‘A goat?’ What nonsense was this?
‘Yes.’ This time her smile was more like a grin. Her dark eyes danced and she tilted her head engagingly. ‘A little one. Obviously it’s a friend of yours. It’s been foraging for food but it keeps coming back to sleep just outside the tent.’
A goat? His mind was blank. Frighteningly blank.
‘What else?’ he murmured. There must be more.
She shrugged and he caught a flash of something in her eyes. Distress? Fear?
‘Nothing else. You just appeared.’ She waited but he said nothing. ‘So, perhaps you could tell me something.’ She lifted a hand and tugged nervously at her earlobe. ‘Who are you?’
‘My name is Tahir…’
‘Yes?’ She nodded encouragingly.
A sensation like a plummeting lift crashed through the sudden void that was his stomach. Blood rushed in his ears as he met her gaze. The kaleidoscope of blurry images cascaded through his brain into nothingness.
‘And I’m afraid that’s all I can tell you.’
He forced a smile to lips that felt stiff and unfamiliar. ‘I seem to have mislaid my memory.’
CHAPTER THREE
FOR a man who couldn’t remember his name Tahir was one cool customer.
Annalisa read the shock flaring in his eyes and the way he instantly masked it. Ready sympathy surged but she beat it down, knowing instinctively he’d reject it.
Despite never having left Qusay, Annalisa had seen a lot in her twenty-five years. As her father’s assistant she’d seen the effects of accident and disease, the way pain or fear could break even the strongest will.
Yet this man, traumatised by wounds that must be shockingly painful, smiled at her with a veneer of calm indifference. As if he were one of her father’s scientist friends and they were conversing over a cup of sweet tea in her father’s study.
Yet none of her father’s friends looked like Tahir. Or made her feel that warm tingle of awareness deep inside.
Years ago, with Toby, the man she’d planned to marry, she’d known something like it. But not so instantaneously, nor so strong.
There was something about Tahir that she connected with at the deepest level. More than his extraordinary looks or the innate sophistication that had nothing to do with his beautiful clothes. Something that set him apart. She was drawn by his core of inner strength, revealed as intensely blue eyes met hers with wry humour, ignoring the unspoken fear that his memory lapse was permanent.
He comes from another world. One where you don’t belong.
She’d do well to remember it.
A pang shot through her and her calm frayed at the edges. Just where did she belong?
All her life she’d never fitted in. She was a Qusani but didn’t live as other Qusani women or fit their traditional role. She was poised between two worlds, belonging to neither. She’d been part of her father’s world, his assistant, his confidante.
But he’d gone, leaving her bereft.
‘What’s wrong?’ Tahir’s deep voice roused her from melancholy reflection. ‘Are you all right?’
Despite herself Annalisa smiled. Lying flat on his back, bruised and barely awake, his memory shot, yet this man was concerned for her?
She laid a reassuring hand on his arm. His muscles tensed beneath the fine cotton of his shirt. His warm strength radiated up through her fingertips and palm.
A zap of something jagged between them as she met those piercing eyes. His nonchalant half-smile disappeared, replaced by frowning absorption.
‘Nothing’s wrong,’ she said briskly, slipping her hand away. It tingled from the contact and she clenched it at her side. ‘Your foggy memory is normal. It should come back in time.’ She drew her lips up in a smile she hoped looked reassuring. ‘You’ve got two head wounds. Either would be enough to knock you about for a couple of days.’
Or do far worse. Ruthlessly she pushed aside the fear that he might be more badly injured than she realised.
‘You speak as if you have medical experience.’
‘My father was a doctor. The only doctor in our region. I helped him for years.’ She turned away, horrified by the way memories swamped her again, and the pain with it. ‘I don’t have medical qualifications but I can set a sprain or treat a fever.’
‘Why do I suspect you’ve done much more than that for me, Annalisa?’
The sound of her name on his lips was strangely intimate. Reluctantly she turned back, meeting his warm gaze, feeling his approval trickle through her like water in a parched landscape.
‘You’ve saved my life, haven’t you?’ His voice dropped to a low rumble that vibrated along her skin.
Annalisa shrugged, uncomfortable with his praise. Uncomfortable with her intense reaction to this stranger. She’d done all she could but he wasn’t out of the woods yet. Fear edged her thoughts.