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Scandal: His Majesty's Love-Child

Page 2

by Annie West


  But this realisation came as an almighty gust buffeted the chopper, slewing it sideways. Tahir grappled with the controls, swinging the helicopter high above the dunes.

  The sight that met him sent adrenalin pumping through his body. The growing darkness filling the sky wasn’t an early dusk, as he’d thought.

  If he’d been flying by the book he’d have noticed the warning signs sooner. Instead he’d been skylarking, swooping dangerously low, gambling on his ability to read the topography of a place that changed with every wind.

  This was the mother of all sandstorms. The sort that claimed livestock, altered watercourses and buried roads. The sort that could whip up a helicopter like a toy, whirl it round and smash it into fragments.

  No chance to outrun it. No time to land safely.

  Nevertheless, Tahir battled to steer the bucking chopper away from the massive storm. Automatically he switched into crisis mode, sending out a mayday, knowing already it was too late.

  Calmness stole over him. He was going to die.

  The prodigal had returned to his just deserts.

  He wasn’t dead.

  Fate obviously had something far worse in store. Dehydration in the heat. Or, going by the pain racking him, death from his wounds.

  The preposterous luck that had seen him win several fortunes at the gaming table had finally abandoned him.

  Tahir debated whether to open his eyes or lie there, seeking the luxurious darkness of unconsciousness again. Yet the throbbing pain in his head and chest was impossible to ignore.

  Even opening his eyes hurt. Light pierced his retinas through sand-encrusted lashes. It dazzled him and he groaned, tasting heat and dust and the metallic saltiness of blood. His hands and face felt raw from exposure to whipping sand.

  He had a vague recollection of sitting, blinded by dust and strapped in a seat, hearing the unearthly yowl of wind and lashing sand. Then the smell of petrol, so strong he’d fought free of both seatbelt and twisted metal, stumbling as far as he could.

  Then nothing.

  Overhead the pure blue of a cerulean sky mocked him.

  He was alive. In the desert. Alone.

  Tahir passed out three times before he dragged himself to a sitting position, sweating and trembling and feeling more dead than alive. His brain was scrambled, wandering into nothingness and then jerking back to the present with hideous clarity.

  He sat with his back against a sandbank, legs stretched out, and tried to ignore the brain-numbing pain that was the back of his skull in contact with sand.

  He was drifting into unconsciousness when something jerked him awake. A rough caress on his hand. Gingerly he tilted his head.

  ‘You’re a mirage,’ he whispered, but the words wouldn’t emerge from his constricted throat.

  The animal sensed his attention. It stared back, its horizontal pupils dark against golden-brown irises. It shook its head and a cloud of dust rose from its shaggy coat.

  ‘Mmmmah.’

  ‘Mirages don’t talk,’ Tahir murmured. They didn’t lick either. But this one did, its tongue tickling. He shut his eyes, but when he opened them the goat was still there. A kid, too small to be without its mother.

  Hell. He couldn’t even die in peace.

  The goat butted his hip, and Tahir realised his jacket pocket had something in it. Slowly, so as not to black out from the pain, he slipped his hand in and found a water bottle.

  A muzzy memory rose, of him grabbing bottled water as he stumbled from the wreckage. How had he forgotten that?

  It took for ever to pull the bottle out, twist off the lid and lift it to his lips. The hardest thing he’d ever done was drag it away after one sip.

  Guzzling too much was dangerous. He risked another sip then lowered his hand. It felt like a dead weight.

  Something nudged him and he opened his eyes to see the goat curled up close. In the whole vast expanse of desert the beast had chosen this place to shelter.

  Gritting his teeth as he brought his left hand over his body, Tahir poured water into his palm.

  ‘Here you are, goat.’

  Placidly it drank, as if used to human contact. Or as if it too was on its last legs and had no room for fear.

  Tahir had just enough energy to recap the bottle before it slid from his shaking hands. His head lolled.

  Beside him the warmth of that tiny body penetrated his clothes, reminding him he wasn’t alone.

  It was that knowledge that forced him to focus on surviving Qusay’s notoriously perilous desert.

  Annalisa drew water up in the battered metal scoop and sluiced it over her face. Heaven.

  The huge sandstorm had delayed her journey into the desert. Her cousins had tut-tutted, saying it was proof this trip was a mistake. The sort of mistake she wouldn’t survive. But they didn’t understand.

  Just six months after her granddad’s death, and her beloved father’s soon after, it meant everything that she come here.

  Annalisa was keeping her last promise to her father.

  It was wonderful to be here again, though sadness tinged the experience as she remembered previous trips with her dad.

  She’d arrived this morning, spending the afternoon cleaning her camera and telescopic equipment. A day out here meant a day of heat and dust, and the luxury of having the oasis to herself was too much to resist.

  She lifted another scoop of water and tipped it over her head, shivering luxuriously as the water slid through her hair, over her shoulders and down her back. Another scoop sluiced over her breasts and she smiled, revelling in the feeling of being clean. She wriggled her toes in the sandy bottom of the small pool.

  The sun was setting and she should move to build up the fire before darkness fell.

  She was just turning to get out of the water when something on the horizon caught her attention. She narrowed her eyes against the setting sun.

  A shadow. More than a shadow. A man. She made out broad shoulders and dark clothes. Remarkably, for this place, he was wearing what looked like a suit as he took a step down the dune, letting the slip of sand carry him several metres.

  Automatically Annalisa reached for her towel and wrapped it close, her actions slowing when she registered his strange gait. He didn’t use his arms to keep his balance on the treacherously steep slope and his movements were oddly uncoordinated.

  Caution warned her to take no chances with a stranger.

  No local would harm her. But this man clearly didn’t belong. Who knew how he’d react to finding a lone female?

  But as she knotted the towel and watched his slow progress she realised something was wrong. Instincts honed by years of helping her father tend to the sick overrode her wariness. The stranger was no threat. He looked as if he could barely stay upright.

  Moments later she was racing up the other side of the wadi towards him.

  Her steps slowed as she neared and took in the full impact of his appearance.

  Her breath hissed in her throat. Disbelief filled her. She blinked, but the image was clear and unmistakable.

  A tall man, dark-haired, wearing a tuxedo and black leather shoes, was slipping down the dune towards her. His dress shirt was ripped open and filthy, revealing bronzed skin and the top of a broad chest. A dark ribbon, the end of a bow tie, fluttered against his collarbone.

  His face was long and lean and so caked in sand she could barely make out his features. Yet the solid shape of his jaw and the high angle of his cheeks hinted at a devastating masculine beauty. His temple was a mass of dried blood that made her suck in a dismayed breath.

  But it was his eyes that held her still as he slithered down the slope. Piercing blue, they mesmerised her. Such an unexpected colour here in a desert kingdom.

  Even as he staggered towards her his tall frame looked improbably elegant and absurdly raffish. As if he’d drunk too much at a society party and wandered unsteadily off.

  Then she registered the way he cradled his arms across his torso and fear escalated. C
hest wounds? She could deal with cuts and abrasions. She was her father’s daughter after all. But they were days away from medical help and her skills only went so far.

  Clumsily Annalisa raced up the dune, hauling the flapping towel tighter. Her heart thudded painfully as she fought to suppress panic.

  She’d almost reached him when he stumbled and dropped to his knees, swaying woozily.

  He stretched out his arms and looked up from under a tangle of matted dark hair.

  ‘Here, sweetheart.’ His voice was a hoarse whisper, thick and slurred, as if his tongue didn’t work properly. She leaned closer to hear. ‘Take care of it.’

  His arms dropped and something, a small scruffy animal, rolled out as the stranger pitched to one side, seemingly lifeless, at her feet.

  CHAPTER TWO

  ANNALISA sat back on her heels and pushed a lock of hair behind her ear with shaky fingers. She trembled all over, her arms weak as jelly from exertion. Her pulse was still racing from shock and the fear she mightn’t be able to save him.

  After a quick check she’d decided to risk moving the stranger to her campsite. His temperature was dangerously high and a night on the exposed dune could prove fatal.

  But she hadn’t reckoned on the logistics of transporting a man well over six feet and at least a head taller than her.

  It had taken an hour of strained exertion and all her ingenuity to get him down, dragging him on a makeshift stretcher. Most frightening of all he’d been a dead weight, not stirring.

  ‘Don’t you die on me now,’ she threatened as she checked his weak pulse and began cleaning the wound on his temple.

  Head wounds bled prolifically. It probably wasn’t as bad as it looked, she told herself. Yet she found herself muttering a mix of prayer and exhortation in mingled Arabic, Danish and English, just as her dad had used to when faced with a hopeless case.

  The familiar words calmed her, made her feel slightly more in control, though she knew that was an illusion. It would be a miracle if her patient pulled through.

  ‘It’s okay.’ A slurred voice broke across her thoughts. ‘I know I won’t survive.’ His eyes remained closed, but Annalisa watched his bloodied, cracked lips move and knew she hadn’t imagined his voice.

  Hope surged, and a spark of anger born of fear.

  ‘Don’t be ridiculous! Of course you’ll live.’ He’d echoed her fears so precisely she lashed out, heart pounding in denial.

  After a moment his lips moved again, this time in a twitch that might have signified amusement.

  ‘If you say so.’ Now his voice was weaker, a thready whisper. ‘But don’t fret if you’re wrong.’ He drew a shaky breath that rattled in his lungs. ‘I won’t mind at all.’

  The words trailed off and he lay so still in the lamplight Annalisa couldn’t make out his breathing. Frantically she fumbled for his pulse. Relief pounded through her when she felt it.

  She told herself it was better he’d slipped into unconsciousness again. He wouldn’t feel pain as she tended his wounds.

  It was only later, as she placed a damp cloth on his forehead, trying to lower his temperature, that she realised the man had spoken to her in perfect English.

  Who was he? And what was a lone foreigner doing in Qusay’s arid heartland dressed like some suave movie star?

  Tahir ached all over. His head hammered mercilessly, as if a demolition squad had started work inside his skull. His mouth and throat were parched and raw. Swallowing felt like his muscles closed over broken glass. His body was stiff and weighted, bruised all over.

  It was one hell of a beating this time, he realised vaguely. Had the old man finally gone too far?

  Tahir couldn’t bring himself to struggle out of the blackness to take in his surroundings. Instinctively he knew the pain would be overwhelming when he did. Right now he didn’t have the strength to pretend he didn’t care.

  His only weapons against his father were pride and feigned unconcern. To meet the old man’s eyes steadily and refuse to beg for mercy.

  It drove his tormentor wild and robbed him of the satisfaction he sought from lashing out at his son.

  No matter how bad the thrashing, how prolonged or vicious, Tahir never begged for it to end. Nor did he cry out. Not a murmur, not a flinch, no matter how remorseless his father’s ice-cold eyes or how explosive his temper. Even when Yazan Al’Ramiz brought in thugs to subdue Tahir and prolong the punishment, Tahir refused to give in.

  There was triumph in facing down the man who’d hated him for as long as he could remember. That was little recompense for not knowing why Yazan loathed him, but it gave him something to focus on rather than go crazy seeking an explanation the old man refused to give.

  Obviously Tahir wasn’t the sort to inspire affection.

  Far better to be alone and self-contained.

  He was stubborn and contemptuous enough never to give in. It was a matter of honour that every time, when it was over, he gathered his strength and walked away. Even if his steps were unsteady and his eyes clouded. Even if he had to haul himself along using furniture or a wall to keep upright.

  Sheer willpower always forced him on. He refused to lie broken and cowed at the old Sheikh’s feet.

  Tahir drew a shaky breath, awake enough to register the constriction in his chest and the pain ripping across his side. Broken ribs?

  He couldn’t walk away this time. The realisation tore at his pride and ignited his stubbornness.

  Something fluttered at his neck. A touch so light that for a moment his dazed brain rejected the notion.

  There it was again. Something cool and damp slid from his jaw down his throat, then lower, in a soothing swipe over his chest. And again, from under his chin, the caress edged down, tracing blessed coolness across burning skin.

  It stopped and, straining his senses, Tahir heard a splash. A moment later the damp cloth—he was aware enough now to realise what it was—returned, trailing across his pounding forehead and brushing damply at his hair.

  He swallowed a moan at the pure pleasure of that cool relief against the searing ache in his head.

  Was this some new torture devised by his father? A moment’s respite and burgeoning hope to rouse him enough only so he could feel more pain when the beating recommenced?

  ‘Go away.’ He moved his lips, worked his throat, but no sound emerged.

  The cloth paused, then slid down his cheek in a tender caress that was almost his undoing. He couldn’t remember feeling weaker.

  His skin burned and prickled, as if stung by a thousand cuts, yet the bliss of that touch made him suck in his breath. That sudden movement scorched his battered torso with a fiery ache.

  ‘Go away.’

  He didn’t have the strength to withstand the lure of this gentle treatment. It would break him as the pounding fists never could.

  ‘You’re awake.’ Her voice was a whisper, soft as a soughing breeze. He racked his brain to place it. Surely he couldn’t forget a woman with a voice like that? Low and sweet, with a seductive husky edge that set it apart.

  He didn’t know her. In his foggy brain that fact stood out.

  She must be one of his father’s women. A new one.

  Bitterness flooded his mouth, ousting even the rusty taste of blood. He should have guessed Sheikh Yazan Al’Ramiz would try something new to break his obstinate son. What better than the soft touch of a woman?

  ‘Leave me,’ Tahir ordered. But to his shame his voice emerged as a hoarse whisper. Almost a whimper.

  ‘Here.’ A firm hand slipped beneath his shoulder and a slim arm supported his skull, lifting him slightly.

  Instantly pain shot through him. A stabbing spike of lightning shattered the blankness behind his closed lids and he stiffened against the need to gasp out his agony.

  ‘I know it hurts, but you have to drink.’ He heard the voice vaguely, as if through a muffling curtain. Then water, blessedly cool, trickled over his lips. Thought fled as he gulped the precious fluid.


  Too soon the flow stopped.

  He opened his lips to ask for more, heedless now of pride. But she forestalled him, her voice soothing.

  ‘Be patient. You can have more soon.’ She leaned close. He felt her warmth beside and behind him as he lay in her lap. Her scent, wild honey and cinnamon and warm female flesh, teased his nostrils and unravelled his thoughts. ‘You’re dehydrated. You need fluids, but not too fast.’

  ‘How long before he returns?’

  ‘He?’ Her voice was sharp. ‘There’s no one else. Just you and me.’

  Tahir listened to her husky voice, a voice of untrammelled temptation, and suppressed a groan of despair. How could he hold out against the promise of that voice, those gentle hands?

  In his weakened state Tahir had no reserves of strength. All he wanted was to have her hold him, nurse him against her undoubtedly soft bosom and pretend there was no such thing as reality.

  How long before he begged for the first time in his life?

  Damn his father for finally finding a way to break his resistance. She’d sap his willpower as no beating could.

  ‘Tell me.’ He struggled to sit higher, but was so weak the press of her palm against his bare chest stopped him. ‘When will he be back?’

  ‘Who? Was there someone with you in the desert?’ Urgency threaded her voice.

  ‘Desert?’ Tahir paused, his brows turning down as he fought to remember. Sheikh Yazan Al’Ramiz enjoyed the luxuries of life too much to spend time in the desert, even if it was the traditional home of his forebears.

  She was trying to distract him.

  ‘Where is my father?’ he whispered through gritted teeth, as pain rose in an engulfing tide. ‘He’ll want to gloat.’

  ‘I told you, there’s no one here but us.’

  His face hurt as he grimaced. ‘I may have been beaten senseless but I’m not a fool.’ He raised a hand and unerringly encircled her wrist where her palm rested against his chest.

  She was young, her skin supple and smooth. He felt her pulse race against his fingers, heard her breath catch in the resounding silence that blanketed them.

 

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