Reading Online Novel

Awakened by Her Desert Captor(18)



 God. What did that mean? What did that make her?

 Arkim took his hand away and stepped back. Sylvie almost reached out  for him. She teetered on the cliff-edge of a very scary and precipitous  drop into the unknown. His words seduced her: There are things about you  that I don't know...that I want to know.

 A fluttering started low in her belly. Nerves, excitement. The thought  of going with him...getting to know him more...letting him be intimate  with her...was terrifying. But the thought of leaving...going back to  her life and not knowing him...was more terrifying.

 Sylvie's gut had been guiding her for a long time now-taking her out  of the toxic orbit of her stepmother and her father's black grief at the  age of seventeen-and it was guiding her towards the Jeep on the  right-hand side before she could stop herself.

 Arkim displayed no discernible triumph or sanctimony. He just held the  passenger door open for her to get in, closed it, and got in at the  other side. Sylvie was aware of the staff re-materialising, to put their  bags in the back of the Jeep, and once that was done Arkim was pulling  away and out of the castle.

 She tried to drum up a sense of shame for her easy capitulation but it  eluded her. All she felt was a fizzing sense of illicit anticipation.

 Endless rolling desert and blue skies surrounded them. It should have  been a boring landscape but it wasn't. And the silence that enveloped  them was surprisingly easy as Arkim navigated over a road that was  little more than a dirt track.

 Eventually, though, Sylvie had to say the words beating a tattoo in  her brain. She looked at him, taking in his aristocratic profile. 'Halima told me you've never brought anyone else to the castle.'

 His hands tightened on the steering wheel momentarily and his jaw twitched.'No, I haven't taken anyone else there.'

 She hated it that she cared, because it meant nothing, and the feeling  of exposure after having mentioned it made her say frigidly,'I should  have guessed that you'd prefer to keep this...situation well out of the  prying gaze of the media. The last thing you want is to be publicly  associated with someone like me.'

 Arkim glanced at Sylvie, and she was surprised to see his mouth tip up  ever so slightly at one side.'I think our association became pretty  public when you broke apart the wedding and claimed that I'd spent the  night in your bed.'

 She flushed. She'd conveniently forgotten that. She never had been a  good liar. Afraid he'd ask her again about her motive for doing such a  thing, she said hurriedly,'This oasis-it's yours?'         

     



 

 Arkim finally looked away again to the road-but not before Sylvie's  skin had prickled hotly under his assessing gaze.'Yes, it's part of the  land I own. However, nomads and travellers use it, and I would never  disallow them access as some others do. It's really their land.'

 There was unmistakable pride in Arkim's tone, and it made Sylvie  realise that, whatever their tangled relationship was, this man was not  without integrity.

 Genuinely curious, she asked,'What's your connection to Al-Omar?'

 Arkim's jaw tightened.'This is where my mother is from-hence my name.  The land belonged to a distant ancestor. She grew up in B'harani; her  father was an advisor to the old Sultan, before Sadiq took over.'

'And do you see any of your family here?'

 Before he'd even answered Sylvie might have guessed the truth from the way his face became stern again.

'They disowned my mother when she brought shame on the family name-in  their eyes. They've never expressed any interest in meeting me.'

 Sylvie felt a surge of emotion and said quietly,'I'm sorry that she had to go through that. She must have felt lonely.'

 How bigoted and cruel of them, to just leave her. But she didn't think  Arkim would appreciate any further discussion on the subject, or  hearing her saying she felt sorry for him.

 She looked out of the window and took the opportunity to move things  on to a less contentious footing.'It is beautiful here...so different  to anything I've ever seen before.'

 There was a mocking tone to his voice.'You don't miss the shops? Clubs? Busy city life?'

 She immediately felt defensive.'I love living in Paris, yes. But I  actually hate shopping. And I work late almost every night, so on the  nights I do have off the last thing I want to do is go out to a club.'

 Arkim seemed to consider this for a moment. Then he settled back into  his seat and angled his body towards her, one hand relaxed on the wheel  and the other on his thigh.

'So tell me something else about yourself, then... How did you end up in Paris at seventeen?'

 Sylvie cursed herself. She'd asked for it, hadn't she? By changing the  subject. She looked at him and there was something different about  him-something almost conciliatory. As if he was making an effort.

 Because he wants you in his bed.

 She ignored the mocking voice.'I left home at seventeen because I was never the most academic student and I wanted to dance.'

 She deliberately avoided going into any more detail.

'So why not dance in the UK? Why did you have to go to Paris? Surely your aspirations were a little higher?'

 Arkim sounded genuinely mystified instead of condemning, and Sylvie  felt a rush of emotion when she remembered those tumultuous days. Her  hands clenched into fists in her lap without her realising what they  were doing.

 Suddenly one of his hands covered hers. He was frowning at her.'What is it?'

 Shocked at the gesture, she looked at him. The warmth of his hand made  her speak without really thinking.'I was just remembering... It was  not...an easy time.'

 Arkim took his hand away to put it on the wheel again, in order to  navigate an uneven part of the road. When they were through it, he said, 'Go on.'

 Sylvie faced forward, hands clasped tightly in her lap. She'd never  spoken of this with anyone-not really. And to find that she was about to  speak of it now, to this man, was a little mind-boggling.

 Yet even his judgement could never amount to the self-recrimination  she felt for behaving so reactively. Even though she couldn't really  regret it. She'd learnt so much about herself in the process.

'As is pretty obvious, my stepmother and I don't get on. We never have  since she married my father. And my father... Our relationship is  strained. I rebelled quite a bit-against both of them. And Catherine, my  stepmother, was making life...difficult for me.'

'How?' Arkim's voice was sharp.         

     



 

'She wanted me to be sent to a finishing school in Switzerland-a way  to get rid of me. So I left. I went to Paris to find some old contacts  of my mother's. I'd always wanted to dance, and I'd taken lessons as a  child... But after my mother died my father lost interest. And when  Catherine came along she insisted that dance classes weren't  appropriate. She had issues with keeping my mother's memory alive.'

 That was putting it mildly. Her father had had issues too, and his had  had more far-reaching consequences for Sylvie. Her stepmother was just a  jealous, insecure woman. She'd never known Sylvie well enough for her  rejection to really hurt. But her father had known her.

'So you took off to Paris on your own and started working at the revue?'

 Sylvie nodded and settled back into her seat, the luxurious confines  of the vehicle making it seductively easy to relax a little more.'I had  about one hundred pounds in my pocket when I met up with Pierre and  found a home at the revue. I had to pay my way, of course. He let me  take dance classes, but only if I cleaned in my spare time.'

'You took no money from your father?'

 Sylvie glanced at Arkim's frown and slightly incredulous expression  and wondered why she was surprised at his assumption that she would  have.'No, I haven't taken a penny from my father since I left home. I'm  very proud of the money I make-it's not much, but it's mine and it's  hard-earned.'

 He schooled his expression. This information put everything he knew  about Sylvie on its head and pricked his conscience. It was so  completely opposite to everything he'd always assumed about her: that  she was a trust fund kid, petulant and bored, seeking to disgrace her  family just because she could. It sounded as if she'd sought refuge in  Paris out of rebellion, yes, but also because she'd more or less been  pushed away.

 Very aware of that direct gaze on him, he said a little gruffly,'You  should rest for a bit-it'll take another hour or so to get there.'

 Sylvie's eyes flashed at his clear dismissal of the subject, but  gradually the tense lines of her body relaxed and she curled her legs up  on the seat. Her head drifted to one side, long red hair trailing down  over her shoulder.

 Her lashes were long and dark against her cheeks. She wore no make-up,  and Arkim noticed a smattering of small, almost undetectable freckles  across the bridge of her nose. Had that been the sun? Because he didn't  remember seeing them before. They gave her an air of innocence that  compounded the naivety he'd seen in her dancing.