‘I think so.’
Even he was having trouble defining it. ‘When I say enough, or stop, or there is danger, you must listen to me without question.’
‘You are just like my brother and father—’
‘Please,’ Mikael dismissed. ‘Do you know, I’m actually starting to lean to their side? If they’ve had to put up with your dramas for the last twenty-four years I’m full of admiration, in fact, that they got you to adulthood alive.’
‘We only have a couple of days and you spoil them by being mean to me,’ she said.
‘You forgot to stamp your foot.’ He saw her tense, frustrated face as still she did not get her way. ‘It won’t work with me, Layla.’
‘It worked before.’
‘It won’t work in the important things. Now, do you want to learn to drive?’
‘Yes.’
‘Who’s in charge when you’re a learner driver in my car?’
‘You are.’
She climbed in, and this time Layla did listen.
Half an hour later they bunny-hopped back into his long drive…
‘More to the left,’ he said, his hand hovering over the handbrake, and wondered if he should take the wheel. But she righted the car—though a fraction too late.
‘What was that noise?’ Layla asked.
‘My paintwork.’
‘Oh.’ She pulled to a halt, actually quite smoothly. ‘How did I do?’
‘Very well,’ Mikael said, wondering why he wasn’t jumping out of his car to inspect the damage; instead he leant his head back on the headrest and gave up fighting it.
Pointless and hopeless, perhaps, but in love was where he was.
She was the important thing.
Which meant that something had to be discussed.
And this time when he raised it he wouldn’t let Layla interrupt him.
THEY UNPACKED HER case and Layla put on her new bikini. They had a swim at the beach until, salty and dusty with sand, they returned home hungry.
Layla was determined to make lunch herself.
Hair tied up, her new bikini damp, she was frying a practice prawn in butter with Mikael behind her, telling her to turn it when it went pink.
‘It looks beautiful,’ she said. ‘I can’t wait to tell my father about them.’
‘Do you want to go back to Ishla?’ Mikael asked the question he had tried to before, when Layla had been looking at his painting.
‘Of course I do.’
She didn’t even hesitate in her response, but Mikael persisted, knowing her answer had been automatic.
‘Are you sure that you do?’ He saw her face turn just a little and her lovely smooth brow was marred by a frown.
Until this morning she had not considered that she might have to say goodbye to people she cared about. Until now it had never entered her head that she might not want to go back to Ishla.
That she had a choice.
‘Of course I am sure,’ Layla said, though her voice suddenly said otherwise. ‘I love my family.’
‘I know that you do.’
‘It would kill my father if I left.’ Her voice started to rise as she pointed out the reality. ‘It would honestly kill him.’
‘Okay,’ he soothed.
‘I don’t like that question,’ she said. ‘I don’t like how it makes me feel inside. Please don’t ask me things like that again.’
‘I won’t.’ Mikael turned off the gas and, still behind her, wrapped his arms around her and held her till she relaxed back into him. But he could feel that her heart was racing—as, he guessed, was her mind.
‘Go,’ she said, because his words had unsettled her. ‘Go and have your shower. I want to make lunch by myself.’
Mikael left her to it, mentally kicking himself and wondering if he could have handled that any better.
What the hell had he been thinking?
Suppose she’d said no, that she didn’t want to go back?
What then?
Had he been asking her to be his wife?
* * *
Layla was determined to make a beautiful lunch—and she would if the butter knife she was trying to cut a tomato with didn’t flatten it so.
And the onion had made her cry.
Or was she just crying?
Damn you, Mikael, for asking me that, she thought. Damn you for making me stand here and cry and not want to go home to the land and the people I love.
‘Mikael!’ She was suddenly angry and walked through to the bedroom. She could hear the shower was on but had no qualms about walking in. After all, he had bathed her a few times.
What Layla saw, though, had her heart in her throat—and suddenly she wasn’t angry any more.
He looked up and saw the shock on her face as his eyes lifted from where he had been concentrating and he saw her standing there, watching him.
Then he watched her as the shock changed to a delicious smile and she stepped into the shower with him.
‘Continue,’ she said.
Mikael wasn’t sure that he could—until her mouth started working his chest.
‘Is this why you have so many showers…?’ she asked, and he gave a half laugh. ‘I thought you were just very clean!’
She loved the tension in him, loved the feel of his wet skin, and she slipped out of her bikini and then boldly dropped to her knees and kissed up his legs…slow kisses that changed to frantic, because she wanted so badly to touch and to taste what she must not.
He almost pulled her up by her hair, but he wanted her to see this, and wanted her pleasure too. He took her hand and placed it over his, on the outside, so that she did not touch, but she felt the motion and the building tension.
‘Oh…’ It was the nicest thing she had ever felt.
He bent his knees a little and rubbed himself over her and Layla watched in fascination, till her thighs were shaking.
‘Mikael…’ Every stroke brought her closer, and then she watched as their hands stilled but his shaft didn’t, and the moan that came from him as he shot over her was addictive, for she wanted to hear it again and again. It was that and the shots of silver that spilled over her that almost brought Layla to her knees with her own lovely orgasm.
‘What’s that noise?’ Layla gasped, at the sound of bleeping, but she was talking to thin air as Mikael had suddenly bolted from the shower. ‘What is happening?’ she asked, following him out. ‘Mikael, what is that smell?’
Layla found out what a fire extinguisher was as a naked Mikael tackled the wok that she had left unattended.
‘You’re supposed to turn the gas off,’ he said as he put the small fire out.
‘You shouldn’t have turned me on.’
She