teachers in Kharmistan. At the age of twelve he had been sent away to learn the ways of the world, of the men who were outside his fatherâs small but strategically important kingdom.
Having an English mother had helped him, but nothing she had taught him could have prepared himfor the lack of respect, mingled with hatred and misunderstanding, that had greeted him when heâd taken his first steps out of Kharmistan and into the world beyond his fatherâs kingdom. In Kharmistan his family name was revered, honored, even feared. In England he was the outsider, the alien being, the oddity. His clothing was ridiculed, his speech pattern mocked.
That was when the young prince had learned the value of conformity, at least an outward conformity that seemed to put his classmates at ease.
He had forsaken his comfortable tobe and kibr for the short pants and blazer of his classmates, even though his father had gained permission for him to avoid the school uniform.
He had answered insults with a smile until he had found sticks big enough to beat them all down. Those sticks had been his brilliant horsemanship, his skill on the playing fields, his excellence in the classroom.
Within a year he had become the most popular student in the school, as well as its top student. He was invited to large country estates over term breaks, introduced to the sisters of his classmates, both welcomed and welcome wherever he went. His friends were legion, and they believed they knew him well.
They never knew him at all. But he knew them. He knew them very well.
What had begun so encouragingly in England had been equaled and then outdone by the success he had found in America during his years at Yale. He assimilated. He blended. He fit in. He became one of âthem,â even though he was not one of them.
He could never be one of them, one of those he met, roomed with, ate with, laughed with over the years.
Because he was Barakah Karif Ramir, only son of the sheikh, heir to the throne of Kharmistan.
All his English and American friends knew him as Ben, the nickname his Yale roommate had given him when he could not remember how to pronounce Barakah.
And being Ben was easier, simpler. Nobody groveled, nobody harassed, nobody bothered to try to impress him or beleaguer him or ask anything of him.
It had been as Ben that he had traveled to Paris in an attempt, years after his return to Kharmistan, to recapture some of that simplicity that had been lost to him in the halls of his fatherâs palace.
It had been as Ben that he had met Eden Fortune, the beautiful Texan heâd foolishly introduced himself to as Ben Ramsey. And why not? Heâd anticipated an innocent flirtation, a Parisian romance, perhaps a mutually pleasurable dalliance.
Most women fawned all over him once they learned he was a prince. They fawned, and they preened, and they asked inane questions, and they got mercenary gleams in their beautiful eyes when they looked at him.
He had not wanted to see that acquisitional gleam in Eden Fortuneâs lovely blue eyes. And he had not. He had seen interest, yes. In time, he had seen love, a love he returned in full measure.
Even as he deceived her.
The summons back to Kharmistan had come too soon, before he could confess that deception, before he could ask her to marry him, share her life with him. A hurried note left on a pillowcase, and he was gone, flying back to Kharmistan on his private jet, racing to the bedside of his seriously ill father.
But he had written. He had written several times, little more than hurried notes scribbled between taking care of state business and sitting at his fatherâs bedside. He had ordered those notes hand-delivered to Paris, with her replies placed directly into his hands.
Nothing.
There had been nothing.
No answer. No response.
And then sheâd been gone. By the time he couldassure himself of his fatherâs recovery and jet back to Paris, Eden had returned to