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Guarding the Princess
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“You’re not just a job anymore.”
It was supposed to be a 72-hour mission, in and out, until Brandt Stryker got stranded in the arid African plains with predators before him, a killer at his heels and an exotic princess by his side. Dalilah Al Arif stirs his blood, makes him crave things he’d lost long ago—but she is off-limits, promised to a sheik.
Dalilah’s wedding contract stipulates she must wed before her 30th birthday—just months away. It’s a duty she accepts. But in the arms of her handsome protector, she’s torn between her sense of duty and honor, and her freedom. And as the terrorists close in, she fears the most dangerous creature in the savannah is Brandt himself….
A powerful attraction swelled fast and hard in her.
So hard, it was painful. Brandt Stryker was a man with depth and compassion. He’d been hurt inside and out and was scarred because of it.
Dalilah needed to hold him, love him, and it scared her. Then she did something she didn’t think through: she kissed him.
Brandt melted into the sensation of her lips on his. He kissed her softly, so gently it hurt every nerve in his body. He wanted her—all of her.
Then a slow prickle started up his neck—a hunter’s instinct. A sense of being watched, preyed on. He froze.
“Don’t move,” he whispered against her lips, his hand going for the gun. He breathed in, then whipped onto his back, spinning the rifle around to face their attacker.
Dear Reader,
As you may have noticed this month, Harlequin Romantic Suspense has a brand-new look that’s a fresh take on our beautiful covers. We are delighted at this transformation and hope you enjoy it, too.
There’s more! Along with new covers, the stories are longer—more action, more excitement, more romance. Follow your beloved characters on their passion-filled adventures. Be sure to look for our newly packaged and longer Harlequin Romantic Suspense stories wherever you buy books.
Check out this month’s adrenaline-charged reads:
COWBOY WITH A CAUSE by Carla Cassidy
A WIDOW’S GUILTY SECRET by Marie Ferrarella
DEADLY SIGHT by Cindy Dees
GUARDING THE PRINCESS by Loreth Anne White
Happy reading!
Patience Bloom
Senior Editor
Loreth Anne White
Guarding the Princess
Books by Loreth Anne White
Harlequin Romantic Suspense
Desert Knights #1661 “Sheik’s Captive”
The Perfect Outsider #1704
‡Sheik’s Revenge #1710
‡Surgeon Sheik’s Rescue #1721
‡Guarding the Princess #1738
Silhouette Romantic Suspense
Melting the Ice #1254
Safe Passage #1326
The Sheik Who Loved Me #1368
*The Heart of a Mercenary #1438
*A Sultan’s Ransom #1442
*Seducing the Mercenary #1490
*The Heart of a Renegade #1505
**Manhunter #1537
Her 24-Hour Protector #1572
**Cold Case Affair #1582
‡The Sheik’s Command #1609
Covert Christmas #1627 “Saving Christmas”
*Shadow Soldiers
**Wild Country
‡Sahara Kings
Other titles by this author available in ebook format.
LORETH ANNE WHITE
was born and raised in southern Africa, but now lives in Whistler, a ski resort in the moody British Columbia Coast Mountain range. It’s a place of vast wilderness, larger-than-life characters, epic adventure and romance—the perfect place to escape reality. It’s no wonder she was inspired to abandon a sixteen-year career as a journalist to escape into a world of romance fiction filled with dangerous men and adventurous women.
When she’s not writing, you will find her long-distance running, biking or skiing on the trails and generally trying to avoid the bears—albeit not very successfully. She calls this work, because it’s when the best ideas come.
For a peek into her world, visit her website, www.lorethannewhite.com. She’d love to hear from you.
To Norma Beswetherick, for making a Botswana safari come true.
And to Susan Litman, for all the editorial support and encouragement along this writing road.
Contents
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Epilogue
Excerpt
Prologue
A plume of yellow dust rose along the horizon, carrying like spindrift over Mopani trees eaten squat by elephants. High above in a haze-white sky, vultures wheeled on thermals—drought had this southern region of Zambia in a death grip.
Amal Ghaffar raised his binoculars and studied the approaching vehicle. It was a jeep, drab olive-green, stark against the dry earth. As it neared, he recognized the hulking shape of Mbogo at the wheel. Amal lowered his scopes and resumed cleaning his AK-47 with his right hand. The sleeve of his khaki shirt hung empty where his left arm used to be. Heat pressed down on the shade cloth over his head, sweat trickling from his sideburns.
Amal didn’t bother to look up when the jeep drew to a stop outside the camp and the door slammed. He listened to the crunch of Mbogo’s combat boots approaching.
“What is it?” Amal said.
Mbogo slapped a newspaper onto the small table in front of Amal.
“Page nine.” His voice was a deep baritone and it carried the resonant rhythms of Africa.
Amal’s gaze slid slowly over to the newspaper.
“It’s a British paper, a week old.”
Mbogo remained silent.
Amal finally glanced up, then pulled the paper toward him and opened it to page nine. For an instant he was paralyzed by the black-and-white photograph.
He leaned forward for a closer look, to be certain. But there was no doubt—it was her. All flashing black eyes, thick dark hair, a broad smile across her exotic features. She was, as usual, exquisitely dressed. Standing beside her was a tall, dark-skinned man with hooded eyes and pitch-black hair. Her left hand rested on the man’s arm and the diamond on her ring finger was large enough to feed a small nation.
Amal’s attention darted to the text below the photo. A date had been set. The wedding of Princess Dalilah Al Arif of Al Na’Jar and Sheik Haroun Hassan of Sa’ud would take place in the Kingdom of Sa’ud nineteen months from now, as per the contract negotiated between their fathers almost twenty-three years ago. It would marry two oil-rich kingdoms, one in the Sahara, the other across the Red Sea in Arabia.
“According to that article she’s in Zimbabwe right now,” Mbogo said quietly. “And in two days she’ll be staying at a lodge near Victoria Falls.”
Amal stared at the photo. It was a sign—a gift from God, delivered right to his very hand. For two long years he’d been forced to live like a wounded rat, scurrying around the dry hills and plains, hiding in the insect-infested jungles of this dark continent with a rogue band of fugitives, eking out a living by doing mercenary jobs for corrupt men in power, thwarting the international agencies hunting him. The Al Arif family had taken everything from him, including his left arm, and his father. They had forced him into this existence.
Now, suddenly, he could taste revenge.
“We leave before nightfall,” Amal whispered. He got to
his feet, his empty sleeve flapping in the hot breeze. “And in case we don’t reach her in time, put out word that I want her. Alive. Although dead will suffice as long as I am brought her head on a plate. Let it be known I’ll pay—very well.”
“And how will you pay?”
Amal’s eyes flared to Mbogo. “Her brothers will. Ransom. While they think I have her alive.” He grabbed his gun, a new fire burning in his gut. “The world will see what happens when you dare cross a Ghaffar.”
Chapter 1
The screeching monkeys in the branches above the lodge patio forced Dalilah Al Arif to lean forward in order to hear what the shorter Chinese diplomat was saying. She smiled and nodded encouragingly, not wanting to ruffle any feathers tonight—this deal that would see Zimbabwe ceding platinum-mining rights to China was unprecedented in scope. For her part, Dalilah was in the country to ensure the provision of clean-water points for the impacted villages was firmly entrenched in the deal when it was signed in Harare tomorrow. ClearWater, the New York–based nonprofit agency for which Dalilah volunteered, would handle the installations over the next five years.
She’d been working on securing ClearWater access in Zimbabwe for almost four years now, and it would be her swan song. Because when she married in nineteen months, she’d be leaving Manhattan, along with her foreign-investment consulting career and charity work, to live in Sa’ud. There she’d be expected to work at her new husband’s side as queen when Sheik Haroun Hassan took the throne from his ailing father. This had been her destiny from the day she turned five. She accepted it, but tonight, on the eve of her success, Dalilah was having trouble with the idea of letting go of the things that had come to define her, of losing her freedom.
But the marriage would forge a powerful political and economic alliance between the two oil-rich kingdoms, one in Al Na’Jar in the Sahara, the Sa’ud across the Red Sea in Arabia. It would boost her own country’s economy. It would help her brothers, one of whom was king.
It’s what her dead father had wanted.
And at least, after this deal was signed tomorrow, she’d be leaving a legacy for hundreds of villagers. It would be a tribute to the freedom she’d enjoyed, and in which she’d prospered.
Most of the serious talks with China had been conducted over the past fortnight in Harare, and now the delegates, including Dalilah, had been flown to a high-end game lodge near Victoria Falls as part of the president’s show of hospitality. His largesse stuck in her craw when she thought of the country’s starving and disenfranchised citizens, but dealing with the devil was a necessary evil if she truly wanted to help. It was like this in much of Africa, and Africa was her speciality. Having been raised in the Sahara, Dalilah understood the precious commodity that was water on this continent, and she understood the complexities of government and corruption.
As she listened to the Chinese delegate, she sipped sparkling water from a glass held in her carefully manicured hand. The evening air was warm against her bare shoulders, the sun sinking to the horizon in a blood-orange ball, colored by haze from surrounding bushfires brought on by drought. The acrid scent of smoke tinged the air, and she could hear drumming from a nearby village. It carried an undercurrent of foreboding, something primeval that lurked under the layers of feigned civility.
“The fires smell close tonight,” said a delegate from the Czech Republic as he sidled up to Dalilah and the Chinese representative. The Czech’s pores sweated the smell of metabolized booze. He mopped his forehead with a kerchief and pointed his glass of vodka out toward the treed gardens where sprinklers threw graceful arcs of water over lush lawns. A family of warthogs grazed on the grass near the river, and tiny white lights pricked their way through the dusk, marking pathways to the thatched guest cottages, each of which was decorated in different African themes. Lanterns hung in trees where the monkeys chattered.
“At least the wind is blowing away from us,” he said. “Our guide said it’ll turn tomorrow, but we should be gone before that.” He tossed back the last of his vodka, standing too close to her now. “At least we will be safe.”
“Yes,” she said. Too bad about all the villages and wildlife in the path of the fires.
“It’s incredible to think it’s so dry out there when Victoria Falls and the massive Zambezi is just a few miles away. All that water.”
“It is,” Dalilah said, swallowing her real thoughts. The Czech Republic was a cosigner with China on the deal—she had to play nice, only until tomorrow. Once this was signed, she was going to take a long hot shower and scrub the schmooze off her skin.
“A most spectacular waterfall,” the Czech said as he waved for a waiter to bring him more vodka. A man in a red fez and white button-down shirt approached quickly with his silver tray and filled the man’s glass.
The Czech raised his full glass to the darkening sky. “Here’s to Dr. Livingston for discovering the falls!” Then he tossed back the entire glass.
“The locals call the falls Mosi oa Tunya,” Dalilah responded quietly. “It means the smoke that thunders. They called it that well before Livingston ever arrived.”
He shot her a sharp look, and she cautioned herself. Be nice. Tomorrow it will be a done deal. But the stress of the week was taking its toll on Dalilah. Earlier in the day, after a game drive, a whirlwind visit to the falls and a lavish lunch, she’d tried to steal a few moments alone, seating herself on a bentwood bench along the high riverbank that ran along the lodge property.
The riverbed was dust-dry, apart from a few deep, lingering, brown pools, and to her delight, a family of elephants had come down on the opposite bank to drink from one of those pools.
Dalilah had watched them for almost an hour, stress easing from her neck and mind, until a crocodile broke the muddy surface and latched onto the baby elephant. The ensuing fight, the raw violence of it, had grabbed her by the throat.
As she’d been held fixated by the death struggle, this same Czech had approached her from behind, his footfalls rustling through the tough grass. He’d stood over her shoulder and made some inane comment about the spectacle unfolding in front of them as he offered her a sweating glass of gin and tonic, ice chinking in the oppressive heat.
He’d stood beside her, watching, sipping his own cocktail, cheeks flushed and eyes bright with the thrill of his own personal reality show.
And something cold and disturbing had settled into Dalilah’s chest on that riverbank this afternoon, something she couldn’t define. A sense of change coming. Something dark.
Whatever it was, her mood altered the color of the afternoon. The shadows in the trees across the bank had grown a little darker, the shapes of the leaves more prickly, The sun too harsh. The insistent, sad Qwa-waaaaee call of a gray lorie seemed even sadder. Go-a-waaaay. Go-a-waaaay.
The locals called it the go-away bird. It was one of several Botswana birds that issued an alarm call when a large predator came near, although it was difficult to tell whether the lorie was warning of a human in the area or a lion stalking out of sight in the long grasses.
“The danger is everywhere out here,” the Czech said at her shoulder. “Always a predator in the shadows, lurking, waiting to kill. You go about your business, then suddenly, it strikes.” She heard him sip his drink, ice knocking against crystal, and she couldn’t help flicking a glance over to where her two bodyguards stood, watching her discreetly from the shadows of nearby lucky bean trees.
“We’re put on this earth to eat or be eaten,” he intoned. “To kill or be killed, except with us humans, it’s not always about food or water. Sometimes it’s just for fun, or revenge. Sometimes an attack comes indirectly through commerce, greed…” He trailed off, his words slurring, his philosophical idea blurring around the edges.
Dalilah fingered the mammoth pink Argyle diamond on her ring finger as she thought of the elephant kill that afternoon, of the Czech’s ominous words. The diamond was a symbol of her call to duty, her looming future. Was she going to be confined to a life
of polite talk and diplomatic function, feigning civility with the likes of this Czech boozer for the rest of her life?
As the sun slid below the escarpment the cloak of darkness was sudden and thick. Small bats flitted out from under the lodge’s thatched eaves and a fish eagle cried somewhere along the river. She could hear the rising whoops of hyenas—the sounds of the bush night shift, and violence, beginning.
The dinner gong boomed suddenly and lodge staff politely began to usher guests across the lawn toward the lapa, a fenced-off circular dining area where a huge fire crackled inside a stone circle at the center. Pulsing embers had been raked to one side. Upon them rested several three-legged African cast-iron pots, simmering with traditional game stews, one with a vegetarian selection for Dalilah.
Delegates took their seats at long tables decked with white linen, candles, polished silverware. Wine flowed, and the entertainment began—xylophones and softly throbbing skin drums, voices that sounded like the land itself. Dancers shuffled out from behind the branch fencing, stomping bare feet, nutshells and bottle caps clicking in bracelets around their ankles as they swayed and hummed to the beat. A lone voice rose above it all, a cry, in song.
Goose bumps chased over Dalilah’s skin, and she had to resist the urge to close her eyes and just drink in the sounds. Instead, she nodded politely at a representative from Bangkok who’d taken a seat at her side, instantly feeling crowded, which, she suspected, had little to do with this occasion and more to do with her future.
By the time the first song ended and the guests applauded, the night was thick as velvet, stars spattered across the vault of African sky. Nature seemed to be encroaching on the periphery of the camp, closing in with mysterious night sounds. Fatigue slammed down on Dalilah, and her mind turned to her guest suite, the cotton sheets, the hot tub. Sleep. A warm wind gusted, rustling the nyala leaves above, and Dalilah suddenly felt as if she was being watched. She glanced up into the branches, saw the glow of a tiny white owl looking down at her.