ROMANCE: THE SHEIKH'S GAMES: A Sheikh Romance (53 page)

BOOK: ROMANCE: THE SHEIKH'S GAMES: A Sheikh Romance
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“Put the gun down, Phil. You won’t shoot me. You certainly won’t shoot yourself.”

“You think I won’t?” he demanded, his voice becoming shrill. “You think I won’t?” And he lifted the gun, brought it up fast to point it at his head.

Whether he meant to shoot, or whether it was accidental, Sophia would never know, but there was a terrible, echoing report, and Phil crumpled, leaving a spray of blood on the glass behind him.

Sophia, rooted to the spot, could not even scream. She stood there and stared as the pool of blood spread out underneath Phil’s head, stared as people began to crowd into the vestibule, and the police were called.

“Are you all right?” someone asked, and Sophia could not even speak.

Once Daniel arrived, he sat with her, holding her hand while she spoke to the police. She said that she didn’t think Phil meant to pull the trigger, that he had never had a gun as far as she knew, and probably didn’t understand basic gun safety. “I think he meant to prove a point and his finger slipped.”

She told them what he’d said, what she’d said, and she expected them to give her that look that said she was responsible for this as surely as if she’d pulled the trigger. That she should have been nicer to Phil. But surprisingly, the two officers seemed sympathetic.

“You’ll take care of her?” the female officer asked Daniel, and he nodded.

He took her upstairs and poured her a glass of brandy. “Get yourself around this.”

“It’s okay,” she said.

“Something like this isn’t really okay, Sophia, it just gets further away with time.” He drew her a hot bath, and afterward put her to bed.

When she woke after hearing the sound of the gunshot in a dream, he was sleeping beside her, curled up against her back, one arm thrown over her waist. It made the bad things fade away enough for her to fall asleep again.

The next morning, she woke to the smell of coffee. She threw on her robe and padded out to the kitchen where Daniel was making toast. “You’re up! How you feeling?” he asked.

“I don’t know, really. A little uneasy, but not as rattled as I’d have imagined. The weirdest thing: When I woke up just now, I lay there in bed thinking about decorating the bedroom. Isn’t that strange?” She rubbed her forehead.

“Headache?”

“No, just a bit tense.” The memory of that pool of blood rushed back and she jumped off the stool and raced for the bathroom where she threw up.

Daniel came and held her hair back, and gave her cold water to rinse her mouth.

“I thought about… I don’t want to talk about it, but, what happened, it’s like a movie that plays inside my head at weird moments.” Her hands were shaking.

“Come and have some coffee and toast.”

“Make it tea with dry toast and I’m there,” she joked.

“Whatever you need.” He got her settled on the couch, under an afghan and brought her a cup of tea and a plate of unbuttered toast which she devoured.

“Better?” he asked.

“Much. I was starving.”

“You didn’t eat dinner last night, so it’s not a huge surprise.”

“No.”

“Feel like talking about it?”

She wasn’t sure she wanted to tell Daniel about what Phil had said to her. So much of it had been about him.

“I know what he said to me was about him, not me or you, but I have to say this. I’ve been wanting to say it for a while now and I think it’s time.”

“Okay.”

“I think we both recognize that this isn’t a forever thing between us. No, let me finish, please? This is hard for me.”

He nodded, but he looked uneasy.

“I’m happy. Being with you has been one of the best things that ever happened to me, and no matter when it ends, that won’t change. I love you for your kindness and your thoughtfulness, and I love you for you. I hope that even when we’re not together anymore, we can stay friends. Okay, that’s it.”

Daniel’s expression was strange, unreadable. “Okay,” he echoed. “Yeah, of course we’ll be friends. Let me get you another cup of tea.”

Had she said something wrong? Maybe it wasn’t the best time to approach the subject after all. Maybe obsessing about what Phil had said to her had pushed Sophia into talking about things that Daniel didn’t want to deal with.

When he brought her mug back to her, she said, “You know what I’d like to do today? I’d like to pick out colors for the bedroom and get the process started. What do you think?”

“I’d like that,” he said, but the wariness was still there in his eyes.

She sipped her tea and decided that what would happen would happen. She couldn’t spend her life worrying about it. She had to do something to begin to push the memory of Phil’s death out of her consciousness.

They managed to pick out the paint for the bedroom, but while they were choosing a new bed for Daniel (the old one being one he brought from his old bedroom at his parents’ home) Sophia was hit with a wave of fatigue the like of which she’d never felt before.

“I don’t know what’s wrong with me,” she said. “I’m just so tired all of a sudden.”

“We’ll go home. We’ve done enough for today. You’ve been through too much.” Daniel was always so good to her.

“Have I told you lately how much I appreciate you?” she asked when they got back to his condo.

“Yes, but I can always stand to hear it.”

“You look like such a tough guy… and you are, where it counts,” she told him. “But you’re so kind.”

“I’m not, you know. Do you want to take a nap, sweetheart?”

“No. I mean yes, but I’d rather do it on the couch. Let’s watch a movie or something.”

She dozed through Key Largo, and when she woke she had a craving for Thai food, so they ordered dinner and sat on the couch eating spring rolls and watching Casablanca.

When they finally retired, Sophia found that she felt more at ease. The memory of Phil’s death had become less vivid, less intrusive. Along with a sense of relief that he was out of her life, something she would never have talked about, she felt a little sad for him.

She also found that she was craving Daniel. She lay in bed and watched him undress, and the heat of her desire grew so hot that she felt as if she would burst into flame. She pulled the sheet up to her chin and slithered out of her night clothes, so that when Daniel came to bed, probably assuming that they’d be curling up chastely that night, she surprised him by pulling him into her embrace.

She giggled at his confusion, shivered as he began to touch her with careful hands, and said, “More. Harder. I want to feel you.” She needed this. It wasn’t just a final exorcism of Phil’s control over her, or a desire to know that Daniel found her desirable. It was something bone deep, something awakening in her. It was a hunger that she couldn’t control.

She urged him on, whispering at first, then speaking aloud what she wanted, arousing him with her words, and the sounds of passion that were no longer quiet and ladylike. For the first time, she truly gave voice to the pleasure he gave her, and she could feel how he responded, how his body responded.

It was like madness, and it left her sated, so drained that she could barely move when they finally finished. Only when she grew cold, did she manage to stir herself to tug at the covers. As she pulled them up she rolled onto her side and found Daniel lying there, already half asleep. She pulled the duvet over both of them, and whispered, “I love you.”

Daniel’s eyelashes fluttered and for a few moments he stared at her and said, “And I love you.”

Sophia didn’t bother to try to analyze or parse his meaning. It was enough that he’d said it.

She’d made an appointment with Doctor Forster to talk about what had happened. It was an early appointment, the only one the doctor had open, and she came close to canceling because she felt so dragged out, and a bit queasy.

“I’m easier in my mind,” she said, when the doctor asked how she was feeling. “But it’s had a profound effect on my physically.”

“How so?”

“I’m exhausted all the time.”

“Understandable.”

“And I’m often nauseated.”

“Really? Any shortness of breath? Dizziness?”

“No, just sometimes in the morning I’ll feel… Oh.”

“Sophia?” the doctor said gently.

“I think it’s not what happened with Phil. Or maybe only partly,” she admitted.

“Could you be pregnant?”

“It’s not impossible,” she said. “We’ve been careful. Mostly.”

“You need to find out,” Forster counseled. “Sooner rather than later.”

She didn’t know what to think. She tried to talk about Phil’s suicide, but the idea of pregnancy wouldn’t let go of her, and she ended up talking about her relationship with Daniel and how she knew it would end, and she was trying to be adult about it, but how she thought losing him might kill her.

“I don’t want to be a female Phil,” she told the doctor. “I want to accept things as they are, not try to make them what I think they should be.”

“Have you spoken to him about this?”

“Yes, and he agrees that we should stay friends. I just…” Oh God, it hurt so much. She started to cry. “I don’t want to lose him even though I know it has to happen. How will I survive that?”

By the time her session was over, she had managed to pull herself together. She thanked the doctor, then went downstairs and stopped at the pharmacy to buy a pregnancy test. Better to know sooner rather than later.

When she stepped out of the building, Daniel was waiting for her. “What are you doing here?” she asked.

“I thought maybe your session would be rough, and I wanted to be here for you.”

It made her cry. Again.

“Oh God, I’m sorry. I’m so sorry.”

“No, sweetheart, no, it’s okay,” he told her, holding her close. “I understand.”

“You don’t.”

“My sister was—”

“It’s not about Phil. It’s about us.” She could feel him stiffen. “Let’s talk in the car, not out here in public.”

“Daniel…” She didn’t know how to start. There was so much to be said, but where to begin? She handed him the bag from the pharmacy and watched as he opened it and realized what she’d bought.

“Are you—”

“I don’t know. I think I might be. I don’t know what to do.”

He closed the bag. “We should get married.”

That made her laugh. “We should wait to see what the test says.”

“No. No, Sophia, no. I don’t want us to think we had to get married. I want us to want to be married. You’ve talked about our relationship as if it’s temporary, and I don’t understand that. This feels like the most permanent part of my life. You say you love me but you talk about being friends.”

“I just didn’t want to lose you.”

“The only way you can lose me is by leaving me.”

“You want…” She made a helpless gesture. “I thought you were with me because you felt sorry for me.”

“What? No. Sophia, I love you. I haven’t loved like this for years. I didn’t think I ever could again. I want to marry you and have a family with you. I want us to be forever. I don’t want us to be about this,” he said shaking the bag and throwing it on he back seat. “Damn Phil to Hell,” he muttered, and turned away.

She wanted to believe. She needed to. She reached out and cradled his cheek with her hand.

“It’s not about Phil anymore.” Half question, half affirmation.

“No.”

“Then yes, I want it to be permanent too. I want to be a family. Two, three… ten…”

Daniel began to laugh. “Fifty,” he said.

“I’m not sure I’d survive fifty,” she said, but she was grinning.

“Grandchildren. Great grandchildren. Everywhere we look, babies,” he said before he pulled her into his arms and kissed her.

There was a moment, just a split second, when the voice of her insecurity cleared its throat and said, “What is it he really wants?” Except it wasn’t her voice, not really. It was Phil’s. And Phil was dead and gone from her life. His voice needed to be silenced too.

He wants me, she thought. He loves me.

To which there was no reply, nor could there ever be to a truth so deep. It was love, not pity, or simple kindness. It was something they’d both earned. And it was something Sophia was determined to take joy in.

“Let’s go home,” she said. “We have work to do.” They’d have to make over the second, smaller bedroom as a nursery, she supposed. She hoped. It was time to break out the fan deck and choose colors again. Something warm and pretty. Yellow, perhaps. Good for a boy or a girl.

“It’s a beautiful day, isn’t it?” she said as they drove along the lakefront towards home.

“The best,” Daniel agreed. “You feel up to painting when we get back?”

“Of course! Always.”

What she didn’t say, what he’d find out when they got there, was that before the painting, she had something else in mind. Something much more exciting.

She smiled and laid her hand on her still-flat belly.

THE END

The sun was just coming up as the last of the party-goers trailed off to their cabins on the Kallisto. Simon Katsaros, the Kallisto’s owner sprawled in his deck chair and watched the rising sun glint off the graceful Doric columns of the temple of Poseidon. The deep blue of the Aegean waters made him feel calmer, less likely to fly into bits after his confrontation with Marissa, his girlfriend.

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