She leaned forward a little, watching as far as she could. And then, despite his missive, she slid out of bed and reached for her underwear. It had been discarded hastily, but thankfully close to the bed. She pulled it on then stood still as fragments of the conversation reached her ears.
“Malik… happened suddenly … non-responsive…”
And panic sledged her veins. She reached for her gown, pulling it over her
hips and sparing herself a quick glance in the mirror as she crossed the room. Her hair was in a state of total disarray, her cheeks were flushed, her lips swollen. She looked like a woman who’d just been ravaged. Well? So?
She stepped into the living area of her suite just as Raffa shut the door. His eyes flew around the room but he wasn’t looking for her.
“What is it?” She demanded.
He startled, his gaze landing on his shirt. He stormed towards it, lifted it over his head and down his body. His face was implacable but she knew that deep emotions were stirring through him.
“Raffa?” She asked, moving towards him, putting a hand on his chest.
The look in his eyes made her heart split in two.
“My father,” he confirmed with a simple nod, stepping away and turning his back from her. “I must go to him.”
“I’ll come too,” she said softly. “If you’ll just give me one minute.”
“No. I must go now.” The words were short and immediately discouraging. “You remain here. I will have a servant send you news when I have it.”
She opened her mouth to object but he was already at the door. He slammed it after himself, and she was alone in the suite.
But no way was she going to do as he said! If Malik had taken a turn for the worse – heaven forbid, if he had already met his end – she was going to be there. She was going to be there out of respect for the man who was like a second father to her, and she was going to be there for her husband. Because whether he realized it or not, he would want support and strength before the night was out.
She took a moment though to straighten her hair and apply the bare minimum of make-up. If she was going to defy her husband, the King, then she wasn’t going to do it looking like she’d just rolled out of bed. It wasn’t vanity, so much as respect for this ancient palace and the people who inhabited it.
Only minutes after her husband had left her suite, Chloe was doing the same. Her servants were waiting, as always, and fell into step behind her; it didn’t occur to Chloe to mind. She walked as quickly as she could without breaking into a run, but as she got nearer to her father-in-law’s wing, her heart was racing as though she’d sprinted a marathon.
The door was open, and inside was a hive of activity. Nurses, servants, a doctor, and in the middle of it all, her husband. He stood beside Malik’s bed, his face cast from stone, his eyes on his father. She couldn’t see Malik clearly, but she moved deeper into the room, and Malik was the first to see her. His lips parted and just for a moment, for the briefest instant, a weak smile crossed his face. He held a hand out to her, limply, but it spurred her forward.
She took it in hers and lifted it to her lips, kissing his aged, papery skin, then straightened. Her husband was looking at her and the intensity of his expression almost bowled her over. For once, she couldn’t have said what he was thinking or feeling, she knew only that something dark burned within his gaze. She swallowed and gave all her attention to her father-in-law.
“What happened?” She asked her husband, without looking at him.
Raffa didn’t speak, so Chloe lifted her gaze to his face.
“What happened, Raffa?” She asked with icy hauteur, and from the bed, heard a rattling laugh wheeze from Malik’s slender frame. His fingers squeezed hers.
“A heart attack,” Raffa said finally. “And you should not be here.”
She ignored him, purely because it felt safer than entering into an argument with her husband over the ailing frame of her father-in-law. But she stayed where she was, her head bent, her smile intended for Malik.
Activity swirled around them, with Raffa’s command of the situation apparent. From the way he spoke to the medical personnel and gave orders to servants, he was in charge of all that happened in the room.
“It’s going to be a long night,” he said eventually, and when Chloe lifted her head, their eyes met. “Nothing is served by you being here.”
It was cold, and it was hurtful, because he was shutting her out. He was drawing a line in the sand between them. He belonged here; she didn’t.
She bit down on her lip, hating that the foreign taste of salty tears spread through her dry, aching throat.
“I’m making trouble,” Malik said, his face alarmingly pale, kindness in his eyes.
“Yes, you attention seeker,” she teased, pushing her worries and hurt from her mind, smiling at him in a way that she hoped would assure him he would be fine. She didn’t want him to be afraid.
“Sheikha.” Her husband’s word was a warning.