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Captive of the Harem

Page 30

by Anne Herries


  would soon see her father, for that at least she must be grateful.

  If only she could stop this ache in her chest from threatening

  If only she could stop this ache in her chest from threatening

  to crush the life from her. She wished that she might run back to

  the Sultan’s palace and beg for her husband’s release, but such

  actions would merely cause more trouble. Perhaps when they

  were back in Cyprus, she might persuade her uncle to make

  inquires. She might even persuade him to let her return—if

  Suleiman stil lived.

  She nodded to the young boy who had stopped outside what

  was clearly the most important cabin on board ship. Her uncle

  must have given up his own accommodation for her sake, which

  was kind of him.

  She went inside, and then stopped as she saw someone

  standing by the porthole, her heart catching as she saw the tal,

  broad-shouldered man with his back towards her. He was

  dressed in the simple, traditional style he liked to adopt when

  private—yet it could not be!

  ‘Suleiman?’ she breathed, walking towards him as if she were

  in a dream. ‘Is it realy you?’

  He turned and smiled at her, opening his arms as she gave a

  scream of surprise and delight and ran to him. His arms closed

  about her, crushing her to him as their lips met in a hungry kiss

  that made her feel like swooning.

  ‘I thought you were stil a prisoner,’ she cried, the tears

  running down her cheeks. ‘I thought they were sending me away

  from you—that I should never see you again.’

  ‘Would you have cared so much, my dove?’

  ‘You know I would! I should not want to live if I could not be

  ‘You know I would! I should not want to live if I could not be

  your wife. I am your wife, Suleiman—and can never marry any

  other man.’

  ‘If you do, I shal kil him!’ Suleiman said hoarsely. ‘Did you

  realy think I would let you go, Eleanor? I would have fought my

  way out of the palace if necessary rather than lose you. Better I

  died than let you go away from me.’

  ‘But what are you doing here on my uncle’s ship?’ Eleanor

  looked up at him uncertainly. ‘Did you not tel me that you could

  never leave your father?’

  ‘I do so only on the Sultan’s orders,’ Suleiman replied, his

  expression serious. ‘I have seen my father and he gave me his

  blessing—but he knows the time has come for me to leave him. I

  am to be our master’s ambassador, Eleanor. The Sultan wishes

  for more trade with merchants like your uncle, and he also

  wishes me to seek out a way of building peace between our

  empire and its enemies—if one can be found that does not

  require him to make concessions.’

  ‘Do you think that is possible?’ Eleanor asked doubtfuly.

  ‘Perhaps there is a chance—I cannot tel,’ Suleiman said. ‘As

  you know, there is a wide divide between the Christian and

  Muslim way of life. Much blood has been spiled, and much

  hatred exists between our peoples—but the Sultan and I spoke

  much on this subject privately, and we are agreed that the empire

  wil suffer in time if nothing is done.’

  Eleanor stared at him. ‘You spoke to the Sultan yourself—

  directly to him and not the Grand Vizier?’

  ‘Yes.’ Suleiman laughed. ‘You, of course, were not permitted

  ‘Yes.’ Suleiman laughed. ‘You, of course, were not permitted

  to address him yourself—but have you forgot, my love—you are

  merely a woman and I am a man. The case is entirely different.’

  ‘You! You are a wicked tease,’ she replied, her eyes flashing

  at him. ‘I should punish you for your arrogance, my lord. Do not

  forget that we shal not be in your country for much longer!’

  ‘And yet I am your husband—and a woman is the property

  of her husband wherever she may be in the world, Eleanor. I am

  sorry, my love, but it is the way of men to be superior.’

  ‘You… Oh, I shal punish you,’ she cried and beat against

  him with her fists until he caught her wrists. Then he drew her to

  him once more to kiss her lips. She stopped fighting him and

  clung to him, her body melting into his as the love flowed through

  her. ‘I was so frightened when they arrested you,’ she said when

  he released her lips at last. ‘I do not know what I should have

  done if we had been parted, my lord.’

  ‘Nor I, my darling,’ he murmured and touched her cheek with

  the tips of his fingers. ‘I could not bear it any more than you.

  That is why I told the Sultan of my desire to serve him. It means

  that we must travel the world in search of treasures, Eleanor—

  and in doing trade perhaps we shal teach others that we Turks

  are not al as savage as they think us.’

  ‘But what of your father? Shal you never see him again?’

  ‘From time to time I shal return, to take back the treasures I

  have found—and to visit my home. My brother Bayezid wil do

  his best to take my place, though I fear he would prefer to spend

  his time in study—but he wil become my father’s heir in my

  stead. It must be so or he would be exposed and vulnerable.

  stead. It must be so or he would be exposed and vulnerable.

  Besides, Bayezid is worthy to take my father’s place, more fitted

  for the honour of being Caliph than I could ever be.’

  ‘Do you mind that, Suleiman?’ she asked, looking at him

  anxiously.

  ‘No—for I have used my privileges wel, Eleanor. I am a

  wealthy man through my own endeavours, which is why the

  Sultan wanted me to become his ambassador. It was the clock I

  gave him that convinced him I was the man he sought for this

  task.’

  ‘The clock you gave him instead of me?’ Eleanor smiled up at

  him. ‘I was sure he must be better pleased with such a gift than a

  mere woman.’

  Suleiman laughed huskily. ‘He told me that when he looked

  upon your face he was convinced that my taste in al things

  beautiful was not to be faulted. He said that a man who had the

  wisdom to choose such a woman over a clock was the man he

  desired as his representative in the capitals of the Western

  world.’

  Eleanor blushed. ‘I revealed my face so that the Vizier would

  know I did not lie about the fact that I had studied the Qur’an

  before I ever came to your country. Forgive me, my lord. I

  know it was immodest of me.’

  ‘It was done for my sake,’ Suleiman said. ‘Besides, that

  custom belongs in my father’s house—in your father’s house you

  wil wear the clothes you were used to before your abduction.’

  ‘Must I?’ Eleanor sighed. ‘The clothes you gave me were so

  ‘Must I?’ Eleanor sighed. ‘The clothes you gave me were so

  much more becoming—and so comfortable. May I not at least

  wear them in private?’

  Suleiman laughed down at her. ‘So—you have become a

  convert to our way of life after al.’

  ‘Yes, my lord—though I am not sure what I believe in the

  matter of religion.’

&n
bsp; ‘In that you are not alone,’ Suleiman said and sighed. ‘I

  learned of your faith from my mother, Eleanor—and I have

  studied the Bible. I do not know where the truth may lie.’

  ‘Perhaps there is only one God,’ Eleanor replied, wrinkling

  her brow in thought. ‘He may be caled different names and

  worshipped in different ways—but He remains the same.’

  ‘I think that perhaps to believe something of that sort is the

  only way we can be at peace within ourselves,’ Suleiman said.

  ‘We must live good lives, Eleanor, you and I—and in that way

  we may achieve the ideal that al the gods tel us is the true way.’

  ‘If only others could be as tolerant as you,’ Eleanor said and

  sighed as she gazed up at him with love in her eyes. ‘I am so

  lucky to have found you, my dearest husband. I do love you so

  very much.’

  ‘And I love you,’ he replied. ‘Now you must change into the

  clothes your uncle has provided, Eleanor. Once we are at sea,

  he wil come for you. For we are to be married by the captain of

  this ship.’

  ‘Married?’ Eleanor stared at him. ‘But I am already your

  wife. Karin said the ceremony was complete.’

  ‘According to Muslim law that is so, but your family wil not

  ‘According to Muslim law that is so, but your family wil not

  be happy until we are married in their eyes—and that means

  under their law. Sir John explained to me that we could be

  married at sea by the captain of his ship and need not enter a

  Christian church—and I agreed that I would be happy to take

  part in such a ceremony for your sake.’

  ‘You would do that for me?’ She stared at him in wonder,

  her heart sweling with love for him.

  ‘It is no more than you have already done for me.’

  Suleiman came towards her, drawing her to him once more to

  kiss her on the lips tenderly. ‘Had we never been married

  according to your law or mine, you would always have been my

  love—my life. You came to me as a slave, Eleanor—but you

  have become the queen of my heart. I know that I shal never

  love another woman.’

  ‘And I shal never want more than your love,’ she said. ‘For

  you are al that I want and need…’

  Epilogue

  Eleanor stood looking out to sea as they left the shores of

  England far behind. She had thought never to return, but

  Suleiman had visited the English court as the Grand Turk’s

  ambassador and she had gone with him. Afterwards, they had

  traveled to her old home in the west of England.

  ‘It is just as you described it to me,’ Suleiman had told her

  one night as they lay together in the huge four-poster bed after

  they had made love. ‘Richard says that he wil never return to

  England—but I think that we may choose to visit your home

  from time to time, my love.’

  ‘Wil my father sel the estate to you?’

  Suleiman smiled down at her. Over the past three years he

  and Sir Wiliam had become firm friends, spending time

  examining many of the treasures Suleiman had discovered on his

  travels. Their return to Cyprus was always eagerly awaited—and

  it would be no different this time.

  ‘Your father asked Richard his opinion first, my love—and he

  said that he had no objection.’

  ‘I stil cannot believe that you and my brother are friends.’

  ‘I think that happened after our first child was born,’

  Suleiman replied. ‘How could Richard hate me when he adores

  little Isabele?’

  Eleanor smiled and leaned against his shoulder as the shores

  of England faded into the distance. She had already given her

  lord a daughter and a son, Kasim, both of whom Suleiman

  spoiled dreadfuly—but she was with child again.

  They would teach their children to have open minds, to

  respect others and do what they could to unite the people of

  their two lands and cultures. And one day their children would

  live and flourish in the misty, beautiful countryside of her

  childhood home…

  ISBN: 978-1-4592-3698-1

  CAPTIVE OF THE HAREM

  First North American Publication 2004

  Copyright © 2002 by Anne Herries

  Al rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the

  reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any

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  or hereafter invented, including xerography, photocopying and

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  forbidden without the written permission of the publisher,

  Harlequin Enterprises Limited, 225 Duncan Mil Road, Don

  Mils, Ontario, Canada M3B 3K9.

  Al 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 al incidents are pure invention.

  This edition published by arrangement with Harlequin Books

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  Table of Contents

  Epilogue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Epilogue

 

 

 


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