more.
But though he did, and had said theyâd focus on their current predicament, he couldnât forget the beef she had with his family. An unjustly imprisoned sibling was the stuff of undying grudges. This was worse than anything heâd imagined. Heâd thought heâd be bargaining with a news bounty hunter or an intel black marketer. But he couldnât have imagined this. Imagined her. What she was, how she affected him, what she had against his family.
Even the response he wrenched from her was one more strike against him.
Not that heâd let this, or anything, stand in his way.
He wanted her to give him everything. The info. And herself.
He always got what he wanted.
And heâd never known he could want like this.
Everything she knew, felt, was, had to be his. Would be his.
He cocked his head and her gaze slid unwilling admiration and sensuality over the hair that fell to his shoulder.
Pleasure revved inside his chest. âNow weâre squared on that, how about shelving your enmity until we survive this?â
â Youâre only playing nice because you need me . Primary closure of a wound of that caliber is in four to ten days.â
He knew that. He also knew she needed to provoke him to keep her spirits up. He let her. âAnd you need me . You wonât find any passersby here to hitch a ride with to the nearest oasis. So how about you be nice to me? â
Her eyes stormed through vexation, futility and resignation before she harrumphed. âOkay, okay. I concede the need is mutual.â
âIt is. In every way. Even if youâre too mad right now to concede that.â
She blasted him with a glare of frustration. He only grinned and dueted her exasperated, âOh, shut up .â
Six
N o one could know how absolutely majestic and humbling night could be until theyâd been in the desert at night.
Problem was, it was also downright petrifying and alien.
Talia had known they were in the middle of nowhere. But before she got out of the helicopter, that had only been a concept, a figure of speech. Now it was reality. One that impacted her every sense and inundated her every perception. As she at last had the chance to appreciate.
And what a vantage she had to appreciate it from.
Harres had crash-landed them about five dozen feet from the top of one of those thousand-foot dunes heâd spoken of. From this spot she had an almost unlimited view of the tempestuous oceans of sand that seemed to simmer with their own arcane energy, emit their own indefinable color and eerie illumination. At the edge of her vision, they pushed in a scalpel-sharp demarcation against a domeof deepest eternity scattered with stars, the unblinking shrapnel of the big boom. Under their omnidirectional light, each steep undulation created occult shadows that seemed to metamorphose into shapes, entities. Some seemed to look back at her, some seemed to beckon, some to crawl closer. It made her realize how Middle Eastern fables had come to such vivid and sometimes macabre life. She certainly felt as if a genie or worse would materialize at any time.
Then again, sheâd already met her genie.
Right now, he was taking apart the mangled rear of the helicopter to get to the gear and supplies theyâd need before they set off on their oasis-bound trek.
She shuddered again, this time complete with chattering teeth, as much from expanding awe and descending dread as from marrow-chilling cold aided by a formidable windchill factor.
Though he was making a racket cutting the twisted metal with shears heâd retrieved from the cockpit, and the wind had risen again, eddying laments around them, it seemed heâd heard her.
He straightened with a groan that reminded her of his injury, made her wonder again how he ignored it, functionedâand so efficientlyâwith only the help of a painkiller shot.
He reached out to her face, cupped her cheek in the coolness of his huge,