The Black Sheep Sheik. Dana Marton

The Black Sheep Sheik - Dana Marton


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Maybe he was hallucinating. But no, the woman in front of him was all too real. She took the knife from him as easily as if from a child, tossed it onto the counter and tried to help him back to the hospital bed.

      His masculine pride insisted on the sofa, and so did he.

      “Okay. For a little while,” said that sensuous voice he hadn’t been able to forget. “How do you feel?”

      The same way he’d felt when he’d been thrown by the lead camel at a race a couple of years ago and stomped on by the rest. He wasn’t about to tell her that, not until he got his bearings and figured out what was going on. His voice was rough and rusty as he asked the most basic question, “Where are we?”

      “At my father’s hunting cabin. He used to call it his escape pod. I don’t think he actually ever hunted. He came here to avoid my mother.” She talked to him slowly, in a reassuring tone, a doctor who knew she had a disoriented patient on her hands.

      Yet there was some tightness around her eyes—anger?—that put him on guard. Just because he remembered her most fondly, it didn’t mean she felt the same, although he couldn’t think of why she would be mad at him.

      Yet her posture was rigid. “How is your throat?”

      He swallowed painfully. “Raw.”

      A slight breeze blew in through the open door. He turned his face into it for a second and figured out at last why the air smelled all wrong in this place. He couldn’t smell the ocean.

      He wanted to ask why they were here, but he registered her full body at last, his mind beginning to function a little better, the mental haze thinning. He blinked hard. “You’re pregnant.” His voice sounded even hoarser than before.

      “Why, thank you for noticing,” she said with a dose of sarcasm as she stepped away from him, moving briskly to the hospital bed to shut off the machines, then to the door to close it.

      “Are we safe?”

      “Nobody knows you’re here.”

      He didn’t feel safe. His instincts still signaled danger.

      Everything around him was small, the cabin all wood and unfamiliar. His country being an island nation, they didn’t have an overabundance of trees. Buildings were made of stone or brick, which kept their interior cool during the hot Mediterranean summers. He felt out of place here.

      “I need my phone.”

      “Absolutely not.” She had her strict doctor face on as she came back to him. “Whatever business you have can wait. First things first.”

      She reached for the old-fashioned blood-pressure cuff on the coffee table and wrapped it around his arm and started to pump it. Her long, slim fingers woke up nerve endings wherever she touched him.

      “You shouldn’t even be out of bed. Stay off your feet. Your blood pressure could drop without notice. You don’t want to fall and bang yourself up all over again.”

      He needed to talk to her about the danger they were in, but his gaze kept slipping to her round belly. Disappointment and some other stronger emotion, one he didn’t care to examine, filled up his chest. “You are married?”

      “In this day and age, a woman doesn’t need a husband to have a baby.” She had a scowl on her face as she lifted a finger so he’d stay quiet while she counted. “Blood pressure’s a little low, but not bad, all things considered.” She put the cuff away, then left him again to go to the kitchen.

      He wished she would stay put by his side for a while to give him a chance to drink in the sight of her, a chance to sort his thoughts into some order. Against her medical advice, he tried to rise, but his legs wouldn’t support him, so he slumped back onto the sofa with ill grace.

      “Who?” He wanted to know who had seduced her, then abandoned her, so he could have some words with the blackguard as soon as he felt better. The thought of anyone hurting Isabelle was intolerable. “What’s his name?”

      She was searching for something in the refrigerator, ignoring him. She was just as beautiful as he remembered, her movements graceful despite her swollen belly, her eyes intelligent and inquisitive. Despite the months that had passed since their first and only meeting, his attraction hadn’t lessened any.

      “Want to tell me who wants you dead?” She put a pot of something on the electric stove, studiously keeping her eyes on the task, almost as if wanting to avoid his gaze.

      “The million-dollar question.” He sounded every bit as morose as he felt. His memory had big, gaping holes in it. “What happened last night? I don’t remember everything.”

      He didn’t remember when she’d come into the picture, or how he’d gotten here. He clamped his teeth, hating to admit weakness, hating to be sitting there, disoriented, clad only in a hospital gown—not exactly the image he’d planned to project when he’d decided to find the American doctor he’d had a two-day affair with, then couldn’t forget.

      “Let’s see.” She looked at him as she stirred the pot, and watched him carefully. “Last night I tried to catch up on my medical journals. You were in a coma. Same old, same old.”

      His mind, barely settled since he’d woken, went into another spin. “A coma? For more than a day?” Had the summit started without him? He was one of five royals, all leading small Mediterranean island nations, who’d come to the United States for trade negotiations and agreements about undersea oil fields. The economic recovery of other countries depended on this summit, not just his.

      Pity suffused her delicate face. “A month. Take it easy, all right? You’ll be fine. You made it. Don’t stress yourself out. You need to keep calm and you need to be resting.”

      The cabin closed in around him, all that dark wood making him feel like he was trapped in a cave. He wanted the spacious rooms of his palace with their whitewashed walls and tall ceilings, with all those open views of the Mediterranean Sea surrounding his island. He wanted normal and familiar, a point of reference. His ears were buzzing.

      “How?” The one-word question tore from his throat.

      “Your limousine blew up on the road I usually take to work. I was driving to the hospital in Dumont for my shift, and there you were, trying to climb from the wreckage. I recognized you. You asked for my help. You demanded that I not call the authorities.”

      He recalled the phone threat Prince Stefan had received the day they had arrived in the United States, the threatening letters he himself had received in the leading up to their trip. He also remembered now that minute or two after the explosion, mangled thoughts mixed in with the pain.

      He had thought he would just need a minute to recover. Then he could go back to the resort, and between him and his friends they would figure out what was going on, figure out the publicity angle. He had wanted his security to check the scene before the police cordoned off the area as their crime scene.

      His next thought made his stomach clench with dread. “The driver?”

      Her lips flattened into a grim line. “Dead on impact. You had minor burns and some serious lacerations. Hit your head pretty hard. All in all, you were very lucky.”

      He hung his head, not feeling lucky in the least. He would have Bahur’s family found and would make sure they were taken care of. The least he could do was to make sure that they had everything they needed. Guilt ate at him as he thought of the years the man had spent in his service, the future Bahur had been robbed of.

      Because of him.

      Those threatening notes hadn’t been bluffing. They weren’t some discontent coward’s way of trying to spread fear, as he had first hoped. His enemies were prepared to kill.

      And here he was, in the middle of nowhere, unarmed and without any security. With Isabelle. Which made a bad situation intolerable. “My presence here puts you in danger.”

      “Nobody knows.”


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