by Sophia Lynn
“That does make things more complicated,” he agreed. “And some of the villagers say that they are more well armed than we thought they would be. May I respectfully suggest…”
“You may not,” Dario said shortly. “This is my place here, both as a commander in the Jabal military myself and as the First Among Ten Thousand.”
Bishr might not have liked it, but he knew better than to argue, which Dario decided was a blessing of sorts anyway.
“Yes, sheikh. Your order, then?”
“We wait until the sun is a little lower in the sky. We assess the situation, and if possible, we act as soon as we can. There may be some people who cannot wait much longer.”
He took the note back from Bishr and placed it in his pocket. There had been something so desperate and so afraid about the girl who had bumped into him. She was brave to try to get word out, but from the glare of the man who had come to collect her, she might be punished for that bravery.
What stuck with him, though, were her enormous gray eyes. They were as clear as water, and it felt as if he could see right down into her soul.
Save me, save me please, her eyes seemed to say, and he knew that he had to do everything he could.
The other men had appeared, the forward guard for this particular expedition. Outside, waiting behind the rise, were the military vehicles to provide them with the support they would need.
“All right,” he said. “We’re moving out.”
*
Back in her trailer, Bailey couldn’t relax. She stripped off the headdress, but she stayed in the robe, pacing back and forth in her tiny space. Abdul had threatened he would tell Christensen that she had been flirting with men in town, but it was just as likely he would hold the knowledge over her head for some kind of gain.
There was a rough pounding on the door. She knew she should go see who it was, but instead, she picked up a small paring knife that she used to cut fruit, holding it down flat against her thigh. Bailey retreated into the farthest corner of the trailer, which she knew painfully was not very far away from the door at all.
After a few minutes of cursing, the key turned in the lock, and she realized that it was Christensen after all, who had keys to all of the trailers on the site. To her dismay, she realized that he was drunk, and there was that mean glint his eye.
“Abdul tells me you went to town to find yourself a man,” he snarled. “What the hell are you on about, then, Tyler?”
“Abdul is a liar,” she said as calmly as she could. “He hit on me on the way back to the camp, and then he threatened me. I guess this is what he came up with.”
He stilled, glaring at her. She clutched the handle of the paring knife so hard that she knew her knuckles were turning white.
“Is that so?” Christensen asked, suspicious.
“It is.”
He watched her so intently that she thought he must be able to see her pulse, the frantic beating of her heart.
“Abdul needs to learn to keep his damned mouth shut,” Christensen declared.
Instead of leaving, however, he simply closed the door behind him.
“I’ve been watching you,” he said, his voice somehow more terrifying when it got quiet. “You’ve got potential. Wouldn’t have brought you out here unless I thought so…”
At that point, Bailey stopped listening to him. There was nothing he said that was important at this point. Right now, she had to watch his body to see what he would do next. She forced herself to breathe, because to do otherwise would mean she would be faint and light-headed when she did have to move.
“Pretty little thing. Very pretty,” Christensen said, drawing closer.
When he moved, he didn’t crowd her like she was prepared for him to do. Instead, his long arm snaked out, and he snagged her wrist, drawing her stumbling into his body with a sharp cry.
“Yes, just keep quiet, Tyler. This is for… for your own good. Show the men to keep their damn hands off of you, right…?”
Somehow, she ended up on her back on the narrow bed, Christensen kneeling over her. He reached for his clothes, and that was enough for her to strike.
With a scream that seemed to echo through the trailer and the very mountains themselves, she jabbed upward at him. The knife sank into… something, and then Christensen threw himself backward, screaming with fury.
Bailey couldn’t figure out how badly she had hurt him, and at the moment she didn’t care. She threw herself across the trailer to the door. To her relief, Christensen hadn’t locked it behind him, and she threw it open, stumbling into the free air.
She had taken two steps to freedom, but then she yelped as he stumbled forward, grabbing her by her long brown hair.
“Come back here, you little bitch, you fucking cut me…”
She turned around, ready to fight, to claw, to do whatever she had to to get away while knowing that it was likely futile. He grabbed her, but when she clawed at him, he pushed her to the hard ground. Bailey gasped with pain, feeling a hard thunk against her temple. For a moment, her vision swam, but then it righted itself again.
Suddenly, there was the quick thunderous smatter of gunshots.
Christensen swore, and in his distraction, Bailey managed to twist away and run into the darkness. She veered away from the sound of the gunfire, into the darkness of the desert. It was miles to get to the village, but it was her only chance. The only ones with guns in this part of the desert were Christensen’s team, poachers, and bandits, and if they caught her…
She pelted into the darkness, moving as fast as she could. For a moment, she thought that the thunderous pounding was the beating of her own heart, but then, with dread, she realized it was hoofbeats. She was running fast, but she was no match for the horse, which gained on her with every stride.
The horse pulled up alongside her, and then with a sharp cry, the rider leaned over the side, wrapping an arm around her torso and lifting her straight up.
“No, no!” she screamed, struggling against his grasp, but he threw her over his hard thighs, holding her in place with one hand.
“Stay calm,” said a voice in English. She was shocked to realize that she recognized the voice. “You’re safe, stay calm, little darling…”
It was the man from the village earlier. He had read her note, and somehow, he had found her. The shock combined with the blessed relief of being finally safe was too much.
Bailey fainted dead away.
CHAPTER TWO
In the same hospital where he had watched his father die, Dario now sat next to a tiny girl who slept soundly in the white bed. She looked almost doll-like under the white covers, so small and frail.
At some point, a nurse had come in to clean her up, washing away the grit and blood from the wound on her temple.
“It could have been much worse,” the doctor had assured him. “She might have a small concussion, and she is definitely malnourished and exhausted, but she should be fine. She’ll likely wake up sometime today.”
He wasn’t sure whether he was relieved or not that she was still out like a light when he returned in the late afternoon. Dario had a dozen things to do, but right now, all he wanted was to sit by her bedside.
He could feel the night’s effects on him as well. He slumped down further in the chair next to the bed, his eyelids starting to droop.
“Well, if you’re going to sleep, I should as well,” he murmured, feeling himself drift off.
“You can have the bed if you want,” said a soft voice.
He jerked up to look into that same pair of vivid gray eyes that had stuck in his memory. She sat up in bed, holding her hospital gown around her.
“Where am I?” she asked. When she spoke, she winced, reaching for the bump at her temple. Before he could think about what he was doing, he reached out to grab her wrist before she could touch it.
“You’re at the hospital in Jabal,” he said. “You fainted during the raid on Chri
stensen’s camp, and we brought you here.”
He could see the memories coming back to her, and he could see the moment when she realized who he was.
“You’re… you’re the man from the village! You picked me up on your horse…”
“I did,” Dario said with a slight smile. “In the middle of everything, I saw you running into the desert. I went to get you, but then you fainted on me and… well, here we are.”
“Thank you,” she said. Her words were quiet, but he could feel the depth of her gratitude in those eyes. Could she keep anything a secret with eyes like those, he wondered.
“You’re welcome. I am merely sorry that you became engaged in such an operation.”
She winced.
“I needed the money,” she said, her voice small. “My mom, well, we don’t do so great, and the offer sounded like it was magic, like it was everything that I might have… well. I know better now.”
He nodded sympathetically.
“I understand,” he said, standing. “Now that you are up, I can go notify the people at your embassy. We can get things straightened out for you.”
The smile she gave him, even with the white bandage taped to her head, was tremulous, but as beautiful as the dawn.
“Thank you again,” she said softly. “My name is Bailey. I would really, really like to know the name of the man who helped me out so much.”
He grinned at her from the door.
“Dario,” he said, and for some reason, he didn’t say any more.
*
Things were never simple, Bailey realized. For two days she stayed in the hospital, antsy to get out. She was terrified of the bills she was racking up, before one of the nurses kindly told her that they were being covered by the state. That was fine, but then when she tried to check herself out, she found that she was not able to do so.
It was about then when she had realized that the embassy had never appeared, and the fear from being in Christensen’s camp came back.
When she had demanded to speak with the embassy, a large and stern military official had come to speak with her. He was nothing like Dario, who had treated her with such kindness; he was perfectly blunt.
She could either continue her convalescence at the hospital, or she could be taken to a detainment area.
“Detained?” she had sputtered. “What for?”
“You are under investigation for the crime of attempting to remove priceless national treasures from the country of Jabal, part of the Christensen case. At the moment, your role in the case is unclear, and you are staying put until that role is understood.”
“My role…?”
“Or do you intend to call Sheikh al-Nejem a liar?” he said coldly. From the look on his face, that would be a very bad idea indeed.
“Who?” she blurted out.
The man looked at her, obviously impatient and ready to be done with her.
“You told him you needed the money and that you were involved. Obviously, this must be investigated further, before you can be cleared.”
She stared at him, feeling as if the world had turned upside down. The words he was saying made sense in and of themselves, but together, they felt like nonsense.
“Are you talking about Dario?”
If anything, her outburst made the official look at her even more coldly.
“Yes. Dario al-Nejem, First Among Ten Thousand. The Sheikh of Jabal.”
Bailey’s mouth went dry. She couldn’t match it up. The highest law in the land could not be the man who had rescued her, could not be the man who had sat by her bed.
The official left the room, leaving her lost in her thoughts and pondering what her fate might be.
The next few days passed slowly. The bruise on her forehead faded until it was a mere smudge, and the pain went away before that. Soon she was pacing restlessly in her room. They allowed her to send a message to her mother telling her that she was fine, but beyond that, she was not allowed her phone.
A day after she saw the military official, a representative from the embassy came to see her.
“You were breaking the law,” the woman said, not without sympathy. “You came to this country to work with criminals.”
“But I didn’t know,” Bailey said for what felt like the thousandth time.
The woman shook her head.
“Jabal, like many other parts of the Middle East, has had many sacred treasures taken from their shores. They are protective to say the least, and they do not tolerate theft in this regard.”
Bailey swallowed, on the verge of tears.
“What’s going to happen to me?” she asked.
The woman sighed.
“We’re not quite sure yet,” she said gently. “The wheels are turning, however, and I believe that most would rather just let you go. Just sit tight and don’t cause trouble, all right? We’ll figure something out for you.”
The days dragged out until she thought they had forgotten her utterly. Perhaps this was her punishment, to stay in a small hospital room, overlooked and forgotten until she went insane.
Finally, almost a week after she had seen the representative, a woman she had never met before showed up with a shopping bag for her.
“All right, Miss Tyler, you need to get changed. We’re leaving the hospital now.”
For a moment, she thought she was being told to change into prison coveralls, but then she looked down and realized that she was being given robes of the kind worn in the countryside. When she put on the dark robes and the headdress, she felt as if she was being muffled in fabric.
“What’s going on?” she asked, keeping her voice as calm as she could. “Where am I going?”
“You are going to the excavation site close to the Sinn mountains. Things will be explained to you there.”
It occurred to Bailey that she could dig in her heels, protest, kick and scream. The idea of being taken back to the scene of one of the worst nights of her life was terrifying. Instead, she swallowed her protests and dressed as the woman waited impatiently.
“Does… does the American embassy know where I am going?”
The woman nodded.
“They have been apprised, and they will be in contact with you later.”
With that, Bailey had to be content. The woman ushered her down to a waiting car outside the hospital. Bailey was slightly shocked at the number of people walking around, living their lives, checking their phones and getting food from the falafel stand. Her life had felt so intense for so long that she couldn’t even remember what normalcy felt like. She envied them immensely.
The car took them to the edge of town, where she was transferred to a jeep. The driver settled her comfortably into the back, which was something of a comfort, before he started driving.
It took almost four hours to get to the site in the desert, and though she was comfortable and given food and water, Bailey couldn’t stop the stab of fear going all the way through her. What was happening?
She could tell they were back at the excavation site, but a huge change had come over it. The trailers had been replaced by state-of-the-art mobile homes, and at the center of it, improbably and quite gorgeously, was an enormous brocade tent.
“What’s going on here?” she asked, but the driver only shook his head.
“Not for me to tell you, I’m afraid. Here, I’m to show you to your mobile home.”
He took her to a small but comfortably appointed mobile home, where she found all of her things she had thought lost forever waiting for her. After that, there was nothing for her to do but wait.
Almost an hour later, there was a knock on her door. Bailey had spent the last week with people making free with her personal space, and for a moment, she barely knew that she was meant to allow them in. Cautiously, moving as if there were some kind of dark beast waiting for her, she opened the door, and there stood Dario.
Since they had seen each other, she had someho
w convinced herself that he couldn’t be that handsome, that she was simply overwhelmed because he had saved her life. Now that Bailey was confronted with the man face-to-face, she realized that had not been an exaggeration or a hallucination.
Dario was an exceptionally handsome man, tall enough that she had to tilt her head back to look at him, muscular enough that it made sense he had been able to lift her on his horse so easily. Dressed casually in the fatigues, boots, and white tank top that were worn by so many off-duty soldiers around the world, he was almost breathtakingly handsome.
The only problem was that now she knew who he was.
She didn’t see the tentative smile or the bright hopeful look on his face. Instead, she dropped her eyes and dipped down in the half bow that was so common in this part of the world.
“Your highness,” she said, her voice low.
“No, that’s not necessary,” he said. To her surprise, he took her shoulders, straightening her up. Bailey looked up into his dark eyes, shocked at the simple humor there.
“Can I come in?” he asked.
It had been so long since someone had asked her permission for something, she hesitated a moment before she gave it to him.
“I’m not sure that I can stop you,” she said, stepping aside.
When he walked into her trailer, Bailey wondered with a slightly wry humor how she had never noticed before that he was a sheikh. He walked in as if he owned the place and everything in it. When he glanced at her with the same kind of proprietary gleam, she could feel the anger that had been fraying at the back of her mind start to slip.
“How are you finding your accommodations?” he asked, and it was a simple enough question. If she had been a visiting dignitary or scholar, it would have been fine. However, she was not.
“I’m finding them a little confusing,” Bailey said bluntly. Dario looked slightly taken aback by her bluntness, and right now that suited her just fine. Let him see what happened when he kept her in the dark too long.
“Ever since I woke up, I’ve had no idea what is happening to me. At first I thought I was going to go home, and now, for some reason, I’m in the Sinn mountains again. No one is telling me what is happening, and… and…”