Hired: The Sheikh's Secretary Mistress. Lucy Monroe
actually smiled. “I thought Mother was a tough audience.”
“Grace keeps me in line,” Amir said with some humor, while he willed his libido back into check.
These moments of attraction for his indispensable assistant were coming too frequently for his comfort. But the spark in her eyes when she chastised his brother and him had lit a fire somewhere else entirely in Amir.
Zahir shook his head. “I only wish that were true.” And just like that, the air of gravity was back.
“Tisa was a mistake,” Amir admitted.
“Yes.”
Amir refused to allow his pride to elicit offense at his brother’s honesty. Tisa had been a mistake. In more ways than one. “Are you here on your own, or did Father send you?”
“Father sent me.”
A cold fist tightened around Amir’s heart. Some might think that King Faruq sending his eldest son in his place was an indication that he did not place as high of an importance on the message as he would one he delivered personally. However, Amir knew that was not true. Sending Zahir said more than Amir wanted to hear about how disappointed in him his father truly was. It implied the king was so angry, he did not even want to see his youngest son.
“You know, I realize that Tisa courts the limelight a bit too much and maybe I showed up in more than one story with her, but damn it…I never moved in with one of my flings like Khalil did with his mistress. He lived with Jade for almost two years before he decided to marry her.”
And in any other universe that would have made Jade untouchable in the marriage stakes for a man in his family, but she had friends in high places. Their uncle had taken an interest in Jade and Khalil’s romance and seen to it that Jade had a place in the royal family of Zorha.
Zahir’s frown said how little he appreciated the reminder that his sister-in-law had been his brother’s live-in lover. “Misdirection will not undo the results of your actions.”
“You can assure the king that his youngest son will be more circumspect in choosing companions in future.” Amir’s jaw tightened against words he wanted to add, but would regret saying later.
“Unfortunately, such an assurance will not be enough. Our father has grown weary of you dragging the family name through camel dung. It is time for you to tame your wild ways permanently.”
Once again, Amir had to bite back words it would be impolite to speak. But his father’s and brother’s attitudes grated.
He was loyal to his family and to his people. He had put the needs of each ahead of his own on more occasions than he could count. He lived away from his desert home to oversee the royal family’s business interests. His position left him little time to himself and if he chose to spend that time with beautiful women in uncomplicated liaisons, how did that make him a bad person?
“I don’t date innocents or married women. My companions are aware of the transitory nature of our association before I ever take them on the first date.”
“So is the rest of the world.”
Amir winced, but he said, “So what?”
“Your lifestyle reflects negatively on our family and our people.”
“There is nothing wrong with my lifestyle.”
“Our father does not agree.”
“What does he want me to do, remain celibate?”
“No.”
“Then what?”
A brief flash of pity flared in his eldest brother’s dark eyes. “The king has decreed that you shall be married.”
The king? So this was coming as a royal command. Camel dung was right. “And has he chosen my future wife?” Amir asked in disbelief.
Zahir had the grace to look at least a little uncomfortable. “Yes.”
“That’s positively medieval.”
Again that short flicker of pity, but then Zahir’s expression hardened. “Are you refusing the king’s command?”
Foreboding skated up Amir’s spine. He knew that to deny his father would come with a very heavy cost, maybe even his position within their family. His father almost never pulled royal rank, so when he did so, his family knew he would not be moved. If Amir refused to marry the woman his father had chosen, he might as well start looking for a new job. One that didn’t have “prince” in its title.
He had been raised to do his duty and could not imagine refusing his father, unless the dictate were so untenable he could not possibly live with it. This one was not.
“I will marry the princess…. I assume the woman he’s chosen is a princess.”
“Actually, yes.” If Zahir was surprised by his youngest brother’s acquiescence, he did not show it.
“Who is it?”
“Princess Lina bin Fahd al Marwan.” Zahir dropped another sheet of paper on the desk.
This one was a single-page dossier on the princess, including a picture of the beautiful woman. Maybe it wouldn’t be so bad. The last thing he wanted was to marry for love and, if he was honest, he would admit that the transitory nature of the women in his life was starting to get old.
He wouldn’t have chosen to marry for some time yet on his own, but he wasn’t completely against the idea.
Besides, he had his own reasons for wanting a more permanent distraction than Tisa and the others like her.
“When’s the wedding?” he asked.
CHAPTER ONE
“WHAT DID YOU SAY?” Grace felt like Amir had just punched her right in the solar plexus, but all he’d really done was ask her a question.
“I want you to find me a wife.”
She closed her eyes and opened them again, but he was still there, her gorgeous, totally sexy, only-man-in-the-world-for-her boss. The expression of expectation on his too handsome face said he had actually made the request that she was desperately hoping had been a figment of her imagination.
Hadn’t it been awful enough when he’d announced to her a mere six weeks ago that his father had decreed Amir was to marry some princess from a neighboring sheikhdom? Grace’s heart had shriveled and come close to dying at how easily her usually independent and stubborn boss had so easily submitted to his father’s demand.
Then a reprieve had come for Grace’s bleeding emotions when Princess Lina had ended up eloping with an old flame and nullifying the contract the two powerful sheikhs had signed. That had happened almost two weeks ago and Grace was just overcoming the jagged edges of pain left by the king’s edict and his youngest son’s acceptance of it.
Now Amir wanted her to find him a wife? Just kill her now because life couldn’t get much worse.
Okay, maybe it could, but even plain PAs had the right to their moments of drama.
“What? Why?” He was happy in his serial liaisons, or at least he’d always acted like he was.
Definitely, he’d never fallen in love with any of them. As far as she knew—and she knew him better than anyone else in his life, including his family—Amir had not been in love since he was eighteen years old. Not that he admitted now that it had been love then.
But she knew the signs of a true and abiding love. Didn’t she live with them on a personal basis every day?
Amir had loved his Yasmine enough to ask her to marry him. They were only engaged for three months, the wedding less than a month away—which in Grace’s mind showed just how much he had loved the other woman to press for such a speedy wedding—when Yasmine was killed in a freak accident. It was