The Lost Prince. Cindy Dees
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She absorbed his words in silence. Damned if what he said didn’t make perfect sense. Foreboding clutched at her throat like a cold, bony hand.
He murmured urgently, “I’m not exaggerating. Trust no one. Both of our lives depend on it.”
His golden gaze bored into her in uncomfortably intense entreaty. He certainly believed his warnings to her, at any rate. Should she?
He exhaled a long, slow breath and said beseechingly, “Please. My life is in your hands.”
He didn’t sound as though he used the word please often. And that was the second time he’d used it with her. Despite his breezy charm, this guy was scared stiff. And she couldn’t blame him. Sharaf’s men hadn’t exactly made the world’s friendliest first impression on her.
Saying “please” was probably a big concession for him. The guy was a king, after all. At least he’d sounded sincere when he’d said it. Maybe she was wrong to protect this guy. Maybe she should ignore his advice and tell her boss who he was after all—
His voice interrupted her troubled thoughts. “I believe you were going to put a bandage on my nose?”
“Right,” she mumbled. “Bandage. The bigger, the better.”
“Exactly.” His relieved smile lit up the room like a floodlight. He added under his breath, “Thank you.”
She got the distinct feeling she’d just stepped over some sort of invisible line. And, once crossed, there was no going back.
Katy stumbled through the rest of the day’s work in a daze, mechanically treating prisoners and recording their condition on her clipboard. Alive! The king of Baraq was alive! And she was the only person who knew it. Was her life really in danger? Or was Nikolas Ramsey just trying to scare her into silence? Should she ignore his warning and tell someone of her discovery or was discretion the better part of valor? One thing he was right about: palpable currents of intrigue flowed around her as she made her way through the palace toward the exit a few hours later.
Unseen eyes glared at her, and she caught the furtive looks and snide comments the Army soldiers cast at her when they thought she wasn’t looking or listening. It was one advantage of the veil over most of her face. Nobody could see her reaction to their jabs, uttered mostly in Arabic they thought she wouldn’t understand. She’d studied the language for four years in college, and it was coming back to her rapidly. She got the distinct feeling her well-being might rest on her secret comprehension of the tongue. Nope, not gonna let on that I understand them just yet.
The Army didn’t deign to provide the aid workers transportation to their hotel, so Katy, Larry and two other team members, who’d been treating the more seriously wounded prisoners housed in the palace proper, convened at the main drawbridge at dusk to walk to their lodgings. Soldiers all but pushed them out a man-sized postern gate within the larger drawbridge. The good news was the walk was steeply downhill into the crowded city streets. The bad news was the hike back up the hill tomorrow morning was going to be a bear.
When they arrived at the hotel, Katy was segregated from the men and given a room on a floor allotted only to women. Her room was sparse and in need of a good cleaning, not to mention stuffy with the remnants of the day’s warmth. There was one toilet for the entire floor of twelve rooms and one bathroom with an old claw-foot bathtub. At least it was clean and in good working order.
She sat down on her bed and winced at the sag in the mattress. But, hey, it was better than the stone ledges the prisoners were sleeping on. She stripped off her abaya, considering whether it would be dry by morning if she washed it right then. She opened her suitcase, which had magically appeared in her room. And stopped cold. Someone had searched it. The clothes weren’t folded right, and her things weren’t in the same places she’d put them when she’d left home.
She went next door and knocked on Hazel’s door. The older woman stuck her head around the jamb. “Oh, it’s you. Come on in.”
Katy stepped inside and grinned at Hazel’s shorts and halter top. No wonder the woman had hidden behind the door. She’d be arrested if any Baraqi Army type saw her in such lascivious garb. “Was your suitcase searched, Hazel?”
The older woman looked up at her quickly. “No. Was yours?”
For some reason, a twinge of foreboding made her reticent to tell anyone about it. Maybe it was Nikolas Ramsey’s warning. Or maybe it was a gut instinct. Her brothers swore by them. She shrugged. “I guess I’m just getting paranoid after the way the Army’s treating us women.”
Again Hazel shot her a strange look. “They’ve been exceedingly polite to me and Phyllis. Did you do something to make them mad?”
Katy blinked. “Not that I know of.” On yet another hunch, she asked, “Do you speak Arabic?”
Hazel nodded. “Fluent in it. I can argue politics and cuss out a cab driver with the best of them.”
“And there haven’t been any nasty comments or innuendos flying around you from the soldiers?”
“Nope.” Hazel looked at her closely. “You going to be able to hack it in this country?”
Katy drew herself up straight. “Of course.” Why in the world was she being singled out for harassment by the Army? Surely they didn’t know or give a flip for who her brothers were!
The older woman nodded. Paused. Told her sagely, “Don’t go out by yourself. Eat in the hotel or go with a group into the bazaar to buy food. And don’t touch any of the meat from the street vendors. It’ll give you a case of Montezuma’s revenge you’ll never forget.”
Katy smiled at the small overture of friendly advice. “Thanks.”
Hazel nodded briskly.
Thoughtfully Katy wandered downstairs to snag a couple pieces of fruit and returned to her own room. She unlocked the door and let herself in. Night had fallen while she’d been gone, and she had to cross her room to reach the lamp in the corner. The white gauze curtains billowed in the breeze, and again she stopped cold.
She hadn’t left her window open.
She turned around slowly, scanning the dark corners and shadows dancing in her room. Nothing there. She was alone. She let out a slow breath. Still in the dark, she moved over to the floor-to-ceiling casement windows and shut them. She made a special point of locking them, as well. Only then did she move over to the lamp and switch it on. It bathed the room in soft yellow light.
She looked around again. And froze. There was something on her pillow. A note. She moved over to it and looked at it without touching it. It was a single sheet of beige linen stationery folded in half. In cramped cursive were the letters M-l-l-e, the French abbreviation for Mademoiselle. Gingerly Katy picked it up. Unfolded it. More of the cramped cursive.
She translated the French quickly in her head.
King