The Sheikh's Pregnancy Proposal. Fiona Brand
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There was a moment of vibrating silence, filled by the muted sound of their footfalls on wet pavement, the distant wash of the sea and the slow drip of water splashing off a gutter. Sarah’s stomach tightened as Gabe directed her to a door at the side of the consulate building and held it for her. Somehow, in the space of a little over an hour they had achieved a level of intimacy that made her stomach tighten and her pulse pound. But her time alone with him was almost up. Soon they would be joined by other people and a conversation that had become unexpectedly important would be over.
As if to underscore her thoughts, the plump administrative official, Tarik, strode down the corridor toward them, disapproval pulling his brows into a dark line. She drew a breath, but it was already too late to ask Gabe the question that was burning inside her.
He knew she was strongly attracted to him and that was why she had left the consulate so quickly. But was attraction the reason he had come looking for her?
* * *
Gabe left Sarah freshening up in the guest room that opened onto his study and strode along the hall to his suite. The moment he had seen the thug lay hands on her replayed through his mind, making him tense. When he had registered the danger, the half-formed desires and intentions that had driven him out into the stormy night had coalesced into one burning reality.
He wanted Sarah Duval.
He hadn’t liked the fact that she’d had a date. He had liked it even less that the drunk thought he could simply reach out and touch her. Crazily, because Gabe barely knew her and had no interest in emotional attachments, his attraction to Sarah had coalesced into the kind of knee-jerk possessiveness he could not afford on the eve of his engagement. But, as hard as he tried to shake it, he couldn’t—for one simple reason. In his mind he had already claimed her.
As he unlocked the door, Xavier stepped out of the elevator and followed Gabe into the suite. Gabe grabbed a towel from the bathroom and began blotting his hair and face. “What’s the verdict on the car?”
Xavier shrugged. “We could have it going in half an hour if we put it in the consulate garage, but to get it there we’ll need to tow it and none of the hire vehicles have tow bars. The best-case scenario is that I call her a taxi.”
“No.” Gabe unknotted his tie and peeled out of his wet shirt and tossed both in the laundry basket.
The sensible thing was to do what Xavier suggested. The last thing he needed was a complication that would make the commitment he had to make in the morning even more difficult. But ever since Sarah had walked into the reception room, glowing like a fiery beacon in red, her dark hair a sexy tousled mass, the obligation and duty of his impending marriage had seemed secondary. When she had disobeyed all instructions and laid her hand on his ancestor’s sword, he had been entranced.
Somehow, the fact that she had knocked the sword, which was practically a sacred object on Zahir, off its bracket had only made her more interesting.
She was a history teacher. Against all odds, he found himself grinning.
Like no history teacher he’d ever seen.
Gabe strolled into his bedroom to find a clean shirt. In the past hour something curious had happened. He felt lighter and more carefree, as if a weight had lifted off him.
Because for the first time in years when he had looked at another woman, he hadn’t been haunted by thoughts of Jasmine.
He guessed the fact that Sarah was literally Jasmine’s polar opposite—tall and curvy with a steady, resolute gaze and hints of a fiery temper, instead of tiny and fragile and sweetly feminine—had helped. When Sarah had toppled Kadin’s sword, in some odd way the separation from his past had seemed complete. Jasmine had hated all of the old Templar relics and the violent history that went with them. Sarah had seemed fascinated. From the way she had wielded her umbrella in the parking lot, he was willing to bet she would not be averse to holding a sword.
He stared at his crisply starched shirts in the closet, looking for something that didn’t belong in a boardroom. Clothing that might indicate that he had a life. “I’m taking her home.”
Xavier muttered something soft and short. “I don’t think that’s a good idea. Neither will your father.”
Gabe shrugged into a dark shirt and buttoned it. The searing attraction that had sent him walking out into the night to find Sarah settled into grim determination. Xavier’s unease mirrored his own because it was a fact that Gabe didn’t want to just spend time with Sarah—he wanted her. Period. But just hours out from signing his life away, he was in no mood to deny a response he thought he would never feel again. “Right now a whole lot of things are happening that are not exactly good ideas.”
An outmoded financial system that did not allow for the foreign investment Gabe had been advocating for years, and the marriage that was Zahir’s financial rescue plan.
“The marriage is just an arrangement, you could have an—”
“No.” Zahir was Western, but it was also extremely conservative. And Gabe was clear on one fact: once he was married he would not dishonor his vows or his family’s integrity.
Xavier looked uncomfortable. “Sometimes I forget the pressure you’re under. But what do you know about this woman? She could be some hard-nosed journalist angling for a story.”
“Sarah’s not a journalist.” Gabe shrugged into a soft black leather jacket. “And she won’t go to the press.”
“You can’t know that. You’ve only just met her. You have no idea what she’ll do.”
Gabe went still inside as a memory flickered. Cold rain scything, a dark-haired woman, head down against the weather, stepping around a corner. As his hands had shot out to stop her caroming into him he had noticed that her hair had been scraped back and her face had been almost bare of makeup. She had looked like a history teacher. But it had been Sarah, her eyes that deep, pure blue, the faintly imperious nose and exquisite cheekbones, the soft, generous mouth.
Instead of tempering his attraction, the recollection had the disconcerting effect of deepening it. In that moment, Gabe recognized the quality that drew him to Sarah most of all—the fact that in the midst of all the superficiality of the social world he usually moved in she was exactly what she seemed, a refreshingly direct woman unafraid to reach out and take what she wanted. “I met her yesterday.”
Xavier’s brows jerked together. “That makes it even worse.”
Everything Xavier was saying was true. Normally he didn’t pursue women he had only just met. Because of his position, he accepted that security checks on the women he dated were a fact of life. But ever since he had woken up that morning he had been restless and in no mood to be controlled. “Relax. She doesn’t know who I am.”
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