Название: The Solitary Sheikh
Автор: ALEXANDRA SELLERS
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
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He lengthened the first a. Jahn-eh.
Jana swallowed. “What does it mean?”
“Soul,” he said. “Really, ‘the soul of’—it is incomplete. Jan-am means my soul, for example. What is your middle name?”
Jana shivered. His deep voice had softened on the words, and he was watching her as he said them, and her skin responded as if to a touch.
“Roxane.”
“This also is a Parvani word. Roshan means ‘light.’ Therefore your names together mean ‘light’s soul,’ or ‘a soul of light.”’
Jana swallowed and nodded. “I see,” she said. “Thank you.”
There was a pause while the prince considered the sheaf of papers in his hand. She recognized her resume and application, but the rest was written in the Arabic alphabet.
“You are descended from the royal family of Scotland.”
“We lost that battle many generations ago, Your Highness.”
“But you will have an understanding of royal life that the others did not have. This is always the problem, that the foreign teachers cannot understand the restrictions. You, I think, would understand.”
She thought, Oh, yes, I would understand. It’s just what I’ve always fought against, the restrictions. She looked down at the photo of those two questioning, uncertain little faces, and a well of pity washed up in her.
“Yes,” she said.
“And your work in the poorest schools tells me that you understand the nature of duty. The princesses must also understand their duty.”
Poor, poor little princesses. She looked again at the photo still in her hand. He was going to offer her the job. And in spite of everything, she realized, she still wanted it. Not entirely for the sake of the little lost-looking princesses. But for her own sake, too. However cold the sheikh was, however restricted the environment, it would only be for a year. If she ended up married to Peter...that sentence would last much longer.
She looked at Prince Omar and decided not to point out for him the significance of those ten formative years in Calgary. “I see.”
“This method you have for teaching children to read. You developed this yourself?”
“Only partly. It’s really a variation of the old phonetic system, which everyone over the age of forty in this country learned by. But it was thrown out and now they teach English as if it were Chinese—as though we had no alphabet, but only pictures depicting words. It’s a terrible waste of an alphabet.” She could feel the soapbox forming under her feet and forced herself to shut up.
“The princesses—” she noticed that he hadn’t yet said “my daughters” “—can speak English quite well. But they cannot read. They read Arabic and Parvani and French very well, they are intelligent, but they say they cannot understand English reading. Is this the reason?”
“Well, without knowing who my predecessors were...” She shrugged.
“These children you taught—their mother tongue was not English?”
Jana nodded.
“What language was it?”
“Nearly any language you care to name.” She smiled. “I can say very good in fourteen languages.”
“Khayli, khoub,” said Prince Omar.
Jana raised her eyebrows.
“That is how we say very good in Parvani, Miss Stewart. I hope you will have reason to say it to the princesses many times.”
Three
A week later the royal party filled almost the entire first-class cabin of the small Royal Barakat Air jet. Only half a dozen seats were empty, one of them beside Jana, and so she read, and ate, and contemplated the amazing step she had taken, in lonely luxury.
Her parents had remained nominally opposed to this career move, even while secretly impressed by the thought of the Barakat royal family. Their opposition had faded quickly in the face of her determination. And as for Peter’s —it had never materialized. Had he ever, Jana wondered, wanted to marry her? Or had it been, for him, the “thing to do”?
Someone slipped into the seat beside her, disturbing her train of thought, and she looked up from the book she had not been reading to see the old vizier.
She smiled a welcome, and they chatted about nothing in particular for a few minutes. Jana had been deeply impressed by the old man from the first time she met him. He had an air of humility that would make it very easy to underestimate him, she thought, and she was sure it would be a mistake to do so. Those calm black eyes saw into human motives, and she was a little afraid of him.
He chatted to her about her new charges, Masha and Kamala, and how tragically unnecessary their mother’s death two years ago had been. If she had been taken to the hospital—but Prince Omar had been away, and in his absence no one had dared to take the responsibility.
Jana frowned. “It can’t have been much of a decision to take a sick woman to a hospital!” she said.
“She did not want to go. No one had the authority to overrule her.”
“You mean, no one would take the risk of defying a sick queen to save her life?” she asked in disbelief.
“Would you have done so?”
“Well, I hope I would have! My God, is the place really that protocol bound? What was Prince Omar’s reaction when he got back? He must have been furious.”
“He was very distressed indeed. But it was impossible to blame anyone.”
Jana wondered why he was telling her this story. To help her understand the princesses...or the prince?
She said tentatively, “Was...was Prince Omar very much in love with his wife?”
The vizier smiled and lifted his hands. “Who can look into the hearts of men in such a matter?” he asked rhetorically, and Jana thought, You probably do it all the time. “He has said that he will not marry again.”
Jana stared at him. “Are you—?” she began, but Hadi al Hatim was already slipping out of the seat, and with a friendly nod moved on up the aisle.
She puzzled over his motives for a few minutes. She had almost said, “Are you warning me off?” but it was ridiculous to think that anyone could imagine she had her eye on Prince Omar! He was as cold as—but then, what was his motive for telling her? She had too much respect for the vizier’s capacities to think that he had spoken at random.
It was a minute or two before she thought to ask herself why she had asked the question. It was no business of hers if Prince Omar’s heart had died with his wife.
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