Midnight in Arabia. Trish Morey

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in our home when I married Hanif and Badra made even more. While the receiving room is traditional, the way we divide what used to be considered the women’s space is quite different.”

      “I see.” Though honestly, Iris felt very much in the dark.

      “Hakim and I have the room at the end, beyond the interior kitchen. Fadwa and Nawar share the room between it and us. And you are correct, in the Bedouin culture, usually a single woman would stay in that room with them, but Asad has decreed you would be more comfortable in Badra’s old lodgings.”

      The older woman waited as if expecting Iris to say something, so she said, “Um … I’m sure he’s right.”

      Neither woman commented on the fact that the sheikh and his wife had not shared sleeping quarters. But Iris couldn’t help speculating on the why of it. Had the virtuous Badra found the wedding bed too onerous?

      Unimaginable. How could any woman not fall under the sensual spell Asad created in the bedroom? When they were together, she’d craved his touch with an intensity that had shamed her after the breakup. At the time though, she’d been enthralled by the beauty and passion of their lovemaking.

      It was simply unfathomable to her that another woman would be indifferent to Asad’s sexual prowess.

      Needing to redirect her thoughts, Iris reached out to touch the brass pitcher beside a matching basin on top of the single chest of drawers. “This is lovely.”

      Decorated with an intricate design surrounding a proud peacock, it was polished to a bright sheen.

      “The water in the pitcher is clean. You may drink it, or use it to wash,” Genevieve said. “Someone will come to dispose of the water in the basin for you. It will be used to water my garden in the back, so it is important you only use the soap provided.”

      Iris picked up the bar of handmade soap and sniffed. The fragrance of jasmine mixed with sage. “I’ll be happy to. This is wonderful.”

      “I am glad you think so.” Something in her tone said that perhaps the perfect princess, Badra, had not. “We make it here in the encampment.”

      Iris noted that her case was beside the chest, but she hadn’t seen anyone come in while they were visiting over tea. “Is there another entrance to the tent?”

      Genevieve nodded with a warm smile. “Through the kitchen. I will show you the rest of our humble home, if you would like?”

      “Oh, yes, please.”

      The tent dwelling was anything but humble, the private compartments all endowed with the same level of luxury as Iris’s room, if not a plethora of furniture that might make their twice-a-year resettlement difficult. Or at least, Iris assumed Nawar and Fadwa’s was, but she had been unable to see for herself as the child was settling into her nap.

      One thing she did note was that the single women’s quarters that housed Asad’s daughter and distant cousin were actually smaller than the apartment Badra had commandeered for her own use and that Iris would now use.

      When she said as much to Genevieve, the other woman shrugged. “Perhaps when Asad marries again, his wife will reapportion the sleeping quarters again. So long as she does not attempt to change my and Hanif’s room, I will be content.”

      “Is he thinking of remarrying then?” The thought of Asad taking another wife sent a shard of pain that absolutely should not be possible straight through Iris’s heart.

      “But naturally. Though he has not set his sights on any woman in particular.” Genevieve led the way through the inner kitchen and outside. “Enough time has passed since Badra’s death though, I think.”

      “How did she die?”

      “In a plane crash with her lover,” Asad said with brutal starkness from behind Iris.

      His arrival taking her by surprise, she jumped and spun to see him standing with an old familiar arrogance, but an only recently familiar harsh cast to his features.

      Genevieve tutted at her grandson. “Really, Asad, you needn’t announce it in such a manner.”

      “You think I should dress it up? Pretend she was simply vacationing with friends as the papers reported?”

      “For the sake of your daughter, yes, I do.”

      Asad inclined his head. In agreement? Perhaps, but the man wasn’t giving anything away with his expression.

      “What do you think of my home?” he asked, dismissing the topic of his unfaithful wife in a way that shocked Iris.

      The Asad she had known at university would never have been so pragmatic about such a betrayal.

      Forcing her own mind to make the ruthless mental adjustment of topics, she said rather faintly, “It’s fantastic.”

      “You like your room?” he asked, the stern lines of his face relaxing somewhat.

      She tried to keep the hesitation she was feeling from her tone. “Yes.”

      “But?”

      “I didn’t say anything.”

      “Didn’t you?” Asad’s tone was borderline cutting.

      “It’s just that, well … it’s kind of big for just me, isn’t it? I mean, it’s gorgeous, but I could set my lab up in the room and still have plenty of room to spare.” She felt guilty about that fact, though she wasn’t sure why.

      Not to mention, it was right next to Asad’s room. That in itself was enough to cause immeasurable anxiety and probably sleeplessness on her part.

      One of his now rare but gorgeous smiles transformed Asad’s features. “That will not be necessary. You and your coworker have already been assigned quarters for your tests.”

      “Thank you.” What else could she say?

      “I will do all that I can to make your stay here a pleasant one.” The words were right, but the look that accompanied them sent an atavistic shiver down Iris’s spine.

      She turned to take in the charming courtyard created by the surrounding tents. Jasmine and herbs in pots decorated with bright mosaics made the space seem anything but desert austere. Despite the heat, other women cooked over open campfires, their curious gazes sliding between their sheikh’s guest and the watch they kept over children playing in the communal area.

      “I had read that the tents are grouped by family ties. Is that true here among the Sha’b Al’najid?” Iris asked.

      “It is,” Asad answered while his grandmother conferred with the woman cooking what Iris assumed was to be their dinner. “The dwellings around us are those of the family closest to my grandfather’s predecessor. Had my grandparents had more children, it would be their tents that occupied these spots around the sheikh’s home.”

      It must have been a great disappointment to the elder couple to have only had one child, but Iris kept her lips clamped over the much too personal thought.

      “Come.” Asad took Iris’s

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