Sheikh's Scandalous Mistress

Free Sheikh's Scandalous Mistress by Jessica Brooke, Ella Brooke Page A

Book: Sheikh's Scandalous Mistress by Jessica Brooke, Ella Brooke Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jessica Brooke, Ella Brooke
to block myself from anything that horrible again.”
    She shook her head and picked up her tennis racket from where she left it in the corner of the room. “Alright, Amir, Mother can see when she’s pressed too hard.”
    “Really? Since when?” he joked, arching an eyebrow.
    “You know what I mean! I’m going to be late to tennis, and I’ll be damned if I let the sheikha of Oman beat me this month. Now, think over what I’ve said,” she said as she left.
    She was a whirlwind, but he couldn’t ignore her advice.
    Amir didn’t have much time to focus on his mother’s words and unsolicited advice, because almost as soon as she was down the hall, Mafir slipped in the door. That was actually advantageous as he was about to summon his manservant anyway. It didn’t matter that Amanda didn’t want help. She could say anything she wanted, but he’d be a damn fool not to have some of his security team on her. Right now, some of his best agents were determining if the senator currently had her bugged, and learning whatever other information the ass had gathered on her. He’d started with the espionage route, but in a few weeks, he was far from opposed to sending her back to the States with a guard at her disposal.
    It was common sense, what was truly safe and smart.
    “Sir—”
    “Mafir, I’m glad you came. I wanted to talk to you about Miss Sinclair.”
    “Then you’ve seen? Good because I think we may have a problem on our hands,” he said, crossing quickly to the television and flicking the machine on.
    Amir frowned but watched the image flicker to life. Mafir grabbed the changer and sped through the usual news and finance channels and instead settled on a vacuous entertainment news network. He was about to ask his servant what in the blue hell he thought he was doing, when Amir saw a familiar but blurry image on the screen. Blood boiled in his veins, and he knew that some employees of his were merely going to wish that there were still dungeons and hands being chopped off in this nation. It would be far less painful than the blackballing and lawsuit for breach of privacy he planned to unfurl on them.
    “What?” he roared.
    “Then you didn’t know,” Mafir said dryly, which galled Amir even further. How could his servant be so calm when the video feed from the gallery—heavily edited for broadcast television but still revealing—was playing on a loop on some gossip channel? “Sir, I think we need to call a press conference as soon as possible. I’ve summoned your press secretary, and she’s already thinking of how to start with damage control.”
    “Damage control?”
    “Well, some people are scoffing again at the whole project, as if it’s a lark for you or some excuse to seduce women. You need to go into damage control now. You know how important the launch of your property is, how crucial all of it is.”
    “I need to talk to her, see how she is.”
    “You can, but give it thirty minutes. You need to preserve a billion-dollar casino’s opening first, my sheikh,” Mafir said, shoving the phone into his hand. “Take care of your business dealings first. Never lose sight of what matters.”
    “That’s what I’m trying to do.”
    ***
    The phone was blaring in her ear, startling her out of her sleep, and damn it, she needed it after being kept up all night with the best sex of her life. Amanda rose up in bed, pushing herself out of the mountains of silk sheets before she grabbed her cell. Blinking blearily down at it, she noticed that the caller ID said “Margery.” Good, she still had till tomorrow to file her gallery story, and once she prepped that, she’d talk to Harris about taking a bit of time off. Who cared about some gondola attraction opening in Venice? She just wanted to try and assess her life, which seemed to be swept up in a whirlwind.
    The fact that doing it in Amir’s bed for a few weeks was merely a bonus.
    Of course, that’s not completely true. Last night was the best

Similar Books

Seducing the Heiress

Martha Kennerson

Breath of Fire

Liliana Hart

Honeymoon Hazards

Ben Boswell

Eve of Destruction

Patrick Carman

Destiny's Daughter

Ruth Ryan Langan

Murderers' Row

Donald Hamilton

Looks to Die For

Janice Kaplan