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The Sheikh's First Christmas - A Warm and Cozy Christmas Romance

Page 12

by Rayner, Holly


  "Why do you still stay here?" I finally asked.

  He stared thoughtfully ahead. All of the anger and hardness had gone from his face.

  "I stay because, if I go home, it means I go home without her. I could not face that day five years ago, and I still don’t think I’d be able to." He shrugged and took another sip from his cup. "I know that she's dead, that she's never coming home, and that it's because of me. All of that is bad enough. But to go home, back to the comfort of all that I know, when I've not even named her killer..." He shook his head.

  I searched for words, but couldn't think of what to say. There didn't seem to be much for anyone to say.

  "I can tell that you loved her very much," I said finally.

  He smiled, and I saw in his smile all the love and sadness that I'd seen the first night I'd met him.

  "She was a special person. She was precious; I can't forget her absence."

  "You never will," I said. "And you never should."

  His hand found mine where it rested on the cold metal of the counter. He linked my fingers gently in his.

  "And now you will remember her, too," he said. "I wonder if you can understand why knowing that brings me comfort."

  I thought of my mother, and tears stung my eyes. I smiled, though, because it didn't hurt to remember, not anymore. And if it did hurt, it was a sweet pain.

  "I do understand," I said, brushing away tears. "Anyone who's lost the person they loved the most understands that feeling."

  He thought about it for a moment, studying me as though seeing me differently than he had before.

  "How strange it is, that we're ever so foolish as to think ourselves alone; that we're so foolish to think no one else can know our pain."

  His words felt like some sort of compliment, and I felt my cheeks go red.

  I squeezed Sadiq's hand and stood up straighter, tossing back my hair. "Come on. Show me what the rest of this place looks like when it's clean."

  EIGHTEEN

  Aaminah Al'Adash had been buried an ocean away from us, so there was no grave for Sadiq to show me. We went instead to a row of restaurants and bars on Union Street. He parked the Jaguar and came around to open my door. I stepped out, shivering in the frigid night air.

  "Ah, I keep forgetting!" he said.

  I waited as he went around to the trunk of the car. He bent down and searched inside, coming up a moment later with an armful of red wool.

  "Yes, thank you!" I said as I pulled on the scarf, hat and mittens my mother had given me. I shut my eyes and snuggled down into the softness of the scarf, the closest I would ever come to being embraced by her again. When I opened my eyes, Sadiq was watching me with an understanding smile.

  He was wearing his heavy black overcoat and the leather gloves he'd worn when we'd made the snowman. True to my warning, the snow had damaged the leather, made it discolored and stiff. He'd brushed off my scolding, though, insisting they were better this way.

  "Ready?" I asked.

  He gave a half-shrug.

  "I suppose we'll find out."

  He offered me his arm, and I slipped mine through it. I huddled close to his side as he led me to a broad, glass-fronted establishment. It was very late, past midnight, and the sign that read "The Silver Spoon" wasn't lit. Through the glass, I could see upturned wooden chairs resting on square tables. A row of booths ran along one wall. At the rear of the restaurant, the darkness was too thick for me to make anything out.

  "It was called something else back then, 'Mandala.'" He reached out his gloved hand and laid his palm against the glass.

  I had no illusions that what we were about to do would end anything for him. I'd known too much of my own loss to put faith in simple ideas like closure or redemption. But I thought, and he tentatively agreed, that it may be time to remember his sister in a different way.

  Sadiq lifted his hand from the glass and put it back into the pocket of his coat, searching. A moment later, he brought out a little red box. The corners were scuffed; the silver ribbon that tied it closed was faded and frayed. He looked from the box to me, his eyes shining with memory.

  "Minah was never able to wait for Christmas for presents," he said. "That year, she'd already given me mine."

  "What was it?"

  "A set of carvings; little wooden people, but more—" He paused as he searched for the word. "More abstract, yes. They were very old, and beautiful."

  The blood drained from my face as I remembered the little wooden statues on the dresser in his bedroom, the ones I'd considered taking, if only for a second.

  You didn't take them, though. Let it go. Forgive yourself.

  It was so much easier said than done.

  "You were telling me about the presents," I said, bringing us back to the reason for our trip out here.

  "Yes, Minah had already given me the statues, weeks before Christmas. She demanded her gift from me as well, but I was stubborn. I said no." I heard the regret in his voice.

  He stood there for a moment, saying nothing. His gaze searched the empty restaurant, then dropped to the sidewalk where he stood. Without him saying it, I knew what he was picturing, what moments he was remembering.

  He patted my hand and stepped away from me. I stepped back, wrapping my arms around myself again. He crouched down close to the sidewalk, holding the little red box. He stared hard at the silver ribbon as a tear ran down his cheek.

  "Merry Christmas, Minah," he said, and placed the box carefully on the cement. "I do hope that you like it."

  He fingers rested on the box for a moment, then he rose up and walked to where I waited a few yards away. Without looking back at the gift he'd left behind, he took my hand and led me back along the frozen street to his waiting car.

  NINETEEN

  An hour later, I was sitting on the couch in his study with my feet tucked beneath me, a blanket over my knees. I watched as he arranged kindling and logs in the same fireplace that had warmed us Christmas Eve. It seemed that he was taking an inordinate amount of time to perform the task. Every splinter and twig had to be just right.

  "You do know we're going to burn that lovely little tower you're building, right?"

  "If you make a fire properly, it will keep you warm all night," he said, unperturbed.

  "Not if we freeze to death first," I grumbled, pulling the blanket more tightly around me.

  "Hush, little thief. We'll be warm soon enough." His voice was gruff, but I heard his smile in it. There was sadness too, but it had eased, as though some part of his burden had lifted.

  After a few more minutes of fine-tuning, Sadiq lit a piece of kindling and placed it at the heart of the pile. Soon the first flames appeared, small and uncertain at first, then brighter. Sadiq stood and stretched before joining me on the couch. I curled close to him, wrapping the blanket around us both. We watched the fire for several minutes without speaking.

  "How are you doing?" I asked. He seemed fine, considering the magnitude of what we'd done tonight.

  "I'm okay," he said. "What we did tonight... I’m glad we did it."

  I nodded against his chest.

  "Who knows?" he added, his tone lighter. "Maybe I won't be such a Christmas recluse after this. Perhaps I'll keep the holiday better now."

  "That's ridiculous," I said. "Talking as if you don't know how to honor the season. You of all people."

  "What do you mean?" he said, sounding defensive.

  "Sadiq, you gave me my freedom, twice! You had no reason to help me, after what I did, nor did you ask for anything in return—not even my thanks. You have enough Christmas spirit in you for a hundred people."

  His expression changed, became unreadable. His warm hand covered mine.

  "I know that neither of us like to be thanked," he said. "But I do thank you. This seems like it might be, I don't know, a second chance?"

  I looked up and him and smiled.

  "I think you might be onto something there," I said. "I guess that's what we both needed, huh?"
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  He didn't answer at first.

  "Annabelle," he said after a pause. "I told you before that you owed me nothing. That's still true. Nonetheless, there is something I must ask..." He looked away, into the fire.

  "What is it?" I asked. I had a strange feeling in my chest, like fluttering wings.

  He turned to me and lifted his hand to cup my cheek softly in his palm. His eyes were determined and almost afraid.

  "If you do not want me as I want you, you must know that I will always be your friend. I'll always care for you, and I'll always help you. And yet... Sometimes, I think you do want me. And, if I’m right about that..."

  He trailed off on an uncertain note.

  My heart had gone from fluttering to pounding. My hand shook as I lifted my fingertips to touch his cheek.

  Wordlessly, I drew him down to me, stretching my neck to meet his lips. Softly at first, and then with urgency, he kissed me. It was more than passion, and more than want. His kiss told me that he knew me, all my best and the worst parts, and he desired all of me. In my last few years, all that fear and shame, I'd come to believe that I'd never have another chance to be close to someone this way. But now he was giving me that, too.

  "It's another kind of second chance," I said, breathless, when we parted. "It's another gift."

  He looked down at me, not understanding at first. Then he smiled and nodded his agreement.

  "I could have had walls of steel, the best alarms, and a team of vicious guard dogs... I still wouldn't have had a chance against you, little thief. I've been defenseless against you from the start."

  "You got that right," I said with a laugh. "I'm a criminal mastermind, remember?"

  "Yes, a mastermind so lovely and sweet that your victims throw open their windows and dream of the time you will come to steal from them."

  I lay my head against him, a warm, pleasurable feeling swelling in my chest.

  I dreamed of you, too, I thought as the fire crackled and popped before us.

  We'd never talked about the future, and we didn't talk about it that night. The present was too delicious and warm for talk of days to come. Whether it would be Seattle nightclubs, or snow-covered mountains, or some strange and distant shore mattered not at all to me. What mattered was the strength of his arms, the sound of his voice, and the peace I always found when I was near him. I remembered when I'd dreamed of him, how we'd stood side-by-side, gazing out together over silvery deserts and ink-black seas. As he held me now, I was certain that, in any adventure, I'd still feel this safe, this strong, so long as I was his.

  I peered up at him. He smiled into the fire like a warrior victorious, all calm satisfaction and disbelieving joy.

  That smile is for me.

  "Sadiq..."

  "Yes?"

  "Tell me a story.”

  Holly Rayner

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  ONE

  “Mom. Mom, I’m driving, so I need to call you back,” Mia said, looking around as she navigated the right turn out of the high school parking lot.

  “You should have said something,” her mother said, before erupting in a spasm of coughs.

  “I know,” Mia said, trying to keep her voice level and patient. “I’ll call you as soon as I get back home, Mama.” She took a deep breath and waited while her mother said goodbye before ending the call. Mia set her phone down on the seat next to her and turned the stereo up. She could feel fatigue in every muscle of her body. “I wouldn’t be surprised if there was some kind of time anomaly that only exists at that damn school,” she said to herself, coming to a stop at a red light. It seemed like every day was just a little bit longer, every weekend just a little bit shorter.

  Mia yawned, blinking her eyes a few times rapidly to clear the slight blur at the edges of her vision. It seemed as though there was always something that she had to do next; if she wasn’t rushing to get papers graded during her lunch break, she was hurrying to the store to pick something up for her mom, or to the pharmacy, or just dropping by the old house to make sure everything was okay there. She barely even spent time in the apartment she was paying through the teeth for.

  “Just a few more hours,” Mia said to herself with a sigh. She needed to get home, get laundry in the washer, and call her mom back. Then she would park herself on the couch, unload the papers she had stuffed into her backpack to grade, and catch up on the series she was following. If she was lucky, she might be able to make it into bed by midnight. Mia yawned, longing for the coffee she had left behind at her desk.

  As she slipped into the routine drive home, Mia’s mind started to wander; she paid enough attention to the world around her to make sure she wasn’t going to run into anyone, but she couldn’t help going over the list of things she had to get done that week—especially those she had to do over the weekend. Three years before, when she had graduated college, Mia had thought that the best possible use of her talent would be to work at an underprivileged school; there was a program that would allow her to have her student loans forgiven if she taught for five years at a school that was registered on the program, and at the time she had been convinced that it would be the best way for her to put her degree to use.

  At first, her decision seemed vindicated. The students responded to her, and she had won an award at the end of her first year for bringing up the test scores for her classes over the course of the school term. Her mother had come to the ceremony, and Mia had believed—truly believed—that she was doing good work. Knowing that in four more years her student loans would be paid off, Mia had enjoyed her summer and had taken her continuing development classes happily.

  But as she started into her second year, Mia’s responsibilities had piled up. She had moved out of her mother’s house over the summer, and found that her paychecks never seemed to go quite as far as she needed them to; there was always some surcharge, or some extra cost on her bills. No matter how she tried to save on her electricity, it went up inexorably. Mia had taken refuge in her work, but had quickly discovered that anyone who had performed well in their first year as a teacher was invariably asked and pressured into doing as much as possible.

  She started spending longer days at school, taking part in committees, finding herself being volunteered for this or that task, this or that group. Her students in her second year were not as easy as her first; so many of them had no interest at all in learning the material, and Mia had had to keep a sharp eye on the papers they turned in—more than half of the first-week papers had been completely plagiarized. If they’re going to copy-paste an essay about how they spent their summer, what on earth are they going to do when it comes to writing about the books they’re supposed to be reading?

  Late in the year, her mother had fallen ill. At first, it had just been flu-like symptoms. She had been tired all the time, with headaches that came and went with little rhyme or reason. One appointment after another with one doctor after another resulted in nothing; and Mia had found herself sucked into her mother’s problems, spending almost as much time at her parents’ old home as she did in her own apartment. Mia had barely managed to keep up with her work as the spring semester dragged on; instead of taking her break, she had been with her mother, going to the doctors’ offices, taking care of her, cooking for her.

  Finally, as summer break had started, Mia’s mother had gotten a diagnosis. The disease wasn’t in and of itself deadly, but it was progressing unusually fast, and Mia’s mother was coping with it poorly. More than once, Mia had wished—more fervently than she had wished anything else before in her life—that her dad could somehow still be around, still be alive for her mom. If her dad were there, the burden wouldn’t be so much on Mia—and she thought that if Dad were around,
Mom might be able to bear her deteriorating health better.

  Now in her third year of teaching, Mia had begun to feel hopeless. She felt as though she was always rushing, as if her work consumed more and more of her time; but her pay wasn’t slated to increase until after her five-year anniversary had come. For two more years she would have to keep at it. The job that had seemed so worthy, and such a solution to the problem of her debt was actually—as strange as it had seemed when she first realized it—sending her into greater debt; because she couldn’t quite afford to keep herself afloat, Mia found herself charging things more and more onto her credit card, and making smaller and smaller payments on it. As the balance increased, the finance charges were getting larger—sending the balance higher and higher.

 

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