Heir to a Dark Inheritance (8 page)

BOOK: Heir to a Dark Inheritance
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“You’re my husband,” she said, her voice cutting itself off, choking itself out. “And you shouldn’t be.”

“Tell me honestly, did you ever plan to marry again?”

“No.”

“Then why does it matter what title I have. You are all about the heart, Jada, in which case, to you, no matter if I’m your husband on paper, the fact that I’m not your husband in your heart is all that should matter.”

But it did. She wanted to scream it. Wanted to shout it to the heavens so he would understand. It mattered because only one man should ever have had the title. It mattered, but it shouldn’t. She knew that.

Signing a document wasn’t what forged a bond between people, and yet…there was something. Husband was still a meaningful position whether she wanted it to be or not. That was the real problem. Not that she felt nothing, but that she was starting to. And maybe it was down to Leena, to their connection with her.

That she could handle. Yes, they should feel bonded over Leena. They both wanted what was best for her and had acted in her best interest. So of course, they would feel a connection. Not that he did—she doubted Alik was bothered with her at all. But with her maternal instinct and all, it was logical she would feel something.

And that was all. She was sure of it.

“I don’t know how you can be so calm about it. This is hardly how I saw my life going.”

“Maybe then, that is the difference between you and me. I didn’t see my life going anywhere.”

“What does that mean?”

“Every day I got up and didn’t count on making it back to my bed that night to sleep. I lived every day like it would be my last one, and sometimes I made an attempt to make it my last one. Oh, not actively, but safety has never been high on my list of priorities. So it’s very hard to be disappointed at how your life has turned out when it’s a surprise that you’re still living at all.”

His words chilled her down to her bones, and at the same time, the fire that was blazing in his eyes ignited her soul. She had always planned, always worried. Had always held life close to her chest like the precious gift that it was. And she had gotten so much pain, so many carefully laid plans utterly destroyed. What would it be like to be covered in a layer of armor as thick as Alik’s? Would things roll off? Would life feel easier? She imagined that it might. Things had been so hard for so long she could hardly imagine what it might be like to have it just be simple for a while.

Alik’s life certainly wasn’t easy—it wasn’t even terribly happy and yet he seemed so much more at ease with all of it.

“Failing that,” he said, his voice getting rougher, deeper, causing everything in her to respond to it, “I could always try and make you feel more married to me.”

He took a step toward her and she knew what was going to happen. She also knew that she should tell him to stop. That she should be good and sensible. That she should ignore the rapid beat of her pulse, and the tightening in her stomach. That she should embrace logical thought, and reason.

But she didn’t. She just stood and watched him advance, her throat dry, her breath coming in harsh, shallow bursts.

Why wasn’t she running? Why wasn’t she telling him no?

Because I don’t want to
.

He hooked his arm around her waist and pulled her up against his body. Water from his bare skin soaked through her cotton top, the chill making her nipples tighten. She wasn’t wearing a bra because she’d been dressed for bed and now she was unbearably conscious of the fact and, heaven help her, grateful.

He cupped her chin with his thumb and forefinger, forced her to meet his gaze, and a flame burst to life inside of her. She wanted, so much it was painful, the need hot, raging, threatening to destroy everything if it wasn’t met.

The tip of his thumb touched her lips, and she opened her mouth, tasted the salt on his skin from the water drops. She sucked on him, gently, and a rough growl came from deep in his chest. He tightened his hold on her and pulled her in tight, and in one fluid motion, he dipped his head and started kissing her.

Deep, sensuous, his tongue sliding against hers, tracing the line of her lips, before delving deep again. She’d never been kissed like this. So hard, so desperate. She didn’t know where the hunger had come from. And then she had to wonder if it was coming from her.

This kiss was different because she had never wanted like this. Had never craved a man in quite this way.

She flattened her palms on his chest, his skin slick, hair roughened and hot beneath her hands. And she could feel his heart, throbbing fast and hard, proof that he felt it, too. That he felt the intensity like she did.

He lowered his hand and palmed her butt, drawing her in closer, bringing the V at the apex of her thighs into contact with the hard evidence of his desire. She moved her hands off his chest and looped them around his neck, forking her fingers through his hair, holding him tight.

His hand slid upward and then down the waistband of her sweatpants, beneath her underwear. She gasped when
his callused palm cupped her skin, and she sighed when he squeezed her tight, amping up the tension, her need, making her ache for him.

He pushed his other hand beneath her top, found her breast, squeezed her nipple tight before sliding his thumb over it. She arched into his touch, raking her nails over his back and letting her head fall back. He took advantage of her exposed throat, pressing hot, openmouthed kisses to her skin.

He pushed his hand up higher and managed to strip her of her top in one easy motion, then he kissed her mouth again, deeper, harder, and she couldn’t think. Couldn’t remember why she’d ever wanted to run from this. Couldn’t remember why she was here or even who she was. All she knew was that she wanted more. Whatever he would give, she wanted more.

He moved his hand down from her butt, pushing it between her thighs, sliding his fingers between her slick folds. If she could have thought, she would have been embarrassed over just how obvious it was that she wanted him, over just how ready she was, so fast. But she couldn’t think past the burning pleasure that was arcing along her veins.

One finger slid over her clitoris and she pulled her mouth away from his, a strangled cry, too loud in the still of the night, escaping her lips, pushing against the haze of fantasy she’d built up to block out reality.

And then it hit her, with full, hideous force. She was half-naked, outside, with a man she barely knew and she was about to let him have sex with her.

She pulled away from him, gasping for air, looking around frantically for her shirt. She ran through a litany of curse words just under her breath while she bent to retrieve her top and tugged it over her head.

“What happened?” Alik asked.

“What happened? You kissed me and then thirty seconds later you were stripping me naked and…touching me.”

“Are you going to pretend that you didn’t like it?” he asked. “Because I have a low tolerance for things like that.”

“I don’t do things like this.”

He looked at her, slow, appraising. Making her hot all over again. “Maybe you should, because you’re very good at it.”

She frowned, wrapping her arms around herself, a shiver racking her frame. “What’s that supposed to mean?”

“That I enjoyed kissing you. And touching you. And I would very much enjoy taking it to its logical conclusion.”

“But to what end?” she asked.

He frowned. “Orgasm, what else?”

She let out a short, frustrated growl. “Is that all that matters to you? Not if we mess up what we’re trying to build for Leena, but having an orgasm?”

“Why would it mess anything up?”

“Are you truly so obtuse?” She examined the look on his face, totally blank, totally unruffled, and she suddenly started to understand. “It would honestly make no difference to you, would it?”

“What we do in the bedroom would be separate from how we raise Leena.”

“But sex isn’t separate from a relationship—it’s woven through it. You can’t simply ignore it during the day.”

“Why not? I don’t see how sex is connected to the day to day. It’s a release, an adrenaline rush. My favorite way to get one, in fact, but it hardly affects what I do with the rest of my time.”

“And that’s why we can’t. Because I can’t separate it. Because I know what it can mean. How close it can make people. And you never will.”

“I don’t feel I especially need to know it.”

“I know, Alik. And that’s another problem.” Jada crossed her arms beneath her breasts and walked back into the house, making a concerted effort not to look back at him. That might
look like longing. It might look like she regretted the decision to stop. And she didn’t. She couldn’t.

This kind of thing might be fine for some people. It might be fine for Alik, but it wasn’t her. Love was stronger than lust; it was more important. No matter how much she might think she wanted Alik, that was just physical. And the physical wasn’t all that important.

She liked the physical, but you couldn’t cuddle up with the physical afterward. And it wouldn’t sit and have pancakes with you in the morning. Wouldn’t hold you when you cried. The physical was only good for one thing, and she just didn’t live her life that way.

It wasn’t her.

Of course, that meant she would be living the rest of her life feeling very physically unsatisfied. Because she wasn’t doing love again. And without love, she wasn’t doing sex.

She bit her lip, fighting against a wave of unresolved arousal, and tried not to think about how very much she’d wanted to cast off her inhibitions and live life like Alik, if only for one night.

Alik prowled the length of his office, his entire body on red alert, an adrenaline high on a level he’d never experienced outside of the battlefield.

What was wrong with him? And what was wrong with her? Clearly she’d wanted him, so what was the point in denying it? It made no sense to him.

He pushed his hands back through his hair and noticed that his phone was blinking. He snatched it up off his desk. “Vasin.”

“I expected to get voice mail.”

“I was awake. What is it?”

“This is Michael LaMont. We spoke a few weeks ago.”

“I remember,” Alik said, gritting his teeth. As if he would forget.

“I was wondering if you’d given any more thought to taking up my cause?”

“Your ailing company? Yes, I have.”

“And have you made a decision?”

“Not as of yet.” He looked out the window, down at the pool, and his body tensed.

“I would love it if you could come to Paris for a while. See the sights, my company, take in an opera. Bring your wife if you like, or bring someone else if you need a break.”

A break was exactly what he needed. Some time away. Parisian clubs and Parisian women. “Sounds like a plan, LaMont. I’ll be there tomorrow. It’s past time I got out of Attar.”

Past time he got away from Leena, Jada and all of the ways they upended his life. Past time he took another woman to his bed and purged his system of this…this unreasonable desire for Jada. She was under his skin, and he could not allow it.

They would stay here in Attar, and he would find the man he’d always been in Paris. Alone.

CHAPTER SEVEN

“I
NSTRUCT THE SERVANTS
on how to pack for you. We’re heading to Paris in two hours.”

The pronouncement seemed to shock Jada, but it shocked Alik a whole lot more. He had been planning on coming into the dining room to tell her that he would be gone for a week, and that she and Leena would stay here until his return. But that wasn’t what he’d ended up saying.

“Two hours?” Jada’s mouth, the mouth that he knew tasted like the most decadent dessert, rounded into a perfect O.

“Yes. I am on a time frame and you don’t want to stay out here in the middle of this godforsaken desert by yourself, do you?” Frustration at himself made him sound harsher than he’d intended.

“I don’t know. The alternative is going to your godforsaken bachelor pad in the middle of a French city, where you will also be—am I right?”

“You are coming with me. I am not leaving you here. It is an issue of safety.”

“How is it an issue of safety? We’re quite fine out here. All the modern conveniences. Light switches, even, as you pointed out.”

“I do not like the idea of leaving you alone.”

“Alik, you have a staff of about a hundred out here. I think we’d be fine.”

“Are you honestly arguing with me about going to Paris?
No woman would do that. What is wrong with you?” She made no sense to him. Trying to get out of a trip to Paris, turning down sex when she clearly wanted sex. The woman was inscrutable.

“What is wrong with me? I’m finally coming to terms with the fact that this is my life, finally finding a routine, and now you want to uproot me.”

“The plan was never for you to stay here.”

“I know.”

“It was also the plan for you to come with me and be my date at business functions if it was required. It is now required and you will do as I tell you.” He was lying. And for some reason his conscience, which until thirty seconds ago he hadn’t known he possessed, twinged a bit.

“I did agree to that, Alik, you’re right. But I didn’t agree to submit to your every command, so you can get off your high horse and chill for a moment. If I have to be ready in two hours I’d better go figure out what I need now.”

“Never mind that…I will have the servants see to it. Did you just tell me to…chill?”

“Something wrong with your hearing? I did. And you need to.”

“No one talks to me that way.”

“Does anyone talk to you for longer than five minutes at a time, Alik? Anyone other than Sayid, who I’d venture to say could give you a serious run for your dominance and is probably not bothered by you in the least.”

“Not very many people do, and do you know why, Jada?”

She set Leena down on the floor, on her blanket and stood, arms crossed beneath her breasts. “Why, Alik? Please do enlighten me.”

“Because people who are smart are afraid of me. They know that even if I’m smiling at them, I could turn on them at a moment’s notice. If money passes into my hand and my
allegiance is asked to be changed, it will be changed. That is why people are afraid of me. And they should be.”

“I’m not afraid of you, Alik.”

“I think you are.”

“You think wrong.”

“I don’t think wrong, Jada, I know you’re afraid of me. Oh, perhaps you aren’t afraid of me harming you in any way, and you should not be. For all my sins, I have never hurt a woman or child, and I never would. There is a line in the sand that even I won’t cross. But I think you’re afraid of what might happen if I get too close. Of what might happen if I touch you. Kiss you again.”

He took a step forward, watching as her pupils expanded, making her eyes appear darker, more seductive, watching her pulse throb at the base of her throat, revealing just how unnerved she was. Revealing just how turned on she was, he suspected.

“Yes, you’re afraid of that,” he said. “So afraid of my touch.” Nearly as much as he was coming to fear hers. What it did to him. But in keeping with his character, the more dangerous something seemed, the more he wanted it.

He extended his hand, intent on cupping her cheek, feeling her silken skin beneath his fingertips and Jada jerked back like she’d seen a snake.

Jada was mainly horrified that she’d wanted to lean into his hand, that she’d longed to feel his skin against hers again. That she wanted more than what she’d gotten last night when she should really hope nothing like it ever happened again.

He was wrong, though. She wasn’t afraid of him. She was afraid of herself.

“Just because I don’t want it, doesn’t mean I’m afraid.”

“You do want it, though,” he said.

“No.” She bent down and scooped Leena up into her arms. “I don’t. I have too much going on in my life, and frankly, so
do you. We have a daughter. We have a daughter together. That means we have to be able to parent together.”

“I told you, I doubt I will be doing much in the way of parenting.”

“I think you will,” she said, challenging him. The way he’d challenged her. “I think you’re going to have to. Leena isn’t an accessory to add to your home. She’s not a vase that has been in your family for generations that you’re owed based on lineage—she’s your blood. Not a thing you hold rights to.”

“It is not for my own sake that I thought to avoid her, but for hers. Don’t ask why, because you know the answer.”

She did. She knew why. Alik said the worst things at the worst possible times, and that was when he wasn’t trying to hurt anyone. He just seemed to be missing that place inside of him that should be filled with emotion and empathy. He was void there.

The realization, the image of an empty hole in his chest where his heart should be, made her own heart feel pain. It wasn’t fair. Alik had never had a chance. He had never had love or family. He’d grown into the man he was thanks to circumstances, but even though so much of it wasn’t his fault, it didn’t make it any less difficult for him to deal with. It didn’t make it any less real.

“I know you might not know this,” she said, “since you didn’t know your parents, but children are able to forgive a lot of shortcomings. Because they are born loving you, trusting you. At the moment, you have that love, that trust. No matter what you say, no matter what you intend to do, no matter how distant you want to be, you will be Leena’s father. And if you never try, she will have a lifetime of pain, disappointment and the breaking of that bond. Because she has that bond, Alik.”

“She doesn’t seem to like me,” he said, looking down on Leena’s head.

“She does. And she will more as she gets older. She’ll love you, Alik. You will be her hero. It’s how a little girl looks
at her father. It’s how I looked at mine. He died when I was seventeen, and it was such a shock. He’d seemed invincible to me. Superman. I always felt safe with my father around.”

“How did he die?”

“My parents were older. I was a late-in-life surprise for them. I came sixteen years after their last child, my much-older brother. They were wonderful, and I didn’t get enough time with them. But my father…He taught me what to expect from a man in terms of treatment, simply by treating me like a princess. I would never have settled for less, because without words he showed me what it was I deserved. You have the chance to do that for her. Or not.”

“I need to go and ensure all is going as it should with the packing.”

“Of course,” she said.

Alik turned and walked out of the room, and a flood of emotion washed through her with such ferocity she was afraid it might bring her to her knees. She didn’t feel hopeless, though, not as hopeless as she had a moment ago.

Because when Alik had turned to go she’d seen emotion in his eyes. She’d seen fear. He didn’t want to let Leena down, and whether he knew it or not, he was on the road to loving her. And with that, more would follow. She had to hope so.

Right now, she just ached for him. For the man who was lost in a situation that made no sense to him. Alik was alpha, controlling and extremely capable. He had money and power, charisma to spare when he chose to apply it. But Alik didn’t understand love, and in this situation, that made him infinitely more helpless and less equipped than she was.

When it came to emotion, she held the power, while he stood, defenses down, with nothing.

She kissed the top of her daughter’s head and closed her eyes, repeating a promise in her mind, over and over again.

I will help your father learn to love you. Because you deserve nothing less
.

She’d been on one of Alik’s private planes before, but that didn’t mean she was immune to the glamor of traveling in that kind of style. Not after a lifetime of flying economy. And after suffering, happily, with the inundation of luxury, brought on by having a bed available for a flight, she was completely floored by her first glimpse of Paris.

She’d been to India, with a stopover in Frankfurt, on a visit to see her in-laws once, but beyond that, she was hardly a world traveler. Seeing so many sights in person that she’d seen immortalized in movies was a truly surreal experience.

And after being treated to her first vision of the Eiffel Tower, she was shocked even further by the location of Alik’s town house. It was sleek and spare inside, the perfect foil for the view it afforded. Out one side was an alley, with a cobbled street and small, crowded shops. The patisserie, the boulange-rie and various cafés with pastries guaranteed to go straight to her hips. And on the other side was the tower itself, the base of the iron structure filling the view from the kitchen windows. And from the bedrooms, you could see the rest, glittering in the darkness, iconic and surreal.

No, not even the luxury of Alik’s private plane could have prepared her for it. As if a palace in Attar hadn’t been sufficient to prove what sort of man Alik was, to demonstrate the sort of power he had, the opulent home in the heart of Paris drove the point home.

“Your room is here,” Alik said, “Leena’s is down the hall. The master is on the top floor.”

“Only the master?”

“And my office, but yes.”

Alik was a man of total self-indulgence. That, also, should have been clear by now. For some reason, she was understanding it slowly, in increments. Perhaps because it was so very different from the way she did things. From who she was.

She should be disgusted by his attitude. Instead, she found
she was fascinated by it. Not many people were so honest about how selfish they were. Alik owned it, enjoyed it. He’d made a life that was purely for himself and he seemed happy in it.

As happy as Alik could ever be.

That thought made her sad. Reminded her that sometimes having whatever you wanted didn’t add up to a satisfying life.

“So what are our plans while we’re here?”

Alik put a hand in his pocket and leaned against the door frame of the bedroom. “Tomorrow night my potential client is providing us with tickets to the opera, before I meet with him the following day.”

“Opera? I’ve never been.” And she shouldn’t want to go. Not with Alik. It was shockingly like a date. Because you couldn’t bring a one-year-old to the opera.

“Then it shall be a culturally enriching experience for you,” he said, his eyes not focused on her, but on a point somewhere past her head.

“What about Leena?”

“I have secured an au pair for the duration of our stay.”

“Have you?” she asked, anger—welcome, blessed anger—spiking in her. “And what are her references? Shouldn’t I have been consulted?”

“Adira took care of it, and I trust her as much as I trust anyone.” She noticed he didn’t say he trusted her completely. Simply as much as he trusted anyone. Because Alik didn’t trust. Another piece of him to add to her puzzle. She shouldn’t be working on an Alik puzzle.

No, she should be. Because she was trying to figure out how to help him have a real, positive relationship with Leena, and in order to do that she would have to understand him.

“Still, in the future, I would like to be consulted.”

“Of course, my princess, whatever you desire,” he said on a slow drawl, his tone mocking.

“She’s my daughter. I’ve rarely left her alone.” And she
shouldn’t be leaving her now. She should tell Alik no. Tell him she didn’t want to go to the opera.

But she did. And it had been a long time since she’d been out. Since she’d done something she wanted to. Something for herself.

“She will be fine. She’ll be sleeping for most of the time we’re gone, as she is now.”

“I know,” she said. “I mean, I do know but…kids make you worry.”

Alik frowned. “Yes, they do. That is a universal feeling, then?”

“Yes. Everyone worries about their kids.”

A slow half smile curved his mouth. “And so do I.”

Even as they were preparing to leave for the opera, Alik wondered why he’d issued the invitation to her. He could have asked another woman. Could have gone to a club the night before and met someone to take out.

Better still, he could have given it a miss entirely. Opera wasn’t his thing. But he had asked Jada. And he found that he actually wanted to take her.

Maybe because he was sure it was something she would never do for herself. And she looked tired, something he was certain was partly his fault.

And no matter what she’d said to him, she hadn’t moved on. She was still grieving her husband; even he could see it, and he scarcely understood that emotion or any other.

That was how he found himself waiting at the base of the stairs in his town house, his heart beating a little faster than normal, waiting for her to join him. Waiting for his first sight of her in the dress he’d selected for her to wear.

That was another unusual thing. He’d never concerned himself with putting clothes on a woman before. In the past, he’d only been worried about taking them off. He was hardly a connoisseur of fashion, female or otherwise. But he’d seen
the dress in a boutique window that afternoon on his way through the city and he’d known he had to have it for her.

As if on cue, he heard the sound of high heels on marble floor, and he looked up. And then it became hard to breathe. Hard to swallow.

The rich, crimson fabric made Jada’s golden skin glow, the strapless, scooped neckline of the dress revealing a teasing glimpse of her full, perfect breasts. Her waist was small, the gown fitted there before gently flowing away from her hips in waves of chiffon. And when she took her first step down the stair, the fabric parted and revealed its secret, and a hint of Jada’s shapely legs.

BOOK: Heir to a Dark Inheritance
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