of six miles or so. She had cycled it many times as a child, frequently seeking out the company of Lukas and his kindly father in preference to her own curmudgeonly father and boring half-brothers, with whom sheâd had absolutely nothing in common. But sheâd never paid much attention to the names of the two villas beforeâMelina, the name of Aristotleâs first wife and Helene, Lukasâs mother. She hadnât known either woman, but it was obvious now she thought about it that the villas had been named after them.
What she hadnât knownâwhat no one had known by the look of itâwas that Thalassa had actually belonged to them. No one except Lukas, of course, who had used that information to buy the entire islandâpresumably as a way of getting back at her family. She had no idea what had happened to the Lukas she had once known. What had become of him...
Turning off the coastal road, Lukas bumped the bike up the dirt track that lead to Villa Helene and pulled up in front of the entrance in a spray of dry dust.
Quickly dismounting, he held out his hand to her, but there was nothing gentlemanly about the gesture. It was done with an aggressively urgent air. Shepherding her before him, he unlocked the front doorâan action that surprised Calista in itself. No one bothered to lock their doors on the island of Thalassa.
Inside, the villa was just as she remembered it. Even the smell was familiarâsomehow both comforting and unsettling. She followed Lukas down the cool hallway until they reached the large living room that ran the entire width of the villa. It was still and dark in there, until Lukas strode over to the bi-fold doors, unlocked them and pushed them wide open, undoing the shutters so that the light streamed in.
Calista blinked. The stunning panoramic view of the Aegean Sea appeared before them, but Calistaâs focus was solely on the room she now saw so clearly. Or, more specifically, on the sofa in the room. The one she had so recklessly fallen onto with Lukas that evening, in a tangle of fervid, scorching, pumping desire. The one where Effie had been conceived.
âDrink?â Lukas grabbed a couple of glasses from the sideboard and reached for a decanter of whisky.
âNo, thank you.â Calista dragged her burning eyes away from the scene of their complete madness.
âMind if I do?â Pouring himself a generous slug, he knocked it back in one gulp, then poured another.
Clearly he wasnât waiting for her consent.
Averting her eyes from the sheer brutal beauty of him, Calista quickly scanned the rest of the familiar room; the white walls displaying colourful local artwork, the rustic wooden furniture and the travertine marble flooring. She had always loved this villa. More so than her own familyâs, in fact, which Aristotle had massively extended over the years as a succession of different women had needed to be impressed and the urge to display his wealth had become ever more important.
Villa Helene was more modest, more traditionally Greek, with towering walls affording much needed shade and the exterior woodwork painted that particular Mediterranean blue. Not that it lacked any modern comforts, with its large stainless steel kitchen, a beautiful infinity pool that glistened invitingly through the open doors, five bedrooms, a gymnasium and a library. There was even a helipad where, out of the corner of her eye, Calista had noticed a gleaming helicopter, heating up in the sun as they had walked in. So that was how he had got here...
âSo, what is this unfinished business?â She decided to take the lead rather than wait for Lukas like a fly in his web. She watched as he set down his glass, swallowing hard as he started towards where she stood in the middle of the room. âWhat is it you want to talk about?â
âThe talking can wait.â He stopped before her, towering over her as he gazed down her flushed face. âRight now I am more interested in action.â
With no warning he reached forward, sliding a hand around the back of her neck, lifting the weight of her hair for a second, before dropping it so that it rippled down her back. âRight now I want you to kiss me the way you kissed me the last time we were here, agapi mou. Do you remember?â
Calista felt herself sway. His hand was branding the back of her neck...his hot, whisky-tinged breath was shooting sharp waves of longing throughout her body. Of course she remembered. She remembered every minuscule, heart-stopping, life-changing detail. She had been living it for the past five years.
It had been her eighteenth birthday partyâa gloriously warm June evening. Calista had finished her exams and finally left the boarding school that she had disliked so much, and sheâd been intending to soak up a few weeks of Greek sunshine before returning to the UK to start university.
She had been looking forward to the partyânot so much to the actual event, the guest list for which had mostly comprised her fatherâs business cronies and their families, rather than her friends, although that had partly been her decision. Aristotle had told her to invite as many people as she wanted, offering to pay for their flights from the UK and to put them up at the villa, âSo they can see the sort of wealth you come from.â But she hadnât had that many friendsâsheâd always been the outsider at school, a motherless red-haired creature with a Greek nameâand she hadnât intended to scare off the couple of friends she had had by subjecting them to the full force of her father.
Because far from wanting to show off Aristotleâs wealth she had been embarrassed by itâor, more precisely, embarrassed by Aristotle. Over the years he had become ever more boorish, more overbearing, and the large quantities of alcohol heâd consumed, along with the banquet-type meals that he demanded every night, had not helped his general health or his temper. It had seemed the larger heâd got, the more obnoxious heâd become.
But there had been one person Calista had wanted to seeâLukas. He had promised her that he would be there, and that alone had been enough to see her struggling to straighten her unruly tumble of red hair, carefully applying some lipstick and eyeliner and easing herself into a short emerald-green silk dress that had hugged her youthful curves in just the right places. Donning a pair of strappy gold sandals, complete with killer heels, she had been ready to goâor, more importantly, ready for Lukas.
Except he hadnât showed up.
The disappointment had been crushing. Calistaâs fragile hopes had been dashed every time another group of guests had appeared and he hadnât been amongst them. It had seemed as if more and more people had come, spilling out onto the terrace, laughing, drinking, dancing...
Finally Lukasâs father Stavros had arrived, bursting onto the terrace in a highly agitated state, seeking out Aristotle and demanding that he go inside with him so that they could talk in private. Calista hadnât even had a chance to ask him where Lukas was.
In the end she had decided to take matters into her own hands. Suddenly she had no longer just wanted to see Lukas. Being with him had become an all-consuming compulsion, taking on a frightening urgency that would have seen her do almost anything to achieve her aim.
Which had turned out to be stealing a car. Or rather âborrowing itâ from Stavros, who had left the keys of his SUV in the ignition. Calista had only had a handful of driving lessonsâshe had certainly never passed her driving testâbut such had been her determination to see Lukas that she hadnât been about to let a little thing like that stand in her way.
Somehow she had managed to negotiate the twisty coastal road without tumbling the car off the cliff and then, armed with a bottle of champagne and what she hoped was a winning smile, she had burst into Villa Helene and found Lukas anxiously pacing the floor.
He had looked astonished to see her. âCallie! What on earth are you doing here?â
âIâve come to find you, of course. Itâs my birthday, in case youâve forgotten.â
âNo, Iâve not forgotten. Happy Birthday.â
Heâd said the requisite words but there had been none of his usual warmth, no kiss on the cheek or birthday hug.
Instead he had looked distractedly over her shoulder. âHave you seen my father?â
âYes, heâs at my birthday party. Which is where you should be. You promised, Lukas.â
âDid he seem okay?â
âYesâwhy?â
âItâs just that he left here in a hell of a hurry and refused to tell me what was going on.â
âWell, he seemed fine to me.â It had only been a small lie. Calista could have had no idea of the consequences. âHe was chatting with Papa. He told me to come and get you.â
âHe gave you the keys to his car?â Clearly puzzled, Lukas had obviously tried to work out what was going on. But Calista hadnât gone there to talk about Stavros. Right up until that moment she hadnât been entirely sure why she was there, but suddenly she had known with an all-consuming certainty.
She wanted Lukas to make love to her.
She still remembered his look of surprise as she had moved towards him, the way he had finally smiled when she had flung her arms around his neck, the bottle of champagne still in her hand, clunking heavily against his back. He had laughed, telling her to stop being silly, that she must have had too much to drink, but when he had pulled back to look into her eyes he had seen the truth.
That she wasnât a child any more. That she knew what she was doing. That she wanted him.
Even so, he had resisted. But as she had shamelessly pressed her body up against his, chucking the bottle of champagne onto a chair so that she could thread her fingers through his dark curls to pull him closer, she had felt him weaken. And when she had finally claimed his lips, when the first split second of panic and insecurity on her part and complete shock on his had vanished, rapidly melting into desire and then into a burning passion that had seen them stumble backwards onto the sofa, there had been no turning back.
And now they were here againâin the exact same spot. And Calista was horrified to find that the pull of his attraction was just as strong...that she still wanted him every bit as much as she had that June night, even knowing what he had done, even having seen the man he had become.
For Lukas was no longer the warm, funny, laid-back guy she had originally fallen in love with. Along with the dark curls, the mischievous twinkle in his eyes had gone, to be replaced by a cruel stare and a grim determination that sent a shiver down her spine.
And yet still she wanted him.
Her whole body thrummed, all but begging to be his. He was too closeâfar too closeâhis head bent so that there was no escaping the searing intensity of his eyes.
âOf course I remember.â She dragged up the words from somewhere, fighting to find some control. âBut, believe me, I wonât be making the same mistake again.â
âSo it was a mistake, was it? Thatâs an interesting choice of word.â
âYes...yes, it was.â Heat flared in her cheeks.
âBecause, you see, I donât think it was a mistake at all.â He lowered his head until their lips were only a fraction apart. âI think it was all very carefully planned.â