The Desert Kings. Оливия Гейтс

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The Desert Kings - Оливия Гейтс


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suddenly she thought of her own mother, the famous British model, a woman the world admired and envied, and yet a woman who couldn’t make her father happy.

      A tap sounded on the door and Jamie stepped inside to gesture to her watch. Rou glanced at her own watch. Fifteen minutes had already passed. The media escort would be here in fifteen to escort her to the TV station and Rou still needed to change and freshen her hair. She rose, fingers pressed to the surface of the desk. “If you’ll excuse me, Sheikh Fehr, I must get ready for my next appointment—”

      “Is this because of Angela Moss?”

      Rou froze. “I don’t know—”

      “She was your client. A year ago. Surely you remember her? Slim, striking redhead. Twenty-six years old. Former model turned purse designer. Ring a bell?”

      Of course Rou remembered Angela.

      The sheikh had wooed her, won her and then cast her aside within months, and because of Rou’s personal feelings about Zayed, she’d refused to take Angela on as a client, but then Angela had tried to take her life, and Rou realized she had to help the poor girl. Angela was beyond desperate, and even with Rou’s help, it took months of patience and skill to walk her new client through the heartbreak.

      When still in the chemical rush of love, having one’s heart broken is a form of death. For others, it’s like detox. The brain, suddenly starved of the opiates that had previously fed it, craves the beloved, needing contact, needing that flood of chemicals and hormones that comes with togetherness.

      After twelve years of research she understood that love, falling in love, was the most potent drug man would ever know. Love was maddening, delicious, addictive. And when it went wrong, destructive.

      “I know she came to you,” Zayed added tonelessly. “I was the one who gave her your name. I thought you could help her.”

      Rou sank back down into her chair. “You sent her to me?” She gave her head a slow disbelieving shake. “Why?”

      His brow furrowed and he lifted his hands as if the answer was self-explanatory. “I was worried about her.”

      “So you do have a conscience.”

      “I didn’t love her, but I didn’t want her hurt.”

      She eyed him with disdain. “Then maybe you should stop seeing women with hearts and brains.”

      One black eyebrow lifted. “What are you suggesting?”

      “Puppets. Robots. Rag dolls. Blow-up dolls.” She smiled thinly. “They won’t be hurt when you cast them aside.”

      There was a flicker in his eyes—surprise, maybe—and then it was gone. “You’re angry.”

      Rou realized Jamie was still hovering in the doorway and she gestured for her to give them five more minutes. Once Jamie was gone, Rou looked at him. “I’m not angry. I just don’t have any need for you.”

      “Need?” he drawled.

      “Let me be clearer.” She leaned forward, her gaze intent on his. “I don’t particularly like you, Sheikh Fehr, and because my practice is very successful and very busy I can afford to be selective. Therefore, I’d never work with you.”

      “Why not?”

      “Why not, what?”

      “Why won’t you work with me?”

      “I already said—”

      “No, you’re giving personal opinions. I want a professional opinion. You are a scientist, are you not?”

      God, he was arrogant. “I know too much about you. I couldn’t approach your situation without prejudice—”

      “Because I didn’t love Angela?”

      “Because you don’t love. You can’t love,” she blurted, before grinding her teeth together in remorse. She wasn’t supposed to say that last bit. It was something Angela had told her. Angela had said that Zayed had used his inability to love as the reason to end their relationship. Apparently he didn’t love, couldn’t love—seemed he’d never been in love—and because he couldn’t love, he thought it best to end their relationship as Angela’s feelings had grown too strong.

      Classic narcissist.

      Her father had never loved anyone but himself, either. Narcissists couldn’t love anyone else. Couldn’t see anyone else as separate or having individual needs.

      “I’m sorry,” she added. “That was inappropriate of me. Doctor-patient confidentiality. But you can see why I can’t work with you. After counseling Angela, after knowing certain things about you, I believe it’d be too much of a conflict of interest.”

      He looked at her levelly. “Of whose interest?”

      “Yours.”

      “And this is all based on my six dates with Angela?”

      No, she answered silently, it’s also based on my personal experience with you. But she didn’t say that, as she’d never let him know she was aware of what he really thought of her. “It’s not complicated, Sheikh Fehr. You’re being deliberately obtuse.” Her voice hardened. “You told Angela you’d never marry. You said you’d never fallen in love, and that you were unable to love, and therefore, you didn’t believe you could be loyal to any woman—”

      “I’ve changed.” His lashes lifted and the light golden gaze met hers.

      “That’s not possible.”

      “Isn’t it?” His gaze skewered her. “You are a psychologist, aren’t you?”

      Jamie’s head appeared around the corner of the door. “I’m sorry to interrupt again, but your escort’s arrived, Dr. Tornell. She’s waiting in the lobby.”

      Rou nodded at Jamie and yet she never took her eyes off Zayed. She waited for the door to close. “I have to go.”

      “Time is of the essence, so let’s meet for dinner. We’ll start tonight. The profile, the background information, everything—”

      “No.” She rose to her feet, wound more tightly than she could ever remember. “Never.”

      “Never?”

      “It wouldn’t be right. I couldn’t represent you fairly, and—” she took a deep breath “—I’m not sure I’d want to.”

      “I’m not asking you to find a cure for cancer, Dr. Tornell. I’m asking you to find me a wife.”

      She moved from the desk. “You might as well ask me to find a cure. It’d be easier.”

      If she’d hoped to quell him, she’d failed, as he laughed a deep bitter laugh. “I thought you were a professional.”

      “I am.”

      “Then do your job. It’s what you’re good at, and apparently the only thing you’re good at.”

      Her breath caught as though she’d been sucker punched. “That’s low, and mean-spirited.”

      “And you haven’t been? You judged and sentenced me before even meeting with me today. Fine. I don’t need your approval, but I need your time and your skill.”

      “If you did your research you’d know that I don’t just accept everyone as a client. I take less than five percent of the applicants that come to me. My success is based on the fact that I’m exclusive. I only work with people I believe I can help.”

      “And you could help me. I have an entire country waiting for me to return. Do this and I promise you that you will be compensated handsomely.”

      “This isn’t about money. It’s about values and ethics, and working with you goes against my ethics, and frankly,


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