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Flame of Desire

Page 18

by Carole Mortimer


  She could see the tension in his body. ‘What did you say?’ he grated.

  Her eyes were swimming with tears. ‘I love you. I love you!’

  Luke took an involuntary step towards her, then stopped. ‘You are sure?’

  ‘Very sure.’

  ‘Oh God, I love you too!’ he groaned, gathering her into his arms to bury his face in her throat. He trembled against her as he strained her to him. ‘If you only knew how I have longed to hear to say you love me,’ he kissed her again and again, until they were both breathless. ‘I desired you very much on our honeymoon, you must know that,’ he said dryly. ‘But each time I loved you I inwardly pleaded with you to show me some sign of love, to show I gave you more than physical pleasure. I have loved you for so long, since I helped you to stand after your accident.’

  ‘But the day after we were married you said that if I hadn’t been an innocent you would have ended our marriage.’

  He shuddered against her. ‘I could never have done it. Never! You are everything I have ever wanted in a woman, everything I will ever need. But you did not like me very much to start with, would not let me get close to you, and so when the chance came for me to marry you I grasped at it with both hands.’

  ‘You really wanted to marry me?’ She played with the buttons on his shirt, touching the warm skin beneath.

  ‘Desperately. And I used your closeness to your father to get what I wanted, to trap you into marriage with me, hoping you would come to love me later on. I already knew that you were not immune to me physically.’

  Sophie blushed. ‘You’re a wonderful lover.’

  ‘I know you enjoyed what we did together as much as I, but it was not enough. I have never been a patient man, and that weekend at your parents’ home I knew I could not go on any longer, merely a pleasant physical experience for you. It demeaned my love for you. So I left. I have been here ever since just waiting for you to call.’

  ‘And drinking yourself to death,’ she added sternly. ‘The place is a mess, and so were you.’

  ‘I have been drunk most of the time, so the tidiness of the apartment has not mattered to me.’

  ‘Couldn’t you have had someone clean it for you?’

  ‘You dismissed my cleaner,’ he reminded.

  She had done so because she had wanted to care for their home herself. ‘You could have hired someone else.’

  ‘I did not want anyone near me. Oh, Sophie,’ he kissed her long and passionately, ’I have missed you so much, longed for you so desperately. I have not worked on anything but your painting since we parted. I could do no other work. Without you I am nothing.’

  ‘Do you think Daddy might have his portrait of me now?’ she teased.

  His arms tightened about her. ‘As long as I can keep you he may have a hundred portraits of you.’

  ‘I love you so much, Luke,’ she kissed his throat. ‘I don’t ever want to leave you again.’

  ‘You will never be allowed to,’ he said with his old arrogance. ‘I want you, you know,’ he groaned against her earlobe.

  She did know, could feel his pulsating desire for her. ‘But you haven’t eaten yet.’

  He grinned down at her. ‘Now it is you who are being mundane! I think I have enough strength to make love to my wife.’

  Sophie took his hand and led him over to the bedroom. ‘If you haven’t I could always make love to you.’

  He chuckled behind her. ‘What an excellent idea!’

  The smile they shared was very intimate. ‘I thought you might like that.’ The bedroom door closed quietly behind them, the outside world soon forgotten.

  * * * * *

  Now, read on for a tantalizing excerpt of USA Today bestselling author Sharon Kendrick’s new release,

  THE SHEIKH’S BOUGHT WIFE

  Marry for money? Jane Smith would normally laugh in Sheikh Zayed’s handsome face—but her sister’s debts need paying. Zayed must marry to inherit his land—and plain Jane is a convenient choice. But he hasn’t bargained on Jane’s delicious curves…

  Read on to get a glimpse of

  THE SHEIKH’S BOUGHT WIFE

  PROLOGUE

  ‘SO WHAT’S THE catch?’

  Zayed detected the faint ripple of unease which ran through his advisors as he shot out his silky question. They were nervous, he could tell. More nervous than was usual in the presence of a sheikh of his power and influence. Not that he cared about their nerves. On the contrary, he found them useful. Deference and fear kept people at a distance and that was exactly where he liked them.

  Turning away from the window which overlooked his magnificent palace gardens, he studied the men who stood in front of him—the guileless expression on the face of his closest aide, Hassan, not fooling him for a moment.

  ‘Catch, Your Most Supreme Highness?’ questioned Hassan.

  ‘Yes, catch,’ Zayed echoed, his voice growing impatient now. ‘My maternal grandfather has died and I discover he has gifted me one of the most valuable pieces of land in the entire desert region. Inheriting Dahabi Makaan was something which never even entered my mind.’ He frowned. ‘Which leaves me wondering what has prompted this gesture of unexpected generosity.’

  Hassan gave a slight bow. ‘Because you are one of his few remaining blood relatives, sire, and thus surely such a bequest is perfectly natural.’

  ‘That much may be true,’ Zayed conceded. ‘But until recently he had not spoken to me since I was a boy of seven summers.’

  ‘Your grandfather was undoubtedly touched by your visit as he lay on his deathbed—a visit he must surely not have been anticipating,’ said Hassan diplomatically. ‘Perhaps that is the reason.’

  Zayed’s jaw tightened. Perhaps it was. But the visit had not been inspired by love, since love had long departed from his heart. He had gone because duty had demanded it and Zayed never shirked from duty. He had gone despite the fierce pain it had caused him to do so. And yes, it had been a strange sensation to look upon the ravaged face of the old king, who had cut off his only daughter after her marriage to Zayed’s father. But death was the great equaliser, he remembered thinking bitterly as the gnarled old fingers had clutched at his. The stealthy foe from which no man or woman could ever escape. He had made his peace with his dying grandfather because he suspected it would have pleased his mother for him to do so, not because he’d been seeking some kind of financial reward.

  ‘Nobody gives something for nothing in this world, but perhaps this is an exception.’ Zayed’s eyes bored questioningly into those of his aide. ‘Are you telling me that the land is to be mine, without condition?’

  Hassan hesitated and the pause which followed sounded heavy. Ominous. ‘Not quite.’

  Zayed nodded. So his unerring instinct had not failed him after all! ‘You mean there is a catch,’ he said triumphantly.

  Hassan nodded. ‘I suspect that you will see it as one, sire—for in order to inherit Dahabi Makaan, you need to be…’ nervously, he licked his lips ‘…married.’

  ‘Married?’ echoed Zayed, his voice deepening with a dangerous note, which made the aides shoot glances of increasing anxiety at each other.

  ‘Yes, sire.’

  ‘You know my feelings about marriage.’

  ‘Indeed, sire.’

  ‘But just so there can be no misunderstanding, I will reiterate them for you. I have no desire to marry—at least, not for many years. Why tie yourself to one woman when you can enjoy twenty?’ Zayed gave a fleeting smile as he remembered visiting his mistress in New York last week and the sight of her lying on rumpled satin sheets clad in nothing but a tight black basque, her milky thighs open and welcoming. He cleared his throat and willed the hardening in his groin to subside. ‘I accept that one day I will need to provide my kingdom with an heir and that is the moment when I shall take a bride—a pure young virgin from my own kingdom. A moment which will not come for many decades, for a man can procreate until he is sixty, seventy—in some cases, even eighty. And since I beli
eve it is the modern way for young women to enjoy all the expertise of an older lover, it will be a highly satisfactory arrangement for both participants.’

  Hassan nodded. ‘I understand your reasoning entirely, sire, and usually I would completely concur with your judgment. But this land is priceless. It is oil-rich and of huge strategic significance. Think how much it could benefit your people if it were to be yours.’

  Zayed felt indignation heat his blood. Didn’t he spend almost all his waking hours thinking about his people and how to do his best by them? Was he not the most successful of all the desert Sheikhs because of his dedication to his land and his determination to be a peacekeeper? And yet Hassan’s words were true. Dahabi Makaan would undoubtedly be a glittering jewel in the crown of his kingdom. Could he really turn his back on such a proposition? His mouth flattened. He remembered his dying grandfather croaking out a plea for him not to leave it too long to produce an heir, so that their bloodline could continue. And when Zayed had coolly remarked that he had no intention of marrying for many years, the old man’s face had crumpled. Had the wily old king decided that the only way to achieve his heart’s desire was to force the issue, by making marriage a condition of the inheritance?

  Yet the thought of marriage made Zayed want to recoil. To turn away from its insidious tentacles, which could bind a man in so many ways. He loathed marriage for more reasons than a high libido which demanded variety. He loathed the institution of marriage with all its flaws and baseless promises and the very idea of finding a bride in order to inherit was something which repulsed every fibre of his being.

  Unless…

  His mind began to pick over the possibilities—because wouldn’t only a fool turn down the chance to be master of a region renowned for the black gold known as oil, as well as its prized position straddling four desert countries?

  ‘Perhaps there is a way in which the conditions of the will could be met,’ he said slowly, ‘and yet not tie me into all the tedium and inconvenience of a long-term marriage.’

  ‘You know of such a way, sire?’ questioned Hassan. ‘Pray, enlighten us, Oh, knowledgeable one.’

  ‘If the marriage were not to be consummated,’ Zayed continued thoughtfully, ‘then it would not be legal and, as such, could quickly be dissolved. Is that not so?’

  ‘But, sire—’

  ‘No buts,’ said Zayed impatiently. ‘For the idea grows on me with every second which passes.’ Yet he could see the look of doubt on his aide’s face and knew very well what had caused it. Because Zayed was a man known for his virility. A man who needed the regular release of sex in order to sustain him—in the same way that a horse needed oats and exercise in order to live. He doubted there was a woman alive who could resist him in her bed and the idea that he could tolerate a sexless marriage was almost laughable. Yes, there were undeniably obstacles to such a chaste union but Zayed was a man who thrived on overcoming obstacles, and as he stared into Hassan’s perplexed face a brilliant idea began to form in his mind.

  ‘What if I were to choose a woman who does not tempt me in any way?’ he said slowly. ‘A drab woman who makes a mockery of all that is feminine. A woman who would turn a blind eye if I happened to stray. Surely that would provide the perfect solution?’

  ‘You know of such a woman, sire?’

  Zayed’s mouth flattened into a hard line. Oh, yes. He knew of such a woman. An image swam into his mind as he thought about Jane Smith who, with her mousy hair and the colourless clothes which swamped her figure, fitted the bill perfectly. What was it that the English said about a woman on whom the gods had not gifted much in the way of looks? Plain Jane. Yes, indeed. Never had such a description been truer than of the uptight academic who was in charge of the archives of his embassy in London. For not only was she plain, she was also immune to his charms, some might even say disapproving—a fact he had registered a while back with something approaching incredulity. At first he’d thought she must be playing games with him. That she was using that well-known feminine ploy of affecting indifference towards a powerful man, in the hope that it would stir some interest in his groin and in his heart. As if any part of him could ever be stirred by Jane Smith! He had discovered her attitude to be real and not feigned when he’d overheard someone mentioning his name and, as he had silently rounded the corner of his London embassy, had seen her rolling her eyes. Insolent, foolish woman!

  Yet Jane loved his country with a passion which was rare for a foreigner and she knew it better than many of its natives, which was why he hadn’t instantly dismissed her for gross insubordination. She adored every contour of its deserts, its palaces and its rich, sometimes bloody history. Zayed’s heart gave a savage wrench of pain. A pain which had never quite healed no matter how hard he had tried to turn his back on it. Might not it help that healing process if he accepted his grandfather’s bequest and acquired Dahabi Makaan? To close a door on the past and to look beyond, to the future?

  ‘Prepare my jet, Hassan,’ he said harshly. ‘And I will fly to England to take the wretched Jane Smith as my bride.’

  Copyright © 2017 by Sharon Kendrick

  Don’t miss

  THE SHEIKH’S BOUGHT WIFE

  by USA Today bestselling author

  Sharon Kendrick,

  available May 2017 wherever

  Harlequin Books and ebooks are sold.

  www.Harlequin.com

  If you enjoyed this story by

  USA TODAY bestselling author

  CAROLE MORTIMER,

  you will love

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  Do you want alpha males, decadent glamour, and jet-set lifestyles? Step into the sensational, sophisticated world of Harlequin® Presents, where sinfully tempting heroes ignite a fierce and wickedly irresistible passion!

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  Recommended Reads for May 2017

  The Sheikh’s Bought Wife

  The Magnate’s Tempestuous Marriage

  Bound by the Sultan’s Baby

  Di Marcello’s Secret Son

  The Forced Bride of Alazar

  The Innocent’s Shameful Secret

  Blackmailed Down the Aisle

  The Italian’s Vengeful Seduction

  ISBN-13: 978-1-488-03193-9

  FLAME OF DESIRE

  Copyright © 1981 by Carole Mortimer

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  All characters in this book have no existence outside the imagination of the author and have no relation whatsoever to anyone bearing the same name or names. They are not even distantly inspired by any individual known or unknown to the author, and all incidents are pure invention.

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