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Duty and the Beast(15)

By:Trish Morey

       
           



       

She looked up to see the vapour trail of a jet neatly bisecting the  endless blue of the sky with a thin white line, the tiny plane no more  than a diamond sparkling in the sun. She wished with all her heart that  she were on that plane right now, flying as far, far away from Al-Jirad,  Zoltan and her birthright as she could possibly get.

But she was not, because she was a princess, and duty ordained that she do this thing, that she marry a man she didn't love.

Duty.

Such a little word. Such a huge impost. And tonight Zoltan would expect her to do her duty again and let him bed her.

She shuddered at the thought, suddenly assailed by myriad images and  sensations cascading over her: the feel of his strong arms around her in  the library, his hot mouth seeking hers, plundering hers, the sight of  his body, fresh from his swim, the slide of droplets down his  satin-skinned chest.

She breathed in the perfumed air and watched the tiny speck of a plane  disappear into the distance as she thought of her shattered dreams and  hopes. No hope of marrying a man she loved. No escape from a forced  marriage. Not now.

But that did not mean she was completely powerless.

'Princess,' Rani said beside her, 'the Sheikh will be worried.'

She nodded as an idea formed and took shape in her mind, but knowing  what Rani said to be true. Any moment Zoltan was sure to send out the  storm troopers to find her and drag her back.

So there was no escape. She was stuck in this marriage with him. But  Zoltan was a fool if he thought that meant he would have it all his own  way and that she would deliver herself up to him on a platter.

She would not waste herself that way.

She had not saved herself all these years to be taken by a barbarian.

'What are you doing here? '

She stilled at the desk where she was sitting, pausing mid-sentence in  the letter she was writing longhand to her sister to tell her about the  wedding. In all likelihood it would never be sent, the details too  baring, too revealing, but it was cathartic, writing it all down,  putting her thoughts and shattered dreams into words.

But partly it had been something to pass the time, something to placate  her mounting nerves, to do while waiting for the inevitable knock on the  door.

She'd known that eventually he'd finish his drinks with his friends or  whatever it was that he'd excused himself to do and that had kept him so  long after the ceremony, wonder where she was and come looking for her.  She should have known that he wouldn't wait for her to open the door to  barge in, all aggrieved and affronted masculine pride.

She rose to face him, willing away the heat in her cheeks. Against  Rani's shocked protests, she'd unwound herself from the metres and  metres of golden fabric, pulled down her hair and scrubbed her face  clean, dressing instead in a simple white nightdress, with a white robe  lashed at her waist. Now only the henna tattoos adorning the backs of  her hands and feet remained, but even they would fade in time and at  least she no longer felt like some kind of prize to be fought and waged  war over and dressed up like some kind of triumph. She felt like  herself. Not even a princess any more, but a woman.

A woman with a mind of her own. A woman who knew about duty, but who also had her own hopes and dreams for the future.

That woman faced up to him now.

'Why wouldn't I be here?' She swallowed and tugged on the ends of her  robe's ties, taking both mental and physical reinforcement from the  action. 'After all, this is my suite, Sheikh Zoltan.' She put the  emphasis squarely on the 'my'.

'And this is our wedding night!'

Packed with memories she would cherish for ever. What a laugh. She  shrugged, realising she hadn't been the only one to divest of her  wedding garb. He'd changed too out of that crisp, white wedding robe and  into a pair of perfectly tailored trousers and a smooth fine-knit shirt  that clung to his chest like a lover's caress. But no, she would rather  not think of his lovers right now, or how many he must have had, or  what their hands might do with a chest like that to explore. Not that  she was jealous, exactly. It was just that she did not care to know the  details.

She lifted her gaze to his face, plastering a disingenuous expression on her own. 'Your point being?'

'You are supposed to be in my chamber. Didn't they tell you I was expecting to find you in my suite?'

She sniffed, looking down at the desk and fingering the hand-written  pages, thinking about all the things she'd talked about, all her hopes  and her disappointments, exposing herself and her pointless dreams. No,  she probably wouldn't end up sending it, come to think of it. Her  seize-the-moment sister would probably only laugh and say that no man  was worth waiting for, especially the one you didn't even know existed.  She looked back up at Zoltan, waiting like a mountain before her. 'I do  believe someone mentioned something like that, yes.'                       
       
           



       

'Then why did I have to come looking for you here?'

'Because there seemed no point in going to your room.'

He raked one hand through his hair. 'What the hell are you talking  about? Why not, when you knew I had been expecting to find you there?'

'Simply because I thought it might give you the wrong idea,' she said,  pausing to enjoy the mess of confusion on his features and the questions  flashing across his eyes before deciding to put him out of his misery.  'Given the fact I have no intention of sleeping with you.'





CHAPTER SEVEN



THE mountain before her turned volcanic, the face glowing hot with the  magma so close below the surface, eyes wild. She braced herself for the  eruption, knowing she was courting disaster and yet feeling a strange  sense of elation that she'd succeeded in throwing him so completely  off-balance. But the expected eruption did not eventuate. Zoltan somehow  managed to hold himself together, his rage rolling off him in searing  waves of heat. 'Is this some kind of joke?'

'Rest assured, Sheikh Zoltan,' she said, aiming for meekness. 'I would never joke about such a thing. I am deadly serious.'

'But you are my wife!' he roared, rigid with fury. 'Let me remind you of  that fact, in case today's ceremony had somehow slipped your mind.'

This time she could not help but laugh. 'Do you seriously think for a  moment I could forget, when I was handed over to you like little more  than a stick of furniture?'

'Oh,' he said, pacing out the width of the Persian rug that took up one  half of the room before turning to devour the distance back in long,  purposeful strides, his thumb stroking his chin as if he were deep in  contemplation of some highly complex problem. 'I see your problem. You  think it should have been all about you, the poor little princess forced  to do her duty for once in her life? Do you think we should have got  down on hands and bended knees and thanked you for so generously  sacrificing yourself on the altar of martyrdom? For so generously  agreeing to do what was your duty?'

She closed her eyes as she took a despairing breath, ignoring his barbs  and insults except to use them to fuel her resolve. If she had a  problem, it was standing not ten feet from her. 'No, I don't think that  at all. For, while I'm not overly fond of finding myself a pawn in  someone else's game-a game, it seems, where I find myself a loser from  the very beginning-I actually don't think I'm the one with the problem  here.

'You needed a wife-a princess, no less-in order to be king and today you  got one. So now you can be crowned King of Al-Jirad. You have my  heartiest congratulations.' She looked towards the door. 'And now, if  you wouldn't mind leaving, Sheikh Zoltan, I will finish my  correspondence.'

He stood, slowly shaking his head. 'You are kidding yourself if you  think that, Princess. You think this ends here? You know Al-Jirad needs  an heir. Two at least before your work is anywhere near done.'

She angled her chin higher. 'I acknowledge that my services are also  required as some kind of brood mare. I do not particularly like it, but I  accept that it is so.'

His eyes gleamed in the light. 'Then what are you doing here and not already in my suite?'

'Simple,' she said, crossing her arms over her chest, refusing to be  cowed. 'I don't know you. I won't sleep with a man I don't know, whoever  he is, whether or not he believes he has some kind of legal entitlement  to my breeding services.'

He came closer then, so close she could feel the air shift and curl  between them, carrying his scent to her on a heated wave. It was all she  could do to stand her ground and not turn and run, and only half from  fear of his anger. The other half was from fear that, in spite of her  anger and her hatred for him, she might yet be drawn towards an  evocative scent that brought back memories of lying wrapped in his arms,  close to his heated body.

She swallowed as he came close. But surely he would not try anything  here, in her suite? Surely he was not that ruthless that he could come  here to take what she had denied him elsewhere?