Read The Sheik's Secret Bride Online
Authors: Susan Mallery
SUSAN MALLERY
TORONTO
•
LONDON
AMSTERDAM
•
PARIS
•
SYDNEY
•
•
ATHENS
•
TOKYO
•
MILAN
•
•
WARSAW
•
BUDAPEST
•
AUCKLAND
Contents
“Oh, Mommy, look!”
Liana Archer glanced up from the romance novel she’d been reading and stared out the airplane window. She saw a brilliant blue sky, an unforgiving sun and nearly a dozen men on horseback riding toward the plane.
“Don’t worry,
Bethany
,” she told her daughter absently. “It’s just—”
Liana’s eyes opened wide as she realized what she’d just seen.
Men on horseback?
When the pilot had announced that the plane would be delayed a few minutes because there was a problem at the gate, Liana had assumed there was a technical difficulty or another plane in their space. She hadn’t thought they were about to be assaulted by a herd of native tribesmen.
Not knowing what else to do, she clutched her nine-year-old daughter to her side. “We’ll be fine,” she said with a calmness she absolutely did not feel.
Someone else noticed the group of men. Conversation raced up and down the length of the plane. Several women began to scream. Liana’s heart jumped into hyper-drive, and her breathing increased until she thought she might pass out. Why was this happening? She’d been promised that El
Bahar
was the safest country in the
Middle East
.
That the king was a good and honest ruler, much beloved by his people.
She’d believed the information—otherwise she never would have subjected herself or her daughter to a move that had brought them half-way around the world. So what had gone wrong?
Before she could figure out an answer, the men reached the plane. They circled around,
then
she heard the sound of the forward door opening and the low, gruff voices of the tribesmen as they boarded the plane.
Both Liana and
Bethany
shrank back in their seats. At least they were in the rear of the plane, Liana thought grimly as she looked around for the exit by the tail. Maybe she could figure out a way to open that door, and she and her fellow passengers could sneak out to safety.
“Mommy?”
Bethany
’s voice was shaky and her face pale as she stared at her mother. “Are we going to die?”
“Of course not.”
Liana brushed the blond bangs off her daughter’s forehead,
then
kissed her cheek. “I’m sure there’s a logical explanation for all this and we’ll—”
Several tall, dark men wearing robes and headdresses entered the main cabin. They seemed to be searching for someone.
“What do you want?” a passenger in a business suit asked, rising to his feet. “There are women and children on this plane. If you want hostages, at least let them go.”
The natives ignored him. About midway down the center aisle, they paused. One of them reached for a young woman and drew her to her feet. There was an exchange of conversation that Liana couldn’t hear,
then
the woman was led away.
Conversation exploded like gunfire. Several shrieks pierced the cabin, and Liana felt herself starting to shake. Dear God, what was happening? To think that one of the reasons she’d agreed to the job in El
Bahar
had been her love of sheik romance novels. But danger in the land of the sheik was much more interesting in a book. In real life, it was plain terrifying.
“Silence, please!”
A loud male voice bellowed over the din of hysterical passengers. Liana looked up and saw another of the native men standing at the front of the cabin. He was taller than the rest, and darkly handsome in a remote kind of way. He stood with his feet braced and his robe thrown back to expose the gleaming pistol at his waist. She swallowed, trying to console herself with the thought that if they were to be shot, at least it would be a quick death.
“I apologize for your fears,” the man said. He glanced over his shoulder,
then
shook his head. “A few of the younger men were a little too involved with their assignment and took the game to heart. My instructions were for you to be informed of what was going on before anything began.”
The man gave a low bow. When he straightened, he smiled. The smile transformed his appearance from remote to more appealing than should be legally allowed. “I am
Malik
Khan, Crown Prince of El
Bahar
. Welcome to my country. What you have just seen was not a kidnapping, nor
were
your lives in any danger. A young American woman employed at the palace had requested that her fiancé ‘rescue’ her from the plane. She thought it would be romantic to be swept away by a man on horseback.”
Prince
Malik
motioned to the left side of the plane. “As you can observe, she is well pleased with what happened.”
“Can you see?”
Bethany
whispered, still clinging to her mother.
Liana craned her neck as she looked across the cabin and out the far windows. She could just make out the young woman taken from the plane. She stood in the embrace of one of the tribesmen, and if their passionate kiss was anything to go by, she was plenty happy with what was going on.
“They’re kissing,” Liana assured her daughter. “I guess it’s what the man said. Just a joke that got out of hand.”
Bethany
grinned,
then
touched her hand to her chest. “I thought my heart was going to jump right out of my rib cage.”
Liana smiled at her, then kissed her soft cheek. “
Me
, too, kid. There they would have been, flopping around on the floor.” She demonstrated with her hand, making a wiggly back and forth motion.
Bethany
giggled.
“So you are recovered then, young lady? You are not afraid to enter El
Bahar
?”
Liana and
Bethany
turned as one. The tall prince stood next to their row.
Bethany
stared up at the man. “I would very much like to see El
Bahar
, but not if you’re going to cut off our heads.”
The prince winked at the nine-year-old. “I like your head just where it is. You will be safe here, I promise. In fact, if anyone bothers you, you tell him that you personally know the Crown Prince.”
Her blue eyes widened. “You’re a real prince?
Like in Cinderella?”
“Exactly like that.”
The man’s gaze drifted over to Liana. She started to offer a polite smile and assure him that she, too, was fine, when their eyes locked.
His irises were the color of
Fortunately, the prince merely smiled and returned to the front of the plane without saying a word.
“He’s cool,”
Bethany
said with a smile. “Wow. I’ve met a real live prince. He’s nicer than I would have thought.
And tall.
Did you think he was handsome, Mommy?”
“Yes, I thought he was handsome,” Liana admitted, willing her heart rate to return to normal. They both watched as the prince and his men disembarked. The door closed, and the plane began to move toward the gate. In a matter of minutes, people were disembarking. Liana collected their carry-on items and stowed away her book. As she did, she glanced at the cover of her novel and told herself that whatever ailed the heroine in this book was apparently contagious. For one brief second she’d found herself attracted to a tall, dark, impossible man.
Just an aberration, she told herself as she and her daughter joined the slow-moving line that would take them to their luggage. Too much traveling or the fear or maybe too much coffee had zapped some switch in her brain. That was the only explanation for her instant and overwhelming attraction to a stranger.
Forty minutes later Liana and
Bethany
stood waiting to go through customs. Liana had convinced herself that she’d made too much of her reaction to the El
Baharian
prince. Her body had still been in shock from the danger. Her instinctive fight-or-flight response to those men boarding the plane had sent a number of chemicals pouring into her system. Any thoughts she’d had about the prince had simply been the result of a fear hangover.
Nothing more.
Men like him didn’t appeal to women like her.
“Ma’am?
If you would please to come this way?”
Liana was jolted from her musings by a slight man bending over to pick up one of her suitcases.
“What are you doing?” she asked sharply. “Don’t touch that.”
The El
Baharian
customs area was a large open room with plenty of air conditioning and ceiling fans. Although the lines were long, they were moving quickly and seemed efficient. Security people moved through the crowd, and she was about to call for one when the small man bowed apologetically.
“I was sent to bring you to a shorter line,” he said, pressing his hands together in front of his chest. “You have a young child and I was told that you would prefer the process to go more quickly. Just over there,” the man said, motioning to a lone official at the far side of the building.
“Is that one of the customs lines?” Liana asked, wondering why no one else was going that way. She looked up and saw the overhead sign: Official Visitors and Residents.