Agony ripped through her. “You do want me. I know you do.” Her chin lifted defiantly. “I’ll be back tomorrow night and everything will be the same. You’ll see.”
His lips twisted. “Don’t count on it. You know I seldom keep a woman for more than a month. Be sure to take that pretty trinket I gave you in San Francisco. There won’t be any more forthcoming.”
“You know I don’t want your damn gifts,” she whispered. “Why are you doing this to me?”
A shadow of pain passed over his face. Then it was gone. “Don’t come back,” he said again. “You’ll regret it if you do.”
“I’ll be home tomorrow evening,” she said huskily. “I’m not going to let you do this to us, Philip.”
“This is my home, not yours,” he said as he turned away. “You’re an outsider here. Remember that, Pandora.” He didn’t look at her again as he strode out of the room.
She closed her eyes, trying to fight back the waves of pain. Why? She had expected anger, even jealousy, but not this cold rejection. It was as if she’d touched a trigger that had set off a hidden land mine. She couldn’t believe that the laughing man who had sat beside her on the cliff this morning could have changed in such a short time. No. She wouldn’t accept it. That warm, gentle man was still there beneath the hardness. She just had to find him again.
She opened her eyes and stood up. The sooner she got this Paris business over with, the sooner she could start that search.
Her steps were quick and firm as she hurried from the room to start her packing.
SEVEN
IT WAS ALREADY dark when the limousine pulled up in the courtyard the next evening. Philip’s home resembled a gleaming palace from an Arabian nights storybook as the lights shone from the long, narrow windows and fell on the rich mosaic tiles of the courtyard. A palace that was remote and exotic and not at all welcoming.
Why had that thought occurred to her? Pandora wondered tiredly. She had always thought of the place as home, no matter how palatial and impressive it appeared to others. It must be because she was almost numb with exhaustion and so grimy that she bore no resemblance to the fairy-tale harem beauty who should occupy such an exotic palace.
She had wanted to change from these jeans and the tunic top before she saw Philip, but she had been too tired to bother. She’d had no sleep since she had left Sedikhan the morning before.
Dubois had been just as stubborn as Neal had suspected he would be, and they’d stayed up all night hashing out the tour details and getting the promoter to up the money. They had paused only for breakfast this morning, and the talks had continued until midafternoon. Dubois had been bullheaded, but he had acceded at last. Nonetheless, she had left for the airport feeling as if her nerves had been stretched on the rack. The scene that was waiting for her here would not help them any, she thought as she slowly climbed the steps. She had phoned from the airport in Paris to give her arrival time, and Raoul had rather sheepishly informed her that Philip was too busy to take the call.
It was Raoul himself who opened the front door and came out on the steps. She gave him a rather strained smile. “Hello, Raoul. Have you been sent to guard the gates? I’m not sure I can put up enough of a fight to make it worth your while at the moment.”
“Those were not my orders.” Raoul’s voice held a note of warm sympathy. “I was only told to tell the driver of the limousine to wait, and then to ask you to join the sheikh and his guest in the library.”
“His guest?” Not her father. Please, anyone but him. She straightened her shoulders and lifted her chin. “All right, Raoul, I’ll go straight in. I was going to change, but I wouldn’t want to keep him waiting.” Her lips curved in a sad smile. “That wouldn’t be either polite or kind, would it? I’m sure he’s eagerly anticipating this interview.”
He took an impulsive half step forward. “Miss Madchen, perhaps it would be better if you went back to Paris for the time being. You can always return at some later time, when the sheikh is in a better frame of mind.”
“That bad, is it?”
“I’ve never seen him quite like this. It would be wiser for you to wait until his mood is a little less . . .” He shrugged helplessly. “It would be better to wait.”
She shook her head. “I won’t cut and run. I knew it wouldn’t be easy when I came back to Sedikhan.” Her lips tightened with determination. “The driver of the limo can wait all night. I still won’t be using him.”
Raoul stood aside to let her pass, his expression still concerned. “I don’t think . . .”
“Don’t worry, Raoul. I’ll be all right. The library, did you say?” She walked quickly down the long hall. The door to the library was slightly ajar. She pushed it open and strolled into the room, unconsciously bracing herself for what she would find there.
It wasn’t her father who was sitting in the chair facing the door. It was a woman. An extremely beautiful woman, with silky, dark hair and olive skin, ravishingly complemented by her scarlet chiffon gown. Her lips were parted in a warm smile as she gazed up at Philip, standing by the chair.
She must look like a tousled street urchin in comparison, Pandora thought dully. “Hello, Philip,” she said quietly. “I take it you have someone you want me to meet.”
Philip was in dinner clothes, and looked as dark and dangerous as Oedipus at his most mettlesome. He turned to her with a smile that didn’t quite reach his eyes. “Oh yes. I really thought the two of you should meet. Come here, Pandora.”
She went forward to stand beside him. “That shop in Marasef is boringly predictable,” she said huskily. “Brunettes do look good in colors other than scarlet. I think you’d look beautiful in a soft pink, Miss . . . ?”
“Lenat,” Philip supplied. “Natalie Lenat.” His eyes were narrowed on Pandora’s face. “You’ve guessed that she’s your replacement, then?”
“How do you do, Miss Lenat?” Pandora said wearily. “I’m sorry you’ve been drawn into this. You don’t deserve it.”
“I don’t understand,” Natalie Lenat murmured in bewilderment.
“Send her away, Philip,” Pandora said curtly. “You’re not going to discourage me by dangling another woman in front of my face.”
“What makes you think she’s here for your benefit?” Philip asked silkily. “Natalie and I are old acquaintances. We’ve enjoyed each other’s . . . company several times before.”
“That’s in the past,” Pandora said jerkily. “Not now. Not in the future. I’m your future, Philip.”
“No,” he said very softly. “You’re the past, Pandora. Accept it.”
She was shaking. Each word was stabbing her like needle-thin icicles of pain. “Don’t do this to me,” she whispered. “You know you don’t mean it.”
“Don’t I?” There was a reckless smile on his lips. “Your bags have been packed. Raoul has put them in the car by now. You’ll have to forgive the haste, but Natalie needed the closet room, didn’t you, sweet?”
There was a touch of sympathy in the brunette’s face as she started to rise. “Perhaps I should leave you alone.”
Philip’s hand was immediately on her smooth, bare shoulder, pushing her back into the chair. “No. Stay. I have a gift for you.”
“A gift?”
“A very special gift.” He took a step closer to Pandora, his hands sliding beneath her long silver hair. “Pandora won’t need this any longer.” He found the clasp of the medallion and released it, drawing the chain along her skin as he took the necklace off. It felt as if each link were cutting into her heart. “She’s leaving Sedikhan.”
“I can’t take much more of this, Philip.” She felt a fierce rage begin to smolder, burning away the pain like a mercifully cauterizing brand. “That’s my medallion.”
“Only as long as I chose to let you keep it,” he drawled. “And I no longer choose to do that.” He stepped behind the wing chair. “I wish to give it to my new Khadim.” He put the medallion around Natalie Lenat’s neck and held it there, witho
ut fastening the chain. “She has a lovely throat, hasn’t she?”
“Damn you!” Pandora’s dark eyes were blazing in her suddenly pale face. “Damn you to hell, Philip. Who gave you the right to be so cruel to me? You didn’t have to love me, but couldn’t you have been kind at least?” Her voice was shaking. “What happened? Did you get scared again that you might give a little of yourself to someone else? Well, don’t worry. I’m not sure that I want you to give me anything any longer. I might get frostbite. I think you like that winter world you live in.” She stalked to the door, paused and turned. “And if I happen to have a child, I don’t want him to live in that winter world either. That should relieve you. You can have your barren little planet all to yourself. We won’t bother you again.”
Then she was gone. Philip found himself staring at the door with blind eyes, feeling as if he were waking out of a nightmare dream into a nightmare reality. She had left him. It was what he wanted, wasn’t it? Then why was he feeling this wrenching pain?
“You don’t really want to give me this, do you?” Natalie asked softly. “It was only a way of hurting her?”
“Yes, it was only a way of hurting her,” he said dully. He slowly removed the medallion from around her neck with a feeling of intense self-disgust.
“I think you succeeded.” She rose gracefully to her feet. “I believe you hurt her very much.”
“So do I.” He was suddenly nauseated as he remembered the look on Pandora’s face. “I’m good at pulling wings off butterflies too.”
“I think I should go pack.” Natalie moved with lithe grace toward the door. “You do not want me here. It was all a game, as she said. Is that not so?”
“Yes,” he said absently. He was still seeing Pandora’s white face. “Of course you will be suitably rewarded for your time.”
“Thank you. You’ve always been very generous.” Her low voice was serene. “If you ever do really want me, you know I will come.”
The door closed behind her.
He didn’t want her. He didn’t want any woman but Pandora. He would never want anyone but Pandora.
The knowledge struck him like a blow. Blind. My God, how blind could a man be? Blind and frightened, just as she had accused him of being.
He felt as if he’d been in a fever since the moment she had said she was going to Paris. The pain had been so shockingly intense that he’d automatically withdrawn into himself, throwing up barriers with frantic urgency. Why hadn’t he realized what he was doing?
There was a soft knock on the door and it opened a moment later. “Shall I tell the driver he may leave now?” Raoul asked with an aloofness that signaled extreme disapproval.
“The driver?” Philip looked up swiftly. “The limousine is still here? But Pandora . . .”
“Miss Madchen did not take the limousine,” Raoul said. “She ran out the front door, but she didn’t get in the car.” He paused before adding accusingly, “I don’t think she even saw it. She was most upset.”
“I know that,” Philip said. His lips were a thin line of pain. “Where did she go? Why the hell didn’t you stop her?”
“I wasn’t sure you would want me to. After all, you obviously desired her to leave.”
“Where did she go?” Philip demanded. “I don’t need you to turn the knife, Raoul. All I need to know is where Pandora went when she left here.”
“She ran across the courtyard in the direction of the stables.”
Philip muttered a low curse. He should have known she’d head for the haven of the stables. Then another thought occurred to him, and it stopped the breath in his chest.
“Oedipus,” he breathed. “Oh, my God.” He started for the door, fear a hard fist in his stomach. “Oedipus!”
She was running. The anger lasted only a few minutes after she left the library, and then the pain enveloped her in shimmering waves. She wasn’t conscious of the tears streaming down her cheeks as she tore across the courtyard. She was only aware of the need to escape from that pain in any way possible. But there wasn’t any escape. She knew that, even as she climbed the pasture fence and jumped to the ground on the other side.
Oedipus neighed softly. His dark coat shone in the moonlight with a silken luster. So beautiful. So powerful. So much like Philip, with his complexities and his remoteness. However, Oedipus wasn’t remote tonight. He was warm and accessible as she threw her arms about his neck and buried her face in his mane.
“How about a run?” she said brokenly. “I need it. I want to outrun the wind tonight.” Maybe she could outrun some of the pain as well. She slipped on Oedipus’s back, and he stood like a statue until she nudged him forward. “Not the pasture tonight.” She leaned far down and opened the gate, then urged him into a trot. “We need freedom, don’t we?” In a few minutes she was away from the compound and on the road that led to the hills.
“Now.” She was bent low over Oedipus’s mane. “Run, boy!”
The wind was tearing at her hair as he stretched out at a blinding pace. She couldn’t breathe, but for a little while she couldn’t feel either as the scenery flashed by on either side of her. Oh Lord, how merciful it was not to feel. The moonlight shone on the road and she could see the hills looming dark in the distance.
The hills. She suddenly remembered sitting on the cliff overlooking those hills yesterday morning. Philip had been laughing and teasing her, his face lit with a rare warmth. She felt a bolt of pain rip through her. No, she couldn’t go there now!
She tried to pull Oedipus in, but she had no reins. He was running faster now, covering the distance between the valley and the foothills with great speed. Then he was climbing, and she had to tighten her knees to keep from slipping off his sleek back. The cliff where they had stopped was much closer and she felt a sudden panic. She bent low, her arms encircling Oedipus’s neck, pulling and trying to halt or break his stride.
The action only served to confuse him, and he suddenly reared, pawing the air. Her arms were torn from his neck and she felt herself slipping, falling . . .
She struck the hard, rocky ground with a jar that knocked the breath out of her. For a moment she was only conscious of the struggle to get air. Then the pain in her lower back washed over her with an intensity that made her cry out. She was dully aware of a dampness between her thighs and a mist that surrounded her with ever increasing darkness.
She tried to lift her head and found she couldn’t see any longer through the mist. How odd. It wasn’t that dark tonight, she thought. Then the mists overwhelmed her, and she was no longer conscious of anything at all.
She was lying on something hard and unyielding, and the blanket that covered her was of rough wool. She heard Philip’s voice fading in and out of the mists, but it was hoarse and rasping. She had never heard him sound like that before.
Yet when she forced her lids to open, it was undoubtedly Philip’s face looking down into her own. His eyes were turquoise bright and glittering strangely. “My fault,” she whispered.
He bent closer. “Don’t try to talk. We have you back in the first-aid room. You’re going to be fine.” His hand, brushing a strand of hair from her temple, was trembling slightly. No, that must be her imagination. Philip was always rock firm and absolutely unflappable. But he was going to be angry. So angry. She must make him understand. “My fault,” she murmured again. “Not Oedipus. I was stupid. It wasn’t Oedipus.”
A muscle in his jaw jerked. “No, it wasn’t Oedipus’s fault. I know that. Close your eyes and try to rest. Your father will be here soon, and we’ll get you taken care of.”
“My father?” She shivered suddenly. “Cold. I’m so cold, Philip.”
“Hush, I know.” His hand tightened on her own, as if trying to transmit his warmth to her. “It won’t last long and then you’ll never be cold again. I promise, Pandora.”
Philip always kept his promises. She knew that. Yet even Philip couldn’t perform miracles. How was he going to bring spring to a winter world? “My father does
n’t know about spring.” Her voice trailed away as her eyes closed again. “He doesn’t know, Philip.”
“Then we’ll have to teach him,” Philip said huskily. “I promised, Pandora. Just hold on for a little while longer and then I’ll take over.”
“All right, I’ll try.” Had he heard her? His hand was tightening on hers, as if he were trying to hold her back. Back from what? The darkness was warm and friendly and she was floating away on a gentle surf that cradled her like strong arms. Like Philip’s arms carrying her back from the vineyard that night so long ago. Such a lovely memory . . .
“She’s unconscious,” Karl Madchen said from just behind Philip. His face was expressionless as he took a step forward and picked up her wrist. “Raoul said it was a fall from a horse in the hills. How long was she lying there before you found her?”
“Not more than two hours, perhaps less. I got together a party and rode after her as soon as Oedipus returned to the stable. We were very careful. We brought her down on that stretcher, but we reinforced it with special supports. I don’t think there are any bones broken.” He touched her jean-clad thigh gently. “However, she seems to be in shock and I think there’s some bleeding.”
“So I see. Well, we’ll have to run a few tests. It may be nothing.” Madchen was rapidly unzipping Pandora’s jeans as he spoke. “I will let you know shortly. My assistant is waiting in the hall. Send her in, please. I will join you in the library when I have a report for you.”
“I’m going to stay,” Philip said hoarsely.
“As you like, but you’ll be in the way. I can function more efficiently with you out of the room.”
Philip muttered a curse and reluctantly released Pandora’s hand. “All right. But hurry, dammit. I want to know right away.”
“You will learn my diagnosis in good time. There are tests and perhaps X rays to be taken. I know my job, Sheikh El Kabbar.”
Philip was aware of that. Madchen might be as emotionless as the Sphinx, but he was an exceedingly thorough, competent physician, or Philip never would have retained him all these years. “I want to know right away,” he said again. “I’ll be waiting.”