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The Sheikh's Rebellious Mistress

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Год написания книги
2019
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The hawk thrived on solitude and by trusting its own instincts. It would never let anything defeat it.

Salim’s smile faded.

Neither would he. He’d been made a fool of five months before and the insult would be dealt with, and soon. Lifting the brandy snifter to his lips, he let the last of the liquid’s fire sear his throat.

It still infuriated him to remember. How he had been lied to. How he had fallen for the oldest game in the world.

How the woman had humiliated him.

She had lied to him in the worst way possible. She had played a game in his arms, the kind he’d never believed he would fall victim to.

She had lied to him with her body.

Her sighs. Her moans. The little whispers that had driven him crazy.

Yes, oh, yes. Do that again. Touch me, there, Salim. Ah. Ah, like that. Like that. Just…yes. Your mouth. Your hands…

Damn it!

Just remembering turned him hard. Lies, all of it but still, he couldn’t forget the feel of her. All that silken heat. The sweetness of her mouth. The weight of her breasts in his hands.

None of it had been real. Her sexual appetite, yes. But her hunger for him—for him, not for what or who he was—had been a lie. She had deceived him, toyed with him, made him blind to the truth.

Made it possible for her to steal his honor.

How else to describe waking up one morning to discover that she was gone and with her, ten million dollars?

A tremor of pure rage shot through him. He turned his back to the window, crossed the elegant room to a wall-length teak cabinet. The bottle of Courvoisier stood where he’d left it; he unstoppered it and poured himself a second drink.

All right. Part of that was an overstatement. He had not actually awakened to find Grace gone. How could he, when they’d never spent the entire night together?

Salim frowned.

Well, once. Twice, perhaps. Not more than that, and those times he’d stayed the night because of the weather or the lateness of the hour. Never for any other reason. She had her apartment. He had his. That was the way he liked it, always, no matter how long an affair lasted. Too much togetherness, no matter how good the sex, invariably led to familiarity and familiarity led to boredom.

That last time, he’d left her bed on a Friday night, flown to the West Coast on business. And when he’d returned to New York a week later, she was gone. So was the ten million, embezzled from the investment firm he’d built into a worldwide power.

Embezzled from an account inaccessible to anyone but him.

Salim took a long drink of the brandy, turned and walked slowly to the wall of glass. The snow had eased; the hawk was still perched on the parapet, motionless except for the slight ruffling of its brown, gray and amber feathers.

Ten million dollars, none of it found or recovered. The woman who’d stolen it had not been found, either. But she would be. Oh, yes, she would be, and very soon.

It was all he’d been able to think about today, after the call from the private detective he’d hired after the police and the FBI had proven useless. It was all he could think about now, as he waited for the man to arrive.

Five months. Twenty weeks. One hundred and forty-something days…and now, finally, he would get what he hungered for, an old concept his ancestors would surely have approved.

Vengeance.

Another swallow of brandy. It left a trail of smooth flame as it went down his throat but the truth was, nothing could warm him. Not anymore. Not until he finished what had begun last summer, when he’d taken Grace Hudson as his mistress.

Nothing unusual in that.

He was male, he was in his sexual prime, he was—why be foolishly modest?—he was a man who’d never had to go searching for women. They’d discovered him at sixteen, back home in Senahdar; if he’d been without a woman at any time since, it had been by choice, not necessity.

It was his selection of Grace as his mistress that had been unusual.

The women he took as lovers were invariably beautiful. He especially liked petite brunettes. They were also invariably charming. Why shouldn’t a woman go out of her way to please a man? He was modern; he had been educated in the States but tradition was tradition and a woman who knew that it was important to cater to a man’s wishes was a woman capable of holding a man’s interest.

Grace had been none of those things.

She was tall. Five-eight, five-nine—still only up to his shoulder, even in the stiletto heels she favored, but there was no way one would describe her as “petite.”

Her hair was not dark—it was tawny. The first time he’d seen her, his fingers had ached to take the pins from it and let it down and when, finally, he had, she had reminded him of a magnificent lioness.

As for going out of her way to please a man…She didn’t go out of her way to please anyone. She was polite, well-spoken, but she was as direct as any man Salim had ever known. She had opinions on everything and never hesitated to state them.

She was a beautiful, enigmatic challenge. Not once had she sent out the signals women did when they were interested in a man.

Now, of course, he knew the reason. She’d been plotting from the start, cleverly baiting the trap. He hadn’t seen it. He’d only seen that she was different.

Salim’s jaw tightened.

Damned right, she was different.

She’d worked for him.

He never mixed business with pleasure. You didn’t work and play in the same place. If you did, it was a surefire prescription for trouble. He’d always known that.

An unexpected event had brought her into his life. His chief financial officer—a staid, almost dour bachelor with a comb-over, thick glasses and no sense of humor—had stumbled into a midlife crisis that involved a bottle blonde and a Porsche. One day, the man was at his desk. The next, he was living with Blondie in a Miami condo.

Everyone had laughed.

“Lost his marbles over a babe,” Salim had heard someone say. He’d chuckled right along with everyone else but the situation was serious. They needed a replacement, and quickly. Salim did what was logical, promoted the assistant CFO, Thomas Shipley, to the top job.

That left another hole in the organizational chart. Now his new CFO needed an assistant.

“Dominoes,” the new CFO said with an apologetic shrug, but Salim knew it was the truth. He told him to hire someone. Such a simple thing. Such a damned simple thing…

Hell. The brandy snifter was empty again. Salim went to the bar and refilled it. Where was the detective? Their appointment was for four-thirty. He looked at his watch. It was barely four. His impatience was getting to him.

Calm down, he told himself. He had waited this long; he could wait just a little longer.

Outside, the long darkness of the winter night was setting in; it was time to switch on the lights, but darkness better suited his mood.

Every detail of what had happened after he’d told his new CFO to hire an assistant remained vivid, including the moment two weeks later when Shipley stepped into his office.

“Good news,” he’d said. “I’ve found three candidates. Any of them would be an excellent choice.”
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