Read Hostage of the Hawk Online

Authors: Sandra Marton

Hostage of the Hawk (8 page)

His eyes went dark. ‘You play with fire, Joanna.'

‘What's the matter? Can't you handle the truth? Or do you expect me to bow and scrape and worship you adoringly, the way Rachelle does?'

To her surprise, he burst out laughing. ‘You? Bowing and scraping? It is an interesting thought, Joanna, but I think the only things you will ever scrape will be the chicken coops.'

‘What?' She moved after him as he turned and started for the door. ‘Never,' she said, ‘not in this lifetime...' the door opened ‘...or any other,' she finished, but it was too late. Khalil was gone.

After a moment, she sighed and walked to the window. Why had she wasted time letting him bait her? There were things she'd meant to ask him, things that would make whatever time she had to spend here more bearable.

There was an enclosed garden just outside, a handsome one, from what she could see of it. Would he permit her to walk in it? Surely, he didn't intend to keep her locked up in—?

A flash of colour caught her eye. Joanna leaned forward. A little girl dressed in jeans, sneakers, and a pale blue polo shirt was playing with a puppy. Despite her own worries, Joanna began to smile. There was something about children and small animals that never failed to move her.

The child laughed as she held out a bright yellow ball, then tossed it across the grass. The puppy wagged its tail furiously, charged after the ball, and brought it back. Joanna's smile broadened. The two were having a wonderful time, judging by the way the girl was laughing. The puppy looked as if it were laughing, too, with its pink tongue hanging out of its mouth.

Joanna tucked her hip on to the window sill and watched, chuckling softly as the game continued, until the ball bounced crazily on the cobblestoned pathway, tumbled into the dark green hedge that bordered it, and vanished.

The puppy searched, as did the little girl, but neither had seen where the ball had gone.

Joanna tapped the window pane. ‘There,' she said, ‘in the hedge.'

Neither the child nor the dog could hear her.

She tapped the window again. If the girl would just look up...

The child's face puckered. She plopped down in the grass, snatched the puppy to her breast, and began to sob. The puppy licked her face but the child only cried harder as she rocked the animal in her arms.

Joanna turned from the window, hurried to the door, and flung it open. The guard standing outside looked up, startled.

‘Excuse me,' she said, brushing past him.

He called out after her, his equivalent, she was certain, of ‘Hey, where do you think you're going?' but she was already halfway down the hall, heading towards an arched doorway that she knew must open on to the garden. She went straight through it, pausing only long enough to be sure the child was still sitting in the same place, holding her dog and weeping.

‘Don't cry,' Joanna said when she reached her. The little girl looked up, her eyes widening with surprise. Joanna smiled and squatted down beside her. ‘Do you understand me? You mustn't cry so hard. You'll make yourself sick.'

The child raised a tear-stained face. ‘Who are you?' she said, in perfect English.

‘My name is Joanna. And who are you?'

‘I am Lilia.' The tears began rolling down her plump cheeks again. ‘And I've lost my ball!'

Joanna took the girl's hands in hers. ‘It's not the end of the world,' she said softly.

‘It was a special ball. My father gave it to me, and—' The tears came faster and faster. ‘And he's never coming back!'

Joanna rose to her feet. ‘In that case,' she said, ‘we'll just have to get that ball, won't we?'

She spotted not one guard but several hurrying towards her. Too bad, she thought defiantly, as she hurried towards the hedge that had swallowed the child's toy. When she reached it, she saw that the foliage was denser than it had seemed from her window. She hesitated, then shook her head over her foolishness. It was only a hedge, and the guards were almost upon her. Quickly, she plunged her hand deep into the bush's green heart.

‘Joanna!'

The ball was here somewhere, dammit. If she could just—

‘Joanna! Stop it! Do you hear me?'

There! She had it now. She winced as she felt something needle-sharp hit her hand, but what did it matter? Face flushed with triumph, she pulled the yellow ball from the tangle of branches and looked up into the dark, angry face of Khalil.

‘Relax, Your Highness,' she said coolly. ‘I'd love to escape, but I doubt if burrowing through some shrubbery will get me very far.'

‘You fool.' He barked something at Lilia, who had followed after Joanna. The little girl wiped her eyes, dropped a curtsy, and ran off with the puppy at her heels.

Joanna's eyes flashed. ‘You see? Everyone bows and scrapes to you, even a slip of a child who—'

Khalil grabbed the ball from her and tossed it aside. ‘Would you risk everything for something as stupid as a child's toy?'

‘I know a little girl's tears mean nothing to you, oh great one, but then, you're not exactly known for having a heart, are you?' Her chin tilted. ‘What now? Do I get flogged? Put on bread and water?'

Khalil snatched her wrist. ‘Look,' he growled, lifting her hand.

She looked. There was a single puncture mark in the flesh between her thumb and forefinger.

‘So?' Joanna's mouth narrowed. ‘Don't tell me all this rage is over my getting scratched by a thorn.'

‘No thorn did that, you little idiot! Do you see any thorns on that bush?'

‘So what? It's nothing but a little cut. What's the matter, Khalil? Are you afraid I'll sue you?'

‘Damn you, Joanna.' He caught hold of her shoulders and shook her. ‘Someone should teach you that a smart answer isn't always a wise answer!'

‘It won't kill me,' she said coldly. ‘I assure you, I've survived worse.'

‘You fool,' he said sharply. ‘When will you learn to shut up long enough to listen?'

‘If you're finished, I'd like to return to my room.' Her teeth flashed in a tight smile. ‘Even being locked inside those miserable four walls is preferable to standing here and dealing with you!'

A muscle knotted in Khalil's jaw. ‘I couldn't agree more.'

‘Well, then,' she said, and turned away from him. But she hadn't taken a step before he caught hold of her and swept her up in his arms.

‘Put me down!' Joanna pounded her fist against his shoulder as he strode through the garden and into the coolness of the house. ‘Are you deaf, Khalil? I said, put me down!'

‘With pleasure,' he growled through his teeth. ‘The instant I am done with you, I will do just that.'

‘What do you mean?' She pounded on his shoulder again as he swept down the corridor past her room. ‘Dammit, where are you taking me?'

He glanced down at her, his eyes shimmering like the heat waves on the desert.

‘To my rooms,' he said, with a smile as cold as any she had ever imagined.

Before she could answer, he shouldered open a huge wooden door, then kicked it closed behind him.

Joanna glimpsed a high ceiling, a tapestried wall, and a massive, canopied bed—and then Khalil dumped her on to the mattress, put his hands on his hips, and glared down at her.

‘Now, Joanna,' he said, ‘let's get down to business.'

CHAPTER EIGHT

K
HALIL
was angry, angrier than he should have been, considering the circumstances, but what man wouldn't be angry when an educated, intelligent woman insisted on making a damned fool of herself?

‘The woman is trying to escape, Highness,' one of his people had cried out, bursting into the library just as he'd begun a strategy session with his ministers.

His men had let her run when they'd realised she had made for the enclosed garden from which there was no escape.

‘I'll get her,' Khalil had said, tight-lipped, but instead of chasing down a fleeing Joanna Bennett, he'd stumbled upon a foolish one, up to her silken elbows in a shrub she should have known better than to touch in the first place.

No. That was ridiculous. Even he had to admit that. How could she have known that the seemingly innocent shrub could conceal a venomous insect? It was obvious she hadn't been trying to run away, even though he knew she could hardly wait to see the last of him.

His teeth ground together. Then why was his temper so close to boiling point? He glared down at her. He knew she prided herself on maintaining self-control but in this moment she was as transparent as glass. Looking into her green eyes, he could see her indignation and anger giving way to something else. To fear—and to the bone-deep determination not to let him see that fear.

Instantly, he realised how his sharply spoken words must have sounded. His glare deepened. Did the woman really think him such a savage that he would take her in violence, in some barbaric, retaliatory rage? His nostrils flared with distaste. He would tell her that she was a fool, that he had never in his life forced a woman into his bed and that she was not a woman he would choose to have in his bed, even if she came willingly...

...But then he looked at the glossy auburn hair that lay tumbled over her shoulders, at the rapid rise and fall of her breasts beneath the ridiculously oversized T-shirt she'd insisted on wearing, and it was as if a fist knotted suddenly in his gut. His gaze fell to her mouth, soft as a flower and slightly parted, as if a breeze had disturbed its petals. Desire raged through him, as hot as the fire that sometimes followed a strike of summer lightning in the mountain forests, hardening his groin with a swiftness that stunned him.

What nonsense was this? He was not a boy, given to uncontrollable bursts of adolescent desire. And she was not a woman he would ever want. She was clever and beautiful, yes, but she was soft and spoiled, selfish and stubborn and altogether unyielding.

And yet, she had yielded to him, when he'd kissed her. Each time he had taken her in his arms to humble her, she had instead kindled a fire in his blood, then matched it with a scorching heat of her own.

His breathing quickened. What would happen if he came down on the bed beside her? It was what she expected, he knew, that he would take her now. What would she do if he did? Would she fight him? Or would she ignite with a quicksilver flame under his touch?

‘Joanna,' he said, his voice a little thick, and instantly she rose up on her knees and bared her small, white teeth.

‘Go on,' she taunted, ‘do whatever you're going to do. It's all the excuse I need to claw out your eyes!'

So much for her igniting under his touch! Khalil burst out laughing.

‘If you claw out my eyes,' he said reasonably, ‘how will I attend to you properly?'

‘You couldn't,' she said. ‘I mean, you can't. There's nothing you could do that would make me...'

‘Relax, Joanna.' The look he gave her was cool, almost disinterested. ‘I assure you, I've no designs on your body.'

Her face coloured. ‘Then why—?' Her voice rose as he strode into the adjoining bathroom. She could hear water running, cabinet doors opening and closing, and then he reappeared, bearing a small tray arrayed with a small basin, a bottle, cotton pads, and adhesive tape. Joanna's eyes lit with suspicion. ‘What's all that for?' she demanded.

He sighed dramatically as he put the tray on the bedside table and rolled back his sleeves.

‘I hate to disappoint you,' he said. ‘I know you're convinced I'm about to subject you to some ancient and terrible ritual.' He dipped a cotton pad into the basin. ‘But I'm not planning anything more exotic than cleaning your hand.'

She jerked her hand back as he reached for it but his fingers curled around her wrist like a vice.

‘Come on, Khalil, give me a break! Surely, we're too old to play Doctor.' Her breath hissed through her teeth as he dabbed the pad against her skin. ‘Hey! That hurts.'

‘Not as much as it will if the bite isn't tended. Hold your arm to the light, please.'

‘It's nothing,' she said impatiently. ‘No one dies from—'

‘You may be an expert on many things, Joanna, but you are hardly one on the flora and fauna of my country. The spider that bit you might well be poisonous.'

‘Poisonous?' she said stupidly. ‘Hey! Hey, what are you doing?'

‘Drawing out the venom.' The breath caught in her throat as he lifted her hand to his mouth. A shudder went through her as she felt the tug of his lips, the light press of his teeth, and then he dropped her hand into her lap and strode into the bathroom. She heard water running in the sink and she closed her eyes, fighting for control, but she could still feel the imprint of his mouth, the heat of it...

‘Joanna? Are you feeling faint?'

Her eyes flew open. ‘I told you, it's just a bite. I'm not...' She frowned as he uncapped a bottle and dampened a cotton pad with its contents. Her breath hissed as he applied it to her skin. ‘Ouch. That stings! What is it?'

‘An ancient medication known only to shamans and holy men.' He looked up, and she could see laughter in his eyes. ‘It is peroxide, Joanna. What did you think it was?'

‘How should I know?' she said stiffly.

Khalil worked in silence for a moment, and then he looked at her again.

‘My men think you were trying to escape.'

‘I told you, I'd be delighted to escape,' she said with a quick, cool smile. ‘But I'm not stupid enough to escape into your garden.'

He laughed softly. ‘No. I did not think so.'

She watched as he bent his head and began dabbing at the tiny bite mark again.

‘What were you doing, then?'

Joanna shrugged her shoulders. ‘The little girl lost her ball. I saw where the ball landed but she didn't, and when she started to cry—'

‘Her crying annoyed you?'

‘Annoyed me? Of course not. I felt sorry for her. One minute she'd been laughing and the next—' She caught her breath as he ran a finger lightly over her skin.

‘The bite will itch, for a day or two,' he said, ‘but it will be fine after that.'

‘Fine.' Her voice shook a little and he looked up, frowning.

‘What is it, Joanna? Does it hurt when I touch you there?'

‘No,' she said quickly. ‘It doesn't hurt at all.'

What it did, she thought wildly, was send a wave of sensation along her nerve-endings. The feeling was—it was...

‘That's great,' she said, snatching her hand away. ‘Thank you. I'm sure I won't—'

Khalil clasped her hand in his again. ‘I am not done,' he said. ‘I want to put some ointment on your hand and then bandage it.'

‘It's—it's not necessary. Really.'

‘Just hold still, please. I'll try and be more gentle.' His hands moved on her lightly, without pressure. ‘It will only take another minute.'

Joanna sat beside him, her spine rigid, as he smoothed a healing cream over her slightly reddened flesh. He would try and be more gentle, he'd said—but he was already being more gentle than she could ever have imagined. She had no doubt that those large, competent hands could tame the wildest desert horse; that they could also stroke her as if his fingers were satin and her skin silk came as a surprise. He was touching her with such care, as if she were too delicate for anything but the most careful caress.

Her breathing quickened. Khalil's head was bowed over her hand. She could see the way his dark hair curled lightly over the nape of his neck, as if it were kissing his tanned skin. The fingers of her free hand tightened against her palm. What would his hair feel like, if she were to touch it? And what would he do, if she reached out and lightly stroked that ebony silk?

Some time between the last time she'd seen him and now, he'd changed his clothes. Gone was the white jellaba; in its place was a very American blue denim shirt and jeans. It was amazing, she thought, how little he looked like a fierce mountain bandit and how much he looked like a man who could walk down a New York street without drawing attention to himself—except that he would always draw attention, wherever he went. He was too self-assured, too ruggedly handsome not to be noticed.

Joanna bit down lightly on her lip. Moments ago, he'd dumped her on this bed and stood over her, fury gleaming in his eyes, and she'd thought he was going to force her to submit to him. The thought had terrified her—and yet, if she were brutally honest, she'd had some other far, darker reaction deep within herself as she'd looked up at him.

What if she'd opened her arms to him? Would the fire of anger have left his eyes and been replaced, instead, by the shine of desire? Her lashes fell to her cheeks and she imagined the feel of his body against hers, the excitement of his possession...

Dear God! Joanna's eyes flew open. She really was going over the edge! She wasn't a woman who wanted to be taken against her will any more than he was a man who would take a woman in that fashion. Why would he, when surely any woman he wanted would come to him willingly, when any woman in her right mind would turn to flame in his arms...?

‘There,' he said briskly. He capped the bottle, put it on the tray, and rose to his feet. ‘That should do it. The next time you want to do something heroic—'

Joanna blew out her breath. ‘I wasn't being heroic. I told you, Lilia was crying, and I—'

There was a light knock on the door. ‘My lord?' a little voice whispered, and Lilia stepped carefully into the room. She looked from Joanna to Khalil, who folded his arms over his chest in that arrogant posture Joanna had come to recognise. ‘I am sorry, my lord,' the child said.

He nodded, his face stern. ‘As well you should be.'

Joanna stood up. ‘Khalil!'

‘Will the lady be all right, my lord?'

‘I'm fine,' Joanna said quickly.

Lilia nodded, but her attention was centred on Khalil. ‘I really am sorry.' She sniffed, then wiped her hand under her nose. ‘I didn't mean—'

‘What you mean is, you didn't think.'

‘Khalil,' Joanna said, ‘for goodness' sake, tell the child that—'

‘You have a place to play, Lilia. A safe place, with swings and toys—and with a nursemaid to watch over you.' Khalil's brows drew together. ‘You ran away from Amara again, didn't you?'

The child hesitated. ‘Well—'

‘Tell me the truth, Lilia!'

‘Amara fell asleep,' she said, hanging her head. ‘She ate her lunch and then she ate most of a box of sweets and then she said she would just sit in the sun and rest...'

The child's mouth twitched. Joanna's eyes flashed to Khalil's face. Astonished, she watched his mouth begin to twitch, too, and then he squatted, held out his arms, and grinned.

‘Come and give me a hug, you little devil,' he said. ‘I haven't had one in days.'

Lilia laughed as he swung her into his arms. ‘I love you, Uncle,' she said.

Uncle?
Uncle
?

He kissed the child on both cheeks, then set her on the floor and gave her a light pat on her bottom.

‘Go on,' he said gently. ‘Find your puppy and play some other game. I shall speak to Amara.'

‘You won't be angry at her?'

He sighed. ‘No.'

Lilia smiled. ‘Thank you,' she said, and then she turned to Joanna. ‘And thank you, for finding my ball.'

Joanna smiled, too. ‘You're very welcome.' The child skipped out the door and Joanna cleared her throat. ‘I didn't expect—' Khalil looked at her. ‘I, um, I never imagined... I didn't know Lilia was your niece.'

‘It's an honorary title,' he said.

‘She's very fond of you.'

‘Yes.' His expression was impassive. ‘It is many years since any of us ate children for breakfast, Joanna.'

She flushed. ‘I never meant to imply that you—that your people...'

‘No.' His expression grew cold and forbidding. ‘That's true enough. You never “imply”. Why should you, when you are a veritable expert on our behaviour and customs?'

‘Look, I suppose I deserved that. But you can't blame me for—for...' She sighed. ‘She's a sweet little girl,' she said, after a minute.

Khalil nodded. ‘I agree. She's the daughter of Amahl. He was one of my closest advisors.'

‘I've never seen—'

‘And you won't.' He snatched up the tray of first-aid equipment and stalked to the bathroom, Joanna trailing after him. ‘Amahl was killed during a skirmish.' He yanked open the cabinet door and began slamming the first-aid equipment into it. ‘Lilia was alone to start with—her mother died in childbirth—but after Amahl's death she had no one.'

Joanna could see the muscles knotting in his shoulders. Her throat tightened. She wanted to reach out, to touch him, to stroke away the tension that held him prisoner and tell him it was all right...

Prisoner? She was the prisoner, not he! She was—

Khalil swung around and faced her. ‘Abu is evil, Joanna.' His voice was harsh. ‘If your father signs this contract with him, it will ensure that he has enough money to buy the arms he needs to defeat us!'

She stared at him, her eyes wide. The bathroom was mirrored, and she could see their faces in its silvery walls. Khalil's and hers, their reflections seeming to slip into infinity.

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