The Sheik and the Runaway Princess
off her bedroom, but instead of a sink, there had been a basin and a drain, along with some handmade soap. Yesterday, she’d used a tub filled with water brought by several servants.
    “Kardal, you can’t be serious,” she told him. “About the bath. You look really clean.”
    Kardal actually winked at her. “Come now. Don’t play the shy virgin with me. I’m not going to insist that we become lovers, just that we play a little. You’ll enjoy it.” He lowered his voice. “I promise.”
    Her throat tightened until it was difficult to speak. “Did it ever occur to you that I wasn’t playing? You can call me anything you’d like but that doesn’t change my reality.”
    His eyebrows raised slightly. Great. The man didn’t believe her. She stalked to the window. “Figures that you’re just like everyone else,” she complained, studying the view of the courtyard below without actually seeing it. “The horrible things they say about me in the tabloids and newspapers are a whole lot more interesting than the truth.”
    Kardal didn’t answer. A few minutes later she heard the door open and several people came in with large buckets of steaming water. An empty tub was placed in front of the tiled fireplace across from her bed. Water filled the tub, and then they were alone.
    “I am ready,” Kardal announced.
    “That makes one of us,” she murmured under her breath, not moving from her place by the window.
    “Sabrina, do not make me angry with you.”
    “Or what? You’ll beat me? Tie me in chains? Starve me?”
    “I have no desire to physically abuse you, but if you try my temper, I will be forced to remind you that you are my possession. I am a fair master, but I expect obedience from my subjects.”
    Her eyes burned, but she refused to give way to tears. They wouldn’t do any good and she wouldn’t give Kardal the satisfaction of knowing that he’d won. If he wanted a bath, she would give him a bath. If he tried anything, she would fight and claw and scream until he was sorry he hadn’t left her to die in the desert.
    With her shoulders back and her head held high, she marched over to the tub and stood next to him. “What do you want me to do?”
    He smiled. “Nothing until I’m undressed.”
    Her resolve dissolved like sugar in boiling water. Instinctively she stepped back, then averted her gaze as he reached for the buttons on his linen shirt.
    He chuckled. “Surely even the great virgin princess has seen a man’s bare chest before.”
    “Yes, of course.” But not while she was alone in the room with him, she thought, then forced herself to look at him.
    He removed the shirt slowly, as if she would find the process appealing. He couldn’t have been more wrong. Her desire was for him to get it over with so she could be done and he would leave her alone. But no. Inch by inch he slid the material down his arms.
    She took in the impressive size of his muscles and the way they rippled with each small movement. There was an interesting scar on his left shoulder, and another along his rib cage.
    “Another assassination attempt?” she asked, pointing to a mark on his midsection.
    “An encounter in the desert. I was young and foolish and riding out alone. I was trapped by an unfriendly group. They thought killing me would be great sport.”
    He spoke easily, but his words made Sabrina shudder. Whether or not he was simply recounting a story or warning her about the dangers of the desert, she got the point. While most nomads were honorable and attacked only when provoked, there were renegades who cared naught for the laws of the desert. Those dangerous few killed with the ease of a horse using its tail to swat flies.
    “You survived,” she said, trying to act casual as he stepped out of his shoes.
    “Don’t sound so sad,” he told her. “You may yet find a use for me.”
    “I doubt it.”
    He reached for the waistband of his trousers. Sabrina instantly turned away. She busied herself

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