Securing the Greek's Legacy. Julia JamesЧитать онлайн книгу.
as clear as he could, ‘for there to be animosity or conflict between us. A way can be found. I am sure of it. If...’ He paused, and now his eyes were more intense than ever. ‘If there is goodwill between us and, most importantly, trust.’
She felt her emotions sway, her resistance weaken.
As if he sensed it, saw it, he went on. ‘Will you bring Georgy to Greece?’ he asked. ‘For a visit—I ask nothing more than that for now,’ he emphasized. ‘Simply so that his great-grandfather can see him.’
His eyes searched her face. Alarm flared again in her eyes.
Lyn’s hand smoothed Georgy’s head shakily. ‘He hasn’t got a passport,’ she replied.
‘That can be arranged,’ Anatole responded promptly. ‘I will see to it.’
Her expression was still troubled. ‘I...I may not be allowed to take him out of the country—?’ she began, then stopped.
Anatole frowned. ‘You are his aunt—why should he not travel with you?’
For a second—just a second—he saw in her eyes again that same emotion he had seen when he had challenged her as to whether she had adopted Georgy or not.
‘You said that the process of adoption is not yet finalised,’ he said. ‘Does that affect whether you can take him out of the country?’
She swallowed. ‘Officially I am still only his foster carer,’ she replied. There was constraint in her voice, evasiveness in the way her gaze dropped from his. ‘I...I don’t know what the rules are about taking foster children abroad...’
‘Well, I shall have enquiries made,’ said Anatole. ‘These things can be sorted.’ He did not want her hiding behind official rules and regulations. He wanted her to consent to what he so urgently needed—to bringing Marcos’s son to Greece.
But he would press her no longer. Not for now. Finally she was listening to him. He had put his request to her—now he would let her get used to the idea.
He got to his feet, looking down at her. ‘It has been,’ he said, and his voice was not unsympathetic now, ‘a tumultous day for you—and for myself as well.’ His eyes went to the baby on her lap, who had twisted round to gaze at him. Once again Anatole felt his heart give a strange convulsion, felt the pulse of emotion go through him.
There was so much of Marcos in the tiny infant!
Almost automatically his eyes slipped to the face of the young woman holding his infant cousin. He could see the baby’s father in his little face, but what of the tragic mother who had lost her life in giving him life? His eyes searched the aunt’s features, looking for an echo of similarity. But in the clear grey eyes that were ringed with fatigue, in the cheekbones over which the skin was stretched so tightly, in the rigid contours of her jaw, there was no resemblance that he could see.
As his gaze studied her he saw colour suffuse her cheeks and immediately dropped his gaze. He was making her self-conscious, and he did not want to add to her discomfort. Yet as he dropped his gaze he was aware of how the colour in her cheeks gave her a glow, making her less pallid—less plain. More appealing.
She could be something...
The idle thought flicked across his mind and he dismissed it. He was not here to assess whether the aunt of the baby he’d been so desperately seeking possessed those feminine attributes which drew his male eye.
‘Forgive me,’ he said, his voice contrite. ‘I can see my cousin so clearly in his son—I was looking to see what he has inherited from his mother’s side.’
He had thought his words might reassure her that he had not been gazing at her with the intention of embarrassing her, but her reaction to his words seemed to have the opposite effect. He saw the colour drain from her face—saw, yet again, that emotion flash briefly in her eyes.
Fear.
He frowned. There was a reason for that reaction—but what was it? He set it aside. For now it was not important. What was important was that he took his leave of her with the lines of communication finally open between them, so that from now on they could discuss what must be discussed—how they were to proceed. How he was to achieve his goal without taking from her the baby nephew she clearly loved so devotedly.
He wanted his last words to her now to be reassuring.
‘I will leave you for now,’ he said. ‘I will visit you again tomorrow—what time would be good for you?’
She swallowed. She had to make some answer. ‘I have lectures in the morning, but that’s all,’ she said hesitantly.
‘Good,’ he said. ‘Then I will come here in the afternoon. We can talk more then. Make more plans.’ He paused, looking into her pinched face. ‘Plans that we will both agree to. Because I know now that you will not give up Georgy—you love him too much. And you must surely know that since he cannot be taken from you without your consent, for you are his mother’s sister and so the best person to adopt him, that you have nothing to fear from me. Whatever arrangements we make for Georgy’s future it will be with your consent and your agreement. You have nothing to fear—nothing at all.’
Surely, he thought, that must give her the reassurance that would finally get her to make long-term plans for the infant’s upbringing?
But her expression was still withdrawn. Anatole felt determination steal through him. Whatever it took— whatever!—he would ensure that his Georgy was reunited with his father’s family.
Whatever it took.
He took a breath, looking down at the baby and at the aunt who held him.
‘I will see myself out,’ he told her. ‘Do not disturb yourself.’
Then he was gone.
In the silence that followed his departure the only sound was Georgy contentedly chewing on his plastic keys. Lyn’s arms tightened unconsciously around him. She felt weak and shaky and devastated. As if a tsunami had swept over her, drowning her. Her expression was stark.
An overwhelming impulse was coursing through her, imperative in its compulsive force.
The impulse to run. Run far and fast and right away! Run until she had hidden herself from the danger that threatened her—threatened her beloved Georgy! The danger that was in the very person of the tall, dark figure of Anatole Telonidis.
Fear knifed through her.
* * *
Anatole threw himself into the back of his car and instructed his driver to head back to the hotel. As the car moved off he got out his mobile. It was time—most definitely time—to phone Timon and tell him what he had discovered.
Who he had discovered.
He had kept everything from Timon until now, loath to raise hopes he could not fulfil. But now—with or without DNA testing—every bone in his body was telling him that he had found Marcos’s son.
The son that changed everything.
As his call was put through to his grandfather, and Timon’s strained, stricken voice greeted him, Anatole began to speak.
The effect was everything he’d prayed for! Within minutes Timon had become a changed man—a man who had suddenly, miraculously, been given a reason to live. A man who now had only one overriding goal in his life.
‘Bring him to me! Bring me Marcos’s boy! Do anything and everything you need to get him here!’
Hope had surged in his grandfather’s voice. Hope and absolute determination.
‘I will,’ Anatole replied. ‘I will do everything I have to do.’
But as he finished the call his expression changed. Just what ‘everything’ would need to be he did not fully know. He knew only that, whatever it was, it would all depend on getting Lyn Brandon to agree to it.
As