looking guilty as hellâ¦
OK, Ellie conceded grudgingly, so she must have looked a bit suspicious in those circumstances. But that still didnât justify his outrageous insistence that he couldnât trust her out of his sight for the next thirty-six hours. And to demand that she travel abroad with him into the bargain was, in her opinion, proof of sheer insanity!
That wasnât his only problem either. The way Dio Alexiakis had looked at her a couple of times had infuriated her. Even in the midst of what he had clearly seen as a very serious situation, Dio had still been eying her up like a piece of female merchandise on offer. Compressing her generous mouth into a most ungenerous line, Ellie ruminated on that fact.
Ricky Bolton had been hard enough to tolerate, refusing to take no for an answer and convinced that he only had to persist to wear her down. That she had experienced that strange sense of disorientation when Dio Alexiakis had looked down at her didnât surprise Ellie in the slightest. This arrogant Greek had merely incited a stronger sense of revulsion than even his subordinate did. But then he was one of those very earthy guys, she decided grimly, the sort who couldnât look at any reasonably attractive woman without wondering what she might be like in bed!
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Quite impervious to Ellieâs growing antipathy, which she expressed in frigid silence, Dio Alexiakis marched her through the airport to a busy shopping area. Striding straight into an exclusive boutique, he headed for a rack of lightweight black skirt suits. Dumping the smallest size available into Ellieâs startled arms, he snatched a hat, purse and long black gloves down from the display shelf above and added them.
The remainder of the tastefully concocted display fell flat on the stand. Flushing to the roots of her hair beneath the aghast scrutiny of the saleswoman surging forward, Ellie whispered in a mortified undertone, âWhat on earth do you think youâre doing?â
âShopping,â Dio Alexiakis delivered succinctly, quite indifferent to the staff eyes now trained on their every move. Like a steamroller, he headed for another rack, to pull a blue cotton shift dress from a hanger and stuff it with equal unconcern into her dismayed grasp. A long black coat was thrust at her in the same careless fashion. Then he paused by a severely undersized candy-pink shorts outfit on a dummy. With an imperious inclination of his dark head, he hailed the frozen-faced older woman already moving their way. âWeâll have this as well.â
âIâm afraid that item is sold out, sir,â he was told acidly.
âTake it off the dummy, then,â Dio instructed the woman, whose badge proclaimed her managerial status.
âMr Alexiakis!â Ellie hissed, cringing with embarrassment.
On the clear brink of making a deflating retort, the older womanâs mouth fell open when she heard that name and took a better look at the tall black-haired male towering over Ellie. âM-Mr Alexiakis?â she stammered in incredulously.
âYes, the owner of this chain of shops,â Dio confirmed, surveying the unfortunate woman with menacing disapproval. âTell me, do your staff usually stand around chatting when there are customers requiring attention? And since when has a display been more important than making a sale?â
âYouâre quite right, sir. Please allow me to assist you,â the manageress muttered unevenly, her discomfiture unconcealed.
âThis lady needs lingerie. Pick some out for us.â His attention falling on the shoe racks, he dragged Ellie across to them. âWhat size are you?â
âI donât think Iâve ever been more embarrassed in my life.â Ellie was trembling with rage and chagrin. âIs this the way you normally behave in public?â
âWhatâs the matter with you?â he demanded with ringing impatience. âWe