SILK AND SECRETS

Free SILK AND SECRETS by Mary Jo Putney

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Authors: Mary Jo Putney
months.”
    As she gave a slight smile, a man and two boys entered with trays of food, which they set on a worktable along one side of the study. The man said, “Do you wish anything else, Guli Sarahi?”
    “No, Ruhollah. We shall serve ourselves. You may retire for the evening.”
    The three bowed, then departed.
    Juliet explained, “I thought it would be best if we had no interruptions.”
    “I agree. I also just realized what your name means. I had thought it was a Tuareg word that I didn’t recognize, but it must be the Persian phrase
guli sarai:
flower of the desert.”
    “It’s because of my coloring.” She lifted a self-conscious hand to her bright head. “The first time we met, Saleh called me Desert Flower and the name stuck.”
    “Why did you prefer to speak French rather than Tamahak this afternoon?” he asked curiously. “I thought you had learned the Tuareg language when you lived in Tripoli.”
    “I did, but you spoke Tamahak so well that I was afraid you would notice if I made a mistake. I haven’t spoken Tamahak in years, so French seemed safer.” She lifted a bottle. “Would you like some wine?”
    Ross raised his brows. “That must be hard to come by in this part of the world.”
    “It is, but I like to keep a little wine and brandy on hand for those guests who want it.” She opened the bottle and poured two glasses of red wine, keeping her fingers away from his as she handed him one of the glasses. “Since alcohol is forbidden to Muslims, there is no problem with the servants drinking up the wine cellar, as there often is in England.”
    For the next several minutes she was busy ladling soup into bowls and setting platters of bread and other food on the table.
    Ross watched in silence, taking an occasional sip of the wine. He remembered her blue silk gown very clearly, and she looked better than ever in it, for her lithe body had added a few more curves. In fact, she looked so provocative that he wondered if she had deliberately set out to tease or seduce him, and if so, which of those two things would be harder to endure.
    She glanced up at him, her fiery hair swirling and dancing around her shoulders as she turned her head. The sight was enough to make a man forget every wise resolution he had ever made, yet as her gaze met his, uncertainty was briefly visible in the clear gray depths of her eyes. At seventeen Juliet had not understood how intensely alluring she was, and, to Ross’s surprise, she still had that same quality of innocence.
    Which had to be false, considering the swath she had cut through Mediterranean manhood before disappearing into Asia Minor. The rumors about her behavior had been so lurid that he would not have believed them, had he not had irrefutable proof. Nonetheless, he acquitted her of any desire to tempt him tonight; if that had been her aim, she would be doing a better job of it. Instead, her wariness seemed as great as his own.
    Oblivious of his speculations, Juliet said, “By the way, your two servants are here, none the worse for wear. They are staying in the men’s quarters.”
    “I’m glad to hear that.” Trained to be polite under any circumstances, Ross pulled out a chair for her. After a moment’s hesitation Juliet sat down. Her silky hair brushed the back of his hand as she did, and Ross jerked back as if scalded. His mother’s training in manners had not extended to how a man should behave when dining with an estranged wife who wished that she had never met him.
    Taking his own seat, Ross asked, “How long have you lived here, Juliet?”
    “Over nine years now. After I…”—she hesitated, then chose a neutral term—“left England, I traveled through the Mediterranean, then into the Ottoman Empire. As you know, I lived in Teheran as a girl, when my father was posted there. I wanted to see Persia again, so I spent quite some time journeying through the country. I was about to return to Constantinople when I discovered Serevan.”
    Ross

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