His Royal Prize. Debbi Rawlins
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She slowly glanced down at her worn jeans, the old plaid shirt Mickey had outgrown and passed on to her. It was really too big, but it was free, and with the enormous amount of oats Prince ate, she couldn’t waste money on clothes.
She sighed. Okay, so maybe mistaking her for a boy wasn’t so farfetched. Although she didn’t suppose taking off her ragged hat would help. Not with the last haircut Mickey had given her.
“This animal, he was sired here?”
Animal? Livy bristled. Technically maybe. “Khalid is a fine Arabian colt.”
Her snippy tone briefly drew his attention and she lowered her gaze, letting her hat shield her face as he stared down at her in silence. Finally he asked, “And the other one, the black gelding. How much are these animals?”
Her chin jerked up. “Neither one is for sale.”
Their eyes met and his gaze immediately narrowed. She looked away and focused on stroking Khalid’s neck, her heart pounding. What she said was true. Prince was safe. She wouldn’t sell him for all the money in the world. And although the Desert Rose owners, Randy and Vi Coleman, had no intention of selling Khalid, if this guy was someone important, they might feel obligated to part with the foal.
Livy could barely stand the thought. “I have to take him in now,” she mumbled, and started to turn, tugging on Khalid’s lead.
The bearded man gasped and moved toward them, and she knew she’d made one of those faux pas things Rose had explained to her. But the sheikh guy, his gaze fastened stonily on her, raised a hand, and the other man stopped dead in his tracks.
Mr. High-and-Mighty probably expected her to stop, too. Tough. She led Khalid back into the stables, her heart rate not yet back to normal. Tempted to glance back, she looked straight ahead until they neared his stall. Then out of the corner of her eye, she noticed they had been followed inside. By the head honcho himself. The bearded man was nowhere to be seen.
She was going to ignore him, but when she started to open the gate, he reached out and held it closed.
“In my country, do you know how we handle such insolence from servants?” His voice was deep and close and annoyingly unnerving.
Itching to tell him she didn’t give a hoot, Livy carefully kept her eyes lowered and her mouth clamped shut. No matter what a pain this guy was, he was a guest of the Colemans, and as much as it irked her, she supposed she ought to hold her tongue.
“Do you know who I am, boy? I warn you. Do not ignore me.”
That did it. Livy may have to behave, but Khalid was, after all, just an animal. She whispered something in the horse’s ear and he suddenly threw up his head, catching the man off guard. Before he could recover, Khalid nudged him hard enough that he stumbled forward.
Struggling for balance, he reached out, groping for a pole. And got a handful of Livy’s right breast.
His eyes widened in shock as they met hers, and he curled his fingers, filling his palm more fully, almost in disbelief.
Livy yelped, and shoved him away from her.
His Royal Highness landed on his royal heinie.
Chapter Two
A woman!
Stunned, Sharif propped himself up on one elbow. He should have known, should have sensed somehow that this wisp of a female was not a boy. Without having her soft feminine flesh fill his palm.
He was reminded of her unexpected warmth as he stared up into striking violet eyes. Bewitching eyes that flooded him with wariness.
Laughing eyes.
He straightened, aware suddenly of the undignified way he lay sprawled on the ground. Hay fell from his hair. Mud splattered the front of his shirt, making the fabric cling to his skin.
Sharif sniffed and cursed. There was more than mud ruining the expensive silk.
“If you’re waiting for an apology, you’ll be sitting there for one heck of a long time.” She stuck out her hand, and when he scowled, she shrugged and backed up. “Suit yourself.”
Slowly he started to raise himself. Arms folded across her chest, head cocked slightly to the side, she watched him, looking more amused than alarmed when he finally got to his feet and towered nearly a foot over her.
“Do you know who I am?” he asked in a deceptively calm voice.
She paused with a considering expression, then shrugged. “Not exactly.” At her indifference, his anger grew. “Want me to call your flunky?”
He frowned at the unfamiliar word.
“Your servant?” Her eyes widened in innocence, mocked by her tone. “Or can you handle this by yourself?”
The violet color was extraordinary, but her mouth was tarter than a lemon. He wondered what shade her hair was, all tucked under that hat. Wisps of light brown stuck out here and there, and an occasional blond strand. He could order her to remove the ugly tan hat. He doubted she would obey.
That anyone would dare oppose him was a staggering thought. And a woman? Almost unthinkable. But of course, this was America, a country of strange customs.
“Why do you pose yourself as a boy?” Sharif asked as he begun unbuttoning his shirt.
Her gaze settled on his right hand, turning increasingly wary with each button he unfastened. Apprehension darkened her eyes and gave him enormous satisfaction. Without the smug look she was even prettier.
“For your information, lots of girls dress like this here. We don’t go prancing around in stuff that looks like night clothes and flimsy veils for your benefit.” She briefly looked from his hand to his face and back again. “What are you doing?”
“Ah, so you do know who I am and where I come from.” He shrugged off the shirt.
She took a step back. “I don’t know who you are.” Her gaze leveled on his bare chest, and she blinked. “What are you, some kind of sheikh or prince?”
He tossed the shirt over the side of the stall, mostly to distance himself from the slight odor, and advanced toward her.
She ducked behind the horse. “We have laws here, you know. Just because you’re some sheikh, or whatever, you can’t just do what you want.”
He moved around to the front of the horse.
She scurried toward its left flank. “You don’t intimidate me, so don’t even try.”
He stopped and focused on the horse, virtually ignoring her except to ask, “What is this animal’s name?”
“Quit calling him an animal. This is Khalid.”
Sharif nearly smiled at the relief she could not keep from softening her voice. And when she stepped around to reverently stroke