being alone with this man in some remote desert for the next two weeks was overwhelming. âYou canât force me to do anything I donât want to do, you know.â
He looked at her, and there was something so explicit in his gaze that she felt herself blushing.
âI wonât need to use force, Sylvie.â
And just like that the humiliation sheâd felt that night in the study of her fatherâs house came back and rolled over her like a wave.
She fought it. âThis just proves how little you really felt for my sister. Hurting me will only hurt her .â
The expression on Arkimâs face became incredulous at the mention of Sophie âYou dare speak to me of hurting your sister? When you were the one who callously humiliated her in public?â
Words of defence trembled on Sylvieâs tongue, but she bit them back. She would never betray her sisterâs confidence. Sophie had just been a pawn to him. It never would have worked. She had to remember that. Sheâd done the right thing.
But then she saw something in the distance and became distracted.
Arkim followed her gaze and said, âAh, weâre here.â
Here was another, even smaller airfield, with a sleek black helicopter standing ready.
Slightly hysterically Sylvie remembered something sheâd learnt when sheâd taken self-defence classes after aâluckilyâminor mugging in Paris. The tutor had told the class the importance of not letting an attacker take you to another location at all costs. Because if he did get you to another place, then your chances of survival were dramatically cut down.
It would appear to be common sense, but the tutor had told them numerous stories of people who had been so frightened theyâd just let themselves be taken to another place, when they should always have tried to get away during the initial attack.
And okay, so technically Arkim wasnât attacking Sylvie, but she knew that if she got into that helicopter her chances of emerging from this encounter unscathed were nil.
The car came to a stop and he looked at her. âTime to go.â
Sylvie shook her head. âIâm not getting out. Iâm staying in this car and itâs going to take me back to wherever we landed. Or to Bâharani. I hear itâs a nice cityâIâd like to visit.â
She hoped the desperation she was feeling wasnât evident.
He turned to face her more fully. âThis car is driven by a man who speaks only one language, and itâs not yours. He answers to meâno one else.â
The sheer hardness of Arkimâs expression told her she was on a hiding to nothing. A sense of futility washed over her. She wouldnât win this round.
âWhere is it that youâre proposing to take me?â
âItâs a house I own on the Arabian coast. North of Bâharani and one hundred miles from the border of Burquat. Merkazad is in a westerly direction, about six hundred miles.â
The geographical details somehow made Sylvie feel calmer, even though she still had no real clue where they were. Sheâd heard of these places, but never been.
Something occurred to her. âThis...â her mouth twisted â...this fee youâve paid Pierre. I assume itâs conditional on my agreeing to this farcical non-existent dance tuition?â
Arkim nodded. âThatâs good business sense, I think youâll agree.â
Sylvie wanted to tell him where he could stick his business sense, but she refrained. She didnât doubt that there really was no option but to go with Arkim. For now.
âOnce weâre at this...this place, you wonât force me to do anything I donât want to?â
Arkim shook his head, eyes gleaming with a disturbing light. âNo, Sylvie. There will be no force involved. Iâm not into sadism.â
His smug arrogance made her want to try and slap him again. Instead, she sent him a wide,