Marrying the Sheikh (12 page)

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Authors: Holly Rayner

Tags: #Romance, #Multicultural, #Romantic Suspense, #Multicultural & Interracial, #Mystery & Suspense, #Suspense

BOOK: Marrying the Sheikh
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She turned to leave but the doors to the ballroom had already closed. When she turned back around, Djaron was gone too. He had found a seat at the table and Ella quickly realized she was now the only one left standing. She looked around frantically and noticed a narrow opening in a set of heavy drapes to the side of the doors. She quickly ducked in behind the drapes and waited for the ceremony to begin.

 

The music continued as the guests hushed. A moment later, a deep voice came over the speaker.

 

“Ladies and gentlemen, distinguished guests and honored diplomats, thank you for coming to celebrate the union of these two families.” There was applause from the assembled crowd. “Now, if you will please stand, the ceremony will begin.”

 

A rustle moved across the room as the three hundred guests stood to their feet. She took the opportunity and dashed form behind the curtain to the door. When the processional music started, Ella cracked the door open and stepped outside into the hall, closing the door behind her.

 

She listened as the music continued and she knew exactly what was happening. Right now, she thought, Karim and his parents and groomsmen would be entering on the right of the stage. They would perform a ceremonial passing of the rings, and then Karim would escort his parents to their chairs and return to his spot center stage.

 

Ella continued to play out the scene in her mind as she walked slowly toward the lobby of the Plaza, fighting back the tears that threatened to burst through. She knew that once Karim was in position, Nadia’s parents would be escorted to the stage by their eldest son. He would help them to their seats and then go to Karim, pinning a family medallion on his lapel. Once that was done, a new song would begin and a spotlight would appear at the side of the room.

 

The bridesmaids would appear in the royal dresses, carrying the modified peach bouquets, all of them looking for the perfect husband among the guests. Ella laughed ruefully at the thought; she knew this because that’s what she had done every time she'd been a bridesmaid.

 

She took a deep breath and imagined the women walking into the blue room, looking like movie stars, with all eyes on them. And then, Nadia would make her grand entrance, escorted by her brother. He would be wearing his military uniform and would hold her arm in his as they walked slowly down the aisle.

 

When they arrived at the stage, he would gently remove her arm from his, pull back her veil and kiss her on both cheeks. He would take her hand in his and walk her to her spot on the stage, just a few feet away from Karim. The brother would stay there until the officiator pronounces them united as one. And then, Ella thought as she neared the doors to the Plaza, then it would be done. The wedding would be complete. And Karim… Karim would be married.

 

She stood in the grand lobby of the Plaza and took a deep breath in, letting the realization of what was happening sink in. Karim was getting married right now and there was nothing she could do about it. She had missed her opportunity. She would never be able to tell him how she felt, how much her heart raced when she was near him, how secure she felt in his arms, how much she loved him.

 

“Ella!” Karim’s voice boomed over the crowd that was milling about the lobby.

 

Ella spun around. Her tear filled eyes looked up to see Karim just feet away, running towards her. “Karim?!” she asked, astonished. She ran to meet him and he pulled her into his arms. After a moment, he let go and Ella looked up at him in disbelief. “Wha…?”

 

“I called it off! I told them all that it was a sham. I told them how the whole thing was set up so that Nadia’s family could marry into royalty and so my family could strengthen their oil interests.” Karim’s face was wide with enthusiasm. He was so happy he couldn’t contain himself.

 

Ella shook her head as the tears spilled over. “But, but…” She didn't know what to say.

 

“We were going to cancel all along. I just couldn’t tell you.” Karim looked down at Ella, his eyes full of regret.

 

“That’s what Nadia and I were fighting about back at the apartment all those weeks ago. She agreed to call off the wedding if I didn’t tell anyone about her drinking and partying. I agreed, but she insisted that I wait until the day of the wedding to call it off.”

 

Ella just looked at Karim. “Why? Why wait?”

 

“If we canceled while we were engaged, it would be a small blip in the society pages. But if I waited until the wedding day and ditched her at the altar, that would be news. And there’s nothing that Nadia likes more than attention. She figured my canceling on the wedding day would create such a scandal that her name would stay in the news for months and years to come.”

 

Ella heard the words but couldn’t believe them. Karim saw the confusion on her face. “I know,” he said. “It doesn’t make sense to me either, but that’s what she wanted. And in the end, I got what I wanted, too: out of the wedding.” Karim said slowly as he pulled Ella close. “All that matters is that I’m free. I’m free to be honest about how I feel about you. I don’t have to hide that anymore.”

 

“Your feelings for me?” Ella said, her heart pounding even heavier than before.

 

A booming voice came thundering across the lobby and Ella and Karim looked to see a sizable crowd of Nadia’s relatives heading straight toward them.

 

Karim looked at Ella and grabbed her hand. “Quick, come with me!”

 

He pulled her across the lobby and to an elevator. They heard the voices close in just as the elevator doors closed behind them. Karim reached in his vest pocket and pulled out a key.

 

“What’s that?” asked Ella, her hand still clenched to his. She couldn’t believe this was happening. Had Karim really just called off the wedding? Was she really with him right now, running from the bride’s family? Did he just say he had feelings for her?

 

“It’s the key to the roof,” Karim said, sticking the key into the panel on the wall of the elevator. The car rushed to the top of the building and the doors opened into a small glass vestibule. Karim pulled Ella out by the hand and the two rushed through the glass doors to the flat roof.

 

“What are we doing here?” Ella asked, confused and thrilled at the same time.

 

Karim smiled down at Ella and then pointed to the far side of the roof where a helicopter was waiting.

 

Ella’s eyes grew wide. “Is that for us?”

 

Karim smiled and brushed his hand across her cheek. “Yes,” he said as the helicopter engine roared into life and its blades began spinning. “I had Djaron bring it so that I could make my escape.”

 

Ella blinked and thought back. Djaron? He must have known about the plan all along. And if Nadia knew about calling off the wedding, and about Karim’s feelings for Ella, perhaps the call about the flowers was all part of the plan.

 

Karim watched as Ella connected the dots. “My escape with you,” he said as he took her hand in his and started to move toward the helicopter.

 

Ella followed Karim as he reached the helicopter and hopped in, jumping in behind him. As Karim pulled the door shut she sat back in the leather seat and looked out at her beloved city. Moments later, the helicopter lifted up and began to rise above Manhattan.

 

As the buildings got smaller and the chopper settled into a smooth ride, Ella turned her attention to Karim. “Where are we going?” she asked, feeling like a kid in an amusement park.

 

He leaned in close to her and she could feel the breath on her neck as he spoke. “Back to where it all began.”

 

She looked at him with questioning eyes, then smiled. “You mean Eleuthera?”

 

Karim nodded and wrapped his arm around her. “If that’s okay with you?”

 

Ella nodded as Karim continued. “I hear there’s a great little spot there to hold a wedding.”

 

Ella blinked slowly at him, trying to absorb what she was hearing.

 

“Well,” she said coyly as she smiled at his handsome face. “I just might know a good wedding planner.”

 

Karim’s eyes sparkled as he smiled. Then, very slowly, he leaned in and placed his lips on Ella’s. As the chopper rose higher, Ella kissed him back, letting her love for him spill over as they flew off toward paradise and to the rest of their lives together.

 

The End

 

 

 

Holly Rayner

 

 

 

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Thank you for reading my work, I dedicate this story to each and every one of you. As promised, here are the first few chapters of my last book,
The Sheikh’s Captive Woman.

ONE

 

Aurora heard the sound of a yacht blowing its horn, moving away from the docks and onto the open water, and sighed. She closed her eyes, turning her face in the direction of the breeze, trying to imagine that she could smell the brine of the ocean over the solvents, oil and fuel scents that filled her nose.

 

Opening her eyes, she glanced around and saw an enormous cruise ship bobbing in the water. “Aurora Evans, Cruise Ship Activity Director,” she murmured to herself, trying the sound of it. She shook her head; she needed a new job—and a new identity—much faster than it would take a cruise ship to hire her.

 

She sat down on a mooring post, scrubbing lightly at her face with her hands. She’d come out to the docks in the hope that the sight of the boats would give her some kind of inspiration, some indication of her path forward. Everything in Miami seemed like a long corridor of closed doors, leading into darkness. She cringed at the thought of the job she’d left just that morning; Jorge had been so disappointed that she was quitting, especially with no notice—but he had lived in Miami long enough to know that there were only a few reasons why baristas and servers would leave suddenly, and none of them were reasons he wanted to have anywhere near his business. As soon as he’d told her about the “guy in the Italian suit” asking questions about whether he had an employee named Aurora, Aurora had known she couldn’t stick around any longer.

 

“Goddam son of a bitch,” Aurora muttered to herself, shaking her head. She had thought—she had hoped—that she had lost Jon in the murky depths of the city. As far as she knew, he didn’t have her address yet, but that wouldn’t last long. Working at the café, she hadn’t had enough money to afford a decent apartment, and so she’d taken a run-down converted unit in Liberty City, along with the sagging bed that came with it. It was a far cry from the dorm she’d had back at UM Medical, which Aurora thought was a fairly solid reflection of her circumstances.

 

Months before, she never would have imagined herself ending up in this situation. It was still difficult for her to believe that she could go from wandering around hawkers' stands in Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam to living in a glorified slum in the space of a few weeks. Brandon had loaned her the money for her round-trip ticket without even arguing about it, and Aurora had thought that perhaps he was interested in mending fences with her. All she’d done was mention that she wanted to make the trip, get medical school out of her blood and brains, and he’d managed to come up with the money. She hadn’t had a clue that the money hadn’t been rightfully his to begin with until she’d finally come back to the States.

 

She’d gotten a call from him the day her plane touched down at MIA, saying he wanted to take her to dinner and hear about her travels. Aurora had gone along, excited to share her pictures and stories; but alarm bells had begun ringing in her mind as soon as she’d arrived at the restaurant in the downtown area, when she saw that it wasn’t just Brandon at the table.

 

There had been a man, dressed in a tailored suit that looked like a Miami Vice throwback, his hair greasy and his face slightly sweaty in the subtropical humidity. He’d introduced himself as Jon, and had explained—oh, so diplomatically—that Brandon had borrowed money from him several months before. He'd said that Brandon had not paid the money back, and Brandon had informed him that most of the money he’d borrowed had actually gone to Aurora. Therefore, in exchange for writing off the rest of his debt, he’d put Aurora up to paying her chunk, plus interest.

 

Brandon had left her there at the restaurant, seated across from Jon, and no matter how Aurora had explained that she hadn’t had any idea that Brandon had borrowed the money, Jon had continued to counter that it didn’t matter—she was on the hook for the amount she had received, and he expected her to come up with the cash, one way or the other.

 

“You have to understand; I’m running a business here. I can’t let people get away with not paying me when I offer very generous terms,” Jon had said, shrugging off Aurora’s panicked tears. “It sucks for you that your boyfriend turned out to be the kind of guy who sells out his ex, but that’s really not my problem.”

 

Aurora had done everything she could to evade Jon after that night; as soon as she’d left the restaurant, she’d backed up the information on her phone and then destroyed it, changing her phone number and using the last of the money in her bank account to get a new phone and pay the first month's rent on her shitty apartment. She had only given it out to people she thought she could absolutely trust—her parents, Jorge at the café, and a few of her friends. She had sent Brandon a scathing email detailing exactly what she thought of him, as well as her hopes of what someone would someday do to him.

 

For a few weeks, Aurora had held out hope that she would somehow manage to evade Jon for long enough to figure out how to pay back the amount she suddenly owed. The temptation to tell her parents about her misadventure, to beg them to help her, was strong; but Aurora knew exactly the lecture her mother would give her if she admitted that she was in trouble. “So you’ve been lying to us for months? You keep us out of your life, and now you’re getting into trouble with loan sharks? How am I supposed to believe this isn’t your own doing? How could you have been so foolish?”

 

Another cruise ship blasted its horn, and Aurora looked up. Her skin crawled with the sudden apprehension that Jon was having her followed, that someone might be watching her. How else would he have found out where she worked? It wasn’t as though she’d posted anything about it on any of her online profiles—she had locked everything down as soon as she’d learned about the loan. The only way she could figure that Jon could even have discovered that she had a job, much less where it was, was that he’d sent people around the city to track her down.

 

Aurora stood quickly, shivering. Even the possibility that someone might be reporting on her movements to Jon was enough to make her heart start pounding in her chest, her palms break out in a clammy sweat. “I have to get out of this city,” she said to herself, looking around the marina. She took a deep breath, reminding herself that it wasn’t the first time in her life that she’d felt panic like this—although the situation she found herself in was far more deserving of panic than waiting for the letter to let her know whether or not she had gotten into medical school.

 

Aurora walked almost blindly, following the walkway next to the docks. She passed the big commercial liners one by one, reading their blandly poetic names: Mystery of the Sea, Goddess of the Tides, Carnival Breeze, Coral Princess. All at once, Aurora’s thoughts about getting out of the city had crystallized on a solution, one that had been building ever since her aimless wanderings on Dade County Transit had brought her to the port. She would find some way to get out, and this was where she was going to do it.

 

As the moorings transitioned into private yachts and larger pleasure boats, Aurora slowed slightly. She took in the sleek lines of luxury, the signs of the craftsmanship behind the boats. Part of her had dreamed of sailing off across the ocean as a child, and once—as a graduation treat from her parents—she had gone on a cruise with three of her friends from college, flying down from her home in North Carolina and visiting Jamaica.

 

Her mind still spinning with the threats from Jon, the pressure from her parents, the dead end she’d found herself in on returning from Southeast Asia, Aurora started to wonder where the ships she was looking at were slated to go. Images of South American ports filled her mind: tanned, muscular, Brazilian men, shining with sun tan oil, Carnival streets festooned with bunting and thundering with drums, Peruvian highlands with ancient ruins deep in the craggy mountains.

 

Aurora’s heartbeat began to slow as she thought of herself getting on a boat, stowing away and waking up off the coast of England, the air crisp in her hair, rocky beaches flowing past. Or maybe she would find herself in Fiji, or Hawaii, or Mexico.
Maybe even Australia.

 

She imagined emerging anonymously when the boat reached its destination, hiding in the midst of a crowd, and making her way into some foreign city. Somewhere she knew the language would be best, but anywhere on the planet would be better than Miami.

 

She could present herself to a US embassy, get documentation that would allow her to stay wherever she ended up. She could make an entirely new life for herself, somewhere that Jon and his cronies could never, ever find her. She would change her name, meet new people. Her parents would be worried, but her parents were already worried. Once she had herself established, she would make sure they knew she was okay, even if she was on the other side of the planet by then.

 

Her wanderings came to a stop as she spotted deep purple velvet ropes ahead of her, cordoning off a section of the dock. Aurora frowned, crossing her arms over her chest and watching the area. She looked out at the water and saw a huge yacht moored not far from where she’d stopped. It was enormous, even by the standards of the private boats she had already seen; large enough to even rival a few of the smaller cruise ships. For a moment Aurora tried to speculate as to who could own such an enormous vessel.

 

As she looked around, Aurora saw people darting back and forth. Obviously they were getting the ship ready for departure; she saw crates moving across the dock, watched personnel load them onto the yacht while a supervisor checked over other items, consulting a clipboard. Her heart beat slightly faster as she took in the fact that most of the crew she saw getting onto the boat were dressed in black pants or skirts and white button-down shirts—the same kind of outfit she had put on that very morning, for her uniform at the café.
This could be your chance,
she thought.

 

Aurora glanced around, making sure that there were no security agents bearing down on her, coming to tell her to move away from the private slip.
It’s now or never. Can you do it?
Aurora took a quick breath and unzipped her hoodie, taking off her shoulder bag and slipping out of the light jacket. She stuffed the sweater into her bag, slung the bag back over her shoulder, and with a final glance around to make sure she wasn’t being watched, quickly jumped over the closest velvet rope.

 

 

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