Sheikh's Stand In

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Sheikh's Stand In Page 12

by Sophia Lynn


  Almost hesitantly, she went to open the bag and found two lemon-curd donuts, along with a blueberry bagel and a small container of cream cheese. When she took an experimental sip of the coffee, she found that it was their best Guatemalan blend, still hot and delicious. Charlotte looked around for a note, but to her simultaneous relief and disappointment, she found that there wasn't one.

  “Well, score one for the successful one-night stand theory,” she said out loud, settling at her tiny table to eat.

  It occurred to her that it was late enough to call Viviana. When she checked the clock, she realized Viviana's flight should have landed hours ago, and that meant that it was likely a great time for a sisterly chat. It took her sister a while to come pick up the phone, but just when Charlotte was ready to give up, she answered.

  “How are you doing out there?” she asked.

  “About ready to strangle someone,” Viviana said drily. “There's been so much going on that I don't think I've slept at all. I got here, the apartment that I'm meant to be staying in is a mess, the office that I'm meant to be using seems to be above a diner that hasn't changed its grease traps since the fifties, and the cab driver got lost...so not great. What's going on with you?”

  Charlotte couldn't help but chuckle at her younger sister's pique. Of the two of them, Viviana had always been the one who was concerned with appearances, the one who wanted to make sure that everything was just right. She had, in fact, been one of Charlotte's clients for years at Brooks, but in the last little while, she seemed more interested in striking out on her own.

  “Well, since I talked with you last, there's been a lot going on, actually.”

  Briefly, she outlined what she had decided about one-night stands and how well the last one had gone. She skipped over the more intimate details, but she did end with the fact that Aladdin had sneaked out and left baked goods and coffee in his wake. After she told her story, she stopped, sure that Viviana would have her own take on it. She wasn't disappointed.

  “Are you serious?” demanded Viviana. “Do you have any idea how dangerous that was, and how badly that could have gone for you?”

  “I told him that he couldn't do anything I didn't like,” Charlotte quipped, but she could practically imagine her little sister pacing back and forth in her apartment, her knuckles going white from gripping phone too hard.

  “Yes, because that works so well on murderers and thieves,” Viviana said darkly. “Because that's what it takes to stop violent crimes in their tracks, simply asking people if they could please not do that thing. Seriously, Charlotte, you don't know anything about this guy!”

  “I know that he's good in bed,” Charlotte said with a laugh. “I know that he's nice enough to run to get me donuts and coffee before he makes himself scarce. I mean, that's pretty good if you're talking about a boyfriend, let alone a guy who was here last night and gone today. Honestly, if we put him on a list of the guys that I've been with, he's close to the top.”

  “That's a lot more depressing than you think it is,” Viviana snorted. “But what if he's made a copy of your key? You have some nice things at your apartment. At some point, he might just decide that he can let himself in and help himself. Is that something you want?”

  “And he could have murdered me in my sleep, shot up in my bathroom, or trashed the place. He didn't do anything at all, except be a perfect gentleman.”

  “Somehow I don't really think that perfect gentlemen follow weird girls home at night for one evening of fun....”

  “Well, maybe this one did. Calm down, Viviana! It went well! Can't you just be happy for me?”

  Across the country, she heard her younger sister sigh.

  “All right, you called for approval, not for a lecture. Sis, I'm happy that had a good time. I'm happy that you’re ridiculous gamble paid off, and that instead of getting stabbed and dumped in a New Jersey landfill, you managed to get some donuts and coffee instead.”

  Charlotte sighed.

  “That's the best you can do, huh, Viviana?”

  “It actually is. Next time, make sure that you get his name, okay? I would just like to know who I have to kill if something happens to you.”

  “All right, I got it.”

  Viviana breathed deeply. Charlotte could imagine her shaking her head and giving in.

  “I'm glad he was good for you. You've had too little of that lately.”

  “Yeah, I'm not really thinking of it that way. I had a good time, I put a time limit on it, and now I'm back out and about doing exactly what I like with one better experience under my belt. As far as I'm concerned, it's all good from here.”

  “Just get his name next time, okay?”

  Charlotte hung up after chatting for a little longer, taking another sip of her coffee. In some ways, her sister wasn't wrong. If she had been short on anything for the last few years, it was fun. Now that she had had some, maybe it would work like sympathetic magic and more fun would find its way to her door.

  She was getting ready to throw away her coffee cup when she realized that there was some writing on it. There were no words, she realized, taking a closer look. Instead, there was a phone number.

  “Huh, very nice,” she mused. “You're leaving the ball in my court. I...don't hate this.”

  She fiddled with the cup for a moment. On one hand, the golden rule of a one-night stand was simple—no contact beyond one night. However, there was nothing that prevented her from saying thank you.

  That was fine.

  That was even polite, wasn't it?

  She sat at her table—phone in one hand, coffee cup in the other—and considered this latest turn of events.

  ***

  Manhattan was a small place, at the end of the day. It took the cab less than fifteen minutes to get from Charlotte's little apartment to the elegant brownstone where Aladdin ben-Arie was staying while he was in New York.

  It had taken a little getting used to. At home in Abu Dhabi, the palace was set miles from the city, something that had always irked him. His little brother Mikal, shy and inclined to isolate himself, hadn't minded, but for the far more social Aladdin, that distance was torture. He had always spent a great deal of time in the city, eventually choosing to stay in one of the royal properties downtown for days on end. His parents had been furious when he would stay in the city rather than come home for some event or other.

  Of course, that meant that they were less than thrilled when their firstborn son and heir had decided to go all the way to the United States to get away from one of those special occasions.

  When he got back to the brownstone, he let himself in, enjoying the quiet elegance of the place. The palace was an ostentatious luxury, and the penthouse in Abu Dhabi was expensive and modern, but there was something about the brownstone in Manhattan that suited him well. It was a property that his grandfather had purchased years ago. He was the first member of his family to set foot in it in twenty years. He supposed that made it his in a way that the other places weren't.

  He set his own coffee down on the counter and went to check his messages. He had been avoiding them for almost forty-eight hours, and as he expected, there were five from his father, nearly a dozen from his mother, and unexpectedly, one from his brother.

  Settling himself on the couch, Aladdin pulled up his brother's number.

  “So how much do you like the idea of being disinherited?” was the first thing he heard.

  Aladdin's eyebrows went up and he whistled.

  “Is it as bad as all that?”

  “Oh it's probably much worse,” Mikal said cheerfully. “You remember what was supposed to happen today, right?”

  Aladdin passed a weary hand over his eyes.

  “No, but I'm sure you'll remind me....”

  “Mother had today earmarked for your bridal promenade.”

  “Oh for the love of...is she serious? Father never did that.”

  “Yes, and apparently mother feels the lack of being chosen from the most b
eautiful women in the land.”

  “This is ridiculous,” Aladdin growled. “She can't have missed the fact that we are living in the twenty-first century.”

  “Well, she wants the best for you, and apparently what's good for you goes all the way back to the medieval era.”

  The bridal promenade would consist of women from all corners of the emirate coming to present themselves to the man who would be sheikh. He would walk among them, and at the end, the one he chose would become his wife.

  “She can't be serious.”

  “Well, big brother, I think she is. After all, you haven't given her much hope for choosing a bride for yourself, so I suppose that she wants to step in and help you out.”

  Aladdin gritted his teeth.

  “I will marry when I am damned well and ready, and you can tell her that I have no interest in walking through a group of women as if they were the horses at a fair.”

  Mikal laughed. It was all very well and good for him. He was the second son, and as he had joked more than once, the expectations placed on him were far fewer, and far less serious. For a brief moment, Aladdin seriously thought about abdicating and leaving it all to Mikal.

  “If I were truly to step down and let you have the job that seems to be so funny to you right now, it would break their hearts.”

  “It would,” Mikal agreed, serious now. “You are the firstborn, the light of their age and the future of the country. It has always been so. Aladdin, you can't run forever.”

  Aladdin sighed.

  “No, I can't run forever, but that doesn't mean that I need to come to heel like a trained dog whenever they want to tug my leash. I can rule after Father steps down, and I will find a wife. I just have no intention of doing so as if I were some camel drover choosing a prize racer.”

  From across the world, he could hear his younger brother sigh. Sometimes, he had seriously wondered if Mikal would have been the better heir. His younger brother was dutiful and cared deeply about the country.

  In the end, though, being sheikh was what he had been born to do, and he wouldn't give that up simply because it was inconvenient. It simply would have been nice to have the authority as well as the responsibilities.

  They talked a little bit about lighter matters. Aladdin was almost ready to hang up before Mikal remembered something.

  “So do you, by any chance, have a secret wife out in New York?”

  Aladdin blinked.

  “I beg your pardon?”

  “That's what some of the gossip rags are saying. Father's been keeping it from Mother, but I have an idea that he's wondering, too. You've been out there for almost two months, and some people are wondering if it's more than just the Broadway shows that are keeping you out there.”

  “No, you can reassure Father that I have not come to New York simply to do the thing that I don't want to do in Abu Dhabi,” he said, but even as he did, a pair of bright blue eyes and a confident smile flashed across his vision.

  After he said good-bye to his brother, he headed for the shower. Soon he would call his parents and reassure them that he wasn't dead or straying into the kind of trouble they feared. However, before he did that, he had to think about Charlotte.

  He had gone to Delmarr because he had been told it was wild in a retro kind of way—strange and historical and new all at once. Frankly, once he got there, he hadn't been overly impressed. A loud club full of people with more money than sense, after all, was hardly something exclusive to New York.

  Aladdin had been on the verge of leaving when he saw a girl in blue walk by, holding a bottle as if it were a prize. It was like the moment he set eyes on her, he had triggered what came next. The bottle tumbled from her grasp, and acting on instinct in a move he was not sure he could repeat, he caught it for her.

  He wasn't sure what he was expecting. Perhaps an impressed look at his skill, or maybe an awkward giggle and a number that he had no intention of calling. Instead, he had been challenged. He had never met a girl who was willing to make him dance on attendance before. She made it clear that she was the one who had to be pleased, who had to be impressed. She walked through the bar scene with a kind of pride and self-assurance that couldn't help but catch his eye. He saw her turn with a sharpness that was nearly martial, striding back to her friends like a conquering general.

  He had been on the verge of leaving the bar, but he decided to stay after all. He ordered a drink, grinned when he saw her looking at him, and the rest...

  Charlotte was a singular experience.

  Under the hot spray of the shower, he wondered what kind of queen she would make. Even his mother had to admit that she was born to play the part.

  He shook his head in admiration. He wondered what she would have done if he had offered her a crown. Would she have recoiled and stormed at him for getting above himself? Would she have made a face and dismissed him at once as being far too clingy?

  Or perhaps...

  Perhaps she would have said yes. Perhaps she would have looked at him with that same mischievous grin on her face, and agreed, deciding to see what they could do together.

  Aladdin shook his head free of the fancy. She had his number. She could call, but she had already had her fun. He didn’t expect to hear from her again.

  He finished his shower and was rubbing a towel through his hair when he realized that there was a message on his phone. Grimacing, he checked it.

  Thanks. You're exactly what I wanted!

  For a moment, Aladdin didn't know what to say. He might have been offended by being offered the kind of review that someone might give to a product on an online discussion board. It might have enraged him, or left him seriously questioning what he was doing in New York.

  Instead, he sat down on the bed and laughed until he could feel tears in his eyes. He was a prince on the run from the inevitable, and a man who couldn't seem to please his traditionalist parents, no matter what.

  However, last night he had given Charlotte of New York exactly what she wanted—the woman with the sunny blond hair and the enormous cornflower-blue eyes.

  He debated responding to her. Perhaps this was one of those things that you simply let go. He wasn't sure what the etiquette was, but suddenly he realized something about Charlotte that most people probably didn't see. She was making it up as she went along. She said things in that proud and assured way of hers, and because it was hers, others accepted it as law.

  If she got to make the rules, so did he.

  So glad you enjoyed it. If you ever care for a repeat performance, let me know!

  There were other things that he wanted to say. He wanted to talk about how passionate she had been, giving him something he wasn't sure he had ever had with another woman before. He wanted to know what she was thinking. He longed to tell her how utterly beautiful she was, and not just when she was writhing with passion, but also when she was sleeping so trustingly in his arms.

  She didn't know that he stayed up long after she drifted off, simply watching her. It felt like a rare and precious thing, something that few people got to see and that he wasn't sure he would see again.

  Aladdin shook his head. He was new to the States, but he knew that when a woman as vibrant and direct as Charlotte wanted you, she would let you know.

  ***

  Charlotte laughed a little at the text she got in return. After she sent her thank-you, she had been hit with an odd and foreign case of doubts. Her job was all about presenting the right picture, getting people to see what you wanted them to see, but right now, she felt like a wreck.

  She sent the message, and then when she hadn't received a response in return, she set it aside and didn't think about it. At least, that's what she told herself she did. The truth was that she did some tidying around her apartment and answered a few work e-mails, all while periodically checking her messages.

  When his response came back, she immediately opened it. She told herself that her heart was not pounding, was not eager to see what he had writte
n back. She read the message, and then she read it again. She wasn't sure how to respond.

  For a moment, Charlotte thought about contacting Viviana, but she could already imagine what her sister would say. She would say that a confusing text message was the least of what could have happened to her. She would say that if Charlotte were smart, she would delete the guy's number and pray that she never heard from him again.

  Charlotte resolutely tossed her phone into her purse. She was Charlotte Johns, and she had far more important things to worry about than needing to get a random man's attention.

  Still, he's not a random man, is he?

  Charlotte shivered, remembering how he had touched her and made her feel. Regardless of how she tried to pass it off, she couldn't dismiss it.

  It was Saturday, but as her employers said, the great eye of the public never slept. She was young and hungry in New York, and that meant that there was always work that she could be doing.

  ***

  That evening, Charlotte found herself at a gallery opening, watching over another success story. The young artist who was showing that evening was a perpetually nervous man, one who had drifted in and out of rehab several times. He was brilliant, however, and it was through Charlotte's company's work that he was now seen as a good risk for conservative art buyers, rather than a loose cannon.

  Her presence was more a formality than anything else, and she was having a good time just looking at the art. He was a watercolor artist, something that someone told her was rare for a man. He used greens and blues liberally on enormous canvases, creating a deep and murky world. They gave Charlotte the impression of lying at the bottom of a pool and looking up.

  She was dressed conservatively that evening. There were some art galleries where she could dress as if she were going out for a hot night of clubbing, but this wasn't one of them. She chose a dress in demure black-and-gray florals, something that was cut high enough to hide her generous curves but hugged her body in a way that prevented her from feeling as if she were wearing a sack.

 

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