by Abby Green
The haunting call of the muezzin started up in the city nearby and it tugged on her heart. She’d once fantasised about living here for ever with Kaden, but this was like a nightmare version of that dream.
As if sensing her turmoil, Kaden came out of his chair and down on one knee beside Julia. He took her hand in his. For a hysterical moment she thought he was going to propose to her, but then he said, “You said it yourself when you came here—two babies change everything. I won’t allow them to be brought up on another continent when their heritage is here, in this country. It’s two babies, Julia. How can you even hope to cope with that on your own? They deserve to have two parents, a secure home and grounding. I can provide that. They will have roles to fulfil in this country—one of them will be the next Emir, or Queen of Burquat. Who knows? They might even rule together …”
Julia moved back in her seat. The thought of him seeing how his touch affected her was terrifying. “They also deserve to have two parents who love one another.”
Kaden’s face became cynical as he dropped her hand and spat out, “Love? You speak of fairytales that don’t exist. We will make this work, Julia, because we have to. We don’t need love.”
She saw the conflict in his eyes and on his face. His mouth was a thin line.
He stood up, instantly tall and intimidating. “I’ll do whatever I have to to make this work. You know this is the only way. I will be a good husband to you, Julia. I will support you and respect you.” A flash of heat sparked between them. “And I will be faithful to you.”
A week later Julia looked at herself in the floor-length mirror in her dressing room. The dawn light hadn’t even broken outside yet. According to Burquati tradition, they would exchange vows and rings in a simple civil ceremony as dawn broke.
At any other time Julia would have found the prospect impossibly romantic. As it was all she could think about was Kaden’s grim avowal: “I’ll do whatever I have to to make this work.”
She was wearing an ivory gown, long-sleeved and modest, but it clung to every curve and moved sinuously when she walked. Thankfully the heavy material skimmed over her bump, so it wasn’t too glaringly obvious. A lace veil was pinned low on the back of her head, and Jasmine had coiled her hair into a loose chignon. She wore pearl drop earrings, and Kaden had presented her with a stunning princess cut diamond ring set in old gold the day before, telling her it had been his mother’s engagement ring, to be kept for his own bride.
The thought of wearing a ring that his first wife had also worn made her feel sullied somehow, but she hadn’t had the nerve to say anything to a closed-off and taciturn Kaden. It couldn’t be clearer that he was viewing this marriage as a kind of penance.
If she was stronger … Julia sighed. It was more than strength she needed to resist the will of Kaden. And deep within her she had to admit to a feeling of security at knowing that at least her babies would live lives free of shadows and doubts. She wasn’t even going to admit to another much more personal and illicit feeling … of peace. Julia quickly diverted her thoughts away from that dangerous area.
She thought of the whirlwind it had been since she’d tacitly agreed to this marriage. And of the very muted fanfare that had greeted the public announcement a few days ago. At dinner on the evening their nuptials had been announced, Julia had voiced her building concern to Kaden; the reality of what might be expected of her had started sinking in. “Wasn’t your mother half-English? The people will be used to a foreign Sheikha, won’t they?”
Kaden had avoided Julia’s eye, and that had made her instantly nervous. “Unfortunately the track record of Sheikhas here hasn’t been good since my mother died. Both my wife and my stepmother never really connected with the people. As for my mother … They accepted her, yes … after a rocky start. The truth is that my father went against his own father’s wishes to marry for love. The only reason he was allowed to marry my mother was because she came from a lineage on her father’s side that went back as far as our own.”
He’d looked at her then, with a carefully veiled expression. “It took the people some time to accept her, but they did, and when she died they were just as devastated as my father. He never came to terms with her death during Samia’s childbirth. It changed him … made him withdraw and become more cynical … He blamed himself for having pursued his own selfish desires in bringing her here.”
Julia had protested. “But it was just an awful tragedy.”
Kaden had abruptly changed the conversation then.
Julia had hardly slept since that night, more and more aware of how hard it was likely to be for her to be accepted by the Burquati people, and wondering how far Kaden was prepared to test his people’s limits of acceptance to keep his heirs safe—and here.
CHAPTER EIGHT
KADEN paced back and forth in the huge ceremonial ballroom of the palace. He was dressed in the royal Burquati military uniform. His chief aides and the officiator for the wedding ceremony waited patiently. He looked out of the window for the umpteenth time and saw the faint pink trails in the clear sky that heralded the dawn breaking. The thought of how delicate Julia had looked at dinner the previous evening. She’d hardly said a word, and her eyes had been huge, full of shadows, with the faintest purple smudges underneath.
He bit back a curse, hating the urgency rushing through his blood that had nothing to do with protocol and much to do with his disturbing need to see Julia.
He hadn’t felt like this on his first wedding day. He’d been battling an almost dread feeling of suffocation that day. But since his marriage had ended he’d put that down to a presentiment of what had happened with his wife, and nothing to do with the lingering memory of another woman.
A sound came from the other end of the room and Kaden turned. His mind was emptied of all thought. Julia was a vision in ivory edged with pale gold as she walked towards him, with Jasmine holding her dress behind her. Her face was obscured by a long veil, and his eyes dropped to where the swell of her belly told the story of why they were getting married.
Something so fierce and primal gripped him in that moment that he had to clench his jaw and fists to stop shaking with it as Julia came to a stop just inches away. She was looking down, and Kaden longed to tell everyone to leave so that he could pull back the veil and tip her face up to his.
Instead he reached for her hand and lifted it up, bringing it to his mouth. Her head lifted and he could see the shape of her face, the flash of grey eyes, as he kissed her palm. Her perfume was soft and delicate, winding around him like a silken tie, bringing with it evocative memories and whispers of the past.
In that moment he hated her for coming back into his life, for reawakening a part of himself that he’d thought buried for ever. The only part of him that had ever been vulnerable, and the only part of him that had believed a different future was possible for him. It hadn’t been.
With Julia’s hand still in his he turned to the officiator and said curtly, “Let’s get started.”
What felt like aeons later Julia was sitting beside Kaden at the massive dining table and her face felt as if it was frozen in a rictus grin. Her heart hurt. From the moment Kaden had said, “Let’s get started” earlier, he’d been curt to the point of dismissal.
She dreaded to think what the photographs would look like—Kaden tall and stern, and her like a rabbit in the headlights. Only a few of months ago she’d been independent and strong, living her life, and now she’d morphed into someone she barely recognised. All because of this man coming back into her life like a tornado.
A small voice mocked her: she’d been with him every step of the way.
Julia straightened her spine. She wasn’t going to let Kaden ignore her like this. She turned towards him, where he sat beside her. He was looking out over the sea of some five hundred guests with a brooding expression. She knew none of them except for his three youngest sisters, who had travelled from their schools and colleges for the weekend. Samia and her husband had been
unable to attend, and Julia had felt a little relieved, not sure if she could take Samia’s hostility again.
“Kaden?”
He turned, and Julia sucked in a shocked breath when she saw the look of pure bleakness on his face. But in an instant it was gone, and replaced with something she thought she’d never see again. Heat. He took one of her hands and brought it to his mouth. His touch sent her pulse skyrocketing and a flood of heat between her legs.
She tried to pull her hand back, seriously confused, forgetting what she’d wanted to say in the first place. “Kaden …?”
“Yes, habiba?
She felt very shaky all of a sudden. “Why are you looking at me like that?”
He arched a brow. “Is this not how a man is supposed to look at his wife?”
Feeling sickened, Julia wrenched her hand free from his. He was faking it. Of course. In front of his guests.
Julia muttered something about the bathroom and got up, barely noticing Kaden’s frowning look as she hurried away, head down.
Kaden watched Julia walk away, eyes glued to the graceful lines of her body in the stunning dress. The veil was long gone, and her hair was coiled at the nape of her neck. She was like a warmly glowing pearl against this backdrop. And for a moment, before she’d called him, he’d been drawn back into the memory of their time in the desert just before everything had changed.
He’d once dreamed of exactly this moment—having Julia by his side as his Queen, his heart full to bursting with pride and love … And then she’d called his name and he’d realised that it wasn’t like the dream. That dream had existed in the mind of a foolishly romantic young man who hadn’t known any better. This was reality, and reality was a long way from any dream.
Cursing himself, he could still feel desire like a tight coil in his body. A desire he’d curbed for too long. Kaden threw down his napkin and stood up. They’d had speeches and ceremonial toasts. Everyone now expected the Emir to take his leave with his wife. Striding out of the room, servants scurrying in his wake, Kaden felt his blood growing hotter by the second.
Julia had made her way out of the crowded room feeling stifled and extremely emotional. Jasmine had appeared as if from nowhere to guide her back to her rooms. She still didn’t even know her own way around the palace!
When Jasmine showed her into the suite it took a minute before she realised that the distinctively masculine furnishings weren’t familiar. She turned to Jasmine, who was waiting patiently for instructions.
“These aren’t my rooms.”
Jasmine inclined her head deferentially. “Sheikh Kaden told me to move your things in here. You will be sharing his rooms from now on.”
Julia’s heart fluttered in her chest. She wasn’t sure what Kaden was playing at, but she told Jasmine she wouldn’t need her further. When the girl had left, emotion started rising again, and blindly Julia made her way out to Kaden’s outdoor terrace. Much grander than her own.
It was dusk, and the call of an exotic bird pierced the air as Julia gripped the wall and looked out over Burquat. She could see people coming and going about their business far below, a line of blue which indicated the sea. She smelled the tang of salty air.
And all Julia could think of was how far Kaden was willing to go to make sure everyone believed he desired his wife, and how the immense crowd of guests had looked at her warily, with few smiles. An overwhelming feeling of aloneness washed over her. She put a hand to her bump and thought of her babies. They would be protected from this awful feeling of isolation. But she couldn’t help, for one weak and self—indulgent moment, feeling sorry for herself. And she couldn’t help the tears springing into her eyes and overflowing.
Kaden came into his rooms silently, and immediately saw Julia standing outside. The line of her back looked incredibly slim and tense, and the coil of her hair was shining in the dusky light. A curious feeling of peace mixed with desire rushed through his veins.
He moved forward and saw that Julia heard him. She tensed even more, and didn’t turn around. Irritation prickled over his skin. “Julia?”
Julia was frantically swallowing and trying to blink back tears, her cheeks stinging. The thought of Kaden witnessing her turmoil was too much, but she heard him come closer, and then his hands came onto her shoulders and he was turning her around.
She looked down in a desperate bid to hide, but he tipped her chin up. She looked at him almost defiantly through the sheen of tears. He frowned, eyes roving over her face. “You’re crying.”
Kaden was not prepared for the blow he felt to his solar plexus. Julia’s face was pale and blotchy, wet with tears. Eyes swimming, dark pools of grey. Her mouth trembling.
“It’s nothing,” she said huskily, lifting a hand to wipe at her cheek.
Kaden took her hand away and cupped her face. His chest felt so constricted he could hardly breathe. His thumbs wiped away the lingering tears.
“What is it?”
Julia bit her lip, clearly fighting for control. “It’s just all … a bit much. Finding out about my pregnancy, coming here … my life changing overnight.”
A solid mass of something dark settled into Kaden’s chest. Clearly this was not what she’d envisaged for herself. He felt the sting of guilt. He’d seduced her. And changed their lives.
“Julia … you will not want for anything ever again. You or our babies. You can be happy here.”
She gave a half-strangled laugh. “When your people look at me as if I’m about to do something scandalous?”
He grimaced. “They just need time, that’s all. There’s been so much change in Burquat … my divorce …”
Julia was finding it hard to breathe with Kaden so close and holding her face. She couldn’t bear for him to see her desire on top of this. She tried to pull his hands down but they were immovable. She looked into his eyes. “Kaden … it’s OK. You don’t have to pretend here. No one is watching. And I don’t expect to share your rooms. I’ll go back to my own.”
“Pretend what?”
Julia avoided his gaze. “Pretend to … want me.”
Kaden frowned. Pretend to want her? Could she not feel how on fire he was for her? And then the notion that perhaps she didn’t want him sent something cold to his gut. He moved his hands and took her wrists. He could feel the hammering of her pulse. A sigh of relief went through him.
“Julia, look at me.”
With obvious reluctance she lifted her head. Her eyes were clear now, but no less troubled.
“What on earth made you think that I didn’t want you?”
Now she frowned, a flush coming into her cheeks. “That last night in B’harani … you were so quick to leave …” She stopped when she thought of his reaction to the necklace, and then said hurriedly, “Not that I wanted it to go on. I was happy for it to be over. But I just thought …”
“That I didn’t desire you any more?”
She nodded, and Kaden moved close to her again, lifting her hands and trapping them against his chest, where she would feel the thundering beat of his heart. Standing so close to her like this was exquisite torture. A deep contentment flowed through him that he wasn’t even aware of. He thought of the necklace then, of how seeing it had made him feel. But instead of dousing his desire, or making him want to flee, it actually made him feel even hotter.
Julia’s cheeks flushed even more when Kaden moved so close that his erection pressed against her lower belly. Sensation exploded behind his eyes, through his body, and he had to bite back a groan. He said throatily, “Does that feel like the response of a man who doesn’t desire you?”
He marvelled. How could she not know? He felt as if every time he looked at her she must see the extent of his hunger. She was so different from any other woman he’d known. He’d almost forgotten that a woman like her could exist, and had a fleeting image of how bleak his life would have been if he’d not met her again.
Julia’s eyes dropped to Kaden’s mouth. She was transfixed. Almost without r
ealising what she was doing, she extricated her hand from his grip and reached up to trace the sensuous line of his lips.
Kaden’s hand went around the back of her neck, under the heavy fall of her hair, massaging the tender skin and muscles. His other hand was on her waist, big and possessive. Her breathing was already coming quickly, and she was telling herself to try and stay clear … but it was impossible.
Kaden dropped his head to hers. They were so close now that his breath feathered along her mouth. “I’ve never wanted another woman the way I want you.”
Julia looked into his eyes and saw the flame in their depths. She reached up and pressed her mouth to his softly, chastely. For a moment he did nothing, and then with an urgency that made her blood exult in her veins he brought her even closer and fused his mouth to hers, opening her up to him so that his tongue could explore and seek a deeper intimacy.
Julia’s hands and arms wound around Kaden’s neck, fingers tangling in the silky hair brushing his collar. She could feel the swell of her belly pressing into him, the stab of his erection against her, and something deeply feminine and primal burned within her. This was her man.
Perhaps their desire was the one pure, true thing between them? Perhaps they could build on this? Perhaps one day the fact that he’d rejected her once would fade away?
All of these thoughts and other incoherent ones raced through her head in time with her heart, but she just wanted to lose herself in the release only he could give.
He drew back and took in a deep, ragged breath, eyes looking wild. Julia’s mouth was burning.
“Wait … I want you so badly, Julia … But can we? I mean, is it safe?”
For a moment she didn’t understand what he was saying, and then she felt him place a hand to her belly. Something inside her melted even more. Blushing, because she was aware of the rampant need inside her, she said, “Dr Assan told me that it would be OK if we wanted to … you know …”