Defying her Desert Duty. Annie WestЧитать онлайн книгу.
no flicker of pain in his eyes, no hint of a wince on his face, despite what must have been piercing agony.
What sort of man trained himself not to react to pain?
The question unnerved her.
So did the realisation she was only free because he’d chosen to release her.
Holding her in his arms had been a mistake.
Zahir grimaced and ruthlessly shoved aside any analysis of why it was a mistake.
No need to go there. All that mattered was that she was trouble with a capital T.
He’d known it when he’d arrived at her apartment and found, not the respectable accommodation he’d expected, but a love nest for an almost-naked couple. Clearly they’d tumbled out of bed only because his insistent ringing of the bell had threatened to attract the neighbours.
His assessment had been reinforced when he’d finally tracked her to this seedy club. True, she didn’t flaunt herself half-naked like some women. But that dress, the colour of ripe plums, clung lovingly to curves designed to snare a man’s attention. Its skirt flirted and flounced around shapely legs when she moved. It slithered enticingly under a man’s palm, making him itch to explore further.
Zahir swallowed a curse as his palms tingled.
This wasn’t about what she made him feel.
He wasn’t in the business of feeling anything for her.
Except disgust that she’d played Hussein for a fool. Look at the way she’d snuggled up to that turkey with the ridiculously sculpted excuse for a beard!
He stifled a low growl of anger.
No, she was not what he’d been led to believe. And he didn’t just mean the fact that the old photo he’d been given showed the round, almost chubby face of an innocent. The woman tonight had the cheekbones, sexy curves and full, pouting lips of a born seductress. And those shoes—spangled four-inch stilettos that screamed ‘take me … now!’.
Heat pooled low. Disgust, he assured himself.
The one time she’d impressed was when she’d stood up to him. Few people dared do that.
The look in her eye when she’d used that damned spike heel had, for a moment, arrested him. And the way she’d strode back across the dance floor, with the grace and hauteur of an empress, had made him want to applaud.
At least she had guts. She was no push-over.
The determined click of feminine heels snared his attention and he straightened from the wall.
Instantly the rhythm of those footsteps slowed and a disturbing fire sparked in his blood. He’d felt it each time her eyes collided with his.
Hell! Now he felt it from her mere glance.
A volatile mixture of fury, guilt and some other darker emotion surged to the surface.
This was not the way it should be. Zahir refused to countenance it.
He swung round to face her across the foyer of the nightclub. At this hour even the bouncer had deserted his post. They were alone.
‘You! What are you doing here?’ Her hand crept to her throat, then, as if recognising that for a sign of weakness, she dropped it to her side and lifted her chin. Subtly she widened her stance. What, did she mean to kick him in the groin if he tried to approach her?
It would do her no good, of course. Overpowering her would be a moment’s work.
But that wasn’t an option. Despite her flaws, she would be treated with respect. That was why he’d waited till they had privacy to approach her.
He ignored that ill-advised, inexplicable impulse to approach her on the dance floor.
‘We need to talk.’
But already she was shaking her head. Flyaway strands of dark chocolate tresses swirled around her slender throat.
Zahir forced his focus to her eyes. Dark as ebony, they held his unflinchingly. He gave her full marks for bravado.
‘We have nothing to discuss.’ Her gaze skated across his shoulders, his chest and back up again. ‘If you don’t leave me alone I’ll—’
‘What? Call out for lover-boy to rescue you?’ He crossed his arms over his chest and saw her gaze follow the movement. The low simmer of heat in his veins became a sizzle, igniting a temper he’d almost forgotten he had.
What was it about this woman that got under his skin? It was unheard of.
‘No.’ She took a mobile phone from her purse and flipped it open. ‘I’ll call the police.’
‘Not a wise move, princess.’
‘Don’t call me that!’ She quivered with outrage, her mouth a pout of wrathful indignation.
Too late, Zahir realised why he’d baited her.
Not because she deserved it.
Not because he was naturally crass.
But because he wanted her to look at him, respond to him, as she had on the dance floor. There, despite her defiant words, her body had melted against his just for a moment in an unspoken invitation as old as time.
Hell and damnation!
What was he playing at?
‘Forgive me, Ms Karim.’ Carefully he blanked his expression, speaking in the modulated tones he used when brokering a particularly difficult negotiation.
‘You know my name!’ She stumbled back a half-step, alarm in her eyes.
Registering her fear, Zahir tasted self-disgust on his tongue. Nothing he’d done tonight had gone as intended. Where was his professionalism, his years of experience handling the most difficult and delicate missions?
‘You have nothing to fear.’ He spread his palms in an open gesture.
But she backed up another step, groping behind her for the door into the bar. ‘I don’t hold conversations with strange men in places like this.’ Her gesture encompassed the empty foyer.
Zahir drew a deep breath. ‘Not even a man who comes direct from your bridegroom?’
CHAPTER TWO
SORAYA froze, muscles cramping in shock as that one word reverberated through her stunned brain.
Bridegroom …
No, no! Not yet. Not now. She wasn’t ready.
Her heart rose in her throat, clogging her airways, lurching out of kilter. Her senses swam. It couldn’t be. She had months yet here in Paris—hadn’t she?
Soraya staggered back till the hand behind her met a solid surface. Fingers splayed, she pressed into the wall, needing its support.
Through hazy vision she registered abrupt movement: the stranger striding across the small space, arm raised as if to reach for her.
She stiffened and he slammed to a halt, his hand dropping. This close she should be able to read his expression but in the dim light his features looked like they’d been carved from harsh stone, betraying nothing. His eyes blazed, but with what she couldn’t discern.
At least he didn’t touch her again.
She didn’t want his hand on her. She didn’t like the curious heat that stirred when he did.
She dragged in a deep breath, then another, trying to calm her racing pulse. With him so close, watching like an eagle sighting its prey, it was impossible. She had nowhere to retreat to. And even if she did she knew he’d follow.
He had the grim, resolute aura of a man who finished what he started.