Caro LaFever
Finish the Greek Billionaires Trilogy (Stories 2 and 3)
Finish the Greek Billionaires Trilogy (Stories 2 and 3)
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Two more Greek billionaires. Two more unforgettable love stories.
Continue the passion with the powerful duet that completes the Greek Billionaires series.
A ruthless mogul determined to guard his empire is undone by the reporter who uncovers his hidden past.
A scarred heir bent on revenge collides with the only woman he ever loved—and the family feud that tore them apart.
From glittering New York penthouses to sun-drenched Greek isles, these men must face the shadows of their pasts and the women strong enough to make them believe in love again.
Don’t stop at Book 1. Complete the trilogy with this exclusive duet edition.

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A PERFECT WIFE CHAPTER ONE
He had the perfect wife.
Aetos Zenos smiled into the mirror as he straightened his tie. Today was going to be one of the best days of his life and he had his wife to thank for this success. Without her presence in his life, old man Tucker would never have agreed to the deal he proposed. A deal worth millions.
Nai. His wife deserved a hell of a lot of credit.
He turned around to his walk-in closet and chose the steel-blue Armani jacket that matched his pants. Slipping it on, he adjusted the sleeves and the gold, eagle-encrusted cufflinks. He smiled at his image once more, a sly twinkle in his eye.
Not only had his perfect wife secured this contract for him, she also had many other sterling qualities to admire. She never nagged. She never quarreled.
She was never disappointed in him, demanding of him.
She didn’t require his time or emotions or attention.
She never spent a penny of his vast fortune.
What more could a man want in a woman?
There was the issue of sex. In this one area, she fell short. Not that he cared. He’d found other avenues to take care of that particular need. He didn’t blame his wife for not providing him satisfaction. He knew going into the marriage sex wasn’t in the cards. She wasn’t capable of it. And really, what was the saying?
Variety was the spice of life.
He chuckled. Looking at his left hand, he eyed the plain gold band on his ring finger. He hadn’t taken it off since he put it on two years ago. The ring had saved him countless hassles. When confronted by a determined woman, all he did was wave the thing in her face and tell her no. He liked variety, true, but he was the one to choose and chase. When he did indicate interest, each woman he picked invariably came to his bed.
The ring was never mentioned. Neither was marriage or commitment.
A wife was very useful to have in many situations.
Glancing at his watch, he walked out of his bedroom, across the Persian rugs blanketing the long hall, and down the wide stairs to the foyer of his elegant, Upper East Side brownstone. He’d purchased the property right before his marriage. No longer had he wanted to project the image of a man-about-town. The image was fine and well when he first started building his business seventeen years ago. It garnered him attention, brought him connections, solidified his presence as a mover and shaker. The image the world saw had served his purpose as he rose in stature.
But two years ago?
Well, let’s just say Tucker was only one catalyst for his marriage. The existence of a wife had been important to show he was a solid, established citizen. However, the marriage provided him more than a business deal.
The marriage had provided him cover.
Slipping on his black leather jacket while opening the front door, he nodded to his chauffeur. “Let’s go.”
He spent the ride into Manhattan fielding several calls from his PA. Scrolling through a dozen text messages and emails from his bond traders in London and Singapore, he jotted down a couple of notes on new acquisitions. Not until he was mere minutes from his meeting with the old man did he have a chance to open his laptop and review his final proposal. The review truly wasn’t needed. The proposal had played in his head for years.
He knew what he needed to do. He always did.
The limo door opened and Aetos stepped out into a biting November wind. Looking at the imposing stone building he was about to acquire, he smiled one more time. Who would have dreamed a young kid from Athens would ever accomplish so much and come so far? Who could have imagined that one Aetos Zenos—a nobody, a nothing—with not a penny to his name when he landed on America’s shores, would soon own one of the best properties in New York City? Who would have predicted the rejected heir of one of Greece’s most prominent families would now be the proud owner of more businesses, land, and power than the Zenos clan had accumulated over hundreds of years?
Certainly not his father. Certainly none of the aristocratic Zenos family.
They’d been wrong. All wrong.
He’d dreamed of this at the tender age of nine when he was discarded. He’d imagined this when he left his father’s home at the age of fifteen. This need for success had been branded into him with every sneer and every putdown.
Now, here he was. Making his dreams and imaginings all come true.
Nodding to the doorman, he walked through the open door into his future.
The future his wife had helped him obtain.
His perfect, pretend wife.
* * *
Natalie Globenko sat in the darkest corner of the bar. She’d chosen the place specifically because it was in the Upper East Side, far from her own Brooklyn neighborhood, as far as one could get without falling off Manhattan Island. The place was as shadowy and nondescript as a person could hope. The dusky oak paneling and dark-red paint created a sense of safety. A cave cocooning her in its dark embrace.
Of course, this was an illusion.
Danger lurked and waited.
She held her cup with shaking hands. The warmth of the coffee had long ago dissipated and the waitress hadn’t come back with a refill. But this was the least of her worries.
She was in deep trouble.
How could Nathan have done such a thing? How had she not realized her brother was neck-deep in a scam that would eventually lead to his death? Eventually leave her holding the bag?
The familiar tightness in her throat welled. At least the tears no longer came. During the past three months, she’d cried every single tear inside her. They hadn’t done any good. The tears hadn’t brought her kid brother back from the grave. And they hadn’t miraculously solved all her problems, either. Especially her one gigantic problem.
Fifty thousand dollars.
How was she going to find fifty thousand dollars?
The front door of the bar flew open, bringing a strong gust of cold wind and two men into the room. Natalie shrank back into her seat. As she eyed them, though, she relaxed. The wintery sun shone behind them making it hard to see any details, yet she knew. She knew the hulking outlines of those who pursued her. These men weren’t looking for her. They weren’t the men she feared.
One of the men, the taller one, laughed as he patted the other’s shoulder. “We did it, Hank.”
“You did it.” The balding man looked around before indicating the empty booth next to hers. “Come on. I’ll buy the first round.”
Her gaze moved over the men with disinterest. Since she now realized they weren’t a threat, she had no use for them. She had no use for men in general, but the situation she found herself in had banished everything from her concentration other than survival.
The tall man smiled as he slipped into the booth. The dim light caught the gold of his hair, the flash of straight white teeth. “I’ll take you up on the offer.”
She watched with grim amusement as the waitress made a beeline for the men. There were only two other patrons seated at the long wooden bar and they were being served by the bartender. The waitress couldn’t be bothered with refilling her coffee, but she showed a lively interest in the new customers. Within a few seconds, with much cooing and batting of eyelashes, the men had their beers and shots. Natalie watched as the woman reluctantly took her leave.
“Cheers.”
“Yiamas.”
“The Greek consistently comes out in you when you’ve achieved another goal.”
“I am American.” The deep voice took on an edge.
“Yes, I know.” Nervousness tinged the response.
“Never forget that, my friend.”
The sudden tension eased between the men as they continued to talk. She absently listened as they heartily congratulated themselves about some business deal. Her mind swirled around her problem and her stomach churned. She needed a hideout. Somewhere they couldn’t find her for a few weeks. This might give her enough time to put in place a plan to get the money they demanded. The money Nathan owed them when he died.
The money they thought she had.
Her brother had told the mob about the sale of their mother’s home after she died. Let the gang’s boss believe there was inherited money. Nathan intimated that his older sister held the keys to the treasure and when Natalie received the first threatening phone call, she realized exactly where her younger brother had left her.
In a hellhole she couldn’t get out of.
There’d been little left after burying her mother. Certainly not fifty thousand dollars.
How could she have not seen the signs her brother had fallen into the same trouble her father and uncles fell into years ago? What was it about the Globenko men and their avid need for money and power? Even more, how could Nathan have compounded this travesty by taking one step farther down the rathole by embezzling? She’d thought the family troubles were in the distant past. Put to rest along with her father’s and uncles’ bodies.
Her brother’s body now lay beside them. And if she didn’t find the cash soon, her own body might well be the next one in the ground.
A shiver of fear ran down her spine.
“To Aetos Zenos and his growing empire.”
The name caught her attention. In her previous life, before hell had broken loose three months ago, she spent her days copy-editing the pages of the New York News. Aetos Zenos was a name she’d seen many times. A business dynamo. A ladies’ man.
The kind of man she despised.
“I have to tell you, I didn’t think you’d ever get old man Tucker to sign the contract.”
“My patience is infinite when the goal is worth achieving.”
“What’s it been? Two years since you first approached him?”
“Almost three, actually.”
“At first he wouldn’t even give you the time of day.”
Zenos chuckled. “He told me to my face I wasn’t the kind of man he’d do business with.”
She could sympathize with old man Tucker’s point of view. Watching her dad and his brothers destroy their lives trying to play the money game taught her well. Money corrupted. Money turned men into cheaters and con-men. Money destroyed families. She’d assumed Nathan had learned the same hard lesson.
She’d been wrong.
“So you went about changing his perceptions.”
“It took several years, but I succeeded.”
“Your marriage to Natalie was a brilliant stroke.”
Poor woman. She had a bit more sympathy than usual, if only because they shared the same name. Who would want to marry such a man? A man consumed with getting ahead. A man who surely cheated to climb the ladder of success so quickly. He was what? She frowned. If she remembered correctly, he couldn’t be much over thirty-five years of age. To rise so fast, he had to have cut corners, lied, deceived. Hell, look at her own father. He hadn’t succeeded until he swindled and stole, and he hadn’t started young.
Poor Natalie Zenos. Married to such a man would destroy her sooner or later.
Exactly as it had destroyed Elina Globenko, her own mother.
“The best thing I ever did was take the trip to Las Vegas. My marriage let Tucker know I was a settled man. A man he could now do business with.”
She’d read about this, too, as she thought back. The surprise marriage in Las Vegas. The reclusive bride who never wanted her picture taken. The newly purchased estate in the Connecticut countryside, complete with a pool and tennis courts, where the wife lived. While the husband spent most of his time in New York City.
Right. Definitely. The man cheated. In more than one way. She’d lay money on it.
If she had any.
“I was honored to be your best man.”
Both men roared with laughter.
What was the joke? She’d missed something. Natalie cocked her head in confusion while the men kept laughing.
“You’re the man who gave me the idea, Hank. It was only right you were there when I went ahead.”
“Someone had to be there. You couldn’t be alone when you got married. Plus, Jill was happy to stand in for the blushing bride.”
The men chortled. The waitress sashayed over to them and they ordered another round.
Who was Jill? And what did they mean by standing in?
Nat shook herself. What did it matter? She had far bigger problems than trying to figure out what happened at a Las Vegas marriage two years ago. Sipping the last dregs of her coffee, she pulled her mind back to her other problem. Another very big problem.
Where was she going to stay tonight?
She’d stored her few remaining possessions in a locker at Grand Central Station since she had to check out of the grimy hotel she was staying in. She had precisely fifty bucks left to her name. She couldn’t use her credit cards and chance them tracing her location. She no longer owned a cell to call any friends; she ditched the phone as soon as she suspected they were using it to find her. Any contact with her remaining relatives was problematic. Years had gone by since she saw her aunts and cousins, plus she couldn’t risk the thugs going after them, too, for the family debt.
“I have to recommend marriage to you, Hank.”
“Not a chance.”
“You only have to find the perfect wife like I did.”
The other man snorted.
“Really,” Zenos continued. “There are many perks. For example, family members lay off you completely. A wife provides an excellent cover for any demands to marry a nice Greek girl from home.”
“Your grandparents were rather persistent, weren’t they?”
“Nai.”
She found it hard to envision this man having relatives. He’d seemed to have come out of nowhere onto the New York City scene. One day no one knew he existed. The next day, he was buying every building he could find, his picture was plastered on every gossip page, and his name opened every door.
“You can’t imagine the amount of time I still spend on calls from Greece.”
“At least they won’t arrive on your doorstep.”
“That would be inconvenient.”
The men chuckled again.
Weren’t we the cheerful crowd.
She grimaced at her cynicism. Usually, she was cheerful herself. It was only because she was in a situation that was no laughing matter. Hearing others chortle only made it seem worse.
“But the chances of any visits are remote, aren’t they? Your grandparents are what—?” Hank’s voice echoed in the nearly empty bar. “In their seventies?”
“Eighties.”
“I suppose one of your thousands of cousins could stop by.”
“Unlikely.” The accented voice turned sarcastic. “None of them wish to leave the blessed homeland.”
“Which works in your favor.”
“Correct. I would hate to disappoint and shock my family.”
Was his wife truly disappointing in some way? Nat struggled to remember. There’d been some photos. A few fuzzy ones. There hadn’t appeared to be anything wrong with the woman.
She couldn’t be ugly.
No man like Zenos would marry an ugly woman.
As soon as her father achieved even a minor level of success, he’d found plenty of pretty women. She never told her mother what she’d seen; it would have destroyed Elina. The knowledge of her husband’s illegal business activities was enough to send her into decline. His infidelity would have sent her mother to her grave immediately. Instead, she lingered for years with her memories and her dreams somewhat intact.
Why was she thinking about Aetos Zenos and his wife when she would shortly be sleeping on the streets somewhere, easy pickings for her trackers?
She straightened against the hard wood of the booth. The red leather padding on the seat provided some cushioning, but after two hours of sitting on it, her butt ached. Yet, it was far better than walking out the bar’s door into the danger. Soon though, when the after-work crowd started strolling in, she’d be required to buy something more than coffee to keep her seat.
Fifty bucks. The only money she owned.
Fifty thousand dollars. The money she needed to find.
“Your family and old man Tucker would certainly be shocked to find your wife nowhere to be seen.”
Perhaps his wife had gotten a clue and left him. Nat relished the thought for a moment. Only a moment. Her brain then went back to her reality—a reality where she needed to find a way to make her puny funds grow by a thousand percent.
“A wife who is unseen and unheard is a treasure,” Zenos said, mirth dripping off every word. “You should try it.”
With unwilling interest, she yanked her attention back to the men’s conversation. What a jerk. No man would be chuckling and laughing into his beer if his wife had left him. Apparently, the woman was a doormat. She couldn’t imagine being with such a conceited man. A man who genuinely liked the fact his wife was a doormat.
A man exactly like her father.
Maybe she was a fool to ever hope for another kind of man. In her experience, all men were like this Zenos guy. Arrogant jerks. She was stupid to keep hanging onto her fantasies.
Why was she thinking of fantasies when she was in the middle of a nightmare?
“There is the lack of sex with such a wife, Aetos. You must admit that.”
Both men gave another hearty laugh.
She couldn’t help her odd fascination with this unfolding conversation. Even in the face of her near-disaster of a life. What could this mean? She couldn’t conceive of this guy not having sex. The man had run through a long list of beauties. Miss Universes competed with runway models and starlets for his company.
She remembered all the stories. Vaguely. But she remembered.
However, then…she frowned…yes, she was sure of it. After his marriage, there’d been no more movie stars or beauty queens. At the time, she hadn’t spent one moment thinking about the change. She had enough to cope with; A mother slowly fading away and a brother slowly withdrawing. Now that she thought about it, though, she remembered there had no longer been the frenzied press about Zenos and his private life, only the dull roar of endless coverage about his business success.
Had the man honestly been celibate?
“I’ve had no problem in that area, as you know.” Zenos’ voice oozed satisfaction. “I have been more secretive, to honor my wife. Still, there are always women.”
“I have no doubt.”
“And my wife has provided me with the ultimate excuse when women become too possessive. I am already married. They have no hope.”
Obviously he hadn’t been celibate. What was she thinking?
Honor his wife. What crap.
Her spine stiffened in revulsion, but not surprise. After all, look at her father. Her fantasy of a steadfast man, a man who could be trusted was just that. Pure and complete fantasy.
Focus on your disaster.
Right. The disaster of being homeless and on the run from the Ukrainian mob.
“You know,” the egotistical jerk continued, “I planned on announcing a divorce as soon as the papers were signed with Tucker. Now I’m not sure.”
He had stayed married only to secure a business deal? She made a face at the other side of her booth, imagining the disgusted look slicing through the wood and right into the man’s back. How unbelievably cynical. The poor woman. Stuck in Connecticut, alone, waiting, while this ass pranced around New York, bedding whoever and making deals using his wife as a shield.
At least she’s safe. At least she has money.
Her heart fell. True. Very true. Natalie Zenos might have a husband worth less than nothing, yet at least she had a home. An extremely nice home, if memory served. Natalie Globenko was not as lucky.
“You’re thinking of keeping the ring on?”
What an odd way to ask the question. This conversation was incredibly bizarre.
“Nai.”
“I suppose if you divorce, your family will be on you again to come home and marry one of the endless Greek beauties waiting for you.”
“True. But the demands to come home with my non-existent wife keep escalating.”
What? What? Non-existent?
Nat sucked in a breath, sure she’d heard this wrong.
“Those demands do pose a problem.” Hank chuckled. “I suppose you could hire someone to play the part.”
Play the part?
“I wouldn’t trust a woman not to divulge the truth to the press.” The accent thickened, his voice reeking with brutal antipathy.
She froze as the soft, harsh words drifted over her. There was hatred there. Unadulterated hate. The man might bed women, yet he hated them.
Hank’s laugh was forced. “They’re not all bad. Look at my sister, Jill. In two years, she’s never whispered a thing to anyone.”
Jill was Hank’s sister? Her brain unfroze enough to take in the strange words she’d heard before the harsh putdown of all women.
Non-existent. Play the part.
Jill in the wedding pictures? Not Natalie?
“The fact she received a new home and you still have a job with me might explain her silence.” Rich contempt sliced through every word.
The man held an extreme antipathy for women. She didn’t begrudge him the feeling. In the end, it matched her thoughts about men. Nevertheless, to treat his friend with this kind of condescension was despicable. Apparently, he despised everyone around him to a varying degree. Did he think he was so superb compared to other humans that he could treat a person with such contempt? Her sour distaste and disgust turned into outright antagonism.
Hank gave a nervous laugh.
“But I will always be thankful to your sister for standing in for my bride.” Zenos’ voice switched to calm containment. “The pictures of us at the altar were needed to satisfy the press and my grandmother.”
“Jill was thrilled to make the tabloids. Even if only her back was shown.”
Both men chuckled once more.
Scrunching her face, Nat tried to remember. A vague memory of a candlelit room, a fuzzy, well-covered bride with a long veil. A smiling groom. That had been Hank’s sister at the altar? Not the real Natalie?
The non-existent Natalie.
The pieces came together to paint a completely insane picture. It couldn’t possibly be—
“My grandmother, however, is not satisfied with some pictures. She demands to meet my blushing bride.” The pompous ass sighed, a mocking sound. “I believe I will have to leave married bliss behind, since I am unable to comply with my giagiá’s request.”
“The Greek girls will be delighted.”
“And I will be too devastated by the loss of my wife to contemplate loving another woman anytime soon.”
Hank sniggered.
“The only thing that will console me is my wife will want none of my wealth or possessions.”
“What would a pretend wife need with wealth and possessions?”
Both men roared with laughter.
She sat. Stunned. The picture was insane and completely accurate.
There was no wife. No Natalie Zenos.
This conceited crook had fooled a man into a business deal using a pretend wife. He’d lied to his family for two years. Hell, he’d lied to the entire world to get ahead.
A blunt-fingered hand waved to the waitress. She glided across the room with the bill.
“I will leave the business in your capable hands, Hank, for the next two weeks.”
“You’ll be visiting every one of the Tuckermarkets?”
Tuckermarket. Her brain whirred. Old man Tucker. Sam Tucker’s trading empire was vast and impressive. She’d often strolled through the gargantuan store occupying the last privately-owned Vanderbilt mansion in New York City. The store was stuffed with exotic oriental scarves, golden images of gods, and spices from the Maluku Islands. Once, she’d even been greeted by Sam Tucker himself. The beaming man had taken her hand and shown her around the store, glowing with pleasure when she found the best gift for her mother’s birthday.
The old man had been a delight.
The old man whom Zenos had fooled.
A tight rage filled her, weaving and winding around her growing antagonism towards this overconfident thief. The rage flushed her skin. This bandit had fooled a lovely old man and his own old, needy grandparents. Along with his entire family. As well as all of New York City.
All for a deal. For money. For power.
“Only the main markets. I will take a more extensive tour later, after the holidays.” The pompous man stood, flipping a large bill at the waitress, who beamed in apparent surprise.
Nat glared at his outline. In the dim light, the only thing she could make out were his broad shoulders covered in some kind of sleek suit and his rugged profile with its prominent nose. Yet, the glimpse was enough to give her a sense of his complete arrogance. His absolute assurance. He truly believed lying to an old man, to his family, to everyone was his right. He felt not a slip of guilt in what he’d done.
Zenos was worse than her father and her uncles and her brother.
His friend slid out of the booth to join him. “Do you want me to check on the house?”
The house. The brownstone. The memory of the purchase came back to her. The press had been agog at playboy Zenos purchasing such a sedate property while selling his trendy Greenwich Village penthouse. Soon after, the announcement of the engagement had come. Then, the press release of the marriage.
She knew exactly where that brownstone was. She’d strolled by it during a lunchtime walk. The townhouse stood mere blocks from where she currently sat.
“Not needed.” The playboy jerk strode toward the door, Hank lumbering behind. “I have given the main staff a holiday, but a skeleton staff will remain.”
The door banged shut on his last words.
The glare slipped off her face.
But her turbulent disgust continued. Someone should take the man down a notch. Someone should teach him a lesson. A person of courage should confront him and expose him.
Someone who had a journalism degree and could write an explosive story.
Someone like her.
Her hands clutched the coffee cup until her knuckles turned white. Could this be her way out of imminent disaster? She no longer had any access to a computer, still, she could hightail it down to her old offices and tell the tale and make a deal.
She’d be seen. She’d be caught.
Her breath whispered in and out of her mouth. A zillion thoughts and plans and schemes whistled in her brain.
Would anyone believe her?
She left her work without giving notice. Her boss had been angry. He told her she’d lost her last chance at the paper as she hastily packed her things and escaped before the trackers got her. Would he believe her when she told this outrageous story?
Would anyone believe her?
Zenos had power. And prestige. And pots of money.
Would anyone believe insignificant, on-the-run Natalie Globenko instead of the masterful, godlike Aetos Zenos?
No.
She slumped in the corner of the booth, her hopes sagging.
Even if she got someone to believe, The New York News wouldn’t pay the astronomical sum of fifty thousand dollars. The odds that any other tabloid would believe and pay with no proof other than her word was unlikely. She’d risk capture with no assurance she’d have enough money to pay off the debt.
The risk was too great.
“Do you want anything else, miss?” The waitress walked to her table and smacked the bill in front of her without letting her respond. “We’ll be getting busy soon and this booth will be needed.”
“I understand.” The slick slap of panic slid down her spine. “I’ll be only a minute more.”
The waitress grunted her disapproval as she left.
What was she going to do? Where was she going to go?
The idea flashed in her head like a neon light. A bright blast of pure folly.
Gone for two weeks. Skeleton staff.
Pretend wife.
Natalie Zenos. Natalie Globenko.
A way to pay an arrogant man back. A way to make him sweat. If only for a few days after he came back from his trip and heard his pretend wife had made an appearance before disappearing.
A hideout. Two weeks to buy some time to think and plan.
Her husky bark of laughter caused the bartender to eye her as if she’d gone crazy.
She had. Quite possibly she had.
But why not? What did she have to lose?
A PERFECT LOVE CHAPTER ONE
Revenge was not sweet.
The fire burned in his mouth and gut like acid. It seared his throat and lungs.
Long ago, the need for revenge had charred his heart.
Raphael Vounó stood in front of the business that harbored his foes. The business he now owned, as well as the crumbling building it was housed in. London’s icy rain slanted against the skin of his cheek and jaw. The chill did nothing to lessen the burn inside.
Time to settle the score. Finally.
He pushed open the hotel’s battered steel door and strode in. The foyer was empty, but the low sound of a radio slid through the entryway behind the lobby desk. He didn’t glance around. He knew exactly where everything was in this cramped excuse of a building. His investigation had been thorough.
Nothing was left to chance. Not this time.
Striding past the front counter, he didn’t hesitate. His hand slapped open the office door.
There he was. The first of his two enemies.
The man had aged during the last ten years. Yet, he still lived, unlike Raphael’s father. Loukas Vounó as not as lucky as this old man.
Whose luck had just run out.
The old man lifted his head from the papers strewn across his desk. His gaze was blurry and tired. His skin drooped in grey flaps along his jaw. The years had not been kind, and today this enemy would find out his remaining years would be even worse.
Who are you?” he muttered.
Leaning against the doorway, he gave the older man a mocking smile. “You don't recognize me, Drakos?”
The hazy eyes slowly cleared. The man straightened.
Then, the curses flowed.
Raphael ignored them all. There was nothing this man could do or say that would hurt him. Not any longer. He'd spent the last ten years planning and plotting for this moment. Unlike his father, he took nothing for chance, trusted no one. He'd purposefully built a wall of protection around himself, his family, and his business.
No one, certainly not Haimon Drakos, could ever touch him or his again.
“You’re not welcome here.” The old man glared at him. “Get out.”
He laughed and prowled toward the desk. “No.”
“I will call the police and have you thrown out.” Drakos's words were edged with forced bravado as he uneasily reached for the ancient phone.
“The police are now your friends?”
The seated man gripped the phone in his shaking hand. “They will come and enforce my property rights. I own this place and I demand you leave.”
“Demand?” Raphael slid his leg onto the wobbly wooden desk. Crossing his arms, he smiled. “You will no longer be making demands. Not here. Not anywhere.”
“What do you mean?” Drakos’ voice quivered.
Bending forward to stare into the man's eyes, he delivered the first blow. “I own Viper Enterprises.”
The old eyes widened in horror. “No!”
“What’s going on?” The voice came from the open doorway. The familiar lilt, the unique slur at the end of the words, the husky edge to the vowels…all unmistakably her.
Enemy number two.
Rafe forced a deep breath into his lungs. Finding his formidable control, he turned to confront the girl who’d cut out his naїve heart with her betrayal. “Tamsin.”
She was no longer a girl.
Her bright-blond hair had turned golden, impossibly more beautiful than before. Her green eyes no longer flashed with innocent joy; instead they had darkened into mist and mystery. Her body, the body he’d hugged in his arms when she laughed and clutched to his chest when she cried, the body no longer was a young girl’s.
His reaction to her was the same.
His skin heated, his muscles tightened, and his groin stirred. Precisely as it did in the past, in that long-ago summer when he thought he’d found his soul mate. Thought he’d found his love. Over the years, when he allowed a thought of her to cross his mind, he’d shrugged off his reaction to her as youthful folly. He labeled it for what it must have been—merely a young man’s hormones. In the last ten years, he slept with women when he needed them. None of them elicited more than a night’s interest.
None of them made him sweat.
He twitched his shoulders and felt the trickle slide down his spine. The bitterness inside him churned into anger at himself. Lusting after an enemy wasn’t part of the agenda.
“Raphael?” Her eyes went wide, her arms wrapping around her in useless defense.
Dóxa to̱ Theó. His enemy didn’t sense the lust running through him. The element of surprise, the element he’d planned so carefully for this situation, saved him from revealing anything she could use against him.
“Nai.” Yes. Oh, yes. Tamsin. Did you think I would forget? Forgive? He stood with a jerk, ignoring the old man’s snarl behind him. “It’s me.”
“I can’t—”
“I’m here.” He stared right into her eyes so she would know. Know what was in store for her. “Did you think I would forget you and your family, kardiá mou?”
She flinched.
An exultant flare of acid triumph whipped through him. She remembered. She remembered what he’d called her. Which meant she remembered everything. The loving nickname. Her betrayal. His anger at the very end.
My heart.
What a foolish, stupid boy he’d been to give her those words. To give her any power over him at all. Now, though, she would know everything was different.
Her hands dropped to her sides and her jaw tightened. A familiar glint of defiance flashed in her green gaze. “What are you doing here?”
She’d given him this same bold scowl when they met for the first time. Sure, he’d been a cocky twenty-one-year-old, full of himself, surly about having to spend time with his younger sisters and a girl too young to be of any interest. All because his father had business with Drakos and wanted the families to know each other. He slouched into the unfamiliar house, knowing he’d be bored out of his mind.
And then, it had happened.
He’d gazed into these green eyes and fallen.
Completely and utterly fallen.
Did she think she merely needed to give him a defiant look and he’d be a fool once more?
“I’m here,” he forced himself to stroll to her and stare into those dangerous eyes, “because I now own this place.”
His claim slammed into her. He could see it in the taut, tense thrust of her jaw. See it in the way her head went back, as if slapped. He tried to focus on these telling details which told of his victory, but…
But the effort was futile.
These eyes. Theós.
He’d truly forgotten. Her eyes always reminded him of the laurel leaves his mother used in her cooking, the green glistening pure and clear in the heated water. There was no hint of blue or brown to lessen the impact of flawless color. In his fanciful youth, he’d dreamed her gaze shone with a perfect love, with a belief in his ability to make all his dreams, and hers, come true. He’d fallen asleep in his lonely bed knowing someday these green eyes would look at him as he slept, watch over him and caress him and bless him with the crown of her love.
What a complete and utter fool he’d been.
The fringe of her blond eyelashes whisked across her fair skin as she blinked. When she opened her eyes once more, they no longer reminded him of his lovesick days. They reminded him of the last time he’d stared at her. Then, the green was dark and dirty, dulling into dismissal.
Exactly as they did now.
“We own this building.” Her mouth twisted, turning the lushness of her lips into a rejecting curl. “We have for years.”
The old man rustled some papers behind him. The noise shot through Raphael like a poisoned arrow. As soon as this woman had entered the room, he forgot.
He forgot the old man.
His plans. His revenge.
He forgot everything but her.
Damn her.
Turning around, he glared at the old man. “Tell her, Drakos.”
The skin under the man’s eyes looked like splotches of tar compared to the pale sickliness of the rest of his face. The scent of fear mixed with alcohol wafted off his fat body as he slouched down into the creaking hull of the plastic chair, still cradling the phone. The last puff of smoke rose from the chewed cigar lying in the ashtray among the waste of paper.
Theós. The realization struck Rafe. He’d arrived just in time.
How cruel would fate have been if he left his revenge too late, moved too slow, let this man escape into death before being punished? He could not have lived with himself if he hadn't fulfilled the pledge he made over his father’s dead body. He could not have looked at himself in the mirror if this final revenge was not delivered.
Yet, luck and fate were with him all through these past ten years.
The man before him still lived and would still suffer.
“Tell her,” he demanded once more.
Rafe felt her behind him. She didn’t move, didn’t make a sound. Yet, he felt her. Like a burn in his blood, like a venomous snake sliding on his skin. He sensed her zigzagging thoughts. He tasted her growing unease. He knew what was inside of her. Just as he’d known the moment he first saw her.
The fact this connection still existed between them stunned him. He’d thought his reaction to her would be entirely one of bitter anger and harsh judgment.
He didn’t like this trace of lust in his blood.
He didn’t like this connection, this feeling of her.
However, he couldn’t deny both were there inside.
Haimon Drakos glanced at his stepdaughter. His eyes said everything his mouth would not say.
Defeated. Dead. Two black holes of despair.
“What have you done?” Her whisper, soft and stark, sifted through the hushed silence.
The scent of her sudden fear wrapped around Rafe and he reveled in feeling. His impulse was to turn. Turn to see the fear in the green, green of her gaze. But he didn’t want to stare into those dangerous eyes and chance losing his focus. Right now, he wanted to stare at this man before him who had tricked and scorned his father.
He glared at the old man who’d caused his father’s death.
“Tell her.”
* * *
Raphael.
Here.
Close enough to touch.
The reality was so intolerably unreal, Tamsin could barely breathe. She’d dreamed so many dreams of this moment. Dreams of ecstatic cries of love. Dreams of walking into his strong arms and crying out the years of pain and misery. Dreams that followed her from her bed every morning and swirled around in her head throughout the day.
Raphael.
He was so him and yet, so very different.
He no longer had the lanky posture of youth. Years ago, he seemed more legs and arms, and always walked and moved as if he still were learning how to handle the growth spurt into six-feet-plus of male. Now his shoulders were no longer bony and lean. They were heavy with muscle. His body moved with fluid masculine grace, confident in its supremacy, filling the tiny, dingy room with its power.
Raphael.
She stared at his broad back, turned against her. Then, her gaze took in the way he held his head. The proud tilt told her he no longer had any of the shy charm she’d found so irresistible when she was sixteen. His hair had been longer too, a mass of ebony curls. Curls that clung to her fingers as they lay together in the sunlit vineyards of her stepfather’s Greek estate. Curls that gave him a boyish beauty she fell for within seconds of meeting him. Now those curls were ruthlessly suppressed, the cut emphasizing the symmetry of his ears, the elegance of his jaw line.
Rafe.
“Tell her.”
His voice was different too. No longer warm and fun and full of laughter. Of love. Now his voice slashed into her like a cold slice of steel. His voice hacked through all her old memories and yearnings and brought her back to the reality of what stood before her.
A threat.
She had no doubt of this. None. She’d heard the voices and known immediately something was terribly wrong. Haimon rarely had anyone visit him anymore. He did all his dirty business by phone and she ignored what was going on because she couldn’t do anything about it. As long as he left everything else alone, she was content to let him play his games from his seedy, shabby office.
“Don’t involve the boys,” she’d warned him.
“Of course not,” he’d assured her, puffing on his ever-present cigar.
She’d chosen to believe him because she had no other choice.
Yet, when she heard the voices today, she knew with gut certainty this wasn’t one of Haimon’s customers surprising him in his office. This was worse. This was far worse. But not even her usually keen instincts prepared her for what she saw as she walked into disaster.
Her past walking into her present.
No longer a ghost of regret and pain. No longer a memory she’d hidden in her heart all these years as she lived with her choice and her sacrifice. No, her ghost of past love now stood before her. And as soon as she saw his expression, she knew.
He was a threat.
To Haimon, surely. Maybe with some justification. But not only to him.
To her home. To her.
To the boys.
“What have you done?” She managed to push out the words through the horror leaching into her belly.
Her stepfather had promised her, promised he wouldn’t touch what she’d created here. He’d assured her this place she hobbled together to make a home for the boys would stay safe. Stay apart from his dirty games.
Raphael Vounó suddenly threw his head back and laughed.
The sound jarred her. So different, so different and sad and horribly wrong compared to how he used to laugh. How many memories had she stored inside her soul, memories of the joy of his laughter as he swung her around in his arms? Memories that sustained her through her terrible decision and the ugly aftermath.
This laugh told her everything about him.
A lethal, deathly threat to everything she held dear.
With a swift jerk, he turned to face her one more time. The grief for all she’d lost and he’d lost swept through her again as she stared into his black, pitiless eyes. The eyes that once danced with a bright glow. As a girl, she was never able to describe in her journal the way his black eyes were not dark but light. Not deep but open. She couldn’t communicate in words how the very blackness of his gaze highlighted how brilliant the love shining from them was.
Yet now, like everything about him, the black had changed.
“He’s too much of a coward,” he snarled. “So I have the pleasure of informing you, kardiá mou.”
The nickname was too much. “Don’t call me that.”
The black gaze blazed, flared with unholy delight. “You don’t appreciate irony, Tamsin?”
She tried to wrestle her brain into working order, tried to find her way out of this nightmare, but it was no use. His presence and hate swallowed her whole.
His terrible, treacherous threat.
What could be worse than this? What could be worse than confronting her old dreams arising from the ashes of her past as a menace?
But she’d absorbed a hard, bitter lesson at sixteen. One she learned again and again over the years. There was no way to win when confronted with disaster.
The only thing a person could do was survive.
“Tell me.”
“Your loving father…” His accented drawl elongated the words, edging them with icy contempt.
Haimon wasn’t her father. Once, when she was little, she’d hoped. Hoped he’d take the place of a father who abruptly disappeared from her life. Except her new stepfather wasn’t the paternal type and she’d quickly accepted she was nothing more than a piece of her mother’s baggage.
Raphael knew this.
He’d listened to her wistful dreams about her real father. He’d held her in his arms as she cried about some insult Haimon threw at her.
He knew. Too much.
“No more games.” Tam reminded herself of what she’d become. She ran this hotel. She managed the small staff. She paid the bills. Moreover, she’d successfully raised the twins for the last ten years. Two rambunctious, challenging, amazingly wonderful boys. She could handle anything.
She needed to for the boys.
“Games?” Raphael’s mouth turned grim. “I’m not playing a game.”
“Then stop beating about the bush. Say what you have to say and leave.”
His gaze sharpened. Was he surprised she challenged him? Didn’t he realize she was different too? She was not the loving, giving girl he knew years ago. Her sacrifice to protect everyone, including him, had changed her forever.
“I’m not leaving,” he stated. “You and your father are.”
She didn’t waste her breath denying Haimon as a father. Because she only had breath enough to deny his demand, deny a reality too horrible to contemplate. “We aren’t going anywhere.”
“Nai, Tamsin, you are going. Out onto the street.” A confident smirk crossed his face. “I own this place, and I’m evicting you and your father.”
This building wasn’t merely a building. It didn’t only house the cheap hotel rooms and struggling businesses which paid for the little they had. This building was their home. The top floor was where she and the boys slept, played, dreamed. This building was the only thing they owned.
She peered past the horror standing before her and glared into Haimon’s sunken eyes. “You told me you owned this place free and clear.”
“I did.” The shrug of old shoulders tinged the words with defeat. “Once.”
“Not now?” She couldn’t help the wail. What would she do? What would she do with the twins?
“He took out a mortgage a year ago.” Raphael’s voice was quiet, yet intense. “Which I bought.”
“But…but…” None of the thoughts and emotions running through her brain made any sense. She couldn’t seem to nail any of them down and put them in some comprehensible order.
“He’s late with the payments.” The deadly tone marched on.
“Not that late,” Haimon blustered.
“The contract you signed, old man.” The younger man appeared completely at ease, his arms casually crossed, his long legs planted solidly on the floor. The floor he claimed he owned. “Didn’t you read the contract? Were you as foolish as my father was years ago?”
The sharp tang of sheer rage filled the words. But she detected something else in the flavor of his voice. A hint of permanent, unbearable grief. All these years, and he still mourned. And exactly like before, she couldn’t comfort him; she couldn’t walk into his arms and hold him. The stark thought brought unwilling, unwanted tears to her eyes.
Raphael glanced her way and smiled. “Tears won’t do you any good, kardiá mou. They will not sway me from throwing you out.”
“I’m not—” She stopped.
This man was no longer her Raphael. He wouldn’t believe a word she said. She needed to understand right now—he was the enemy. Somehow she had to find a way around this man and his threats in order to protect the boys.
“In fact,” he continued, his smile tight and taut. “Tears will only make this more pleasurable for me. I want both of you to suffer.”
Just as my father did.
He didn’t have to say the words. They lay in his eyes. His dark black eyes.
She stared into those eyes and saw nothing of the boy she’d loved. Clearly, that boy died ten years ago when his father ended his life. Tamsin’s grief billowed inside. She thought she’d done the right thing that long ago night. She’d been sure in her young heart she was saving him.
But saving him for what?
Saving him only for him to lose any trace of humanity?
For a moment, something flashed in those black eyes. His big body flinched; his mouth tightened. And his eyes…for a moment, Tam thought she saw something.
Then, it was gone.
Rafe swung back to Haimon. “Since you didn’t read all the fine print, Drakos, I’ll enlighten you. One late payment and this place is mine. One.”
The old man sunk deeper in his chair.
“And you’ve missed three.”
“We live here.” Reality seeped into her skin like an oily claw of futility. “This is our home.”
“Not any longer.” He prowled to the door. “You were served with an eviction notice and today’s the last day you can live here.”
“I never saw any such notice.” Tam clung to a last strand of hope.
Her tormentor stared over at her stepfather. Her gaze followed his and what she saw on Haimon’s face cut any hope right out of her heart. “How could you keep this from me?”
“I have a deal in the works,” he mumbled. “I’ll have the money—”
“Too late.” Leaning on the doorframe, Rafael crossed his arms. “I don’t want your money, Drakos. I’ve got plenty of my own.”
“If you’ll give me some time—”
“I’ll give you nothing.” His words were like steel-edged nails. “I want you both out. If not willingly, then I will be glad to call the bailiffs in.”
Fury and fear mixed inside her, making it hard to think. Only emotion shot through the mess in her mind.
“The boys,” she blurted.
“Ah, yes.” He straightened, dropping his hands to his sides.
Her love for her brothers swelled, settling her emotions and letting her think. He remembered the boys. She saw the memories in his black gaze. The times he lifted them into the pool and played with them. The picnic they had with the twins one day. The fun he experienced, laughing and rolling with them in the fragrant grass by the river. If she had to plead and beg, if she needed to use those memories, she would. She would do anything to save their home for them.
“The boys live here.”
“The boys.” Sudden fury flashed across his face. “How could I forget?”
“They have a home here.” Why did the memory of her boys make him angry? They were only three the last time he saw them. They’d done nothing to warrant any anger. She forced herself to continue, trying to find a foothold to negotiate with this man. “I’m…I’m their mother.”
“Actually, you’re not, are you?” The dark gaze pinned her to the floor. “Their mother was a whore, wasn’t she?”
“Don’t say that.” Rage wiped away any impulse to negotiate. “It’s not true—”
“I speak only the truth.” The long, elegant fingers of his hands tightened into fists. He glowered at the old man sagging in his chair. “The boys aren’t yours, Drakos. Did you know that?”
The words blasted into the room like torches of fire. Her stepfather jerked in his seat, and if it were possible, his skin whitened even further. “What the hell are you insinuating?”
“I’m not insinuating anything. I’m telling you.”
The fear in her blood raced, roared, and Tamsin thought she might faint. “What are you telling us?”
“The boys.” Rafe looked right at her as he delivered the killing blow. “Are mine.”
FOR READERS WHO LOVE...
Mandy Baggot, Kate Frost, and Kim Lawrence, these are the stories for you! Includes: enemies to lovers, second chance romance, forced proximity, fish out of water, fake relationship, revenge
MEET THE HEROES
A ruthless billionaire with walls built around his heart, Aetos Zenos thought he had the perfect marriage arrangement—a pretend wife who never demanded his time, emotions, or attention—until a curious reporter hiding in his mansion forces him to confront the wounds of his past and discover what a real perfect wife might be.
A powerful man seeking vengeance for his father's death, Raphael Vounó refuses to believe in second chances until fate reunites him with the one woman who broke his heart—and the nephews he never knew existed.
MEET THE HEROINES
A resourceful journalist on the run from her family's dangerous past, Natalie Globenko never planned to impersonate a billionaire's fictional wife, but when she discovers the wounded soul beneath Aetos Zenos's cold exterior, she risks everything to prove that what started as the perfect lie might become the perfect marriage.
Fiercely devoted to her half-brothers and haunted by the sacrifice that tore her from her first love, Tamsin Drakos must decide whether to risk her heart again when Raphael returns demanding custody—and revenge.
AUTHOR'S NOTE
The Perfect trilogy represents different phases of my journey as a writer, with each book emerging from a unique place in my life and creative development.
A Perfect Man marked a significant turning point in my writing career—the first time characters flowed onto the page with an ease I hadn't experienced before. I'll admit I became slightly enamored with a contestant on American Idol that season, and some of Alex's physical attributes (those unforgettable turquoise eyes!) might have been inspired by watching him perform week after week. Sophie remains one of my favorite characters—the kind of friend I wish I had in real life—brutally honest, fiercely loyal, and someone who would definitely call me on my nonsense while feeding me incredible pastries.
By contrast, A Perfect Wife emerged from one of the darkest periods of my life. Like Natalie, I felt caught in a trap of obligation and financial pressure, unsure of how to break free from circumstances that seemed to be closing in around me. During this difficult time, reading became my sanctuary—I devoured stories where characters faced overwhelming odds yet somehow found their way to happiness. This novel became my own exploration of how two people might find each other despite their wounds and walls, the kind of story I desperately needed to read: one where love becomes not a trap, but the very thing that sets us free.
With A Perfect Love, I ventured briefly into new territory. While I once won the Romance Writers of America's prestigious Golden Heart award with a romantic suspense manuscript (which remains unpublished because suspense isn't truly where my passion lies), this novel represents my one foray into storytelling with suspenseful elements—featuring blackmail, betrayal, and hidden family secrets—but wrapped within my signature emotional style. It's as close as I'll ever get to writing suspense, as my heart belongs to crafting deeply emotional contemporary romances where the greatest danger is to the characters' hearts rather than their lives!
Creating this trilogy was truly a labor of love through various phases of my writing journey. From finding my stride as an author to working through personal challenges to experimenting with different storytelling approaches, these books reflect my growth both as a writer and as a person. I hope you enjoy watching these characters find their way to each other as much as I enjoyed creating their stories.
SERIES READING ORDER
1. A Perfect Man*
2. A Perfect Wife*
3. A Perfect Love*
*all stories are standalone and can be read in any order
HOW WILL I GET AND READ MY EBOOK?
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