Modern Romance December Books 5-8. Дженнифер Хейворд
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Tadj picked up the phone ‘I’m calling my housekeeper to show you to your room. Be ready to leave for Qalala first thing in the morning.’
LUCY GOT HER chance to call both her employers while Tadj was speaking to his housekeeper about the latest arrangements. Her second and most important call was to Miss Francine, a woman she had really come to care for. As she stood in the baronial hallway, she frowned as she waited for her elderly friend to pick up, thinking how to frame her news. She didn’t want to cause any alarm, so it was crucial to find the right words. Tadj’s suggestion that Lucy should become his official mistress was enough to send anyone into a tailspin, let alone a kindly octogenarian. As the log fire crackled, and the phone trilled in her ear, Lucy’s thoughts returned to Tadj. Could a man insensitive enough to ask her to become his mistress in this day and age be expected to make a good father?
She didn’t get the chance to progress the thought, and had to swiftly rejig her thoughts when Miss Francine answered. Having explained where she was and who she was with, Lucy explained that the Emir of Qalala had invited her to visit his country with a view to putting on an exhibition of the famous sapphires. It was almost the truth, and it was a relief when an excited Miss Francine took over from there. She’d read about the Sapphire Sheikhs, and believed the trip to Qalala to see the sapphire mines with an opportunity to display would make a wonderful addition to Lucy’s CV. She chatted about Lucy’s college course, and remembered that Lucy had always excelled at displaying various exhibits to their best advantage.
‘Take all the time you need,’ Miss Francine enthused. ‘This is too good an opportunity for you to miss.’
That was one way of putting it, but then Lucy hadn’t mentioned the complications. ‘See you soon,’ she said fondly as they ended the call.
‘Maybe not so soon.’
She spun around to find Tadj standing behind her. ‘Were you eavesdropping on my conversation?’
‘No more than you’re abusing your position as guest in my home.’
‘I’m sorry—by doing what?’ Lucy enquired.
‘By talking about me as if I weren’t here.’
‘Well, you weren’t here,’ she said. ‘And that’s rich coming from the man who just invited me to become his mistress.’
Within moments, the battle lines were drawn. Emotions were running high between them, which was no surprise, Lucy conceded, when so much had happened in so short a time. If only there could be more than this, she thought as they stared at each other unblinking. The trip to Qalala was more than she could have wished for, but even that was tainted by the way it had been achieved. She hated this devious game-playing, when all she wanted was an honest relationship.
Between the Emir of Qalala and Lucy Gillingham? Dream on!
It was a relief to see the smiling housekeeper, ready to escort Lucy to her room.
‘Mrs Brown will take good care of you,’ Tadj said in a neutral tone that suggested Lucy was just another guest in his house. When did he plan the big reveal? she wondered.
‘You’ll find clothes in the dressing room in your suite,’ he added in the same emotion-free tone. ‘We’ll meet later when you’ve had a chance to freshen up.’
For a trial run? Lucy’s expression suggested coolly.
The housekeeper hadn’t noticed, and was already heading across the hall. Tadj’s mention of clothes in Lucy’s dressing room made her think that he’d had this all planned out; whatever she’d said about becoming his mistress, his decision had been made. A chill ran through her at the thought that, once again, Tadj was in charge. He always had been in charge from the moment they’d met again in the restaurant, she accepted tensely.
‘I expect to see you back in the library in one hour’s time,’ he called after her as he jogged up the stairs. She took his harsh tone of voice as more proof that the fun, uncomplicated man she’d met in a café had disappeared completely.
‘You wouldn’t be the first to stand and gaze around in wonder at all the treasures here,’ the housekeeper said, misreading Lucy’s expression. ‘And I doubt you’ll be the last,’ she added with an encouraging smile.
‘It’s so beautiful here,’ Lucy admitted, glad of the change of subject, taking in the stained-glass windows as they mounted the stairs, and intricate carvings on the bannisters and over the doors. ‘I’ve never seen anything like this, except in stately homes that are open to the public.’
‘The Emir is a very particular man,’ Mrs Brown told her as she led the way.
So, where do I fit in? Lucy wondered. Furnishings, paintings, and more space than one man could ever use, even with a full team of staff, made her feel increasingly superfluous as Mrs Brown led her deeper into the wolf of Qalala’s lair. Even the air smelled of money, though it was impossible to fault the restrained and classy décor. Deep-piled carpet soaked up their footsteps, while framed photographs made her pause and finally accept that this fabulous place was actually a home. Home to a very rich man, Lucy concluded, spotting a particularly striking image of Tadj, coated in mud after a polo match. Even in that shot, he looked amazing.
She stopped in front of another framed photograph, showing him seated on rough wooden benches. She assumed this must have been taken at the sapphire mine. Surrounded by working men, he appeared as one of them, relaxed and at home, in dust-covered jeans and a ripped top, his face streaked with dirt. The photographer had caught him in a pose with his arms outstretched to encompass the men on either side of him, and they were all smiling. How she longed to have that uncomplicated relationship. She could feel the warmth between them, even through the impartial medium of a camera. If only she could see more of that side of him, she thought as Mrs Brown led the way. They had reached a broad, light-filled corridor, where one more framed shot made her pause. This one was of Tadj with his friend Sheikh Khalid. Both men were grinning with pleasure, as well they might, as they were holding up handfuls of the biggest sapphires she’d ever seen.
‘That photograph was taken in Qalala,’ Mrs Brown explained when she noticed Lucy’s interest. ‘His Serene Majesty loves anything that reminds him of his friends and his homeland. Have you been to Qalala? It’s very beautiful.’
As beautiful as here? Lucy wondered as she admired the craftsmanship around her that gave such a sense of history, of destiny.
‘His Majesty treats his staff to a holiday in Qalala each year,’ Mrs Brown continued as she walked on. ‘His Majesty is so generous.’
And so distant from me, Lucy thought with regret as Mrs Brown paused in front of a highly polished mahogany door. ‘It’s no surprise people love him as they do,’ Tadj’s adoring housekeeper went on. ‘You’ll have a wonderful time when you go to Qalala—and I feel sure the Qalalan people will love you.’
‘Oh, but I’m not—’
Too late. Mrs Brown had already entered the room, leaving Lucy to wonder if she’d been mistaken for more than she was. She couldn’t imagine the Emir’s official mistress had much of a public role, but what did she know?