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Untamed Billionaire, Undressed Virgin
Praise for MY TALL DARK GREEK BOSS by Anna Cleary:
‘MY TALL DARK GREEK BOSS is a fresh, sassy and sizzling contemporary romance… Anna Cleary is a talented storyteller who combines richly drawn characters, explosive chemistry, red-hot sensuality and dramatic emotional intensity in an irresistible romance that is absolutely impossible to put down!’
—CataRomance
Look out for more fabulous stories from Anna, coming soon in Mills & Boon® Modern Heat™!
‘But…would you feel honourable about violating my person? A woman who’s never been kissed?’
His eyes flickered over her face and throat. She could sense his hesitation, his struggle against temptation. It gave her such an exhilarating feeling to see that she could tempt him from his intent. And he would succumb, she realised with a thrilled, almost incredulous certainty, her heart thundering.
Beneath his black lashes his pupils flared like a hungry wolf’s.
He curled his lean fingers under her jaw. ‘That can be fixed,’ he said. Then he brought his lips down on hers with deliberate, sensual purpose.
At that first firm touch, a fiery tingling sensation shot through her veins like an electric charge, and sent an immediate swell of warmth to her breasts. She tried to remember he was her adversary, and made a half-hearted attempt to cool her response, but he drew her in closer. Then, like the cunning devil he was, he softened the kiss to clever, gentle persuasion, until the fire on her lips ignited her bloodstream and aroused all her secret, intimate places with erotic yearning.
As a child, Anna Cleary loved reading so much that during the midnight hours she was forced to read with a torch under the bedcovers, to lull the suspicions of her sleep-obsessed parents. From an early age she dreamed of writing her own books. She saw herself in a stone cottage by the sea, wearing a velvet smoking jacket and sipping sherry, like Somerset Maugham.
In real life she became a schoolteacher, where her greatest pleasure was teaching children to write beautiful stories.
A little while ago, she and one of her friends made a pact to each write the first chapter of a romance novel in their holidays. From writing her very first line Anna was hooked, and she gave up teaching to become a full-time writer. She now lives in Queensland, with a deeply sensitive and intelligent cat. She prefers champagne to sherry, and loves music, books, four-legged people, trees, movies and restaurants.
Recent novels by this author:
TAKEN BY THE MAVERICK MILLIONAIRE
MY TALL DARK GREEK BOSS
UNTAMED BILLIONAIRE, UNDRESSED VIRGIN
BY
ANNA CLEARY
www.millsandboon.co.ukFor Gabi, Ben, Michelle, Jenny, Mirandi, Tina, Vicki,
Terese and Shirley, with love and appreciation.
CHAPTER ONE
CONNOR O’BRIEN’S plane glided into Sydney on the first rays of dawn. The shadowy city materialised below, a mysterious patchwork of rooftops and dark sea, emerging from the mists of night. The comforts it promised were welcome, after the deserts he’d traversed over the last five years in the dubious name of Intelligence, but Connor expected no feeling of homecoming. To him Sydney was just another city. Its spires and skyscrapers felt no more connected to him than the mosques and minarets he’d left behind.
Once on the ground, he breezed through customs, courtesy of his diplomatic status. His honed blending-in skills spared him any undue attention. He was just another tall Australian in the Foreign Service.
The technicalities taken care of, he strolled across the International Terminal with his long easy stride, his single suitcase in tow, laptop case in his spare hand. From force of habit, with covert skill he scanned the groups of sleepy relatives waiting to embrace their loved ones. Wives and girlfriends beaming up at their men and weeping, children running into their fathers’ arms. For him, no one. With his father gone now, he kept no personal connections. No lives at risk for knowing him. His precious anonymity was intact. Not a soul to know or care if Connor O’Brien lived or died, and that was how it had to be.
The glass exit doors opened before him and he walked out into the Australian summer dawn, safe and secure in his solitariness. The sky had lightened to a pale grey, washing out the street lamps to a wan hue. Even for the height of midsummer the morning was warm. The faintest whiff of eucalyptus wafted to him on the breeze like the scent of freedom.
Scanning for the taxi rank, he felt an unaccustomed buzz.
He rubbed his bristly jaw and contemplated the potential amenities of a good hotel. Shower, breakfast, relax with the newspapers, shake off the jet lag…
‘Mr O’Brien?’
A uniformed chauffeur stepped forward from the open rear door of a limo parked in line with the exit. Respectfully he touched his cap. ‘Your lift, sir.’
Connor stilled, every one of his nerves and trigger-sharp reflexes on instant alert.
A thin, querulous voice issued from inside the car. ‘Come on, come on, O’Brien. Give Parkins your gear and let’s get on the road.’
Connor knew that voice. With disbelief he peered into the dim interior. A small elderly man swam into focus, majestically ensconced in the plush upholstery.
Sir Frank Fraser. Wily old fox, legend of the Service and one of his father’s old golfing cronies. But surely the ex-Chief had long since hung up his cloak and dagger and retired to live on the Fraser family fortune? As far as Connor knew, he was now a respectable pillar of the world of wealth and ease.
‘Well, what are we waiting for?’ The quavery voice held the autocrat’s note of incredulity at not being instantly obeyed.
Curiosity outweighed Connor’s chagrin at having his moment of freedom curtailed, so he handed his suitcase to the hovering Parkins and slid into the old guy’s travelling suite.
At once his smooth, bronzed hand was seized in a wrinkled claw and shaken with vigour.
‘Good to see you, O’Brien.’ The ancient autocrat took in Connor’s long limbs, his lean, athletic frame, with an admiring gaze. ‘And, my God, you’re the living image of your old man. Same colouring, Mick’s build—everything.’
Connor didn’t try to deny it. Sure, like his father, he’d inherited the ink-black hair, dark eyes and olive skin of some tall, long ago Spaniard who’d washed up on the Irish coast from the storm-scattered Armada, but his father had been a family man, and there the resemblance had to end.
‘And you’ve done well. What department has the embassy hired you for? Humanitarian Affairs, isn’t it?’
‘Something like that,’ Connor allowed as the limo started and nosed into the road for the city. He smiled. ‘Humanitarian Advisor to the First Secretary for Immigration.’
Sir Frank’s aged face settled into thoughtful lines. ‘Yes, yes, I can see why they need more lawyers. There’d be plenty of work involved there.’
A vision of the horror he’d had to deal with at the Australian Embassy in Baghdad swam into Connor’s mind. Unable even to begin describing it, he merely shrugged acknowledgement, waiting for his father’s old mate to spill what was on his mind.
Sir Frank sent him a glance that penetrated through to the back of his brain, and said with unnerving perspicacity, ‘Isn’t all that tragedy enough to keep you interested, without this other work you’re doing? Your father always told me the law was your first and only love.’
Connor controlled every muscle not to react, though a little nerve jumped somewhere in his gut. ‘Sir Frank, is there something behind this friendly chat? Something you need to tell me?’
Sir Frank drew a cigar from his breast pocket. ‘Let’s just say we have a friend of a friend in common.’
Connor’s ears pricked up. This was agency speak for contact. So why the old lion and not some field operative? He was considering the possibilities when Sir Frank came in with a low hit.
‘Heard about your losing your wife and child. That was tough. There’s too many of these planes going down. How long ago was it now?’
Connor gripped his case while the dust and ashes settled back in his soul. The force of it could still catch him off guard, even now. ‘Nearly six years. But—’
The elderly voice softened a notch. ‘Must be time you tried again, lad. A man needs a woman, kids to come home to. It’s time you stopped all this adventuring and settled down. Take up the threads again. This sort of work in Baghdad…’ He shook his head. ‘A man burns out fast. Two or three years should be the limit, and you’re well past it. I hear you’ve taken some very close shaves. They tell me you’re good—the very best—but a man only stays on top of the game for so long.’ He slid Connor a glance. ‘The man you replaced ended up with a knife through his gullet.’
Connor gazed at him with a mixture of incredulity and sardonic amusement. ‘Thanks.’
But the old guy was in earnest. As his enthusiasm heated up his gnarled hands gesticulated with increasing fervour. ‘I wouldn’t be doing my duty to Mick if I didn’t say this, young fella. You’re dicing with death.’
‘You should know,’ Connor fired back. ‘You diced with it yourself long enough.’
‘That’s right, I did, and I’ve learned what’s important. No one ever wins this game.’ He grasped Connor’s arm. ‘Look, I could pull a few strings for you. Your dad’s left you a wealthy man. You could set up your own firm. There’s always a call for good lawyers in this country.’ He thumped his creaky old knee with his thumb. ‘Plenty of injustice right here. A big handsome lad like you won’t take long to find another lovely girl.’
The permafrost that passed for Connor’s heart since the real thing had been broken and scattered over a Syrian mountainside registered nothing. He knew what he’d lost and would never have again. He made his way now without attachments. Banter, the occasional dalliance with a pretty woman, were sufficient to keep the shadows at bay.
‘Civilian life offers its challenges, too,’ Sir Frank persisted. ‘And its excitements.’ He waved his unlit cigar. ‘What are you now—thirty? Thirty-five?’
‘Thirty-four.’ In spite of his discipline Connor felt his abdominal muscles clench. He understood well enough what the old guy was alluding to. To perform in Intelligence an officer needed to be as clinical and objective towards his contacts as a machine. Perhaps, for some, cracks could develop over time and emotion begin to leak in, but he had no need to be concerned. He was still as balanced and dispassionate in his work as ever. He’d quit soon enough if he had a reason. In fact, he needed the constant threat of death to realise he was alive.
‘Sir Frank,’ he said in his deep, quiet voice, ‘your concern is appreciated, but unnecessary. If there’s something you need to tell me, spit it out. Otherwise your driver can drop me right here.’
Sir Frank looked approvingly at him. ‘A straightshooter, just like Mick. Exactly like him.’ He shook his head and sighed. ‘If only Elliott could straighten himself out.’
Ah. At last. The crunch.
Connor stared broodingly out at the familiar streets, riffling back through the dusty mental files of family connections. ‘Isn’t Elliott your son?’
‘Now that’s what I wanted to talk to you about. A situation has arisen.’
As far as he knew, Elliott Fraser was one of those wealthy, fifty-ish CEOs in the private sector. ‘He’s involved in something?’
The old man looked gloomy. ‘You might say something. A woman.’
Connor drew an austere breath. ‘Look, I think you may have been misinformed, Sir Frank. I’m here on leave.’ His tone was cool, but it was necessary to let the old guy feel the steel edge of his refusal. ‘I haven’t been flown halfway around the world to sort out your son’s love-life.’
Sir Frank’s indignant weedy frame flared up like a firecracker. ‘That’s exactly what you have been flown here for, mister,’ he retorted with spirit. ‘Who do you think got you your leave?’ He gestured vehemently with his cigar, pointing it in Connor’s face. ‘No need to get cocky with me, fella, just because I knew you when you had your milk teeth. That’s the very reason I’ve chosen you.’
Before Connor could respond, Sir Frank leaned forward and pinned him with an urgent, beady gaze. ‘It won’t interrupt your break much, Connor. It’ll take you a week, a fortnight at most, then you can enjoy the rest of your three months. Who knows? You might decide to stay longer. Anyway, I know you’ll do your best to help me out. For the love of Mick.’
Ah, here it was. The old boys’ friendship card. All those mornings out on the green. Boozy afternoon sessions in the clubhouse. Connor knew it for what it was—emotional blackmail, and impossible to reject. He closed his eyes for an instant, then resigned himself.
‘All right, all right. Go on, then. Shoot.’
‘That’s better.’ Sir Frank sat back, satisfaction momentarily deepening the cracks and crevices in his crocodile-skin face. ‘Now, this is strictly between us. Elliott’s being considered for a top job with the ministry. Very hush-hush. He can’t afford any scandal. Not a whiff.’ He held up a wizened hand. ‘No, it’s serious. Marla is in America on business for her firm. If she comes back and finds out he’s been playing away from home…’ He shuddered. ‘Marla can be very forceful. I have a strong instinct about this, Connor, and my instincts are rarely wrong. The chances are that this little popsy he’s got himself entangled with is a plant. The timing is suspicious. But even if she isn’t…’ He closed his wrinkled eyelids in deprecation. ‘Do you see now why I’ve chosen you? I don’t want the agency involved. This is my family…I can’t risk some stranger.’ He moved closer to Connor and lowered his voice. ‘You’ll be on your own entirely. It has to be strictly between you and me.’ He waggled an admonitory finger. ‘No logging into the agency’s tech services.’
Connor shook his head in bemusement. ‘But surely all you have to do is whisper in Elliott’s ear?’
‘You try doing that with Elliott. He thinks he’s keeping her under wraps.’
Connor concealed his amusement. The old guy was clearly loath to reveal to his son that he was keeping tabs on him.
Sir Frank clutched at his wrist. ‘Connor, for all his sins, Elliott’s my son. And then there’s my grandson.’ His rheumy old eyes filled up with tears. ‘He’s four years old.’
Connor noticed a tremor in the frail, liver-spotted hand grasping his sleeve and felt the faintest twinge in his chest. ‘Right,’ he said, exhaling a long breath. Old people and children had always been his Achilles’ heel. He might as well grit his teeth, agree to the task and get it over with. He straightened his wide shoulders, and, needing to rein in the excess of emotion lapping the walls of the limo, injected some professional briskness into his voice. ‘Do you have anything on the woman?’
Sir Frank conquered his tears with amazing swiftness and switched into business mode. Reaching into an alcove set in the door, he produced a file. ‘Her name’s Sophy something. Woodford…no… Woodruff. Works in the Alexandra.’
‘Where’s that?’ Connor said, flipping the single page. The information was sparse. A few dates and times. Meetings with Elliott in coffee shops. A bar. An indistinct CCTV still of a slim, dark-haired woman. Her face wasn’t quite in focus, but the camera had managed to catch something of the delicacy of an oval face, the lustre of longish, wavy dark hair. Employed as a speech pathologist in a paediatric clinic. A good, conservative cover. Like his own.
‘You know Macquarie Street?’
‘Who doesn’t?’ As the avenue in which both the Botanical Gardens and the Opera House resided, Macquarie Street was one of the finest boulevards in Sydney. It had long been the preserve of the high-fliers of the medical profession.
‘Some rooms have been vacated for you there. Your law practice will be a perfect cover.’ The old tycoon added slyly, ‘If you did decide to stay, there’d be nothing to stop you hanging up your shingle there for real.’
The location was just around the corner from some of the wealthiest bastions of the legal profession. Connor supposed he could get away with setting up as a lawyer in doctors’ territory. Just how dangerous did the old guy expect the assignment to be? He felt some misgivings at the amorphous nature of it. Sir Frank’s reputation as a cunning operator was well earned.
He studied the clever old face. ‘What exactly do you want from me?’
‘Find out about her. Her background, connections, everything. She’s almost certainly working for a foreign state. Pillow talk.’ He shook his head in disgust. ‘You’d think Elliott would have enough savvy to…’ He broke off, ruminating on his son’s naiveté with compressed lips. ‘Anyway, if—if—you find she’s just a little gold-digger looking for a lamb to fleece, pay her off.’
Connor winced. From what he’d heard of Elliott Fraser, his lamb-like qualities were highly doubtful. On the surface, though, it seemed a tame little assignment. Nothing like strolling to an evening rendezvous to meet a contact dressed in high explosives. Hardly in the same universe as drinking coffee with a smiling man who was preparing to slice open his throat.
‘A good-looking lad like you won’t have any trouble getting close to the woman.’
Connor flashed him a wry glance. He didn’t do close. He was just about to set him straight on that issue when the limo turned into a tree-lined avenue, and he recognised the graceful colonial architecture of Macquarie Street.
Traffic was minimal at this early hour, and there was time to appreciate the street’s pleasantness, enhanced on one side by the dense green mystery of the Botanical Gardens burgeoning with summer growth behind a long stretch of tall, iron railings.
Halfway along the street the chauffeur pulled into the kerb.
‘The Alexandra,’ Sir Frank announced.
Connor craned to stare up at a honey-coloured sandstone edifice, several storeys in height. A splash of scarlet flowers spilled from a third-floor window ledge.
‘You’ll find your rooms on the top floor. Suite 3E.’ Sir Frank pressed a set of old-fashioned keys into Connor’s hand. ‘Mind you keep in touch with me every step of the way.’ He sat back and pulled on his blank cigar, then added excitedly, ‘You know, Connor, I have a very good feeling about this now. I’m sure you’ll be just the man to stop clever little Miss Sophy Woodruff in her tracks.’
CHAPTER TWO
SHADOW. Just a touch to enhance the blue of her irises. Violet like her name, her father used to say. Her official name, not that she’d ever use it. Thank goodness it only rarely appeared, usually on government documents or bank statements. What sort of people would call their child something so schmaltzy?
Certainly not the parents she knew. They’d felt obliged to keep it, but everyone had preferred to call her by the name they’d chosen themselves. Sophy was her father’s choice. Henry—her real father, not the biological one.
That uncomfortable feeling coiled in her stomach. Her biological father. Such a cold descriptor. But could he really be as cold as he seemed? How warm was any man likely to feel when he encountered the daughter he never knew he had? Or so he’d said. Still, if he’d been lying, why order the DNA test?
He was lying about something, though, she could feel it in her bones.
Her brows were dark enough, closer to black than her hair. One quick pencil stroke to define their natural arch. In an emergency it would have to do.
Mascara was mandatory. Lashes could never be too long or too thick. A quick brush of blush on her cheekbones to warm the pallor of her broken night’s sleep, but a glance at the clock decided her to be satisfied with that if she wanted to catch the 6.03 ferry.
With the heatwave still roasting Sydney after three days, she needed to wear something cool. She slipped on a straight, knee-length skirt, turned sideways to check in the mirror. Flat enough. Her lilac shirt with its pretty cap-sleeves was fresh from the cleaners’ and required no ironing. She snatched up her handbag and slid into her lucky high heels.
Something told her there’d be running ahead. Tuesdays were seldom her best, but she had a very strong feeling about this one. She was on the verge of something, she could tell by the prickling in the back of her neck.
Zoe and Leah, her housemates, were barely stirring. She battled her way around the pile of camping gear they’d assembled in the hall, flung them a hasty ‘Bye,’ and ran down the path to the gate, the sun barely up. For the thousandth time she retraced in her mind every step she’d taken since she’d picked the registered letter up from the post office in yesterday’s lunch hour.
She’d taken it straight back to her office to read. And there it had been. Official confirmation. Elliott Fraser’s DNA profile matched sufficiently with hers for the lab to attest that he was her father.
She’d placed it in her bag, and felt sure she still had it when she went to help Millie, in the office next door, pack up for her move.
It hadn’t been until she arrived home that she’d realised it was missing. After the initial panic, she remembered pausing in the mothers’ room on the way from the Ladies. That had to be right…Sonia from the ophthalmic clinic had been in there having a weep, and she’d dragged out a handful of tissues from her bag to help Sonia mop up. The letter could have fallen out then.
If she was to find it before anyone else, she needed to get to work before the Alexandra hummed into life. She supposed she could easily get the lab to send her a replacement copy. But that wouldn’t help the confidentiality problem. A promise was a promise. If she didn’t find it… If she didn’t locate it at once, she’d have to inform Elliott. The thought of that made her feel slightly sick.
After that first meeting in the café—even before then, in fact, when she’d first laid eyes on him—she’d recognised he had a chill factor. Even his name, seen for the first time on her original birth certificate, had had a cold clink of reality to it. At eighteen, when the law had allowed, she’d gone through the procedures of finding out her birth parents’ names out of curiosity, but probably would never have acted on the information. She doubted if she’d have contacted him at all, if it hadn’t been for that Tuesday, exactly six weeks ago.
She’d been standing at the reception desk, checking a patient’s file, when someone had approached the desk and said to Cindy, ‘Elliott Fraser. I’ve brought Matthew for his check-up.’
Sophy’s heart had jarred to a standstill. In a breathless kind of slow motion she’d looked up and seen him for the first time. Her father.
He was in his late forties, his hair already silver. He looked smooth and well-heeled, the image of a successful businessman. His eyes were a cold slate-grey, not like hers at all, and as he’d talked to Cindy his gaze hadn’t warmed or changed in any way. Though Sophy had stared and stared to try to find a resemblance, she hadn’t been able to see any.
There had to be one, though. People could hardly ever see likenesses to themselves. She supposed she might take after her poor mother, who, according to the records, had died from contracting meningitis, but there should still be points of resemblance with her father.
Her glance had fallen then on the four-year-old at Elliott Fraser’s side. He had the most endearing little solemn face. In a rush of conflicted emotion she’d realised he was her half-brother.