Chapter Three
Zoya looked from her bleeding hands to the mangled remains of the bush she'd just "pruned" and whimpered. For three hours she'd worked harder than she'd ever worked in her life, baking under the death glare of an angry summer sun, and this was the result?
Hardly seemed fair.
"Thirsty?"
The woman's voice cut through Zoya's pity party, and she glanced up to find a very beautiful Priya standing before her, so happy with life she actually glowed. Envy clawed at Zoya, but she paid it no heed. Priya was worthy of her happiness.
For years she and her big, golden heart had chased after her party-girl sister, Khushi, while working two full-time jobs just to pay rent"and she'd done it all while dealing with an inner ear disorder. Zoya wasn't sure what the disorder was called; she only knew the devices in the girl's ears prevented her from hearing whispers as loudly as screams.
While Zoya had never turned her evil sights on Priya"even a bully of her magnitude had lines she wouldn't cross"Khushi and Anjali, the sisters' best friend, had not been so lucky.
"Are you offering arsenic or bleach?" Zoya quipped.
"I didn't ask if you wanted what everyone in town would like to serve you," Priya said staunchly, making Zoya flinch. "I asked if you were thirsty."
"I am," she said, standing. "Thank you."
As an old, ugly dog playfully nipped at Priya's heels, she held out a glass of ice-cold water.
Zoya tried for ladylike, taking a dainty sip, but the taste of heaven snapped the tether to her control and she drank the rest quickly, draining every drop. No liquid had ever been cooler or more soothing, wetting her tongue and moistening her dry-as-the-desert throat.
"Thank you," she repeated, feeling human again.
Priya took the glass. "Actually, you shouldn't thank me. You should thank Asad."
His name alone caused her heartbeat to pick up speed and knock against her ribs. She'd stared at the back door for hours, willing him to come outside and check on her. Surely she'd built up the intoxicating effects he'd had on her.
"Is he here?" Was he still in bed with Mahek? Her hands curled into tight little fists.
"No," Priya said. "He was called in for a meeting, but he told me to take care of you while he was gone."
A contented thrill"followed by an irritating realization. He hadn't cared enough to see her? Wow. Well, screw him. He disturbed her, rendering her breathless and shaky with a simple glance, but so what? Physical attraction never lasted. And neither did he! One and done, the king of the one-night stand.
Zoya had no interest in being used and tossed aside, nothing but an afterthought to the man she'd welcomed into her body. She wanted affection and love, the kind she'd read about in books and seen in movies. The kind where couples fought to stay together, even during the worst of times. The kind that protected. Defended. Cherished.
A pang of longing razed her. There'd be no name-calling. No shaming. No being made to feel worthless.
Before dropping out of high school in favor of being homeschooled, she'd had boyfriends. A lot of boyfriends. She'd dated and dumped them at Asad-speed, searching for someone, anyone, to fill the void inside her. A void somehow made bigger when a machine exploded at Dairyland, the milk plant just south of town, killing half the workforce"including her father.
As horrible as he'd been, she should have rejoiced, right? All of her problems should have vanished in a puff of smoke. But that couldn't have been further from reality.
Priya turned and, without uttering another word, walked away, the dog prancing behind her.
"Priya," she called, and the girl stopped without spinning around. "I'm sorry for the way I acted. In the past, I mean...it."
"That's great, I'm glad" was the response, "but actions mean more than words, and so far you've proved nothing."
"I know. But I'm still here, subjecting myself to this, so that I can prove I've changed."
"Please. This, as you call it, is payment." Priya glanced over her shoulder, looking very much like an avenging angel. "But I wonder. Are you ruining the garden on purpose? A way to strike at Asad for...what? What supposed crime did he commit against you? The same crime as the rest of us? Simply existing?"
Her chin fell and her shoulders drew inward. I deserve this. I really do. "He didn't do anything wrong. He's wonderful." And he was. As a boss, or whatever he happened to be to her"debt holder?"he totally rocked. He wasn't hovering but allowing her to do her own thing, and knowing he wouldn't be here, he'd taken steps to ensure she had everything she needed.
But Asad, the guy? Him, she wasn't so sure about. There was the one-and-done thing, of course, but also the fact that he'd bought Zoya's ancestral home even though she hadn't sold it. The bank had forced her off the property, voiding her claim to it, all because her mother had taken out a huge loan a few years before, using the house as collateral. When her mother died, Zoya had tried to get a job.
She'd visited every business in town and asked to paint murals on store windows, or to do portraits of family members. Even to paint houses. When those requests were denied, she'd applied for basically any position available"trash collector, bird-poop cleaner, bunion scraper"but everyone had turned her away. Most had laughed. Moving to the city would have been wise. No one knew the old Zoya, and someone, surely, would hire her somewhere to do something. But her heart beat for Ratibad valley. Her mother had grown up here. She'd grown up here. She trusted the townsfolk not to hurt her, despite their hatred of her, which was far more than she could say for a city full of strangers.
Plus, she had a five-step plan. Up first? Proving she wasn't the incarnation of evil. So far no luck, but as she'd learned, circumstances could change in a blink.
"I don't know anything about gardening," she admitted, "but I'm trying."
Priya raised her brows, her expression total disbelief. "Well, then, I guess you should try harder."
"Priya?" A husky male voice drifted across the daylight, followed by squeaking hinges as the back door opened.
Priya skipped over to greet her fianc, Samar. He nodded at Zoya, his eyes shrewd and curious, before he focused on Priya.
"I missed you," he said, uncaring that Zoya could hear. He brushed his fingers through the girl's pale hair.
"I was only gone a few minutes," Priya said lovingly while Zoya kept watching them.
Their love had inspired Zoya's dream of happily-ever-after, and if canvas and paints hadn't been out of her zero-rupee budget, she would have immortalized them in a portrait.
As they disappeared inside, she dusted the dirt from her hands. No more of this, she decided. Not today, at least. Not until she'd done a little gardening research. Which meant heading into town...facing ridicule...
She rarely ventured far from her property"even before she'd been ousted from her home, but especially since. Her job search had led her into town on a few occasions, but she'd quickly learned she had to pay a hefty price for daring to go where she wasn't wanted.
Suck it up. Take your medicine like a good girl.
Head down, shoulders in, she made her way to the side of an unpaved and narrow road. It wasn't long before a car slowed down, allowing the driver to rubberneck.
The attention unnerved her, and she found herself rubbing the scars on her stomach.
Sometimes she thought she could still feel the flames licking all the way from her navel to her collarbone, using her shirt as kindling.
But she wasn't going to think about the worst day of her life. Distraction wasn't her friend any more than the next driver who passed her, rolling down his window and leaning out to snicker at her. She quickened her step, breathing a sigh of relief when the vehicle finally disappeared beyond the hill.
The third car to come along actually pulled up alongside her, keeping pace.
"Zoya Faaruqui," the driver said with a sneer.
She suppressed a moan. Akram. In high school, he'd been a Popular Boy and one of the first to receive the infamous "Faaruqui Pass." Her special brand of cruel dismissal postdating. It had been especially cruel in Akram's case because he'd dropped his longtime girlfriend to be with her, yet Zoya had dumped him the day after their first date.
Yes, she'd been that girl.
Someone must have called and told him she'd been spotted in the city. "Gotta say, Zoya. You're not looking so good."
Truer words had never been spoken. She was sunburned, sweaty and wearing as much dirt as clothing. "Well, I can't say the same to you. You look great, Akram."
His eyes narrowed, making her think he'd heard sarcasm in her voice even though there'd been none.
She sighed. "And yes, I've been better."
"You headed to town?"
She nodded as she kept trudging forward. "I am."
"That's about four miles away."
"Yes."
"About an hour's walk in the intense summer heat."
"Yes," she said again. The reminders were unnecessary.
"Bet you'd like a ride."
As a matter of fact"
"Good luck finding one." Laughing with glee, he put the pedal to the metal and blazed forward, flinging dirt and gravel at her.
Coughing, she waved a hand in front of her face. Can't complain. Just another dose of medicine.
She kept walking in the sun, fatigue threatening to turn her limbs into jelly. This time of year, the scent of strawberries always coated the air, wafting from hundreds of acres of wild patches.
A handful of cars motored by, and multiple people strolled along the sidewalks. The buildings around her were different colors, from blue to yellow to red, and different sizes. Some were tall, some short. Some were wide, some thin. Some were made of brick and others of wood. A true hodgepodge of design, and she loved every inch of it.
Mr. Sharma and Mr. Kapoor each sat in a rocker, playing checkers in front of Mr. Sharma's salon. Zoya stuck to the shadows and most people never noticed her, which she preferred, but as usual, those two managed to spot her right away.
"How are you doing, Miss Faaruqui?" Mr. Kapoor called. He owned a small shop "and he was one of the few people who actually seemed to care about her well-being, but she had to be mistaken. Back in her heyday, she'd called his son terrible names.
"I'm well, thank you," she muttered, discouraging further questions. Lying always made her feel guilty, but the truth was never palatable. Well, you see, Mr. Kapoor, I'm homeless, I've been found out as a thief on my own property, and I'm currently unemployed. How about you? Still having trouble with your liver?
"I'm willing to listen if you'd like to rephrase your answer, Miss Faaruqui. We can talk over a nice cup of tea." He shook the one in his hand. "Maybe we can even eat the strawberry scones Priya brought me."
Her mouth watered, her stomach twisting with painful hunger, but she forced herself to say, "No, thank you." The sooner she got out of the town square, the sooner her spirits would rally.
"Zoya?"
The familiar male voice came from across the street. As she turned, her nervous system nearly blew a gasket"there he was, Asad Ahmad Khan. And, oh, it so wasn't fair. He looked good enough to eat. His hair gleamed brighter in the sunlight, and his flawless sun-kissed skin somehow appeared painted on by a master artist. He'd rolled up the sleeves of his white shirt revealing muscled forearms.
"Uh, hi," she said, offering the lamest wave.
He grinned at her, both wicked and virtuous, stealing her breath.
Rehaan stood beside him, slightly taller but just as well muscled"just as gorgeous. He was a silent type. Unlike Asad, he practiced restraint, not going on a single date since coming to town.
The two were with an unfamliar man and woman dressed in business-formal clothes. Both were attractive, and though the male looked to be in his late thirties, the woman, looked to be in her late twenties. Roughly the same age as Zoya and yet a thousand times more successful.
Talk about a knife through the heart.
Was Lady Successful a new conquest of Asad's? Or a soon-to-be conquest? Did she know he'd move on in the morning?
Asad muttered something to the group, and Zoya took off. No reason to stick around, and every reason not to. But he shocked her by racing across the street and keeping pace beside her.
"I'm surprised to see you out and about," he said.
Oh, his voice! She'd forgotten how deep and husky it could get, every word he uttered a promise.
Gaze drawn to him by a force she couldn't control, she looked up. He was peering at her, too, and between one moment and the next, the air charged with electricity. Whispers of sensation brushed over her skin, leaving goose bumps behind.
"Expected me to still be slaving away in your garden?" she managed.
"Something like that." Heavy-lidded eyes swept over her, powerful, sensual...almost possessive.
"Are you headed into the city for your shift at the Boobie Bungalow?"
Her cheeks burned, she remembered the story she'd told him. It wasn't a lie if she believed it, right? As a lover of romance novels, she'd often fantasized about being a woman down on her luck"could be a stripper, why not"rescued by the prince of some distant land.
"Maybe I've got the week off. Maybe the other girls lose money when I'm there, and I thought I'd give them a chance to make rent."
"How kind of you." The corners of his mouth curled up, his amusement as seductive as the rest of him. "Where are you headed, sweetheart?"
Sweetheart. Her heart skipped a treacherous beat, her blood heating dangerously, making her sweat, and dang it, she hated herself for reacting so strongly to something that meant absolutely nothing to him. He called every woman he met by an endearment. Which irritated her because...
Just because.
He needed a spoonful of his own medicine, the way she was often forced to taste hers.
"I'm going to the library, sugar tush. Why?"
"That's my question." He flattened his palm between her shoulder blades, sliding it down the ridges of her spine, stopping just above the curve of her bottom. The touch was innocent, nothing overtly sexual to it, and yet it frazzled her nerves. "Why are you going to the library?"
As she opened her mouth to respond"what she would say, she didn't know"a man walked up to Asad's other side.
"Hey, man. Can we talk?"
Asad stiffened before fisting the hem of Zoya's shirt, forcing her to stop with him. The backs of his knuckles brushed against her, skin to heated skin, and tendrils of something hot and dark shot through her.
"Hey," he said to the man, whom he obviously knew.
"How's it going?"
"Not so good. I need your help. My girlfriend is angry. I forgot our three-month anniversary, and she's threatening to leave me. What should I do?"
Asad, the new 'Dear Abby'? "You should give her a thoughtful, personal gift. There's nothing more thoughtful or personal than a portrait, and I happen to have an opening in my schedule. I could""
"What do you think, Asad?" the man said, interrupting her.
"Give her a thoughtful, personal gift," Asad replied. "There's nothing more thoughtful or personal than portrait."
The man nodded as if he'd just received the answer to every prayer, and Asad released her to gently push her forward.
"Now," he said. "Where were we?"
"Uh, I was telling you how I ruined your rosebushes this morning"by accident!"and how I'm headed to the library to learn how to fix them. You were in the process of forgiving me."
"Hold up a sec." He darted in front of her.
Unprepared, she slammed into his powerful chest and ricocheted backward. His arms wrapped around her to cage her and hold her steady.
"Whoa. I've got you."
Her every pulse point suddenly leaped, and as she peered up at him, the rest of the world vanished, every second revolving around Asad alone. Her chest pressed against his, her breath coming faster and shallower, as if the air between them had somehow thickened.
"You okay?" he asked, the gleam in his eyes anything but concerned. Instead, the hot and dark thing she'd felt earlier was now reflected back to her.
"No. I mean yes. Maybe. I don't know."
His hand swept up, up, his fingers soon toying with the hairs at her nape, tickling.
"I think you mean yes, Asad, you make everything better."
She shivered and grabbed a handful of his shirt. The hard line of his body shifted subtly but definitely, ensuring he consumed what remained of her personal space. He stared at her lips...
Did he desire her?
She wanted him to desire her.
No. No. He wasn't the man for her, wasn't steady or reliable. Fortifying her resolve, she stepped away from him, and in an instant, the world crashed back into focus.
He shook his head and frowned. "Let's backtrack. You ruined my roses?"
"Yes. So now you know my newest crime. You should return to your meeting. Don't let me keep you."
Asad, ever the ladies' man, winked at her. "Why would I want to have lunch with business associates when I can pore through dusty old books and learn how to garden with the cutest little pie stealer in town?"
Said without a crumb of resentment. Said with relish. Had he truly forgiven her? Did he actually want to spend time with her? Excitement bloomed"only to be dashed by disappointment. He had a knack for making every woman he met feel special, and she couldn't forget again.
"Sorry," she said, "but I work better alone."
"You only think so because you've never worked with me. Come on." He looped an arm over her shoulders and urged her forward, the contact almost too much to her touch-starved senses. The handful of women they passed peered at him with longing, then glared at Zoya, but he didn't seem to notice. "When we finish at the library, we'll grab lunch and you'll tell me all about your childhood."
"You'll be bored."
"I'll be engrossed, guaranteed. You're an incredibly interesting subject, Miss Faaruqui."
A line. Surely. Just to be contrary, she said, "Should I start with my first period?"
"See?" The low, gravelly tone had returned. He squeezed her tighter, and she just couldn't help herself; she rubbed her cheek against his shoulder. "I'm eagerly waiting for the details."
"Only fair to warn you. My childhood will make you cry. And if it doesn't, you need prayer."
"That bad, huh?"
Worse. "Will you tell me about your childhood?"
"Does my childhood include stories about you?" he asked good-naturedly.
There he went, deflecting. "Maybe it does. For all I know, you're the boy who visited Ratibad Valley every summer and spent his nights peeping inside my bedroom window."
"Hardly. I never would have been content to remain outside. I would have climbed in. And yes, you would have invited me. I would have made sure of it."
"So sure of yourself." She tsk-tsked despite her breathlessness. "I was an ice queen. I would have ignored you."
"I was a blowtorch. I would have melted you."
She snort-laughed, then sighed. He's charming me too easily. "If you want to know about my childhood, fine." The thought of food was too heady to resist. "As long as I get to pick where we eat and you pay for everything." Besides the sandwich he'd given her yesterday, she'd only eaten what she'd managed to forage"two pecans the squirrels left behind.
He ran his fingers up and down her arm, saying, "You're not even going to pretend to pay the bill?"
"Are you kidding? Never!"
He chuckled and a moment later they reached the library, a little red-and-white building in the center of town.
"Wait." A flare of panic overshadowed her good humor as Asad tried to escort her inside. She dug in her heels. "I need a moment to prepare myself."
"For what?"
For what would surely be a humiliating experience." One he would witness.
Oh, crap! She tore away from his grip. The thought of being subjected to people's anger in front of this perfect man was simply too much to bear. "I'll wait out here. You go in and get the books, okay? Then we'll eat."
"And do all the heavy lifting myself?" Asad shook his head. "No. We do this together."
Sweat beaded over her brow. "I'm just... I'm not going in there. Okay?"
"What, you don't want to be seen with me?" He arched a brow at her. "What if I promise to make it worth your while?"
He didn't understand. A guy like him, so blessed in every area of his life, would never understand.
She backed away from him, saying, "I'm sorry, Asad, but I just remembered something, I need to go." She turned and rushed away, never looking back.
45