you invite her to move in?â
âNo, I did not! She invited herself and wouldnât take no for an answer. Have you ever tried to get your stepmother to do something she didnât want to do?â
âAs a matter of fact I have.â
Zarek expertly removed the cork from a bottle of rich red wine and poured a generous amount into a couple of glasses.
âWell, I donât happen to have the promise of a generous incomeâor the threat of withholding oneâto dangle over her head like a carrot. Hermione arrived when the news of your disappearance had just brokenâI didnât know what to do for the best. I thought it might after all be an idea if we were all in one place until we found out just what had happened.â
And she had been reeling in shock and distress. It didnât matter how she and her husband had parted, learning that his yacht had been hijacked by pirates and Zarek himself taken hostage had left her unable to think straight, so that she hadnât had the strength to fight Hermione over anything.
âAnd Jasonâ¦â
Something in the way that Zarek reactedâor, rather, his complete lack of reactionâsent her a warning signal that she was entering dangerous territory. She knew what Zarek had seen and heard on the harbour front only the day before. Her husband might not love her but he was her husband and a traditionally possessive, jealous Greek husband at that. He would not take at all kindly to seeing his wife in the arms of another man. Particularly if that man was his hated stepbrother.
âAnd Jasonâ¦â Zarek prompted almost casually, holding out one of the glasses of wine towards her. Because of the darkness in the room, she couldnât read his face properly but the stiffness of his long spine, a clipped edge to his use of his stepbrotherâs name, made all the little hairs on the back of her neck lift in wary apprehension.
âJason dealt with all the practical thingsâliaising with the police, the press. He was veryâhelpful.â
Besides, Jason had been kind and considerate then and his support had been welcome at a time when she most needed it.
âGood for Jason.â
It was impossible to interpret the strange note in Zarekâs voice as he lifted his glass to his mouth and took a deliberate sip of the wine. But Penny didnât care what his mood was. If there was any doubt in his mind about what he had seen then it was time she made things perfectly clear. His opinion of her was low enough as it was. She didnât want to add any further complications to the already explosive mix.
âWeâre not lovers,â she said starkly and saw his head come up very slightly, though he controlled the movement almost at once.
âDid I say anything?â
âNoâbut youâre thinking it.â
âOh, is that what Iâm thinking?â
Another slow deliberate sip of his wine, but, watching him, Penny saw how long it took him to swallow it. The burn of his eyes challenged her with the fact that he could have been thinking something else entirely but she wasnât yet ready to go there. Better to clear the air with the things she could dealwith here and now rather than rake up old problems and risk ripping open old wounds.
That would have to come, but it was early days yetânot even days! She was still feeling her way with this man who was her husband and yet, after the time he had been missing, now seemed like a stranger to her. She knew his face, his stunning features, his voice, his mannerisms. But was the Zarek she had married, the Zarek she had been intimate with, made love withâno, noâthe man she had had sex withâstill inside this façade that was so well known and yet somehow totally unfamiliar to her? For now she would do better to stay on safer ground. If Zarekâs detested brother could ever be considered safer.
âI know how it might have looked to