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For Pleasure...Or Marriage?

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by Julia James




  As the summer approaches we’ve got the reads to raise your temperature in Harlequin Presents!

  Don’t miss the first book in an exciting new trilogy, ROYAL BRIDES, by favorite author Lucy Monroe. The Prince’s Virgin Wife is a tale of an irresistible alpha prince, an innocent virgin and the passion that ignites between them. In part two of Julia James’s glamorous MODELS & MILLIONAIRES duet—For Pleasure…or Marriage?—enter a world of sophistication and celebrity, populated by beautiful women and a gorgeous Greek tycoon! Captive in His Bed is part two of Sandra Marton’s Knight Brothers trilogy. This month we follow the passionate adventures of tough guy Matthew. And watch out, this story is in our UNCUT miniseries and that means it’s hot!

  We’ve got some gorgeous European men for you this month. The Italian’s Price by Diana Hamilton sees an Italian businessman go after a woman who’s stolen from his family, but what will happen when desire unexpectedly flares between them? In The Spanish Billionaire’s Mistress by Susan Stephens, a darkly sexy Spaniard and a young Englishwoman clash. He thinks she’s just out for her own gain—yet the physical attraction between them is too strong for him to stay away. In The Wealthy Man’s Waitress by Maggie Cox, a billionaire businessman falls for a young Englishwoman and whisks her off to Paris for the weekend. He soon discovers that she is not just a woman for a weekend….

  Check out www.eHarlequin.com for a list of recent Presents books! Enjoy!

  Escape to a world of absolute wealth, glamour and romance…

  Escape to a world of absolute wealth and glamour in this brand-new duet from Julia James. These models find themselves surrounded by beauty and sophistication. It can be a false world, but fortunately there are strong alpha millionaires waiting in the wings to claim them!

  Julia James

  FOR PLEASURE…OR MARRIAGE?

  All about the author…

  Julia James

  JULIA JAMES lives in England with her family. Harlequin novels were the first “grown-up” books Julia read as a teenager, and she’s been reading them ever since.

  Julia adores the English countryside (and the Celtic countryside!), in all its seasons, and is fascinated by all things historical, from castles to cottages. She also has a special love for the Mediterranean. She considers both ideal settings for romance stories! Since becoming a romance writer, she has, she says, had the great good fortune to start discovering the Caribbean, as well, and is happy to report that those magical, beautiful islands are also ideal settings for romance stories! “One of the best things about writing romance is that it gives you a great excuse to take vacations in fabulous places!” says Julia. “And all in the name of research, of course!”

  Her first stab at novel writing was Regency romances. “But alas, no one wanted to publish them!” she says. She put her writing aside until her family commitments were clear, and then renewed her love affair with contemporary romances to great success.

  In between writing, Julia enjoys walking, gardening, needlework and baking “extremely gooey chocolate cakes”—and trying to stay fit!

  CONTENTS

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER ONE

  MARKOS MAKARIOS STROLLED with a lithe, leisurely gait across the parvis in front of Nôtre Dame. Although it was crowded with tourists, all ogling the stupendous cathedral at the southern end of the wide area, he did not object to their presence. It was good, sometimes, to mingle with the masses. Not, he knew, that it made his security people feel comfortable when he did so. Both Taki and Stelios, discreetly following him, wouldn’t relax entirely until he was safely back in his limo.

  But the warm September day was far too fine for sitting inside a limo crawling through traffic, Paris obscured by smoked glass, with nothing to do but study the latest communiqués from his direct reports around Europe. The sudden restless impulse to abandon wheeled transport as the limo had gained the Ile de la Cité had been the right one. Besides, he would probably reach his destination on the Ile St Louis faster on foot.

  Not—he suppressed a flicker of irritation—that he was in any particular hurry to reach his scheduled appointment. Lunch with the chairman of the French company he was currently in negotiations with would be a long-drawn-out and inevitably tedious affair.

  A flicker of boredom nudged at him. It was becoming familiar, and its arrival irritated him as much as the prospect of the lunch ahead. He had no reason to be bored. None at all. He was in the prime of life—a fit and healthy thirty-three—with a lifestyle that every man in the world would envy him for. The Makarios wealth saw to that!

  With the single exception of the one element of his life that he could, frustratingly, do nothing about—the constant, exasperating importuning of his father for him to perpetuate the Makarios dynasty—he had everything he could possibly want. Riches, property in whichever part of the world took his fancy, a yacht in the Mediterranean and another in the Caribbean, a personal jet he flew himself when he was inclined, any number of top marque cars—and, of course, as many beautiful women as he wanted.

  And yet—

  Again, he felt that creeping sense of ennui flicker around him.

  He needed to dispel it.

  By any means necessary. Including, as he was now doing, acting out of character. Taking a walk across one of the most popular tourist spots in Paris, just like any other tourist.

  He paused and lifted his eyes to the magnificent west front of the most famous cathedral in Europe, with its twin towers of glittering Caen stone, the vast rose window nested below, and the great arched entrances. Around him, tourists were chattering in all languages, cameras flashing, groups posing, guidebooks lifted and perused.

  ‘Oh, will you just leave me alone?!’

  The vehement, infuriated voice just to his right drew his attention from the cathedral. As his eyes flicked sideways, he registered two things. The speaker had spoken in English, not French—and she was the most stunning female he’d seen in a long, long time.

  It was the hair that registered first. A fantastic sunburst tumble of curls, cascading down her back almost to her waist, the colour of topaz caught with rich gold light. For a moment it dazzled him, taking all his attention. But then, with the perfectly honed instincts of the practised connoisseur of fine women, his gaze moved on to her face.

  And stopped.

  She could have stepped out of a pre-Raphaelite painting. An oval face, translucent skin, lustrous eyes and a rich, sensuous mouth. But her features were not arranged in the serenity of a painted image. Oh, no—Markos felt amusement tugging at his mouth—serene was the last word to describe her at this moment!

  She was fizzing with exasperation, her expressive, long-lashed amber eyes snapping, jaw set tight.

  And he could see exactly why. Two young men were blocking her way, grinning knowingly, glancing at each other, and then one of them was accosting her again in broken English, trying to get her to go and have a drink with them.

  ‘No!’ the redhead reiterated. ‘Leave me alone!’

  The other of the two young men put out his hand to her, taking her wrist. She made to shake it off angrily, but he only laughed and repeated his unwanted invitation.

  Markos found himself stepping towards her. A few succinct, highly vernacular phrases in fluent French came from him. The two young men froze. Markos added one more sibilant instruction, and then smiled. It was a smile without humour.

  The young man dropped the girl’s wris
t as if it had suddenly turned red hot, and without more ado he and his companion bolted off.

  ‘Merci, m’sieu.’

  The voice was stiff, the accent English.

  ‘My pleasure,’ returned Markos urbanely, in her own language. His accent, thanks to his English mother, was all but perfect, he knew. He also knew it didn’t go with his appearance, which was not English at all.

  He could see her expression registering the dissonance.

  He could also see it registering something else entirely. Something that sent a spear of satisfaction shafting through him. For a moment he just let her gaze, then, timing it perfectly, he murmured, ‘I fear, however, that they will not be the last to…importune you.’

  The flash of amber came again, and the tightening of the beautiful rich mouth.

  ‘Why can’t they just leave me alone?’ she demanded with rhetorical exasperation.

  A laugh broke from him. Quite genuine. He spread his hands. ‘Because this is Paris. It’s what men do here. Pursue beautiful women.’

  ‘It’s just so annoying!’ she exclaimed. ‘And it’s so stupid, too! What kind of man thinks he can just pick up a girl in the street, for heaven’s sake?’

  Not a flicker showed in Markos’s eyes. ‘What you need,’ he said smoothly, ‘is a bodyguard.’

  Amber eyes rested on him. There was uncertainty in them now, not annoyance. And a lot more than uncertainty.

  But the uncertainty won.

  Her lips pressed together repressively. ‘Good day, m’sieu. Thank you for what you did just now.’ She started to move off.

  Markos watched her go. She got about twenty metres before a lanky Scandinavian stopped her, guidebook in hand, asking her the way, then pointing invitingly towards the cathedral entrance. The girl shook her head, and the sunlight dazzled in her glorious hair. She moved sideways around the Scandinavian and straight into the path of a North African, who fell into step beside her, oblivious of her attempts to repulse him.

  With no change in his leisurely gait, Markos strolled towards her. The creeping edge of ennui started to dissolve.

  Fury fizzed through Vanessa again. This was just unbearable! Her very first day in Paris and she was being pestered to death. Whether she stood still or kept walking, they just kept coming. And all she wanted was to be left in peace to do what had been a dream for years and years—see the glories of the most beautiful city in Europe.

  ‘Va’t’en!’ she snapped at the one trying to talk to her now. ‘Get lost. Leave me alone!’

  ‘Eenglish?’ said the man, and grinned. ‘I show you good time.’

  Then, from just behind her, a new voice spoke. It wasn’t a language she knew, but she recognised the voice. Her head whipped round.

  It was that man again. The man who’d got rid of those two Frenchmen. Who’d said that this was Paris and what else should she expect but to be pestered. Words to that effect. Who’d told her she needed a bodyguard.

  Who was the most devastating male she’d ever seen.

  Her eyes swept over him again. Dear God, but he really was jaw-dropping. Not French, she thought. He was powerfully built, tall, but with a kind of casual continental elegance to him that was almost sensual in its effect. Yet he’d spoken English without an accent, despite his dark hair, his Mediterranean skin tone. She couldn’t tell what nationality he was. He’d spoken English to her, French to those pests and something else—Arabic?—to this one.

  Whatever nationality he was, he made the breath stop in her lungs.

  But she mustn’t let him. Mustn’t do anything as stupid as respond to his incredible looks in any way! The last thing she needed was to give any male—even this one!—the slightest sign of encouragement.

  Even though he had come to her rescue twice in a row.

  The North African had vanished as if he’d never been. She took a short breath.

  ‘Thank you,’ she said to her rescuer, as stiffly as she could.

  He seemed undeterred by her coolness. ‘You know, you really do need a bodyguard,’ he observed. ‘These foreign johnnies are the very devil.’

  His accent had changed suddenly, with his second sentence, from normal English to the old-fashioned speech of a pre-war film.

  Vanessa glanced up at him—he really was very tall, and she was no muppet herself heightwise. Humour was sparking in his eyes.

  They’re grey. I thought they were black, but they’re not. They’re a very dark grey…

  The irrelevant observation distracted her a moment. Then the expression in his eyes got her. For a second it hung in the balance.

  Then she fell.

  She felt her lips quirk. ‘Are you trying to tell me you’re not a “foreign Johnny”?’

  ‘I’m probably more English than you are,’ he replied urbanely.

  ‘What?’ Her face furrowed.

  The dark grey eyes flickered over her. ‘Only Celts have red hair,’ he murmured.

  ‘Scottish grandmother,’ Vanessa acknowledged.

  There was something wrong with her speaking voice. It was sounding breathy, and more high-pitched than usual. She swallowed. She mustn’t stand here talking to a complete stranger, even if he had rescued her twice from unwanted admirers—

  It was as if he was reading her mind.

  ‘You know,’ he went on, and his voice had that smooth note in it again, that did strange things to her insides, ‘there is no need at all to be suspicious. I really am very respectable. And, if you would allow me—’the note in his voice changed slightly ‘—I would be more than happy to walk with you around the cathedral—if that is what you were intending—and ensure you are not pestered.’

  He smiled down at her, and Vanessa found herself searching his face. There was nothing in it except a bland politeness. For a moment she felt—quite ludicrously, given the situation—disappointment.

  She bit her lip, eyes dropping away from his face, and thus not seeing the way something flared in the dark grey depths of his eyes. When her gaze went back to him his expression was bland once more.

  He was a businessman, she realised. He was wearing a business suit, very smart, very formal. And very respectable.

  He’s just offered to go round the cathedral with you, that’s all. He’s not asking for a night of torrid sex, for heaven’s sake! And he’s proved he can keep all those pests away from you…

  She took a breath, and lifted her chin.

  ‘Thank you,’ she said. ‘That would be very kind.’

  Markos glanced down at the glorious red-gold head averted from him, focused on whatever the audio guide was describing to her. It was a novelty to have something compete with him for a woman’s attention, especially a medieval cathedral. But then, the girl’s concentration on the glories of the interior of Nôtre Dame was allowing him to concentrate on her own glories.

  And they were remarkable.

  She really was, he mused as they made their slow way around the cathedral, quite exquisite. Everything—from the fantastic sunburst of her hair, the tender line of her throat, the delicate curve of her cheek, the silken translucence of her skin, to the unconscious grace of her slender, yet shapely body—was exquisite. And that she seemed unconscious of it was enticing all on its own. She seemed to have no idea just how beautiful she was. A wry smile quirked at Markos’s lips. Was the girl mad to walk out in Paris, of all cities, with her breathtaking looks, and then be surprised that she was a honeypot to every male around? Including, he thought cynically, himself.

  A self-mocking expression fleeted in his face. Picking up females on the street was not something he made a habit of, not even to stave off boredom. But… His eyes wandered over her again as she stared, face lifted, at the radiance of the rose window. For a beauty so exquisite, so unselfconscious, he was definitely prepared to make an exception.

  His gaze moved on downwards, taking in her tall, slender figure, the beautiful swell of her breasts, her narrow waist and hips and her long legs. Even in the chainstore clothes she was weari
ng she was exceptional. As to what she would look like properly gowned—Markos let his imagination play pleasurably over how much her beauty would be enhanced by couture clothes.

  And jewellery, of course. Paris boasted some of the best jewellers in the world, but if he wanted something special for the girl he knew just where to turn. His cousin, Leo Makarios, had just informed him—as smug as you like, thought Markos—that he had become the owner of a fabulous cache of Tsarist jewels, come to light in the former Soviet Union. Surely something amongst the treasure trove of the Levantsky collection would be suitable to adorn the rare beauty of the woman at his side.

  Sapphires or emeralds? Markos gave his imagination free rein, visualising her freely bedecked in jewellery of each stone. Or both.

  He would enjoy, very much, discovering which suited her best.

  As he would enjoy, very much, discovering all her beauty in his bed.

  Satisfaction and a pleasurable anticipation eased through him. Suddenly, thanks to this extraordinarily beautiful girl, life had become a lot more interesting. His ennui had vanished entirely.

  Vanessa craned her neck upwards at the glorious fractured rainbow pouring through the interstices of the fretworked rose window. The narrative in her ears was telling her dates and monarchs, and the technicalities of producing medieval stained glass, but though she was listening as attentively as she could, the guide had a formidable distraction.

  A distraction who kept making her want to swivel her eyes to him and check whether he really was as breathtaking as she thought he was. But, although the temptation was very great, she forced herself to resist. She had to. She was here to see Paris, nothing more.

  She had promised herself this trip after her grandfather had died in the spring, finally succumbing to the long decline in health that had started when her grandmother had died so unexpectedly three years ago, knowing she would need to have something to focus on during her bereavement.

 

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