His Irresistible Darling (25 page)

Read His Irresistible Darling Online

Authors: Sarah Randall

BOOK: His Irresistible Darling
2.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

His heart jumped in his chest as he saw Pippa turn towards him and pop on her sunglasses before shielding her eyes to look for him. He brought his hand up in a quick wave but it was unlikely that she could see him in the crowded shop. Perched against the rail with her hair blowing wildly around her shoulders, she looked like the poster girl for youth and vitality.

Jumal’s smile dropped as he caught sight of someone approaching Pippa, someone with a black hoodie covering his head. He seemed to be speaking quite animatedly. Jumal rose up on his toes to see what was happening; his stomach plummeted as he saw Pippa struggle with the man for her bag.

“Christ,” Jumal shouted, pushing impolitely past the gathered patrons trying to get to the door. He was vaguely aware of the barista shouting at him, “Sir, sir, your order!” A mother with a double buggy blocked his exit as he cursed again, trying to keep Pippa in his sights. Why didn’t she just let him have the bloody bag? She knew he’d buy her another one. Again. He couldn’t help but yell at her to let it go even though he knew it was useless. She wouldn’t hear him.

Eventually he managed to stride over the buggy and manoeuvre an elderly couple out of his way as he made it outside just in time to see the mugger push Pippa solidly in the chest…

***

As she wrestled with the mugger for her handbag, she knew it was nonsensical. It contained nothing of any importance but she clung onto it regardless. Jumal had bought it for her. Her attacker pushed firmly at her chest and then hit at her head with her bag, causing her to stumble backwards. Her ankle buckled as she stumbled and fell into the ramp leading down to the beach. There was nothing she could do to protect her head from getting acquainted with the concrete.

“PIPPAAAA!!!!!”

She heard Jumal screaming her name loudly and briefly wondered what she’d done this time before she blacked out.

***

“Good afternoon, Mr Aldabbagh, I—”

Jumal didn’t let the doctor finish before he interrupted, “Is she going to be all right? There was so much blood,” he demanded abruptly, too anxious for pleasantries.

“Yes. Head wounds do bleed quite badly and she needed a few stitches in her scalp but nothing too serious. They’ll dissolve in a week or so. We’ve kept her sedated whilst we scanned and monitored her brain. There’s a slight concussion and she’ll need to be observed for a little while longer but yes, she will be fine. The nurse will be in shortly and I’ll be back in a few hours.”

He let out the breath he thought he’d been holding since he got to her crumpled body lying against the hard concrete—blood, too much blood, pouring from her head. He couldn’t close his eyes without seeing that nightmare—didn’t think he would ever be able to forget it. He sat at her bedside and took hold of her hand, remembering her soothing touch when he’d been in her position in that hospital bed, and ran his fingers carefully over the back of her hand.

Thankfully the barista from the coffee shop had run out after him, sensing that something was wrong, and she had called for an ambulance and the police.

He’d taken a call from the police a short time ago who confirmed that they had caught and arrested the suspect with the help of some brave pedestrians, but he couldn’t bring himself to care at the moment. He needed Pip to open her cornflower blue eyes so he could stare into them and assure himself that she would be fine. She
had
to be okay.

“You two just can’t keep away from here, can you? Do you think you get patient reward points or something?” Jumal looked up and offered a weary smile to the nurse who had escorted him from the hospital in the wheelchair all those weeks ago.

“We just
love
the food,” he offered flippantly.

“Hmm-hm. I thought I told you to look after this fiancée of yours,” she mocked. “Did they catch the guy?”

“Apparently,” he confirmed but not trusting himself to say any more. Cursing wouldn’t impress the nursing staff.

He’d lost count of the number of times people had assumed that he and Pip were engaged but was forever thankful that she’d had the sense to tell the hospital of their “betrothal” when he was admitted. He hadn’t even had to lie again when she was admitted. The staff remembered them and the fact they were “engaged”.

“He didn’t steal her ring, did he?” the nurse asked, concerned and nodding towards the hand he held.

“What?” Jumal asked looking up again. “Oh no, erm, thankfully she wasn’t wearing it today,” he lied as he shook his head.

The nurse attended to her duties whilst muttering about crime and the youth of today blah blah blah. Jumal wasn’t listening.

He leaned forward and brushed the hair from Pip’s shoulders and placed a chaste kiss on her cheek, careful of the severe bandage around her head. He moved his mouth near her ear. “Wake up please, baby. Come on,” he encouraged. “Wake up and tell me what an idiot I was to leave you alone.”

He closed his eyes and dropped his head to rest on her bed. Pippa being still and quiet wasn’t natural. Even in her sleep she really did mumble and chatter to herself…maybe not quite how he had teased her all those weeks ago, but she was still a chatterbox and he loved it…
loved it, loved her.

He was in love with her.

He wanted to hold her in his arms. He remembered doing precisely that a few weeks ago. He’d been into the office one weekend when it was deserted, taking advantage of the peace and quiet and finishing up some work before giving in to his desire to see Pippa again and rushing home…

The absence of the usual deafening pulse of dance music in the apartment on his return was his first sign that something was amiss, closely followed by the fact that he could hear the dulcet tones of Nat King Cole singing “When I fall in love” coming from Pippa’s bedroom. He went to knock on her door to ask if she wanted a drink when he heard her sharp intake of breath and sobs. She was crying. He knocked on the door but opened it slowly, not waiting for an invitation. He found her curled up on her bed hugging her knees in tightly to her chest.

He had approached her slowly, not wanting to scare her if she hadn’t heard him knocking, but wondering what the hell had happened in the hour or so he’d left her alone. “Pippa, hey.”

She was clearly distraught about something and it scared him to death. He wasn’t used to worrying about others and the need to comfort her was alien, but it just wasn’t like her to be this upset.

“What is it? What’s the matter?” he asked, sitting down on the side of her bed and reaching out for her shoulder. She jumped slightly in response but didn’t ask him to remove it or scream at him to get out. He reached over and gently pulled her hair back over her shoulder and out of her face.

“Do you want to talk about it?” he tried again.

She sniffed and grabbed a handful of tissues from her side table before turning her body to face him and curling up into his chest. Jumal was surprised by her action and wasn’t initially sure what the hell to do with his arms. Eventually he acted on impulse and held her tightly to his chest and manoeuvred his body so that he was lying down with her body still curled into his like a child. He let her cry until she exhausted herself into a restless sleep. She mumbled a lot but he wasn’t able to make out anything specific.

He made the most of the opportunity and simply enjoyed holding her body close to his own without needing to rationalise it. Her riotous hair was spread over his chest and smelt of apples. After an hour or so she woke and eventually explained that it was the anniversary of her mother’s death and she’d apparently always loved Nat King Cole. Pip confessed that she had put on a front following her mother’s death. A front to Matt and the family housekeeper that she was still her bright and bubbly self when actually she was falling apart inside and falling behind in her university studies. His heart broke listening to her. He wanted to wrap her, this other side of her, in his arms and never let anything ever hurt her again…

He looked up to check the monitors again and decided that he hadn’t done such a great job keeping that promise. On a school report it would likely say: “
Must do better.

The nurse interrupted his thoughts. “Can I bring you a drink of tea or something, Mr Aldabbagh?”

“No thank you. I’m fine.” Although, until she woke up, he was anything
but
fine…

***

“Thank Allah.”

She recognised Jumal’s voice. He sounded upset…oh right, he’d been yelling at her for something

“You’re awake.” He puffed his cheeks and let out a long breath. “How do you feel? Does your head still hurt?” he asked, concerned and gently brushing her brow.

She lifted her hand and felt the bandage surrounding her head and winced. “I hit my head,” she said slowly.

“Hmm-hm,” Jumal confirmed. “You fell back and hit your head on the ground. They’ve put a couple of stitches in there and they are just monitoring you for concussion. I think you’re going to have to stay in at least overnight—” she pulled a face at this information “—but I’m staying with you,” he added determinedly.

“It hurts,” she admitted, “and I can’t see.”

Worry etched his face. “I’ll get a nurse,” he said urgently, moving to stand, but she held out her hand.

“Wait. I don’t need the nurse. I can handle the pain and I just need my glasses. Stay here with me,” she pleaded, weakly.

He nodded gently. “Here,” he said, handing her a spare pair of her glasses. “I had Melina get these for you from the apartment. I thought it better than having to wear your sunglasses.”

He took hold of her hand with his left and eased gingerly back into the chair at her bedside. “Pippa—” he swallowed deeply “—I need to tell you something,” he confessed.

“Okkaayy—”

“They caught the person who attacked you.”

“Yeah? Well good. Did he say what he was after? Was it just money or something?”

He dropped his head down but she didn’t press him further.

Abruptly he looked up as if he’d made an important decision. “It wasn’t a man.”

“What?” she said, faintly.

“It was—” He stalled again.

What the hell was going on?! she worried.

“Faridah.”

“What, where?” she asked, looking towards the doorway.

“No, no, I mean, the mugger was Faridah. In fact it was all her.” She watched, speechless, as he closed his eyes tightly for a moment. “The police caught up with her and arrested her and then visited her apartment. They found your bag and they also found some unprescribed drugs. I told them about your birthday party and the drugging.”

“I don’t—” she started to say before shaking her head and wincing from the throbbing pain.

“It’s likely it was all her—the car as well.” His voice dropped low and raspy.

“Why? I just don’t understand why.”

He sat forward and took hold of her hand and proceeded to tell her about the contract with the Dubai government in full detail. How Faridah had been approached by a shipping competitor in Dubai and accepted a very handsome payment to stitch up Jumal and his company for the inclusion of a term in the contract, which could have led to his financial ruin. His company would have been held responsible for a delayed completion date, even if the Dubai government pushed it back, which had severe compensation penalties. He hadn’t yet fully explored the likelihood that the Dubai government had been involved in the subterfuge… He might have to have a little chat with Kahlid once Pippa was out of hospital.

“I’m so, so sorry, Pippa,” he said in a whisper. “If I had thought for one moment that she was a risk to you, that she’d react against you, I would
never
ever
have mentioned that you had discovered her betrayal. I just wanted her to know that you were… Well, it doesn’t matter now why, but—” he shook his head briskly and she could tell he was flustered “—I should have reported her to the police but, God…” He sat back, dropping her hand gently and raking both of his hands through his hair, which stuck up.

“Can you forgive me?” he pleaded, once again reaching for her hand as his eyes desperately searched hers. “I just assumed that if she was going to hit out at anyone, she’d come after me. Me,” he emphasised. “Never you.” His voice broke as he shook his head.

“It wasn’t you, Jumal. There’s nothing to forgive. Nothing,” she added in an attempt to soothe him.

He dropped his head to lie gently against her hand.

“Well,” she said, “it just goes to prove what I always thought.”

“What’s that, honey?” he asked, leaving his head resting against her hand.

“Never trust tall people.”

Her heart monitor jumped to life as Jumal turned her hand over in his and pressed a gentle kiss to the sensitive inside of her wrist, against her now rushing pulse. The monitor continued to go wild in response. Strange, she thought, how a machine could tell Jumal everything he needed to know about her feelings for him…if only he cared to listen.

***

“Oh. My. God. It’s huge.”

“Pip,” he said, exasperated. “We’ve been over this for the last ten minutes. It’s standard size. You know it is.”

“Nah-ah,” she argued determinedly, shaking her index finger at him and
it.
“There is no way that
that
is going to fit down my throat. I’ll choke on it.”

“Don’t be a baby. Now open wide. If you don’t I’ll grab you, hold you down, force it in and rub your throat till you swallow,” Jumal threatened lightly.

She swallowed as if practising. “It’s like something James would give an animal,” she shrieked, holding her arms out to keep the now stalking Jumal from approaching her. “I hate you.”

“Yeah, yeah. Now open up, baby.”

She sighed animatedly, rolling her eyes. “Good grief. Fine then just give it to me.
Sir.

“Good girl.”

“It’s your turn next.” She grinned wickedly.

***

Later that evening, having both had their pain medication, Jumal had pampered her to distraction, running around the apartment like a mother hen. They then sat next to each other on the leather sofa, all four legs resting on the low-rise coffee table with Jumal’s laptop resting on their touching thighs…

Other books

Fever by Mary Beth Keane
Whole Health by Dr. Mark Mincolla
Elizabeth Mansfield by The Counterfeit Husband
Summertime Dream by Babette James
The One Thing by Marci Lyn Curtis
Becca by Taylor, Jennie