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Duty and the Beast(12)

By:Trish Morey


'You should have brought your swimsuit if you wanted a swim,' he said,  dismissing the vizier with a brief nod over her shoulder, before taking  in the cool shell-top and her bare arms.

She realised he was not angry, as she had feared he might be, but was  laughing at her again. Right now she would have preferred the anger.

'Unless of course,' he added, his dark eyes raking over her heated face, 'you prefer swimming au naturel?'

'No!' Her prissy-sounding outburst escaped before she could stop it,  just as she could no more prevent her cheeks flushing with  embarrassment. The thought of being any more exposed to his scrutiny  than she already was made her skin tingle and goose bump. But the  thought of being naked in the same pool with him triggered an entirely  new and more potent kind of reaction. She could already imagine the feel  of the water cool against her tight nipples, the pull of the water  tugging at her curls as it slipped between her aching, heated thighs.

She squeezed her legs together, wishing to God she'd bothered to find  her jacket so that he might not witness any more of her body's reaction  to his presence, crossing her arms over her breasts so that they could  not betray her. 'I was just going for a walk,' she said, her nails  pressing into her arms, harder and deeper, while she wished fervently  that he would use that damned towel and cover himself, if only so she  was not so tempted to look there. 'To clear my head.'

'A good plan,' he conceded, dashing her hopes when he balled the towel  in one fist and flung it to one side. Yet another reason to hate him,  she told herself, for any reasonable man would surely cover himself up  in front of a lady-a princess. But this was clearly no reasonable man.  He was a barbarian who had treated her, and continued to treat her,  appallingly. Definitely a barbarian, arrogant, self-assured and clearly  used to parading near-naked around women. So what if he managed to look  almost human when he smiled and when he laughed? He did not smile for  her, he did not laugh with her.

This man laughed at her.

And she hated him for it.

She might have told him that too, but just then he reached down before  her and picked up the flowers she had dropped and long forgotten. 'It is  a good time to walk in the garden. All the evening flowers send out  their perfume to sweeten our sleep and make us forget the heat of the  day and let us dream of cooler seasons.' Then he held the floral sprigs  to his nose, breathing in their heady scent, closing his eyes for a  second, giving her the chance to study him more closely-his sooty lashes  and brows, the strong blade of his nose and the three long, red marks  left so unashamedly by her own raking nails. 'Beautiful,' he said,  surprising her again. And then he looked across. 'Did you drop them?'                       
       
           



       

When she nodded, because her throat was suddenly too tight to speak, he  gently tugged one of the flowers and slipped it into the tumble of her  hair behind her ear, presenting her with the rest of the scented  bouquet.

'I should go,' she said, taking them and already backing away, disturbed  beyond measure by even just the brush of his fingers in her hair, the  touch of his fingers against hers. She was unsettled by his proximity  and how it put all of her senses on high alert. Confused by a man who  suddenly seemed once more like her rescuer of last night, the man whose  warm body she had huddled against, rather than the barbarian who had  attacked her today and so mercilessly dismantled her defences.

How could a man she hated on such a fundamental level stir such feelings within her?

For this was the same man, she battled to remind herself, the same  ruthless man who had only rescued her so he could be king. But of course  he could afford to look more relaxed now. He had no need to argue with  her because he had got what he had wanted. He knew that she had been  forced into compliance with this marriage, that she knew she had no  choice. He knew she wasn't going anywhere and that he had won.

He didn't want a wife.

He just wanted to be king. She just happened to be the one who could make it possible. She was merely the means to an end.

Oh yes, there was good reason why he could laugh and smile with his  friends now and afford to be more civil to her, and that knowledge only  served to fuel the burning hatred she felt for him. Because he assumed  she was a done deal. He assumed that, once her father had told her  straight, she would do what she was required to do without any more  complaint and become his compliant bride.

Like hell.

And that thought gave her strength.

It gave her back the power to be herself. 'You are busy and I am  interrupting,' she said. But when she looked over to the pool and  scanned its surrounds for the proof to support her argument, she found  it empty, the sapphire surface of the water unbroken, his friends  nowhere to be seen. She frowned. How had they left and she not even  noticed? For now she was alone here with him, with him wearing nothing  more than a stretch of black lycra. She looked down at the flowers in  her hand and swallowed, trying hard to focus on them and not let her  gaze wander from the detail of their cleverly sculpted petals, the  delicate curve, the subtle shading of colours. Anything that might stop  her gaze or her focus from wandering further afield where she might  catch a glimpse of his powerful legs or that bulging band of black lycra  hinting at what lay below. 'I really have to go.'

'So you said.' He smiled, enjoying the start-again stop-again nature of  her icy armour. For a moment she'd seemed to be regaining some  composure, some of that haughtiness he'd witnessed in the library, but  now once again she seemed unsure of herself, almost confused, like an  actor having trouble staying in character.

How long had she been standing in the shadows watching? What had she  been thinking that turned her cheeks such a deliciously guilty shade of  red?

Whatever it was, she didn't look haughty now, like she had when she had  marched so erect and cold from the library. She looked shy and  vulnerable, a woman again, rather than an ice princess. A woman who  didn't seem to know where to look.

'Is something wrong, Princess? You seem-agitated.'

She looked up at him then, her once kohl-rimmed eyes now a smudgy grey  and overflowing with exasperation. 'You could cover yourself! I'm not  used to talking to a near-naked man.'

'Only watching them, apparently,' he said, while secretly pleased to  hear it. He didn't want to think of her with other men. She would have  had them. God, she was nearly twenty-four-of course she would have had  them. But at least, unlike her sister, she had chosen to be discreet  about them.

'I didn't know you were here!'

'And when you did, you left immediately.' He was already reaching for  the towel he'd flung down earlier. In one smooth movement he had it  wrapped low around his hips and knotted it tight. He held his hands out  by his sides. 'Is that better?'

'A little,' she said, though still her eyes skated away every chance they got. 'Thank you. And now I must go.'

'Stay a moment longer,' he said, enjoying his prickly princess too much  to let her go just yet. She was a strange one, this one, moving through a  range of emotions and reactions too fast for him to keep up with or to  understand, frustrating him to hell because he didn't know what he was  dealing with on the one hand, intriguing him on the other. 'There are  some friends of mine you should meet. Or meet again, without their masks  this time.' Then he glanced over his shoulder, wanting to call them  over so that he could introduce them, surprised when he found they had  disappeared without his noticing. More surprised that they were not  already queued up to congratulate the woman who had left her mark on him  not just once but twice in the space of twenty-four hours.                       
       
           



       

Maybe they had realised that this was his battle and his alone and it  was better to leave him to it. Not that they wouldn't relish the  opportunity to rub it in every chance they got.

But there would be time to introduce her to them tomorrow at the wedding  and maybe by then the marks on his face and hand would have faded and  they might have forgotten.

And maybe camels might grow wings and fly.

More likely they were just hoping that by tomorrow she might have added to his list of injuries.

'Your friends have gone,' she said. 'And so must I.'

On an impulse he didn't quite understand himself, but knowing his  friends would understand a rapid change of plans, he almost asked her to  dine with him.

Almost, except he stopped himself at the last moment. For the dinner he  had planned with his friends would take no time at all, and then he  would be back to his books and his study, which was where he needed to  be if he was ever going to be prepared for the requirements of his new  role.