Greek had arrived, must have seen the spasm of shock that had passed over her features.
âI suppose there is a little resemblance to your brother,â he murmured, intuitively sensing the source of her distress. âI should have saidâ¦â
Katie shook her head. âHeâs not really like him.â
She wasnât just saying this to make Harvey feel better. Peterâs face had been extremely attractive, but stood next to this man he would have been invisible. Her twin hadnât possessed the sheer physical presence that this stranger had in abundance.
As the stranger she was about to marry inclined his dark head in acknowledgement of Harvey and turned his attention briefly to her, Katie saw there was none of Peterâs petulance in this austerely beautiful face, nor any of the warmth. In fact, she saw as he came closer that he wasnât anything like her twin at all.
This man was ice.
Seven years later she was helpless to control the little shudder that slipped down her spine or the nervous flutterin her tummy as she visualised those silver-shot midnight-dark eyes fringed by decadently dark lashes set in an otherwise starkly uncompromising bronzed face.
Even if he hadnât been an attention-grabbing six feet five of solid bone and muscle and moved with the natural grace of a top-class athlete, who could forget those eyesâ¦? She hadnât. Theyâd even featured in some disturbingly erotic dreams that had disrupted her sleep over the years.
âHeâs alive.â
Sadie raised her eyebrows at her friendâs emphatic tone.
âActually Iâve never seen anybody quite so alive.â His vitality had been like an electric current. His brief touch had made her skin tingle and sheâd been relieved he hadnât prolonged the contact more than absolutely necessary.
âI thought you couldnât remember what he looked like.â Sadie watched the distant, almost dreamy expression cross the younger womanâs face.
âI canât, it was just an impression,â Katie replied a little quickly, too stubborn to admit even to herself the impact her bought bridegroom had made on her.
âQuite a coincidence you both being Greek.â
Katieâs soft lips firmed and her eyes filled with scorn. âIâm half Greek.â
It was a half that showed in the contours of her oval face with its proud, high forehead, straight classical nose, delicately sculpted lips and long, swan-like neck. It was also a half she was always ready to deny. The half that had heartlessly cast off the daughter who had offended their precious family honour.
Not even after her husband had died and sheâd been left to bring up two young children on the small salary sheâd earned working part-time as a legal secretary had Katieâs mother tried to contact her family who had rejected her on her wedding day.
Katie and her twin had been brought up with very littleknowledge of their motherâs culture, which suited Katie fine. She had no time for people who could punish a woman for falling in love outside her class and culture. No, as far as she was concerned she was all British.
CHAPTER TWO
K EPT late by an unexpected emergency at work, Katie rang Tom to arrange to go directly to the hotel where they were having dinner. She dashed home, fed the cat, a particularly evil-tempered ginger tom called Alexander, and got changed in record time. As she emerged from the taxi nothing about her demeanour hinted at the breathless haste with which sheâd got ready.
High heels crunching on the gravel, Katie hurried across the forecourt unable to dismiss the nagging feeling she had forgotten something. Walking into the brightly lit foyer, she smoothed down her freshly washed hair, which she hadnât had the time to blow-dry properly; it fell river-straight almost to her waist, gleaming like the finest spun silk under the bright lights, which picked out the rich