the project team but you were in San Francisco.â âAm I supposed to give a speech?â âTheyâre hoping you will agree to say a few words.â âI can manage a few words, but theyâll be unrelated to Minoan antiquities.â Nik loosened his tie. âRun me through the schedule.â âVassilis will have the car here at six-fifteen, which should allow you time to go back to the villa and change. Youâre picking up Christina on the way and your table is booked for nine p.m.â âWhy not pick her up after Iâve changed?â âThat would have taken time you donât have.â Nik couldnât argue with that. The demands of his schedule had seen off three assistants in the last six months. âThere was something else?â The man shifted uncomfortably. âYour father called. Several times. He said you werenât picking up your phone and asked me to relay a message.â Nik flicked open the button at the neck of his shirt. âWhich was?â âHe wants to remind you that his wedding is next weekend. He thinks youâve forgotten.â Nik stilled. He hadnât forgotten. âAnything else?â âHe is looking forward to having you at the celebrations. He wanted me to remind you that of all the riches in this world, family is the most valuable.â Nik, whose sentiments on that topic were a matter of public record, made no comment. He wondered why anyone would see a fourth wedding as a cause for celebration. To him, it shrieked of someone who hadnât learned his lesson the first three times. âI will call him from the car.â âThere was one more thingââ The man backed towards the door like someone who knew he was going to need to make a rapid exit. âHe said to make sure you knew that if you donât come, youâll break his heart.â It was a statement typical of his father. Emotional. Unguarded. Reflecting that it was that very degree of sentimentality that had made his father the victim of three costly divorces, Niklaus strolled to his desk. âConsider the message delivered.â As the door closed he turned back to the window, staring over the midday sparkle of the sea. Exasperation mingled with frustration and beneath that surface response lay darker, murkier emotions he had no wish to examine. He wasnât given to introspection and he believed that the past was only useful when it informed the future, so finding himself staring down into a swirling mass of long-ignored memories was an unwelcome experience. Despite the air conditioning, sweat beaded on his forehead and he strode across his office and pulled a bottle of iced water from the fridge. Why should it bother him that his father was marrying again? He was no longer an idealistic nine-year-old, shattered by a motherâs betrayal and driven by a deep longing for order and security. Heâd learned to make his own security. Emotionally he was an impenetrable fortress. He would never allow a relationship to explode the world from under his feet. He didnât believe in love and he saw marriage as expensive and pointless. Unfortunately his father, an otherwise intelligent man, didnât share his views. Heâd managed to build a successful business from nothing but the fruits of the land around him, but for some reason he had failed to apply that same intellect to his love life. Nik reflected that if he approached business the way his father approached relationships, he would be broke. As far as he could see his father performed no risk analysis, gave no consideration to the financial implications of each of his romantic whims and approached each relationship with the romantic optimism entirely inappropriate for a man on his fourth marriage. Nikâs attempts to encourage at least some degree of circumspection had been dismissed as cynical. To make the situation all the more galling, the