Bride Behind The Desert Veil (Mills & Boon Modern) (The Marchetti Dynasty, Book 3) Abby Green (primary phonics TXT) đ
- Author: Abby Green
Book online «Bride Behind The Desert Veil (Mills & Boon Modern) (The Marchetti Dynasty, Book 3) Abby Green (primary phonics TXT) đ». Author Abby Green
They joined the crazy Paris traffic and Liyah said nothing at first. Waiting to see if Sharif would elaborate. But he was silent. Brooding.
Eventually Liyah had to break the growing tension. âUm...what you said about something not working...what did you mean?â
Sharif turned to look at her, snapping out of his brooding mood. He lounged back against the side of the car. Liyah had never seen him like this. It intimidated her as much as it excited her. There was something careless about him. No... Something reckless. Dangerous.
âI meant that I donât think our current arrangement is working.â
The driver put up the privacy shield between the front and the back seats.
Liyahâs stomach plummeted. Sheâd asked too many questions. She didnât fit into his world. She didnât look like those other effortlessly soignĂ©e women. He didnât want to dance. Not with her, anyway.
And why was her first reaction dismay?
Terrified heâd see how much heâd got to her, Liyah said stiffly, âI think youâre right. Obviously neither of us are really suited to this...arrangementââ
âI donât mean thatââ Sharif interrupted her, but then broke off abruptly. He cursed.
Liyah realised the car had stopped moving, they were back at his apartment.
Before she could try to figure out what he had meant he was out of the car, opening her door and reaching for her, taking her hand and leading her into the building. When they were in the elevator he didnât let go of her hand. Still he didnât say anything.
Electricity crackled in the air between them. She was afraid to look at him, or put a name to it, or think about what it meant. But she could feel it in her gut. Desire. The flames were getting loose and licking at her insides. But what if she was wrong? What ifâ
The elevator doors opened and Sharif led her into the apartmentâs foyer. The door closed behind her and Sharif let her hand go. She wobbled a little in her heels. Why was she out of breath all of a sudden?
Feeling incredibly nervous, she started to babble. âI liked Nikos and Maggie. Theyâre genuinely in love, arenât they?â
Sharifâs expression was stark. He looked at her as if heâd never seen her before and then he said, âI donât know much about loveâbut I know about this.â
Liyah frowned. âAbout...?â
But her words were cut off when Sharif clamped his hands on her waist and pulled her into his body. All the air left her chest.
âThis marriage in name only is not working.â
The look in his eye was explicit. His body was hard. His heart hammered under her hands, which were splayed across his chest. Liyah opened her mouth and then shut it again. The flames of desire licked higher. But even as they did, and as she became aware of the full meaning behind Sharifâs declaration, she felt the need to resist.
âAre you sure thatâs a good idea?â
âI want my wife.â He growled the words.
It took a second for her to absorb that fact. To acknowledge how badly sheâd wanted him to want her. How much it had flayed her inside to think that one night had been enough for him.
Then it sank in. Stark. Unvarnished.
âI want my wife.â
This was how he did it. No romance. He hadnât even said I want you. She was a commodity to him. He just wanted to scratch an itchâshe was no different from his other lovers. Maybe seeing his brother with his wife had made him realise that he was missing convenient sex in his convenient marriage.
That suspicion made something close down inside Liyah.
She took a step back, dislodging Sharifâs hands. âWell, I donât think Iâm prepared to renegogiate the parameters of this arrangement just because you want someone to warm your bed. Iâm sure you have plenty of contacts you can call to alleviate your...urges.â
Deep inside, Liyah wondered what on earth she was saying. She was willingly pushing him into another womanâs bed! But heâd never been hers in the first place. Not really. No matter how serendipitous or magical that night at the oasis had felt.
âI told youâI donât need any adverse press at this time.â He took a step towards her.
Panic at his proximity and her own weakness made Liyah put out a hand as if to ward him off. Or grab him and bring him closer? teased a sly inner voice.
She dropped her hand. âSo now Iâm convenient not just for a marriage but also to scratch a physical itch?â
He took another step closer. His scent wrapped around her like a siren call. Woody and oriental. Infinitely seductive. She wanted to close her eyes, breathe him in until she was dizzy.
He made a sound like a strangled laugh. âBelieve me, thereâs nothing âconvenientâ about how you make me feel.â
Panic spiked. âI donât mind if you want to take someone else to bed. I wonât say anything.â
He came closer, as if she hadnât spoken. Liyah felt as if she was under water. His hands were opening his jacket that was still on her and pushing it apart, over her shoulders and down her arms. It fell to the floor at her feet with a muted swish of fabric.
He said, almost to himself, âThe problem is that I donât want anyone else. I only want you.â
You. Not my wife. Her. Liyah.
Treacherously, she felt her defences weaken.
Up close, he still towered over her, even in heels. His jaw was dark with stubble. He was so broad that he blocked everything else out.
And then he said, âYou really wouldnât mind?â
Liyah couldnât think straight. âWouldnât mind what?â
âIf I slept with another woman?â
A raging hungry beast reared up inside her, and his scent and proximity made her defences crumble to dust. She had an image of him at the oasis, watching her emerge from the water, holding his hand out to her. Something very elemental moved through
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