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Duty and the Beast(18)

By:Trish Morey


'Possibly.'

'And he won't be at the coronation?'

His jaw clenched, his hands tightening on the wheel. 'He wouldn't dare show his face.'

She hoped he was right. If she never saw the ugly slug again, it would  be too soon. She looked around, wondering at the words he had spoken,  about the punch his words had held. She wondered why he was so certain,  and she guessed it was not all to do with her kidnapping.

'What did he do to you?'

There was a pause before he spoke. 'Why do you ask that?'

'You clearly hate him very much. He must have done something to deserve it.'

He snorted in response to that. 'You could say that. I grew up with him. I got to see how his twisted mind works first-hand.'

'Tell me.'

'Are you sure you want to hear this, Princess?'

'Is it so bad?'

'It is not pretty. He is not a nice person.'

She swallowed. 'I'm a big girl. I can handle it, surely.'

He nodded. 'As you say.' He looked back at the road for a moment before  he began. 'There was a blind man in the village where we grew up, a man  called Saleem,' he started. 'He was old and frail and everyone in the  village looked out for him, brought him meals or firewood. He had a dog,  a mutt he'd found somewhere that was his eyes. We used to pass Saleem's  house on our way to school where Saleem was usually sitting outside,  greeting everyone who passed. Mustafa never said anything, he just  baited the dog every chance he got, teasing it, sometimes kicking it.  One day he went too far and it bit him. I was with him that day, and I  swear it was nothing more than a scratch, but Mustafa swore he would get  even. Even when the old man told him that it was his fault-that even  though he was blind he was not stupid. He knew Mustafa had been taunting  his dog mercilessly all along.                       
       
           



       

'One day not long after, the dog went missing. The whole village looked  for it. Until someone found it-or, rather, what was left of it.'

She held her breath. 'What happened to it?'

'The dog had been tortured to within an inch of its life before  something more horrible happened-something that said the killer had a  grudge against not only the dog, but against its owner.'

'What do you mean?'

'The dog had been blinded. So, even if it had somehow managed to survive the torture, it would have been useless to Saleem.'

She shuddered, feeling sick. 'How could anyone do such a thing to an animal, a valued pet?'

'That one could.'

'You believe it was Mustafa?'

'I know it was him. I overheard him boasting to a schoolfriend in  graphic detail about what he had done. He had always been a bully. He  was proud of what he had done to a helpless animal.'

'Did you tell anyone?'

Her question brought the full pain and the injustice of the past  crashing back. He remembered the fury of his father when he had told him  what he had heard; fury directed not at Mustafa but at him for daring  to speak ill of his favoured child. He remembered the savage beating he  had endured for daring to speak the truth.

'I told someone. For all the good it did me.'

Choose your battles.

His uncle had been so right. There had been no point picking that one.  He had never been going to win where Mustafa was concerned. Not back  then.

She waited for more but he went quiet then, staring fixedly at the road  ahead, so she turned to look out her own window, staring at the passing  dunes, wondering what kind of person did something like that for kicks  and wondering about all the things Zoltan wasn't telling her.

He was an enigma, this man she was married to, and, as much as she hated  him for who and what he was and what he had forced her into, maybe she  should be grateful she had been saved the alternative. Because she would  have been Mustafa's wife if this man had not come for her. She  shuddered.

'Princess?'

She looked around, blinking. 'Yes?'

'Are you all right? You missed my question.'

'Oh.' She sat up straight and lifted the heavy weight of the ponytail  behind her head to cool her neck. 'I'm sorry. What did you ask?'

He looked at her for a moment, as if he wasn't sure whether to believe  her or not, before looking back at the interminably long, straight road  ahead. 'Seeing as we were talking about Mustafa,' he started.

'Yes?'

'There is something I don't understand. Something you told me when we rescued you.'

'Some rescue,' she said, but her words sounded increasingly hollow in  the wake of Zoltan's revelations about his half-brother's cruel nature.  Maybe he had saved her from a fate worse than death after all. 'What  about it?' she said before she could explore that revelation any  further.

'How did you convince Mustafa not to take you right then and there,  while he had you in the camp? Why was he prepared to wait until the  wedding? Because if Mustafa had laid claim to you that first night he  held you captive, if he had had witnesses to the act, then no rescue  could have prevented you from being his queen and him the new king.'

She swallowed back on a surge of memory-fed bile, not wanting to think  back to those poisoned hours. 'He told me he did not care to wait, you  are right.'

'So why did he? That does not sound like the Mustafa I know.'

She blinked against the sun now dipping low enough to intrude through  her window and sat up straighter to avoid it, even if that meant she had  to lean closer to him in the process, and closer to that damned  evocative scent.

'Simple, really. I told him that he would be cursed if he took me before our wedding night.'

'You told him that and he believed you?'

'Apparently so.'

'But there must have been more reason than that. Why would he believe that he would be cursed?'

Beside him she swallowed. She didn't want to have to admit to him the  truth, although she rationalised he would find that truth out some time.  And maybe he might at least understand her reluctance to jump into bed  and spread her legs for him as if the act itself meant nothing.

'Because I told him that, according to the Jemeyan tenets, if he took me  before our wedding night the gods would curse him with a soft and  shrivelled penis for evermore.'

'Because you are a princess?'

'Because I am a virgin.'

'And he believed you?' He laughed then as if it was the biggest joke in  the world, and she wasn't tempted in the least to rake her nails down  his laughing face again-this time she wanted to strangle him.                       
       
           



       

Instead she turned away, pretending to stare out of the window and at  the sea, fat tears squeezing from her eyes, but only half from the  humiliating memories of being poked and parted and prodded by the wiry  fingers of some old crone who smelt like camel dung.

The other half was because it never occurred to Zoltan to believe her.  It never occurred to him that she might be telling the truth, that she  might actually be a virgin. And the rank injustice of it all was almost  too much to bear. She angled her body away from him to mask the dampness  that suddenly welled in her eyes.

To think she had saved herself all this time only to be bound to someone  like him instead. The one thing she had always thought hers to give;  the one thing she had thought hers to control, and when all was said and  done she had no control at all. No choice. It was not to be given as a  gift, but a due.

What a waste.

'It would seem your half-brother is superstitious,' she managed to say through her wretchedness to cover the truth.

And from behind the wheel, Zoltan's words sounded as though he was still smiling. 'Yes. He always was a fool.'





CHAPTER EIGHT



SHE could smell the salt on the air long before she could see the sea.  They had left the highway some time ago. The track across the desert  sands was slower going, until they topped one last dune and suddenly a  dry desert world turned into paradise.

From their vantage point, she could see the rocky peninsula jutting into  the crystal-clear sapphire waters, and where before she had seen no  signs of vegetation beyond small, scrubby salt-bushes clinging to the  sand for their meagre existence for miles, now the shores and rocks were  dotted with palms, the rocky outcrops covered with lush, green  vegetation.

'It's beautiful,' she said as they descended, heading for the long, white strip of sandy beach. 'But how?'

'A natural spring feeds this area. If you like, I will take you and show  you where the water runs clean and pure from the earth. If I try hard  enough, I'm sure I'll remember the way.'

The offer was so surprising, not only because he was asking her again,  but because he had revealed a part of himself with his words-that he had  been here before, and clearly a long time ago.

'I would like that,' she said, wondering what he would have been like as  a child. Overbearing, like he was now? Although that wasn't strictly  true, she was forced to admit. He wasn't overbearing all the time.

Which was a shame, really, because he was much easier to hate when he  was. And she didn't want to find reason not to hate him, because then  she might be tempted to wonder.