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Diamond in the Desert(18)

By:Susan Stephens


He had to reach her in time. He had intended to test Britt as she had  tested him in Skavanga when she arrived in the desert, but not like  this.

What would she think when he appeared out of the storm? That a bandit  was coming for her? It only occurred to him now that she had never seen  him in robes before. That seemed so unimportant. He just prayed he would  find her alive. He had left the encampment battening down for what was  essentially a siege. Custom dictated the tribe pitch their tents at the  foot of a rock face to allow for situations like a sandstorm. The best  he could hope for where Britt was concerned was that she'd had enough  sense to stay inside her vehicle. She wouldn't stand a cat in hell's  chance outside.

* * *

The scream of the wind was unbearable. It seemed never ending. It was  as if a living creature were trying every way it knew how to reach her  inside the Jeep. Curled up defensively with her hands over her ears, she  knew that the electrics were shot and the phone was useless. The sand  was already halfway up the window. How much longer could she survive  this?

What a rotten end, she thought, grimacing at the preposterous situation  in which she found herself. She could only feel sorry for the person  who had to drag her lifeless body out of the Jeep-

She Would Not Die Like This.

Throwing her weight against the driver's door, she tried to force it  open, but it wouldn't budge-and even if it had, where was she going?

Flares were her last hope, Britt reasoned. She had no idea now if it  was day or night, and before she could set off a flare she needed  something to break the window.

Climbing over the seats, she found everything she needed. The vehicle  was well equipped for a trek in the desert. There were flares and work  gloves, safety goggles, a hard hat, and heavy-duty cutters, as well as a  torch and a first-aid kit. Perfect. She was in business.

* * *

He had almost given up hope when he saw the flare flickering dimly in  the distance. Adrenalin shot through his veins, giving him the strength  of ten men and the resolve of ten more. He urged his weary animals on  and his brave men followed close behind him. He couldn't be sure it was  Britt who had let off the flare until he saw the warning triangle she  had fixed onto the top of a spade handle with a bra, and then he smiled.  Britt was ever resourceful, and any thought he might have had about her  setting off into the desert at night without a proper guide seemed  irrelevant as he forged on, his lungs almost exploding as he strained  against the wind. Nothing could keep him back. Sharp grains of sand  whirled around him, but the robes protected him and the howlis did its  job. Just thinking about Britt and how frightened she must be made his  discomfort irrelevant. His only goal was to reach her-to save her-to  protect her-to somehow get her back to the camp-

If she were still alive.

He prayed that she was, as he had never prayed before. He prayed that  he could save her as he sprang down from his horse, and started to work  his way around the buried Jeep. The vehicle was buried far deeper than  he had imagined, and, worse, he couldn't hear anything against the wind.  Was she alive in there? With not a moment to lose he yanked at the  windscreen with his men helping him. Britt had already loosened it to  let off the flare-                       
       
           



       

And then he saw her. Alive! Though clearly unconscious. She had managed  to free the rubber seal on the glass and had forced it out far enough  to let off the flare, but in doing so had allowed sand to pour in and  fill the vacuum, almost burying her. He waved his men back. It wasn't  safe. Too many of them and the Jeep might sink further into the sand or  even turn over on top of them, killing his men and burying Britt. He  would not let anyone else take the risk of pulling her out.

He dug with his hands, and with the spade he had freed from the bull  bars of the Jeep. He was desperate to reach her-frantic to save her. It  was the longest hour of his life, and also his greatest triumph when he  finally sliced through Britt's seat belt with the khanjar at his side,  and lifted her to safety in his arms.

* * *

To say she was bewildered would be putting it mildly. She had woken up  to find herself transported from a nightmare into a Hollywood  blockbuster, complete with sumptuous Arabian tent and billowing  curtains, with not a grain of sand to be seen. Added to which, there  were women clustering around what passed for her bed. Dressed in rainbow  hues, they looked amazing with their flowing gowns and veils. At the  moment they were trying to explain to her in a series of mimes that she  had been barely conscious when their leader carried her into the camp.  At which point it seemed they had to pause and sigh.

She must have been asleep for ages, Britt realised, staring around. The  bed on which she was reclining was covered in the most deliciously  scented cushions, and was enclosed by billowing white curtains, which  the women had drawn back. She felt panicked for a moment as she tried to  take it all in. Was this the encampment Jazz had told her about-or was  she somewhere else?

And then it all came flooding back. The terrifying storm- The sickening  fear of being buried alive. Her desperate attempt to set off a flare,  not knowing if anyone would see it-

Someone had. She squeezed out a croak on a throat that felt as if it  had been sandpapered, and the women couldn't understand a word she said,  anyway, so the identity of her rescuer was destined to remain a  mystery.

The women were instantly sympathetic and rushed to bring her drinks  laced with honey, and one of them indicated an outdoor spa, which Britt  could now see was situated at the far end of the tent.

And what a tent! It was more of a pavilion, large and lavishly  furnished with colourful hangings and jewel-coloured rugs covering the  floor. Burnished brass lanterns decorated with intricate piercing cast a  soft golden glow, while the roof was gathered up in the centre and had  been used to display a number of antique artefacts. She was still  staring up in wonder when the women distracted her. They had brought  basins of cool water and soft towels, and, however much she indicated  that she could sort herself out, they insisted on looking after her and  bathing all her scratches and battle wounds.

It was a nice feeling to be made so welcome. Thanking the women with  smiles, she drank their potions and accepted some of their tiny cakes,  but she couldn't lie here all day like some out-of-work concubine. She  was badly in need of a sugar rush to kick her into gear. And those  little cakes were delicious. She was contentedly munching when she  suddenly remembered Jazz. Sharif's sister must be out of her mind with  worry-

Thank goodness she had a signal. She quickly stabbed in: safe @camp. sorry if i frightnd u! lost a day sleeping! talk soon J

A message came back before she had chance to put the phone away: relieved ur safe. Look fwd 2 mtg u b4 long! J

Britt smiled as she put the phone down again. She looked forward to  that meeting too. And now the women were miming that she should come  with them. She hesitated until they pointed towards the spa again, but  the thought of bathing in clean, warm water was irresistible.

She was a little concerned when the women started giggling as they drew  her out of the bed and across the rugs towards the bathing pool,  especially when they started giggling and then sighing in turn. Were  they preparing her for the sheikh? Was she to be served up on a magic  carpet with a honey bun in her mouth?

Not if she could help it.

She asked with gestures: 'Did your sheikh bring me here?' She tried to  draw a picture with her hands of a man who was very tall and robed,  which was about all she could remember of her rescuer-that and his black  horse. She must have kept slipping into unconsciousness when he brought  her back here. 'The Black Sheikh?' she suggested, gazing around the  golden tent, hoping to find something black to pounce on. 'His Majesty,  Sheikh Sharif al Kareshi...?'

The women looked at her blankly, and then she had an idea. She sighed theatrically as they had done.                       
       
           



       

Exclaiming with delight, they smiled back, nudging each other as they exchanged giggles and glances.

She left a pause to allow for more sighs while her heart thundered a  blistering tattoo. So it was very likely that Emir or Sharif, or  whatever he was calling himself these days, had rescued her. Her brain  still wasn't functioning properly, but it seemed preferable to be in the  tent of someone she knew, even if that someone was the Black Sheikh.

She allowed the women to lead her into the bathing pool. She didn't  want to offend them and what was the harm of refreshing herself so she  could start the new day and explore the camp? The women were keen to  pamper her outer self with unguents, and her inner self with fresh  juice. One of them played a stringed instrument softly in the  background, while the scent rising from the warm spring water was  divine. Relaxing back in the clear, warm water, she indulged in a little  dream in which she was a young woman lost in the desert who had been  rescued by a handsome sheikh-