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Duty and the Beast(8)

By:Trish Morey


And he wanted more.





CHAPTER FOUR



SHOCK punched the air from her lungs, sent all thoughts scattering from her mind. But God, she could still feel!

He seemed to be everywhere, the strong wall of his chest pressed hard  against her, the steel bands of his arms surrounding her, the rough of  his whiskered cheek against her skin and the press of his lips against  her own.

Even the very air that intermingled between them, their heated breath, seemed full of his essence, his taste.

And for a moment that recognition blindsided her because it was so  powerful. She did recognise his scent and the very feel of him, and she  knew it was truly him-the man who had cradled her tightly in his arms,  whose chest she had turned into to breathe more of him in while his  horse had carried her away from the desert camp and away from that slug,  Mustafa, who thought he could just take her at will.

Revulsion blossomed inside her, welling up like a mushroom cloud, giving  her frozen limbs strength and purpose and her blank mind the will to  act.

She thrust her chin up, twisted her face away, seeking escape from his relentless kiss. 'No,' she cried. 'No! '

But he did not stop. He gave her no space, no release. He showed no  mercy. Instead she felt herself lifted from her feet and swung around  until she felt the hard marble of a column at her back. She felt herself  sandwiched between it and him, pinning her to his long, lean body while  his seeking mouth found hers again and she was full of him and the  taste of him. Coaxing. Demanding. Persuading.

So persuasive.

Her body stirred. Her body responded, and she hated herself for it, even  as she angled her head to give his mouth and his hot tongue better  access to her mouth.

Then his hand slid down her arm, brushed one aching nipple on a  straining breast, and suddenly it was Mustafa's greasy fingers she saw  in her mind's eye, it was the smack of his lips as he walked towards her   …

Oh God.

And that image was enough to give her the strength she needed. 'No!' she  cried, twisting hard against the steel-hard shackles of his strong  limbs. 'Get away from me!' And somehow she managed to unleash one wild  hand and lashed out with it to push him away, her nails finding purchase  on flesh as she dragged them down.

She heard his curse and suddenly she found herself thrust away, panting  and reeling and having to search for the bones in her legs in order to  stay upright while he stood there looking like a thundercloud, dark,  grim and threatening, rubbing his scored cheek. She waited, gasping for  air, shocked by what she had done, appalled that she, a princess of the  royal house of Jemeya, had performed such a base act. Yet she was not  sorry she had done it. Not one bit.

But she was afraid.

The reality of her position was never starker, never more terrifying.  For she was alone in this palace, with no allies, no-one to protect her.  He was big, powerful and angry, and she had struck him and drawn blood.

The way his chest heaved, the way his pulse pounded angrily at his  temples and his eyes looked wild and vengeful, she knew he would not let  her get away with that.

Just when she feared he would act, that he might actually raise his hand  to strike her, he surprised her by smiling, a long, lazy crocodile  smile. 'What quaint customs you Jemeyans have. What does this second  brand signify, I wonder? Eternal fidelity? Ever-lasting love? Or a  promise of many years of wild, passionate nights in my bed?'

'You flatter yourself! You know exactly why I hit you. How else was I supposed to make you stop acting like a barbarian?'

'Maybe it was not clear you wanted to stop.' And, maybe because he saw  the disbelief etched so clearly on her features, he added for good  measure, 'Your body told me you did not want to stop.'

'Then you weren't listening!'

He lifted his hand, exposing the three angry red lines marring his  cheek, his eyes widening at the blood smeared on his hand. 'You will be  sorry for this.'

She almost laughed out loud. His threat meant nothing to her. 'No. I  don't think so. What I'm actually sorry about is for assuming I was  being rescued last night rather than being kidnapped into some other  nightmare. I'm sorry for having to listen to this ridiculous scheme of  yours and argue its insanity, and I'm really sorry you do not seem to  have any concept of how mad you are. But I am not sorry for hitting you.  You asked for that!'                       
       
           



       

His lip curled. 'I should take you back to Mustafa's camp and leave you there.'

Fear crawled up her spine, even though she knew that there was no chance  of it, even though she knew that he would never do such a thing-not  when he wanted the throne for himself. Yet still she remembered the old  crone's probing fingers, the humiliating inspection, and she remembered  what Mustafa had promised to do to her the moment they were married and  he was safe.

'My half-brother deserves a woman like you,' Zoltan continued. 'He  deserves someone who can give him grief and make his life hell.'

But the poison of his insults washed off her, only serving to fuel the  fire in her veins. She tossed her hair back, refusing to be cowed by his  kind. 'If you think you're so different from him you are kidding  yourself mightily.'

His face turned as red as a pomegranate, the tendons in his neck  standing out in thick, tight cords, his pulse dancing in his throat. 'I  am nothing like him!'

'Then you don't know him at all. You are both contemptible! Unfit to  rule a line, let alone an entire kingdom. Al-Jirad is better off without  the both of you.'

'Then who will be king?'

'I don't care. Someone else can sort that out. But I tell you this much,  just as I'll tell my father when he comes: I am not marrying either of  you.'

'You do that, Princess. You tell your father. You tell yourself. You  tell whoever you like. Maybe if you say it often enough, you might even  believe it.

'But you would be wasting your breath. For in less than twenty-four hours we will be married, whether you like it or not.'

'Over my dead body! '

His eyes glinted dangerously, the three scratches down his cheek standing out bold and angry. 'If that's what it takes.'

If the vizier hadn't chosen that exact moment to arrive, she would have hit him again-harder this time.

Princesses didn't hit, she knew. Princesses were serene, kept their cool  and never lashed out-so she had been taught by endless tutors. But she  had grown up with older brothers. They might have been princes, but  they'd certainly not treated her and her sister like princesses. Oh yes,  she was more than capable of dealing with bullies.

'Hamzah,' he said to the bowing vizier. 'What is it?'

The vizier took one look at Zoltan's cheek before glancing over at Aisha  with disdain, taking in her unkempt hair, her reddened cheeks, clearly  disapproving of what he saw. Then he blinked as if she didn't matter and  turned back to Sheikh Zoltan.

'Sheikh King Ashar has called from the Blue Palace. He asks if he can speak to the princess.'

At last! Zoltan looked at her and now it was her turn to smile, because  finally this was her moment. The sooner she spoke to her father, the  sooner a halt could be put to these crazy wedding plans. Finally she had  a chance to talk to someone who would listen to her, someone who cared  about her, rather than trying to reason with a man who was like a brick  wall and gave not a toss for what she wanted. 'Where can I take the  call?'

When the vizier bowed and gestured towards the big desk in the corner,  it was all she could do not to run over and snatch up the receiver  simply to hear her father's voice again, just to let him know that,  while she might be safe from one despot, it was only to be landed in the  lap of another. He could not know the full details of what was planned.  He must have been deceived. He must have no idea what this man was  really planning.

But she wouldn't let herself run across the floor to the phone. She  could do serene when she wanted to, she could do regal. She was just  finding it harder when this man was around, the urge to act rather than  think decidedly more tempting.

'We will leave you in privacy, Princess,' Zoltan said behind her, about  to withdraw after Hamzah. On a wicked whim she turned and held up one  hand, one-hundred-per-cent confident in what her father would say.

'No. You wait. I'm sure you will be interested in what my father has to say.'

For as much as she hated him, as much as he threw her off-balance, she  wanted him here to witness this, she wanted no more misunderstandings  between them. Finally she could talk to her father, someone reasonable,  someone who made sense and cared about her as a person, not just as some  chattel to be exchanged in a business deal. And afterwards she would  hand the phone over so her father could tell Zoltan the same thing  because he would surely not believe her. She picked up the receiver,  still smiling. God, after what she'd been through, she was really going  to enjoy this. 'Papa, it's so good to talk to you!'