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Page 137

by Cathy Williams


  ‘Well, when our baby’s born—’

  ‘—he won’t care what his mother and father get up to,’ said Jake firmly. ‘Not for years and years.’

  ‘And it is six months away,’ agreed Eve consideringly. ‘You might have got tired of making love to me by then.’

  ‘I’ll never get tired of making love to you,’ asserted Jake fiercely. ‘I feel as though I’ve been sleepwalking for most of my life. Only since I met you have I realised exactly what I was missing. We fit together. Without you I was never totally complete.’

  Eve tipped her head onto his shoulder. ‘That’s a nice thing to say.’

  ‘It’s the truth.’

  ‘And I’m the luckiest woman in the world.’ She smiled. ‘I’m so glad Ellie phoned you and told you what was going on.’

  ‘So am I,’ said Jake fervently. ‘Although I didn’t know if you’d agree to take the job at the school. If you hadn’t, I guess I’d have had to find another reason to visit Falconbridge. Though I’d have been devastated if I’d found that your grandmother had sold the house and you weren’t there any more.’

  ‘Someone would have directed you to Adam’s farm,’ said Eve at once. ‘But I’m glad it didn’t come to that. Ellie so much enjoyed coming here for the wedding. And Adam and his family…I bet they’re still talking about travelling in a private plane.’

  Jake looked sheepish. ‘Yeah, I guess Adam and I got off on the wrong foot, didn’t we?’

  ‘Well, neither of you was exactly friendly towards the other.’

  ‘You know why?’ Jake grimaced. ‘I thought he was another friend of yours. And poor old Adam thought I was another of Cassie’s hangers-on.’

  Eve pulled a face now. ‘She won’t like it when she hears she’s going to be a grandmother.’

  ‘Like I care what that woman thinks.’

  ‘Well, she did make an effort and send us a wedding present,’ said Eve charitably. ‘And I’m so happy, Jake. I can’t forget that without her we’d never have met.’

  Jake sighed. ‘Okay. But I can’t forget the way she treated you when you were a baby. You can ask me to forgive her, but I’ll never forget.’

  Nor would she, thought Eve, as Jake put his arm about her. She probed the small mound at her waist with a gentle hand. Her baby would be loved, not just by her and Jake, but by all his family. The way a baby should be, she thought, burying her face in the warm hollow of Jake’s neck.

  Craving Beauty

  By Nalini Singh

  TORONTO • NEW YORK • LONDON

  AMSTERDAM • PARIS • SYDNEY • HAMBURG

  STOCKHOLM • ATHENS • TOKYO • MILAN • MADRID

  PRAGUE • WARSAW • BUDAPEST • AUCKLAND

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  One

  “With this bond, I take my life and put it in the keeping of Marc Pierre Bordeaux. Forever and eternity.” Hira’s heart shattered into a thousand pieces as she repeated the ritual words.

  Smiling, the elder lifted the trailing edge of the silken red ribbon tied around Hira’s wrist and fed it through the lacy aperture atop the wall dividing the men from the women. The marriage ceremony was almost complete—soon she’d be wife to a man with ghost-gray eyes.

  What should’ve been the most wonderful day of her life was instead marking the destruction of her dreams. Dreams of love, dreams of family, dreams of tenderness. Because instead of being wooed and won, Hira Dazirah had been part and parcel of a business agreement.

  Her wrist jerked as the ribbon went taut. At the same time, the elder said, “He is bound.”

  On the other side of the wall, a single voice rose in the haunting cadences of the blessing chant.

  Per the customs of her homeland, Zulheil, in a few more seconds Marc would be her husband. Marc with his slow smile and eyes full of temptation. Marc with his warrior’s face and hunter’s walk. Marc, who’d demanded her father seal their business deal with his daughter’s hand.

  She’d thought him different. From the first, his obvious strength had attracted her, as had the way he had of looking at her as though she was precious. Then he’d smiled at her in that slow, sexy way. Unable to resist, she’d softened inside and out, responding to the glittering passion in his eyes.

  Believing that their shared smile augured the beginning of something priceless, she’d waited for him to court her. For the first time since Romaz had trampled on her heart, she’d felt the bloom of new hope.

  Two days later he’d offered for her hand, without having spoken to her, and her illusions about her American stranger had shattered. Instead of wanting to know the woman, Marc had been entranced by the shell of her body, the beauty of her face. The staggering pain of her bewilderingly intense disappointment had yet to leave her. It sat like a heavy rock on her heart, crushing and unable to be ignored.

  “It is done,” her mother, Amira, said. “The blessing chant has been completed. You are married, daughter.”

  Hira blinked and nodded, none of her anguish showing on her face. They sat in a sumptuous room filled with the women of the Dazirah family, women whose sharp eyes missed nothing. She would never shame her mother by coming apart at the seams.

  Amira stroked her cheek. “I know this is not what you wanted for yourself, but it will be all right. Though your new husband is scarred, he doesn’t appear cruel.”

  Not unless cruelty could be defined as inciting hope and then crushing it. “No,” she whispered. “He doesn’t.”

  But that told her nothing. Romaz hadn’t appeared cruel, yet he’d ripped out her heart and laughed at her while he’d done it. She’d thought herself in love, so much so that she’d left her home and ran to him, ready to marry him without her father’s consent.

  It had been the only time in her life that she’d considered an action that would’ve brought the scorn of society on her proud family. That fateful day, her happiness had been as iridescent as a summer rainbow, joyous and pure.

  The minute he’d seen her in the doorway of his humble apartment, Romaz’s dark-lashed eyes had lit up in surprise. “Hira. What are you doing here?” He’d glanced over her shoulder, as if expecting an entourage.

  She’d walked in, brushing past him, sure of her welcome. After all, he’d told her that he loved her. “I have come to stay,” she’d said, excited and a little afraid but so glad to be with the man she loved.

  He hadn’t embraced her as she’d anticipated. “Your family?” he’d asked, a frown on his handsome face.

  She’d thought his reserve sprang from displeasure at her forwardness and had been sure that once he heard what she had to say, he’d forgive her for taking the initiative. “They won’t miss me till dinner. We have time to marry. They cannot stop us after that.”

  Some of her nervous joy had started to fade at his continued lack of a response. “Romaz?” She’d glanced at the still-open door, wondering why he didn’t shut it so they could have privacy to make their plans.

  He’d given her a strained smile. “Your father will disown you. You must think this through.”

  “I have! He’ll never agree to our marriage. Never. Already he seeks other matches for me.” She’d wanted to touch him, but there had been an unfamiliar hardness in his eyes that had stopped her. “We don’t need my father’s money. You work hard and I’ll get work, too. We’ll survive.”

  The bitter smirk on his face had confused her. “You? You wouldn’t know honest work if it hit you in the face.”

  Shocked, she’d stood there, unable to understand his anger. “Romaz?”

  “Do you think I’ll be able to keep you in the style to which you’re accustomed?” He’d glanced dismissively at the bracelets around her wrists an
d the baubles in her ears.

  His response sprang from male pride, she’d thought, relief shooting through her body like cool spring rain, bringing renewed hope. “None of it belongs to me. It is the family’s.” Stupidly she’d thought that that would reassure him. “I don’t need such things if I have your love.” She’d been so earnest in her desire to nurture his self-confidence.

  “Well you might not, but I do,” he’d snapped.

  Later she’d realized it was the very naiveté of her statements that had caused his charming veneer to crumble. Her attempt at salvaging his pride had instead proved the futility of his courtship. Financially Hira was worth nothing without her family.

  “What’s the use of marrying you if I don’t get access to the Dazirah coffers?” He’d raked her body up and down. “You might be beautiful, but in the dark, one female body is the same as another.”

  She’d been so badly wounded by that unexpected blow that she’d frozen, her feet rooted to the floor. “You won’t marry me unless I come with my father’s money?”

  He’d shrugged. “How else do you expect me to move up in life? Unlike your wealthy family, I have only one asset—my looks.” He’d pointed to a face so handsome it routinely caused women to stop and stare in the streets. “I intend to use them to my advantage. I don’t want to labor all my life like my father.”

  His sneer had destroyed her final illusions about him, for his father was a respected and skilled man. His family wasn’t as rich as hers, but they weren’t poor, either. Zulheil looked after its own, but no man could expect to gain wealth without work. Her father, too, spent much time “laboring” in his businesses.

  Yet, even after Romaz had said those horrible things, even after she’d seen the truth of his nature, she hadn’t wanted to give up the tattered remains of her dreams. Hadn’t wanted to admit she’d made such a horrible mistake. She’d been so foolishly innocent of the ways of the world, so untutored in deceit. “But…you said you loved me.”

  His expression had turned into a leer. “Any man would love a body like yours. Of course, I’ll take that part of you if you’re offering it without charge. Marriage is too high a price to own just you.”

  He’d crushed her with that dishonorable proposition. Barely able to function, she’d run from his apartment, wandering the quiet back streets for three hours. Just before darkness fell, she’d returned home by the same secret route she’d used to leave, and no one had ever learned of her attempted elopement. They just knew that suddenly all the fight had gone out of her. In one afternoon Romaz had achieved the outcome her father had been aiming for, for twenty-four years.

  Now, almost six months after Romaz had cast her aside because her body alone wasn’t enough, it was the greatest irony that she found herself married to a man who cared nothing for her money and only for her body.

  “Daughter?”

  She jerked up at the sound of her mother’s voice. “Yes.”

  Amira smiled. “Come, it is time for you to wait for your husband.”

  Time to allow a stranger to touch her, Hira thought, anger spiking. Fascinated with him from the first, his act in bargaining for her like an object had turned her budding desire into fury. How dare he reduce her to nothing more than the sweetener for a business deal?

  As she followed her mother up the stairs, her eyes narrowed. Marc Bordeaux might’ve married her, but he would not have her. Not like this. Not without joy and tenderness. Not until she knew the heart of the man he was.

  Marc leaned in the open doorway, his body thrumming with anticipatory tension. “Why the face? It’s your wedding night, not an execution.” He tried to keep his tone light, but it was hard when temptation sat right in front of him.

  Hira occupied the middle of a canopied Arabian bed that screamed decadence. Hung with rich velvet curtains in a warm gold and made up with sheets of silken white, it invited sin and seduction. The luxurious hangings whispered softly in the heavy heat of the desert breeze wafting in through the open balcony doors, full of murmurs of welcome.

  It was as if Zulheil itself was urging him to indulge his hunger for his wife. To complete the invitation, her slender feet rested on pale-pink rose petals, petals that echoed the delicate pink of her wedding garments.

  She should’ve looked like a dream. His dream.

  But instead of welcome, there was only cool distance in her eyes. The woman who’d captivated him with a single smile was subsumed under the crystal hardness of icy sophistication.

  One aristocratic eyebrow rose. “What did my father promise you in the deal? Tell me and I’ll deliver.” That cultured voice with its exotic accent swept along his bloodstream, inciting him without intent. Her voice flared at the end, a stab of heat that was quickly smothered by the ice, leaving him uncertain that it had ever appeared.

  He clenched the fists he’d shoved into the pockets of his tuxedo pants, a feeling of dread infiltrating the joy with which he’d begun this night. “You agreed to this marriage, princess.” What could’ve been an endearment came out as a taunt, her coldness stoking his temper. “I never wanted a wife who wasn’t happy to be mine.”

  He’d starved for this moment since he’d first seen her on the balcony of her family home in Abraz, Zulheil’s biggest city. Her face had been upturned to gaze at the stars, a wistful and somehow hungry smile gracing that lovely face.

  “Your father refused to let me date you,” he told her. “You must know how old-fashioned he is. It was marriage or nothing, and you were asked your choice.” He’d been startled by Kerim Dazirah’s decree that no man was going to be allowed near his daughter without the ties of marriage, but had made his choice in an instant.

  Driven by feelings he barely understood, he’d agreed to a marriage without courtship, chanced forever on the strength of one shared smiled, one instant of pure happiness. No woman had ever made him react with such impetuousness. No woman but Hira.

  “Yes,” she said softly, her strange light-brown eyes fixed on a point beyond his shoulder. “I had a choice. As much as any woman does when she has no independent means of income, no way to fight for her freedom, no chance of escape.” Her tone was as emotionless as a doll’s. “You were better than the alternative.” The final line was heavy with disgust.

  “Who?” He didn’t like the idea of her with some other man, though he hadn’t known of her existence until barely a week ago. From that moment, she’d become his. Only his.

  Her full lips twisted. “You’ve met him. Marir.”

  “He’s a relic.” Marc recalled his one encounter with the oily merchant who was a crony of Hira’s father. He’d disliked the man on sight because his eyes had kept straying to Hira, who’d been acting as hostess for Kerim’s banquet. Marc had almost been able to see the old lech fighting the urge to lick his lips.

  Simmering with possessive anger he hadn’t then had any right to, he’d barely walked away without punching Marir in his florid face. “Why would your father consider him a suitable match?” In spite of his lack of a beautiful face, Marc knew he was of value to the Dazirah family because of his wealth and business status.

  “He has royal blood. Many times removed, but present nonetheless.” Her mouth curved in a humorless smile. “My father always wanted to claim royal connections.”

  Another blow against him—he was no more royalty than the lowest bayou rat. “Then why did he accept me?”

  “In my father’s eyes, you are American royalty. As well as being a man of considerable wealth, you do business with our sheik and are welcome in his home—close enough to royalty to please him.”

  Marc clenched his hands even tighter, frustrated and angry. And hurt. Why did it hurt that this beautiful woman was rejecting him? Why did he feel like something indefinably precious was slipping out of his grasp? “So that was all that was going for me? I wasn’t old and fat?” He didn’t spell out what they both knew. He might not be old and fat, but he was disfigured.

  Scars ran in fine white lines down the
left side of his face. His body bore far deeper marks. He’d become used to them long ago, his confidence founded on more substantial things, but this beautiful ice princess would surely have noticed. When she’d agreed to his proposal, he’d thought that the scars didn’t matter to her. Now he saw that he’d been deluding himself. There was no welcome in Beauty’s eyes for this particular Beast.

  She gave a regal nod and the shimmering light from the tiny, perfectly detailed chandelier caught on the diamonds dripping from her ears. “I do not know you. You are a stranger. My father may have refused to allow a courtship, but you didn’t even try to talk to me once!”

  In fact, Marc had asked to speak to her several times before the wedding but had accepted her father’s explanation that such things were not done in Zulheil. Unfamiliar with the marriage rituals of this country, he’d been wary of giving offence and losing his chance to claim Hira. Not that that was any excuse, he thought harshly. He should’ve tried harder.

  “Are your feelings going to change as we get to know each other?” Despite everything, he continued to ache for the gift of warmth she’d tantalized him with just once before. But he had no intention of taking something that wasn’t freely given. Not even when desire was digging into him with razor-sharp talons and his body was heavy with passion so hot, it was almost pain.

  A sudden shadow dulled the almost-golden brilliance of her eyes. “I once loved a man.” Her long lashes lowered. “And I don’t think I will ever love again.”

  Her words formed an arrow aimed at dreams he’d barely acknowledged but now knew were vital to his existence. “Why did you marry me, then? Why make us both miserable?”

  She raised her head and he caught a glimpse of red-hot anger in those changeable eyes. “My father said you wouldn’t sign the agreement unless I married you. The deal with you is very important to the clan.”

 

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