The Cobra & the Concubine (Khamsin Warriors of the Wind) (9 page)

BOOK: The Cobra & the Concubine (Khamsin Warriors of the Wind)
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A small noise drew his attention to the doorway. Zaid stood there, a sheaf of papers in his hand. Kenneth’s heart sank.

"Those need my signature?"

Zaid nodded. Kenneth motioned to the satinwood desk. He settled onto its sturdy chair and stared at the thick documents Zaid handed over. They looked official and important.

Slowly he dipped the thick gold pen into the inkwell. His hand hovered above the vellum. Kenneth steeled his spine and drew the intricate swirls and curlicues that made no sense to him. They looked very official. Zaid dusted sand over his signature to dry it.

Kenneth pulled a gold watch from his vest pocket. His friend, Landon Burton, the Earl of Smithfield, had asked to meet him at his cousin Victor’s antiquities shop. He’d promised a small surprise.

"Order the carriage, Zaid. I’m late for my meeting with Lord Smithfield."

When the secretary left, Kenneth stared at the particles clinging to the black ink on the paper. Sand. Egypt. His feet longed to walk the land he once called home. But it was home no more.

Such irony. The English duke who’d sworn never to return to Egypt pining for that land more than anything else. He felt adrift, without country or culture. From the moment he’d left Egypt, he vowed to forget the woman who’d crushed his heart. Badra was in his past, when he’d ridden like the wind across dusky sands and swung a scimitar with a mighty arm. When he’d been called Khepri. The memory of her beauty beckoned like a siren’s song. He had to stuff rags into his ears to shut out the melody.

God help him if he ever saw her again. God help them both.

 

 

Chapter Three

 

This assignment was far more dangerous than she’d ever anticipated. Badra’s heart skipped a beat as she stared out the carriage window. She blew a breath on the glass, frosting it, and drew her name in English. The letters made her smile. Once she’d been illiterate. Now she could read and write in both English and Arabic. It was her greatest achievement.

Anxiety gripped her. Did she now face her worst failure?

Smuggling stolen artifacts belonging to a stranger was one thing. But a necklace belonging to Khepri? Sweat slicked her tightly clasped hands inside her fur muff.

The cold, gray land Khepri now called home chilled her blood. Badra ached for Egypt’s warm sands, soft desert breezes and burning yellow sun. She shuddered at London’s smells and crowds, the thick pall of black coal smoke in the air, the pitiful pleas of ragged beggar children huddled in doorways, the continual clip-clop of carriages rushing indifferently past ordure and filth in the gutters.

She glanced at Rashid, talking to Lord Smithfield, Katherine’s father. The earl had helped them secure a trustworthy source to sell Khamsin gold artifacts. With that money, they could educate the tribe’s children in England. Rashid still wore his trousers and indigo
binish
, the turban wrapped about his long, dark locks. His only concession to English style was a thick wool cloak to fend off the icy chill.

At their destination, Badra clutched her wool cloak as the wind whistled beneath it. Her clothing felt odd. She had some trouble maneuvering in the laced boots. A wood sign swung in the winter wind above the shop window. It read "ANTIQUITIES."

She followed Rashid and the earl inside. A little silver bell tinkled gaily when the door opened. She hung back, pretending to admire the glistening artifacts in their glass display cases. When the proprietor invited the men to a back room to make their transaction, she held her breath.

The clerk’s eyes met hers. He was the one who sold artifacts on the black market behind his employer’s back.

Badra furtively withdrew the Egyptian necklace from the satchel—called a reticule, she’d learned—and laid it on the counter. Guilt assaulted her. If Jabari knew what she was doing, dishonoring their heritage to become a lowly tomb raider ...

Brushing aside guilt, she spoke rapidly in perfect English. The clerk studied the Egyptian pectoral, which featured a design of two griffins and the vulture goddess. Lapis and carnelian winked in the light.

"Lovely," he marveled in his thick accent. "Be hard to duplicate, but it’ll fetch a pretty pence when it’s done."

Duplicate? So that’s why Masud wanted the necklace smuggled here. The clerk was making replicas. No matter. Her task was finished, and guaranteed Jasmine’s safety. The clerk handed over a wad of pound notes to return to Masud. As she took them, Badra’s hand shook. She was a transporter of stolen goods and tainted money.

Barely had she stuffed the notes into her muff when the little silver bell tinkled again. Badra turned to see the visitor. A sharp gasp escaped her lips as she stared into a pair of blazing blue eyes she thought she’d never see again.

Khepri.

 

 

Badra.

Time took a step back, just as he did.

Reeling with shock, Kenneth stared at the woman he had once loved. He could not think or breathe. Her exotic beauty enchanted him, wove him back into the familiar spell of hot Arabian nights and the secrets inside the black tents under endless starry skies. Those luminous brown eyes, delicate cheekbones and her soft, pliant mouth still made his heart pound a frantic beat. Her eyes widened as if in fear. Badra’s mouth worked violently. She took a step forward, wobbled like a newborn colt, and threatened to fall.

Habit, borne from five years of protecting her from even her foot scraping a rock, caused him to rush to assist. Grabbing her elbow, he steadied her. Their gazes caught and met, dark brown to deep blue. Her heart-shaped mouth parted in a soft, "Oh!"

Kenneth realized the arm he grasped was covered in soft, gray English fabric. Convulsive shock raced through him.

Badra clad in English dress was like seeing the limestone statue of Ramses II wearing a suit and cravat.

Sublimely ridiculous.

Yet nothing could dim her beauty. Not even sackcloth.

Roping in his emotions, Kenneth straightened and laced both hands behind his back. "Hello, Badra," he said in formal English.

"Khepri," she answered, her sultry voice winding around him like a silk scarf, teasing his senses to madness.

"Kenneth," he corrected.

He picked up the muff she’d dropped and a pound note fluttered out. Kenneth offered both back, deeply curious. He raised inquiring brows.

"I ... I don’t know where to put English currency," she stammered.

His nod toward the reticule swinging from her arm indicated the correct storage place.

"It is good to see you again, Khep—I mean, Kenneth." Badra took the note and the muff. Bright rosy color stained her cheeks. Flustered as he was, she was showing it more.

"I see you are doing quite well," she added.

He stared. Quite well? When all he wanted was to gather her in his arms and kiss her senseless? When she’d cut him to the bone with her rejection? A short laugh escaped him. Viciously, he bit it back.

"What are you doing here, Badra?"

"Rashid and I are visiting Lord Smithfield."

Silently he cursed. The earl had probably thought he’d enjoy seeing people from the tribe that raised him. Not bloody likely.

"Why?" he asked bluntly.

"Ramses was to come, but Katherine is pregnant and he was worried the long journey would tax her. We came in their stead. Do you remember the artifacts stored in the tomb of Ramses’s ancestor?"

At his abrupt nod, she continued. "Lord Smithfield is helping us sell some pieces. With the money, Jabari will send a few children to school in England. They need further education." She smiled. "How is your grandfather faring?"

His throat went tight. "My grandfather ... died two months ago. A sudden illness. I am Duke of Caldwell now." He closed his eyes briefly, then opened them. "But I am fortunate we were able to have some time together before he passed on."

Sympathy filled her lovely face. "Oh, Kenneth, I am so sorry. Why did you not write and tell us?"

Tell them? He had left the tribe behind. They knew nothing of his personal life. He had longed to share with them the deep sorrow he felt after regaining old ground with his grandfather, then losing him. He had felt so damnably alone.

But he could not tell them.

Abruptly, he changed topics. "I understand you visited my excavation at Dashur. Did you see anything you liked?"

Two bright spots of scarlet colored her cheeks. "It—it was very educational. How did you know we were there?"

"I know everything about that dig." He studied her face, her beautiful large eyes. Lost in staring, Kenneth felt the familiar desire rise. He fought it. "How is Elizabeth? Did she enjoy seeing the pyramid?"

"Very much so. She and Jabari both. It was a welcome break for them. Tarik is approaching two and is very"—a sparkle lit her eyes—"very much a boy."

A rush of homesickness for the desert sands he’d once called home engulfed him. Kenneth studied Badra. She wore a soft gray gown with sleeves edged with ecru lace. A warm felt hat covered her silken midnight hair bundled into a tight chignon. Of all the English women he’d met, and those he’d bedded in frantic attempts to forget Badra, none could match this exotic beauty.

He willed his emotions away. Never show them to the enemy, Jabari had advised.
You will be slaughtered without mercy.
God, the sheikh was right—only he’d never warned that the enemy could be a beautiful woman.

"Give her my regards," he told Badra crisply.

Then, with those dismissive words, he crossed to the shop’s assistant. The clerk gave him a friendly smile. Kenneth braced his hands on the counter and offered a penetrating look. "Any new pieces come in? I’m particularly interested in gold Egyptian pectorals. A design with two griffins and the vulture goddess."

 

 

Chapter Four

 

Oh help me, God
, Badra thought frantically. Her heart thudded against her chest. Her eyes sought the clerk’s, who swung his even gaze back to Kenneth.

"No, Your Grace. I don’t have such an item."

Relief made her shoulders slump as he discreetly closed the drawer containing the stolen necklace.

Kenneth drummed his fingers on the counter, peering down at the display case. Badra studied him, this man who once swore an oath to protect her with his life. Now he was a stranger. She might never have recognized him but for those intense blue eyes. A sweep of thick, dark brown hair brushed against the collar of his coat. Cheeks that had been covered in a close-trimmed beard were now clean-shaven. He had a square chin. The beard had hidden this feature. The smooth-shaven look accented full, sensual lips and a thin nose. If Khepri had been merely handsome, this stranger was striking in both his arresting appearance and crisply polished manner. His wool greatcoat hung in clean lines to his thighs. She glanced at his feet—no soft leather boots of blue, but highly polished black shoes.

Once, those blue eyes had held only friendliness. Now they appeared colder than the air outside. Looking a true English duke, Kenneth’s broad shoulders bore a regal posture as he laced gloved hands behind his back.

He had always been alert and sharp, watchful of her every move, and she feared one look at her ragged breathing and he’d ask questions, demand answers. But he merely studied the artifacts, asking about their origins. Voices sounded as the back room door creaked open. Badra’s heart skipped another beat as Rashid stepped out.

BOOK: The Cobra & the Concubine (Khamsin Warriors of the Wind)
13.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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