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Duty and the Beast(2)

By:Trish Morey


'You don't think you're worth it?' Once again she got the distinct  impression he was laughing at her. She looked away in sheer frustration,  trying to focus on the positives. Her father had sent rescuers. Soon  she would see him again. And soon she would be in her own home, where  people took her seriously, and where men didn't come with glinting eyes,  hidden smiles and hands that set off electric shocks under her skin.

She could hardly wait.

She was already reaching for the reins of the closest horse when his hand stopped her wrist. 'No, Princess.'

'No? Then which one's mine?'

'You ride with me.'

'But there are four  … '

'And there are five of us.'

'But  … ' And then she saw them, two more men in black running low across  the dunes towards them when she had been expecting only one.                       
       
           



       

'Kadar,' he said, slapping one of the men on the back as they neared,  making her wonder how he could tell which one was which when they looked  indistinguishable to her. 'I'm afraid the princess didn't think much of  your fireworks.'

Fireworks? she thought as the man called Kadar feigned disappointment, her temper rising. They were only fireworks?

'Apologies, Princess,' the one called Kadar said with a bow. 'Next time I promise to do better.'

'They served their purpose, Kadar. Now let's go before they remember what they were doing before the heavens exploded.'

She looked longingly at the horse she had chosen, now bearing the man  who'd been waiting for them in the dunes. A man who, like the others,  was tall and broad and powerfully built.

Warriors, she guessed as they swung themselves with ease onto their  mounts. Mercenaries hired by her father to rescue her. Maybe he had  spent his money wisely, maybe they were good at what they did, but  still, she couldn't wait to see the back of them.

Especially the one who took liberties with his hands and with his tongue.

'Are you ready, Princess?' he asked, and before she had time to snap a  response she found herself lifted bodily by the waist onto the back of  the last remaining horse, her impossible rescuer launching himself  behind and tucking her in close between him and the reins, before  wrapping a cloak around them both until she was bundled up as if she was  in a cocoon.

'Do you mind?' she said, squirming to put some distance between them.

'Not at all,' he said, tugging the cloak tighter and her closer with it,  setting the horse into motion across the sand. 'We have a long way to  go. You will find it easier if you relax.'

Not a chance.

'You could have told me,' she said, sitting as stiffly as she could in  front of him, pretending that there was a chasm between them instead of a  mere few thin layers of fabric. She tried to ignore the arm at her back  cradling her and wished away the heat that flared in every place where  their bodies rocked together with the motion of the horse.

'Could have told you what?'

'That they were only fireworks.'

'Would you have believed me?'

'You let me think it was much worse.'

'You think too much.'

'You don't know the first thing about me.'

'I know you talk too much.' He hauled her even closer to him. 'Relax.'

She yawned. 'And you're arrogant and bossy.'

'Go to sleep.'

But she didn't want to go to sleep. If she went to sleep, she would  slump against him, closer to that hard wall of his chest, closer to that  beating heart. And princesses did not fall asleep on the chests of  strangers mounted on horseback. Especially not strangers like this man:  arrogant. Assuming. Autocratic.

Besides, she had stayed awake most of the last night. It would not hurt  her to stay awake a little longer. She looked up at him as they rode, at  the strong line of his jaw under the mask, at the purposeful look in  his dark eyes. Then, because she realised she was staring, she looked  upwards to where it seemed as if all the stars in the universe had come  out to play in a velvet sky.

She picked out the brightest stars, familiar stars that she had seen from her suite's balcony at home in the palace.

'Is it far to Jemeya?'

'Too far to travel tonight.'

'But my father, he will know I am safe?'

'He will know.'

'Good.' She yawned again, suddenly bone weary. The night air was cold  around her face and she snuggled her face deeper under the cover of the  cloak, imagining herself back in her own bed at the palace. That was  warm too, a refuge when the winds spun around and carried the chill from  the mainland's cold desert nights.

The horse galloped on, rocking her with every stride, but she knew there  was no risk of falling, not with this man's arms surrounding her, the  cloak wound tightly around them both, anchoring her to his body. She  breathed in the warm air against his body, deliciously warm. His scent  was so different from her father's familiar blend of aftershave and pipe  tobacco, which shouldn't smell good but still did; this man smelled  different and yet not unpleasantly so. This man seemed to carry the  essence of the desert, warm and evocative, combining sunshine and sand,  leather and horseflesh, and some indefinable extra ingredient, some  musky quality all his own.

She breathed deeply, savouring it, tucking it away in her memory. Soon  enough she would be back in her own bed, with familiar scents and  sounds, but for now it was no hardship to stay low under the cloak, to  drink in the warmth and his scent and let it seep bone deep.                       
       
           



       

After all, she was safe now. Why shouldn't she relax just a little? Surely it wouldn't hurt to nap just for a moment or two?

She let her eyelids drift closed as she yawned again, and this time she  left them closed as she nestled against the hard, warm torso of her  rescuer, breathing deeply of his scent, relishing the motion as the  horse rocked them together. It wasn't so bad-a nap would refresh her,  and soon she would be home with her father again. Nobody would know she  had fallen asleep in the arms of a stranger.

And nobody would ever know how much she enjoyed it.

Zoltan Al Farouk bin Shamal knew the precise moment the princess had  fallen asleep. She had been fighting it for some time, battling to  remain as rigid and stiff in his arms as a plank of wood.

He almost laughed at the thought. She was no plank of wood. He had  suspected as much from the first moment he had pulled her into his arms  and spread his fingers wide over her belly. A chance manoeuvre and a  lucky one, as it happened, designed to drag her close and shut her up  before she could raise the alarm, but with the added bonus of  discovering first-hand that this princess came with benefits: a softly  rounded belly between the jut of hipbones, the delicious curve of waist  to hip and the all-important compunction to want to explore further,  just to name a few. It had been no hardship to hold her close and feel  her flesh tremble with awareness under his hand, even while she  attempted to act as if she was unaffected.

Unaffected, at least, until she had given into her baser instincts and jammed her teeth down on his finger.

This time he allowed himself to laugh, a low rumble that he let the  passing air carry away. No, there was nothing wooden about her at all.

Especially now.

The rhythm of the horse had seduced her into relaxing, and bit by bit he  had felt her resistance waver, her bones soften, until sleep had  claimed her and she had unconsciously allowed her body to melt against  his.

She felt surprisingly good there, tucked warm and close against his  body, relaxed and loose-limbed, all feminine curves and every one of  them an invitation to sin.

Exactly like her scandal-ridden sister, from what he had heard. Was this  one as free and easy with her favours? It would not surprise him if she  were-she had the sultry good looks of the royal women of Jemeya, the  eyes that were enough to make a man hard, the lush mouth that promised  the response would not be wasted. At her age, she must have had lovers.  But at least, unlike her sister, this one had had the sense not to  breed.

It would be no hardship making love with this woman. His groin tightened  at the prospect. In less than forty-eight hours she would be his. He  could wait that long. Maybe duty and this unwanted marriage would have  some benefits after all.

Maybe.

As he looked down in the bundle of his arms, one thing he was sure  of-spoilt princess or not, she was far too good for the likes of  Mustafa.

Around him his friends fanned out, sand flying from the horses' hooves  as they sped across the dunes. Better than good friends, they were the  brothers he had never had, the brothers he had instead chosen. They  would stay for the wedding and the coronation, they had promised, and  then they would each go their separate ways again-Kadar back to  Istanbul, Bahir to the roulette tables of Monte Carlo and Rashid to  wherever in the world he could make the most money in the shortest time.