And now here she was, ostensibly in his power, yet still teasing and challenging him, still leaving him empty-handed. A man couldn’t win with this woman, and that was something he had to alter.

Fran was still talking, apparently oblivious to his mood.

‘After that it was just taken for granted that I’d go on taking useful subjects because I was good at them. So I went to college and did economics, which I must admit was fascinating.

‘You wouldn’t think stocks and shares and financial forecasts could be as thrilling as all that, but they were. And when I discovered that I had a “nose” for the markets that sealed my fate. I’ve got a friend who never buys new shares without calling to ask what I think.’

‘Indeed!’ Ali said coldly. ‘A little more wine?’

‘No, thank you. I want to tell you what they say about your companies on the Stock Exchange.’

‘I’m not interested in what a woman has to say about my companies, or the London Stock Exchange.’

‘I can tell you what they’re saying in Wall Street too,’ Fran went on, unperturbed, ‘and the Bourse in France.’

‘But I have no wish to hear.’

‘I’m sure you haven’t. But there’s not a lot you can do about it, is there?’ she asked lightly.

‘You are making a big mistake,’ he informed her.

Instead of answering in words Fran extended her index finger and beckoned to him. Her smile was enticing and her eyes full of mischief. Ali felt his head swim, and before he knew what he was doing he had leaned towards her. Fran came closer, and when she spoke her warm breath whispered against his face.

‘It’s very simple, my darling,’ she murmured. ‘If you don’t let me say what I want, and pay attention, I shall scream for help at the top of my voice.’

‘And do you think anyone will come?’

‘Of course not. But they’ll hear, and they’ll know that you paid a hundred thousand for nothing.’

Ali drew a long breath, a prey to conflicting emotions. The skittering of her breath on his face was sending tremors through him, causing reactions that infuriated him. It was maddening to know that this woman could make him want her to madness as the very moment she was mocking him. She must be resisted and taught a lesson.

But she had called him ‘my darling’.

‘You,’ he said with deliberation, ‘are descended from a rattlesnake. Your father was a vulture. A man foolish enough to love you will end up with his heart shrivelled and his bones bleached white in the desert.’

‘And you,’ she returned, ‘are making a big mistake in trusting Lemford Securities. The man who runs it lives on the edge. He’s borrowing short and lending long, and I’m sure you know that’s a recipe for disaster. Or don’t you? Well, let me explain-’

‘I can follow that kind of kindergarten economics,’ he snapped.

‘I’m so glad, because then maybe you can understand the rest.’

‘I’m warning you-’

‘And I’m warning you that the man in charge of your Wall Street operation isn’t what he seems. He’s changed his name several times to hide his involvement in some very dubious operation-’

‘I have men whose job it is to discover this kind of information-’

‘Then fire them, because they’re letting you down. Take this.’

She took out the notebook that had been returned to her. Ali regarded her grimly.

‘I never travel without it,’ she told him, tearing off a sheet on which were written some internet addresses and giving it to him.

‘Visit these sites,’ she said. ‘You’ll learn enough about him to alarm you. But you do it. Don’t delegate to someone else.’ She was too absorbed in what she was saying to realise that she’d fallen into her efficient ‘business’ voice. But Ali realised it, and he bristled.

‘Do you have any further orders for me?’ he asked frostily.

‘Don’t you dare come the heavy sheikh with me,’ she warned him. ‘If you do what I say, I’ve just saved you a fortune.’ She couldn’t resist adding, ‘Much more than my purchase price.’

‘I wish you’d stop talking as though I’d bought you like a commodity.’

‘It’s the impression you strove to give. I’m merely taking up where you left off.’

Ali took the paper, meaning to toss it contemptuously away. But he didn’t, and at heart he knew he wasn’t going to.

Fran was too wise to press her point any further, and they finished the meal in light, meaningless conversation.

‘It is late and you will be tired,’ he observed, leading her into the room where his great bed stood. His eyes met hers. ‘Nobody will disturb you.’

She almost had a moment of regret as she saw him walk away into a small side room. The door opened just enough to reveal that this was an office. Then it closed, shutting her out.

The bed was so large and so empty even when she lay down. It was a bed made for passion, where two people could forget the world in each other. And deep inside part of her wanted to do exactly that with this intriguing, fascinating and disturbing man. But it must not be. Not yet. Perhaps not ever.

She lay worrying at this dismaying thought, until she went to sleep.

He woke her as the sun was rising. He looked tired, like a man who’d spent all night in front of a computer and on the telephone. He didn’t volunteer anything, but she thought she detected a new look of respect in his eyes.

‘Your bearers will be here in a moment,’ he said, ‘and they will return you to your quarters for the last time. Later today you will be escorted to your new apartments.’

He took her hand to lead her to the litter.

‘Don’t think this is the end of the matter,’ he said. ‘Our battle has moved onto new ground, but it is far from over. You’re not as cold as you want me to think. Before I have finished, you will beg for my love.’

‘In your dreams,’ she said softly, and the bearers arrived before he could reply.

All that day the palace was in a bustle. Everyone knew that the prince had taken his new concubine to his bed, and enjoyed a night of passion with her such as no man had known before. Rumour said that this western woman was possessed of exotic arts that had won his heart and soul, and no reward was too great for her.

Nobody knew her true identity, but that was unimportant, as the prince’s favourite had no life beyond his pleasure. He had decreed that henceforth she would be known as the Lady Almas Faiza.

Leena explained to Fran that Almas meant diamond, and Faiza meant victorious. Fran brooded over the intriguing word. Was Ali saying that she had scored a victory over him, or referring to the victory he was determined to have over her? But he had hinted also that they would find victory together, and, try as she might, Fran couldn’t escape a thrill of anticipation at the thought of that joint victory.

With awe the servants prepared the lavish apartments that were kept for the favourite. The mosaics were washed, the floors polished, all the hangings were replaced, and the air was sweetly scented.

Finally came the ceremony without which her status would not be official. A litter was brought to her door. It was unlike the other one, in that it had no curtains or roof, for in this one she must be seen.

Gorgeously dressed and veiled, she seated herself and was raised high in the air on the shoulders of her bearers. Four maids positioned themselves in front and four behind. Two of them bore large bowls, piled with jewels. The favourite held out one graceful hand, and two snow-white doves fluttered out and settled on her arm. Rasheeda placed herself at the head of the procession and cried out something in Arabic, which Fran now knew meant, ‘She who has been honoured approaches.’ Then they were moving.

Right through the palace they travelled, through long corridors, broken by horseshoe arches, decorated with mosaics, inlaid with gold. Everywhere she looked there was gold, silver, mother-of-pearl. The ceilings were high and often lit by windows above, so that the atmosphere was pleasantly cool and light.

Then it was time to go into the first courtyard, which, although enclosed, was almost as large as a garden, filled with flowers and small trees. Here were the children of the many palace officials, with their mothers and nurses. They all laughed and greeted her, and the children tossed sweets which landed on her satin cushions.

At the far side of the courtyard they re-entered the palace. Men appeared bearing gifts, which the maids graciously accepted on her behalf. The gifts were of the finest and most costly, for everyone wanted to show their respect for Sheikh Ali by honouring his favourite.

Fran’s eyes opened wide at the sight of a delicate sherbet set, made of gold and multicoloured glass, set on a gold tray. Behind this came a huge bowl of the finest porcelain, then a perfume bottle encrusted with rubies.

The second courtyard was smaller, dominated by a large fountain in the centre. There was nobody here, but, looking up, Fran saw that all the windows were crowded with spectators.

Then it was back into the palace, where more people came out to stare, and bow low as she passed.

I don’t believe this is happening to me, she thought.

At last they reached her own apartments, opposite the prince’s. Here Ali himself was waiting, and in the sight of them all he inclined his head to her. For such a woman even the ruler made a gesture of reverence. And only the woman on the litter and the man waiting to receive her knew the true irony of the situation.

He handed her down from the litter, and she lowered her head to him very slightly. Her mind was full of a multitude of images, too many to understand at once, but she saw that she was facing a magnificent trio of floor-length windows, all in the shape of horseshoe arches.

‘Allow me to show you your personal garden,’ Ali said, leading her through the centre window.

Outside was truly a place of wonder. Awed by its beauty, she accompanied Ali along the paths between the four fountains, exclaiming over the peacocks and gazelles that wandered freely. Courtiers remained at a respectful distance, speculating on what the prince was saying to his lady, and she to him, and why they both smiled.

They would have been astonished to overhear the conversation.

‘You bowed to me,’ Ali murmured. ‘My round, I think.’

‘Nonsense!’ she replied. ‘You bowed to me first. I was just returning the courtesy.’

‘The prince does not bow to a woman.’

‘Nevertheless, you did.’

Turning her head, she was just in time to catch him doing the same thing. Unmistakably his lips twitched. The next moment he was staring ahead again, the model of propriety.

Among the spectators there was some interest as to how the lady would react to the prince’s gift of welcome. Instead of a rivière of diamonds, or something equally fabulous, he had chosen to give her a carpet. It was a very nice carpet, the best to be had. But it was a strange choice, and they wondered if the favourite would be disappointed.

Instead, they saw her give a trill of laughter, and throw her arms about the prince’s neck. His own laughter mingled with hers as he said, ‘I wondered if you would understand.’ That remark baffled the onlookers.

Sitting alone in her apartments that evening-alone, that was, except for her personal attendants, her hair-dresser, her chief confectioner and her private chef- Fran regarded that carpet. It didn’t fly, but apart from that it was exactly like the one of her dreams.

Her surroundings vanished and she was back again in Ali’s London house, telling him of her childhood dreams.

‘…a flying carpet was going to come through the window and carry me off…’

She would never forget his reply. ‘I think that for you the carpet will come.’

Neither of them could have foreseen this day, yet when the moment had come he’d known exactly what to give her. It strengthened her suspicion that Ali had secretly lured her here to fulfil her Arabian nights fantasy.

She smiled at the thought, but then the smile faded. Her attraction to him was powerful, real, and no part of a fantasy. It was like a holiday, except that Ali had compelled her to take it, because that was how he did things. But afterwards?

She wasn’t the kind of woman who could be sent on her way with a few glamorous memories and gifts. If she loved, it would be for real, and not as part of a holiday fantasy.

Whatever she felt about Ali, and he felt about her, they wouldn’t discover it in this place.

There was a small flutter near the door, and she turned to find Leena standing there. ‘Prince Yasir begs your permission to approach.’

He was as meek as a schoolboy, but his eyes danced.

‘I come to offer you my tribute,’ he said. ‘If, in your justified anger, you reject it, I shall be so ashamed that I shall ride into the desert and never be seen again.’