sand.â
âIn the time it is taking you to voice your excuse, the entire landscape of the desert will have altered,â he drawled, and Bella glared at him. âYouâre so unsympathetic. I suppose youâre going to tell me you love the sand.â
âI have too little time to enjoy it.â
âHow much time is too little? A nanosecond? I donât think I ever want to see a grain of sand again. And thatâs why I borrowed the horse. I just had to get out of there! I doubt Iâll ever be able to look at a beach again. Iâll be taking city breaks from now on.â
His gaze hardened. âSo you just walked into a busy stable and helped yourself to a horse.â
âActually, that was really weird.â Bella wrinkled her nose as she remembered how odd it had seemed to her at the time. âThe place was deserted. A bit spooky actually. No one around. It was as if something was about to happenââ she gave a shrug ââbut that was probably wishful thinking. Nothing ever happened in that place, I can tell you. My imagination must have been playing tricks.â
âItâs heartening to know that you are capable of imaginationââ But he seemed distracted, as if something sheâd said had captured his attention. âSo you are saying that no one was there? That you simply walked into the yard, took the horse and rode into the desert?â
âYes. Whoever is running that stable should fire some of the staff because they were really lax. I mean, what if one of the horses was sick or something?â
âIndeed.â
âAnyway, so I rode into the desert, following the track to the city. Except it obviously wasnât the right track. It all looks the same. And then I realised I was lost. If you hadnât come along when you didââ
âYou would be dead.â His blunt appraisal made her shiver.
âYes. Very probably. So, thanks again. Iâm lucky you found me.â
He watched her for a long moment, as though he were making his mind up about something, and then he strode across the tent, pulled open a canvas bag and removed a robe. Intercepting her stare, his mouth tightened. âYou might want to look away.â
âWhy would I want to do that?â Bellaâs wicked side took over, driving her into territory she knew she would have been better avoiding. âYou have a fantastic body.â
Shock flared in his eyes and dark streaks of colour highlighted his magnificent cheek bones. âAnd you play a dangerous game for a woman alone and unprotected. Perhaps I am not a good man to be trapped with, habibiti .â His voice wassuddenly soft and there was a shimmer of mockery in his jet-black eyes. He slid the robe over his head in a fluid movement, somehow managing to discard the towel at the same time. âI believe you have a saying: âout of the frying pan into the fire.ââ
Bellaâs mouth dried as she watched him slide a dagger into the folds of his robe and her stomach fluttered with nerves. âWell, itâs certainly true that in the past few hours Iâve been fried, sautéed and flambéed.â Her weak attempt at humour again fell flat and she flopped back against the pillows, her head throbbing and her bravado wearing thin. âAll right, I get the message. No humour allowed. But you ought to know itâs polite to at least smile when someone makes a joke.â She wanted to ask why he needed a dagger, but she wasnât sure she wanted to hear the answer.
He was a complete contrast to the men she usually metâa lethal combination of untamed man and raw sexuality. A real man , she thought to herself, distracted by the dark shadow that emphasised the strong lines of his jaw. It was hard to imagine him sitting at a desk in a tall city office, but she had no problem imagining him wrestling a wild animal with his bare hands. embarrassed to admit that she
Carmen Caine, Madison Adler