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Duty and the Beast(9)

By:Trish Morey

       
           



       

She listened and laughed as he expressed his delight, thanks and  apologies for not being there to meet her. She assured him that she was  unharmed, that neither Mustafa nor his men had hurt her, not physically,  and that she couldn't wait to go home.

She threw a smile across to Zoltan, imagining his teeth gnashing  together, relishing that thought. Thinking that the last thing he would  have wanted was for her father to call, someone who would surely take  her side in all of this.

Until there was a pause on the end of the line she could no longer ignore.

'Papa?'

The words she heard chilled her blood and made her dizzy with shock and  disbelief. 'But, Papa, I do not understand.' And this time he said the  words slower, so there could be no mistake, so she could not  misunderstand.

'Aisha, you are not going home. Why has no-one told you yet? You must marry Zoltan.'

She made the mistake of looking up, caught the suddenly smug look on  Zoltan's face, as if he had caught the gist of her conversation and knew  it was not in her favour. Then again, he had probably read her reaction  on her face. She spun around, turning her back on him, hating his air  of casual boredom, hating the sudden curve she'd witnessed on his lips.

Hating everything about him.

'But, Papa  … ' she pleaded into the receiver, curving her free hand  around the mouthpiece, shielding the panic in her voice and cursing her  impulse to let Zoltan stay in the room while she took the call. But she  was not done yet. 'I don't want to marry him!'

He wanted to choke. Did she for one moment actually imagine that he  actually wanted to marry her? Laughable. But it wasn't laughable. It was  painful, really, having to listen to one half of a conversation when  that half was clearly going so wrong.

There were plenty more 'but, Papa's, a fair sprinkling of 'but why?'s  and a lot of time where she said nothing but listened to what her father  was telling her before she tried to get a word in. He had to admit the  one that almost plucked at his heart strings was the 'Please, Papa,  please!'

Said in her Poor Little Princess voice, it was quite touching, really. If you cared.

Even if you did, what could anyone do? Hadn't he explored every option himself?

But then the final cruncher-the 'Yes, Papa,' in a voice that sounded  like a child's who had just been rebuked and told to be good-before she  turned back to the desk and put the receiver down.

It was awkward witnessing someone else's humiliation, especially after  they'd insisted you stayed and had acted as if it was going to be some  kind of victory for them.

Awkward and yet, at the same time, supremely satisfying.

She didn't look up at him, but she didn't have to for him to realise  she'd been crying. Her long lashes were clumped into thick black spikes,  moisture glazed her eyes and he had to wonder why she insisted on  making it so difficult for herself.

He'd learned early in life that some things were worth fighting for and  some things were a lost cause from day one. 'Choose your battles,' his  uncle, the King, had told him when he was just a young boy and still  steaming after his father had, as usual, accepted Mustafa's side in a  dispute. 'Don't waste your time on the things you can't change. Save  your energy for the battles that count.'

He hadn't really understood the message back then; it had all just  seemed so unfair that his father had never taken his word, no matter the  truth of the matter. But bit by bit he'd learned that nothing would  ever change and that arguing only made things worse.

Gradually he'd learned to accept the inevitable and save his energies for the battles he could win.

Someone should have told this woman the same thing.

Didn't she see there was no changing this? She was stuck. As stuck as he  was in this centuries-old time warp. There was no getting out of it.  There was no escape.

'So you managed to sort it all out?' he asked when she had stood there, her hands on the replaced receiver, for way too long.

She drew in a long breath then, blinked, straightened and made the  tiniest concession she could to her tears by flicking them from the  corners of her eye while making out as though she was pushing the weight  of her long, dark hair back behind her ears.

'My father will be here tomorrow, as you said.' Her voice was low and  flat, as if all the stuffing had been knocked out of it, all the life.

He waited longer still, struck by how much this admission of defeat cost  her in her too-stiff spine and forced control, almost-if he had to  admit it-admiring her. Maybe she wasn't as fragile as he had supposed or  she would have been wailing on the end of the phone, dissolved into  shrieks and fits of tears by now. Facing him after the instruction to  stay, only for it to mean he had witnessed her humiliation, would be no  easy task. Not for anyone, let alone some brittle, spoilt princess.                       
       
           



       

She blinked then as she looked up at him. 'My father-Sheikh Ashar-says I  have no choice. Apparently neither of us do. It seems it is more  complicated than a mere alliance. He says our countries are inexorably  linked and that if this marriage doesn't happen both of our families  forfeit their right to their respective thrones. So, if I say no, it  will not only be Al-Jirad without a king.'

He waited. He had known this to be the truth, but she would never have  believed him if he had told her. It was better coming from her father.

'So then, it is settled. There is no escaping this marriage, for either of us.'

She blinked up at him, her eyes as empty as her voice. 'Not unless I  wish my father to lose the crown and my brothers to lose their  birthright.'

She drew in breath and seemed to grow taller then, her chin raised, her  eyes resigned but still, he noted, with a glimmer of defiance, even if  still glassy. 'I would not do that to my family, of course.'

'Of course.'

'In which case, it seems there is no choice. Apparently I am stuck with  this marriage.' Her chin grew higher then, her eyes grew colder, with an  icy surface you could skate over. 'And so, it would seem, stuck with  you.'

He watched her leave, her head held high, her posture impossibly straight and regal.

Haughtiness becomes you, he thought as she swept from the room, back to  her princessly best, if you didn't count the riotous freefall of her  hair tumbling down her back, hair that had felt like a silk curtain in  his hands. He remembered the feel of her in his arms, the heat from her  mouth, the softness and suppleness of her body against his, and he  growled low and deep in his throat.

For all her protests, for all her pretence, there was a live woman under  that haughty exterior, hot and wanting, and he would take great  pleasure in peeling that harsh shell away piece by inevitable piece.

'What happened to you?' There was laughter in Rashid's words as he led  the other two friends into the library and caught sight of Zoltan's  cheek.

'Let me guess,' Bahir said with a knowing grin. 'The princess happened to him.'

Kadar perched himself on the edge of the desk where Zoltan sat and  studied the three lines down his friend's cheek. 'No wonder she wasn't  impressed by my fire-works. Looks like she's packing her own.'

Zoltan leaned back in his chair, pinching the bridge of his nose with  his fingers, his head full of ancient verse after hours of study. No  surprise that his friends would find this intensely amusing. They would  no doubt find it doubly so if they knew exactly what he had been doing  right before she had raked her claws down his cheek.

'I'm glad you all find this so entertaining. What are you doing here anyway? I thought you were falconing today.'

'We thought you might be lonely,' Rashid said, picking up a paperweight  from the table and tossing it from one hand to the other. 'Didn't  realise you were otherwise occupied.'

'Don't drop that,' Zoltan warned, thankful for the opportunity to change  the subject. 'It's Murano glass, three-hundred years old. A present  from the then-king to his sheikha. Worth a fortune, apparently.'

Bahir stopped tossing the paperweight for a moment, peering into the  colours of its mysterious depths. 'Oh well,' he said, tossing it in  Rashid's direction. 'Easy come, easy go.'

Kadar spun around the heavy tome sitting in front of Zoltan and peered down. 'What's this?'

'The Sacred Book of Al-Jirad. I have to know it by the coronation.'

'What? All of it?'

'The entire thing, chapter and verse. Ready to be quoted from at the appropriate moment, to spout the wisdom of the ages.'

Rashid whistled. 'Then, brother, you really do need rescuing.'

Kadar slammed the book shut before Zoltan could stop him. 'Come on, then,' he said, jumping to his feet.

'I don't have time,' he growled. 'I'll see you at dinner.'

'What, you're too busy to spend a few minutes with your best friends when we've all come so far to help you? Nice one.'

'Lame,' Rashid agreed, tossing the paperweight casually in one hand.  'Besides, you have to exercise some time. We're heading for the pool.'  And he threw the paperweight at Zoltan so fast he almost fumbled the  catch and dropped it to the marble floor.