Authors: Ann Fillmore
Tags: #FIC027010—Romance Adult, #FIC027020—Romance Contemporary, #FIC027110 FICTION / Romance / Suspense
“
Jawohl, min herrevalde.
” The old man turned to go, thought a moment and said, “
Urskulda mig
, but were you not supposed to be back at the
Karolinska Universitat
today?”
“Yeah, I was supposed to go.” Sture grimaced, “More paperwork for Far's estate must be done.”
“Aha, it must be important work for your father to interrupt your studies,” said Gustav with great deference. He bowed as he went out the door, “I will tell Astrid you wish breakfast?
Ja?
”
“Right, tell her I want a big breakfast. I'll need the energy.” Sture went into the bathroom. All the plumbing had been added years after the castle had been built, meaning it was quite aged in and of itself. He and his father had the only two master bedrooms with attached baths, fully updated. The other rooms in this wing had to share a bath and toilet at the end of the long hall. The other wings of the castle had ridiculously small toilets and baths and Sture had once commented that hell would freeze over before the estate invested the huge sums needed to update all of that space. His father, on his way to somewhere else in the world, as usual, had absentmindedly agreed.
The recently installed, under the sink, little hot water cooker was functioning well this morning, giving him plenty of steaming water to wash with. He regarded in the cloudy mirror the attempt he was making to grow a beard like his dad had had at his age. He'd seen photos of the baron as a young man and he loved the swashbuckling appearance the bristled, thick gray-blond beard had given the senior Baron Hermelin. Oh well, Sture mused looking into his own icy blue eyes, it has only been a week. He tried not to be too disappointed. Perhaps it was because his hair was so red. He trimmed the edges and rinsed his face well, scrubbing his pink skin dry with a thick, cream-colored towel.
When he entered the hallway, he could smell from far below in the great kitchen, the wondrous odors of pancakes, ham, coffee, and his most favorite
blabar
syrup. Astrid had picked those blueberries herself last summer from the garden behind the castle.
As his foot hit the first step, he suddenly thought a most distressing thought. Payâ¦how were they going to pay the servants? Gustav, Astrid, the maids, Krister the chauffeur, Sven, and the stable handsâ¦the only person he could think of who came for free was the postal worker, and in second thought, he or she wasn't free either, really. Taxes, incredibly heavy taxes, paid the salaries and benefits of government workers. Surely there must be housekeeping money available?
Sture sighed deeply and slumped down the wide balustrade stairs. Generations of Hermelins had used those stairs, lords and ladies all. Portraits of them regarded the tall, skinny young Sture as he decided, on the second landing, that the attorney's office, Person, Person and Alexanderslund, should come first, then the Pastorkirche. Maybe he could even browbeat Ms. Person into coming with him.
***
The vizier of the i-Shibl family compound was most polite, though Commander Yusef knew full well his soft words were an imperative invitation. The i-Shibl sultanate was of Shi-ite belief and thus, conservative to the point of being only one step removed from the believers who paraded their sacrificial urges.
Commander Gurgin Yusef hung up the phone and wondered with a headshake how Sheikh Sultan i-Shibl's eldest daughter ever had been sent to France for schooling anyway. None of this bother would have taken place if the girl had been kept at home. The commander buzzed his assistant and called for a car to be brought around. If the sheikh sultan wanted him to check out the compound's security, so be it. Gurgin Yusef suspected the real reason for the summons was the sultan's desire to have this tough-looking uniformed commander lecture his daughter on decorous behavior. Which, thought Gurgin, picking up his belt with holster and gun and strapping it on, was like trying to corral the last camel after the others had been scared off by jackals.
His assistant, Faruq, knocked on the door before poking a head in to tell him the Hummer was waiting. Commander Yusef settled his hat on his head and proceeded on his mission. Faruq drove and made good time across the interminable sand and scrubland, arriving at the modernized outer security gate of the i-Shibl's compound in under an hour.
The vizier, that is, the sheikh sultan's number one man and major-domo, waited inside the outer gate. A huge man whom Yusef suspected of having some African forebears, the vizier bowed to the commander and walked alongside the camouflage-colored Hummer as they proceeded through the iron-barred inner gate. The numerous guards were well armed with Uzis. No problems with security here, Yusef harrumphed to himself. Yes, he was being summoned to lecture the girl. He knew it.
At the door of the palace, an obviously Asian servant jumped forward to open the Hummer door for the commander. As he stepped out, the vizier elbowed his way forward.
“Welcome to our home,” said the vizier, whose width equaled his height. This was a man of substance. His clothes were of finely woven cotton and silk, his pink-and-blue turban was of silk, he cut a fine figure. “If you will follow me?” His hand, every finger of which had a ring on it, waved forward and they went through the brilliant blue front door.
Commander Yusef was led from room to room, one cool hallway leading into another until he was quite turned around. His general sense was that they were proceeding north, that is, toward the back of the immense structure. The fittings of the rooms, the halls, made it very evident that this sheikh sultan had a substantial oil field on his property.
They crossed a lovely patio with a tinkling fountain and passed into a sizable room with a set of low Roman couches and chairs at the far wall surrounded by large pink-and-blue pillows. On one of the couches was Sheikh Sultan Rassid i-Shibl. He was much younger than Yusef had thought he would be, perhaps thirty-eight, but not more than forty. Slender, small, the sheikh sultan pulled his bright pink, embroidered topcoat vest down with a jerk to cover the top of his whitish-gold cotton trousers as he stood. This was a tense and unhappy man, the commander noted.
“How do you like my modest domicile so far, Commander?” asked the sheikh sultan.
“It is of inestimable beauty, your majesty,” he replied and cut to the chase. “Your security lacks of nothing that I can detect.”
The small man nodded. He was being told what he intimately knew already. “I would have you look at the back wall and installations before you leave. Vizier Rida will take you that way as you leave. Now, may we share coffee? Some breakfast?”
“If your majesty pleases,” the stocky commander bowed. He also realized the vizier had vanished. A silent, cunning one that fellowâ¦
i-Shibl sent a servant scurrying and he himself sat in one of the low chairs next to a table, inviting the commander to do the same. Yusef pulled up a pillow and sat in front of the man, decorously making himself shorter than the sultan. He had not achieved the rank of commander without learning all the necessary manners around royalty.
The ritual of coffee and food was precisely accomplished. The servants were well trained. The preparation didn't take long and the conversation remained on security, despite that moment's acknowledgement of it's being topflight already. Yusef noted as they conversed that i-Shibl had probably been educated in England, or at least in an English-speaking school. The man mentioned in passing his hobby of desert biology, in particular, the study of the small lichens that grew on the lee side of dunes where moisture would collect in minuscule quantities at night. That seemed to be the cue for a woman to appear.
The vizier brought her in. Despite her full covering in colorful dress and scarf, the commander could tell this was a woman in her mid-thirties and, he suspected, a very good-looking one. From the two strands of hair that peeked from her scarf, she could be seen to have dark auburn hair.
“My first wife,” said i-Shibl.
Neither man stood. The commander simply gazed past her, the polite thing to do. She lowered herself onto an uncomfortable chair on the other side of the large room.
“Jani,” said the sultan, “come closer.”
She got to her feet and approached to within a couple yards.
“This,” i-Shibl said, “is the reason for our daughter Zhara's unruly behavior. When I was a very young man, attending the Birmingham University in England, I met Jani Felice McCreesh. Her father is an engineer from Ireland, her mother a Saudi citizen. I believed Jani had been happy to marry me. We had a good life until I came back here to take the rule after my father died. I thought Jani was fitting in well here. Then five years ago, as is the custom if the first wife can give no sons, I took a second wife. Jani insisted shortly afterward to send our eldest daughter, Zhara, to school and this woman chose a girls' school in Paris.” The man sighed.
Commander Yusef, quiet and attentive the whole time, saw the slightest nod from Jani at the mention of the daughter. Ah, yes, i-Shibl was right, here was the cause of the dissension. Secretly, perhaps even unconsciously, although Yusef suspected not, Jani Felice McCreesh i-Shibl had converted her daughter to wanting more Western ways. This was becoming so common! Despicable, he snorted.
“You must tell your wife not to disobey the teachings of the Koran, my sheikh,” said the commander with as much concern as possible, “for if she has the wishes of the Western world in her heart, even if they are unspoken, even if she tries to keep them hidden, she will transmit them like a disease to her children.”
“So I have said many times,” the sheikh sultan responded with a meaningful look at his first wife. “I sincerely do not think she does it intentionally. Yet,” he put his hands into the air almost in supplication, perhaps of Allah, “I am partly to blame. I had a big-screen television put in the common room last year and it is hooked up to a satellite dish.” A note of bragging slipped into his voice, “We can pick up hundreds of stations, all of European satellite transmissions, all of ours and some of India's. It is quite extraordinary.”
“Television alone did not make your daughter unwilling to be a bride,” was the commander's rejoinder.
“Ah, you are right, of course,” sighed i-Shibl, motioning the servant to pour more coffee for himself and the old warrior.
Yusef accepted it willingly. This was a superior French espresso blend not usually obtainable by the likes of himself.
“I'm certain,” continued i-Shibl, “that being around boys, especially boys of European countries, and being unchaperoned and being in Paris, of all places⦔ this time he positively glowered at Jani i-Shibl who responded by looking away, far, far away.
The sheikh sultan, holding a tiny coffee cup in hand, stood and walked back to the chair he used as a dais. “Did you know, Commander, that Zhara has had the effrontery to say she wants to marry one of those boys? She will not tell us his name, but I happen to know he is French.” i-Shibl laughed cruelly, “Why, he is a commoner to boot. The son of a wealthy Parisian merchant. I am surprised,” he growled harshly, “she didn't pick a Jew! There were a number of them at that school!”
Jani seemed imperturbable. Perhaps, no, definitely, she had heard this argument many times already. What must it be like, wondered the hatchet-faced old warrior, to be ripped from your Western world where women drove cars, voted, carried on as if they were menâwhy, often wore men's clothing!âto be brought to the safety and security of a compound where everything was done for you, where you were cared for with all your best interests at heart? The commander smiled past the woman and said to her husband, “Do you wish me to have a word with your daughter?”
The objective of the visit being reached, Sheikh Sultan i-Shibl motioned to the vizier. “I am so delighted you would do that, Commander Yusef! Rida, fetch Zhara.”
Vizier Rida quietly nodded and slipped away.
“How is your wife, Commander Yusef, and your son?” i-Shibl asked in an off-handed remark.
“My wife is as well as can be expected,” he said, “she will go to Florida next week for her third cancer operation. My son will go with her.”
“Oh, I am so sorry to hear she is that ill. Please, give her my regards,” said i-Shibl, “and those of my wives.”
Zhara must not have been more than a couple rooms away because the big vizier reappeared with her in tow at this point. She was taller than her mother and most probably very distressing to her father being taller than her father. She was dressed in a long skirt made of stunning gold sari material and a white blouse with a scarf that matched the skirt. The scarf was not well wrapped, her eyes and nose and some of her reddish hair could be plainly seen. Yusef felt deeply embarrassed by her forwardness. Rida indicated for her to stand about ten feet away from the old warrior.
Commander Yusef stood and was inwardly dismayed to find the girl was only an inch shorter than he was. “Your father wanted me to have a talk with you. He wants me to remind you of the seriousness of your stubborn behavior.”
Her eyes flicked past him and gallantly remained staring at some distant carpet design on the opposite wall.
“I imagine,” Commander Yusef went on, trying to be kind in his very gruff way, “that you are aware of the penalty for adultery, and that includes the intention of an adulterous act?”
Her eyes flicked across his face, rudely, and instantly returned to their target on the wall. Yusef resisted the urge to slap her hard, although he bet her father had done it several times, or had had the vizier do it for him.
“I can only plead with you to consider your actions,” he continued. “Your marriage to Sheikh Sultan Mustafa Bayigani will assure you of a home, of a future, especially if you give him sons. He is one of the wealthiest landowners in Kuwait. He has the ear of many American governors. I'm sure you may get to travel with his entourage. I see no downside to your situation.”