Nadia finds solace in the fact that Daniel has no idea. He has
no idea that his wife, though in another country, is fully aware of the sordid
affair he has embarked on with her friend. He has no idea that she reads his
emails daily to keep abreast of his misdemeanors, and he is naively unaware that
the ‘I love you toos’ and the ‘I can’t wait to see yous’ are completely,
utterly, unwaveringly untrue.
Poor,
ignorant Daniel just doesn’t have a clue that his wife is
merely buying time until she returns to Dubai before she unleashes the true
extent of her fury.
It is this feeling of empowerment,
of having the upper hand, that gives Nadia just enough peace of mind to fall asleep at
night. Albeit an uncomfortable, restless kind of sleep that never lasts more
than an hour or two. And during her waking moments, she plots her revenge.
Whether lying in bed and staring up at the childish ceiling adorned with
glow-in-the-dark stars, or ploughing through a
painfully quiet meal with Yasmine, Nadia cannot think of anything other than seeking
justice.
Before Daniel metamorphosed into a lying, cheating,
scheming son-of-a-bitch, Nadia took pride in her ability to rationalize
with serene detachment. But months of emotional abuse have taken its toll on her
personality, and she has recently discovered a side to her that previously
remained dormant.
The initial hurt, pain and self-loathing has worn off and in its
place sits a cloud of bitterness, and a desire to get her revenge.
“What do you want to do
today?” Yasmine asks as she enters the dim kitchen to find
her sister standing at the sink and staring out of the window, her view
obstructed by the faded lace curtain intended to afford them a degree of privacy
from their neighbours.
“Something that involves lots of
walking,” Nadia replies, turning around and offering her
sister the slightest of smiles. “In two days I’ll be back in the desert, back to
using a car instead of my legs, and back to the sweltering heat. Let’s make the
most of what London has to offer.”
“Yalla, so choose. Camden or Covent
Garden?” Yasmine says with faux chirpiness, taking note of
the sadness in Nadia’s eyes and
trying to pretend that it has gone unnoticed. “Or anywhere else for that matter.
It’s your day, you choose.”
It has not been easy
for Yasmine to
ignore Nadia’s weak countenance
since she has returned, but whenever she opens her mouth to say something, she
takes one look at her sister’s sunken eyes and snaps it closed. As they tidy up
the breakfast mess, she makes a conscious decision to force herself to ask her
sister what the hell is going on, regardless of how the answer will make either
of them feel. After all, they are family, siblings, blood. They are supposed to
help each other in times of need, irrespective of whether or not help has been
sought.
An hour later, the sisters are
walking arm in arm through the colourful stalls in Camden Lock, weaving their
way through the crowds of people while Nadia tries not to stare at the punks with their
fluorescent hair and piercings, the Goths with their pale faces and black
attire, and the hippies with loose, flowing shirts and baggy
trousers.
Months in the Middle East have
made Nadia forget
what true diversity is. People say that Dubai is a melting pot of cultures, but
walking through Camden Town makes Nadia realize that every person in Dubai is
almost exactly the same as everyone else from their nationality. There is no
originality. So while Dubai is definitely a mix of cultures, it is more like a
stir fry than a melting pot. Every ingredient its own, without merging with the
next.
Their arms laden with haggled
goods, Yasmine and Nadia finally sit down at the centre of the
market with rich cheese crepes and devour them silence, grease dripping down
their fingers. Nadia tries her best to absorb the atmosphere
around her, but she is unable to fully merge into the ambience
with Daniel's memory still
looming above her.
Noticing the frown
on Nadia's
face, Yasmine takes a deep breath, and before she loses
her nerve, begins to speak.
“Listen Nadia,” she begins, nervous at the prospect of upsetting her
sister. "I know something's wrong." She falters
as Nadia's expression changes
from wistfulness to wariness but ploughs on regardless.
"Wait, let me finish," she says, avoiding her sister's eyes.
"Please don't pretend that everything's okay when it's not.
I know something's wrong. I don’t know what it
is, but I know that it's bad enough to turn you
into… this."
Yasmine reiterates her
point by gesturing at Nadia's
painfully thin body, at the sallow skin stretching over her bones, the pools of
black surrounding her eyes, and the worry lines etched on her forehead like
carvings on a stone statue.
Nadia looks down and says nothing,
shame and panic rising within. She was hoping
that Yasminewould never work up
the courage to ask her what was wrong. She was hoping she wouldn't have to admit
to her younger sister that she had failed.
She was hoping that she wouldn’t have to confess that she wasn’t
enough for her husband.
"Please," Yasmine implores, taking her sister's hands in hers
and finally looking into her eyes. "Tell me what's going on. Maybe I can help
you, maybe I can't. Either way, talking about it will make you feel
better."
The silence stretches itself around
them, further strengthening the wall Nadia has built around her. It refuses to reveal
even the smallest crack, its defiance
irritating Yasmine, who is
equally as stubborn. She refuses to let go of Nadia's hands or break eye contact. She doesn’t understand why
her sister cannot bring herself to confide in her. She wonders what has happened
to the Nadia she
used to know, the one who was generous with her smiles yet cutting with her wit.
This Nadia has
forgotten how to smile with her eyes. This Nadia has no energy for wit.
"You're my sister. I love you.
Seeing you like this without knowing why is killing
me," Yasmine pleads, almost ready to give up. "Is it work? Too much
pressure? Friends? The lack thereof? "
There is still no response
from Nadia,
and Yasmine feels
her blood begin to boil. How is she supposed to help if she doesn’t know what is
wrong? What is she supposed to say? She remembers all the
times Nadia was
there for her; through their parents' divorce, their subsequent remarriages, the
second divorces. She helped her through years of being dragged from one country
to another, constant bullying at school. Yasmine remembers the
way Nadia would prise her emotions out of
her, relentless in her pursuit to know what was going through her unstable
mind.
Yet here she was. Unyielding. She
could see what her silence was doing to Yasmine, yet she refused to surrender.
Nadia, oblivious to the emotions
running through her sister's veins, struggles to breathe as claustrophobia
overcomes her. Yasmine’s
insistence makes the walls around her close in on her even more and she feels a
wave of dizziness wash over her.
Please don’t make me say
it.
"What is
it Nadia?" Yasmine continues, her voice harder than before as
she squeezes Nadia's hands, her
frustration growing with every second that passes. "What is it? Are you bored?
The luxurious Dubai lifestyle not good enough for you anymore?"
Nadia snaps out of her trance as if a bucket of water has been
thrown over her head.
"Boredom?" she scoffs, yanking her
hands out of Yasmine's grip,
her eyes narrowed in disdain. "You think mere boredom can do this to me? You
think that I want to have my baby sister
staring at me with her big eyes like I'm some kind of freak show?"
"So what the hell is it then? What
is so awful that you can't even tell me, your
own flesh and blood?" Yasmine retorts, her tone matching her sister's.
Although she feels bad about
pushing Nadia to
this level, she is also relieved that the wall Nadia has built around her is beginning to
crumble, and that she is finally getting some answers.
"You just don’t get it, do
you?" Nadia hisses, standing up. "You think
I like looking like this? You think I don't
know I look like a skeleton? That it's somehow escaped my notice that I've aged
ten years in the past ten weeks? You think I came to London for pity? For an
interrogation? I came here for peace God
dammit Yasmine! I just wanted a
break from wondering about who my husband was cheating on me with now. What I
did to make him hate me so much. What I was supposed to do with my life now.
There. I said it. Happy?"
Nadia moves so abruptly that she
knocks one of their shopping bags off the
table. Yasmine reaches out for her but she shoves her
hands away from her, grabs her handbag and walks away, her heart pounding
furiously and her pulse thumping in her ears, drowning out all the noise around
her. She sees nothing as she pushes through the crowds of people, but feels as
if they are closing in around her, suffocating her, preventing her from
breathing. She breaks into a run, everything around her becomes a blur, and all
she sees is Daniel. Daniel laughing, Daniel smiling, Daniel sleeping. Daniel cheating.
"Oi watch it," a voice cries out
as Nadia slams
into a passerby, almost knocking him over. He grabs onto her waist just as she
almost falls to the ground. Her body presses against him and the shock prevents
her from pulling away immediately. Panting heavily, she mumbles an embarrassed
sorry and then disengages herself.
"No worries love," he replies, watching her with amusement as
she attempts to straighten herself out, still mortified. "Hang on a second," he
adds, staring intently at her face. "Haven't we met before?"
The
shamefaced Nadia finally brings herself to look at the man
insisting on conversing with her, and then does a double take as recognition
dawns on her. There, in front of her, is quite possibly the best looking black
guy in the whole of London. One she remembers meeting before.
"You're the guy from the tube," she says without thinking, and
then curses herself for letting him know that she remembers him. Feeling more
embarrassed than ever, she wills her face not to turn red as she looks down at
the grey pavement, unable to meet his piercing gaze, and stares at his feet
instead. He's wearing white trainers, and she wonders, quite banally, how he
manages to keep them so clean in a rainy country.
"So you remember," he grins, puffing out his chest. "Seems like
you can't stay away from my lap."
"If you say
so," Nadia responds, not knowing what else to say. Her
heart is still beating a little too fast, and she is unsure as to whether it is
due to the physically exertion, the adrenaline, or the good looking stranger who
seems to have a knack of showing up when she needs to be pulled out of a black
hole. She decides that she doesn’t want to know what it is that is making her so
flustered.
"Anyway, I'm sorry
once again," she says indifferently. "Take care…" Hoisting her bag onto her
shoulder, she begins to walk
away.
"Hey, hang on a second," the guy calls out, jogging to catch up
with her. "Don't you think you owe me a drink at least?"
"For
what?" Nadia glances at him sideways without slowing
down, resenting the intrusion of her personal space but kind of enjoying it at
the same time. It has been so long since she allowed this kind of attention. And
although she feels a twinge of guilt, the white gold band on her ring finger
suddenly feeling like lead, she shoves the uneasiness aside and reminds herself
that her husband is currently sleeping with her friend. Surely this gives her
the right to engage in a little harmless banter with an attractive black
guy.
"For what?! For physically assaulting me, not just once, but
twice!"
"Does it look like I drink?"
"I don’t know. I never judge a book by its cover."
"Well I don’t."
"Not even hot chocolate? On a cold winter's day?"
Nadia stops walking, Camden Town
tube station now right in front of her, and she looks at the stranger, not
knowing what to say. Most of her wants to laugh off his advances without a
second thought, but another part of her, the part that longs for some kind of
male attention, the part that needs to feel desired, tempts her into
reconsidering his offer. He has, after all, saved her from falling flat on her
face twice. And he obviously likes her. Maybe he can help her forget
about Daniel, at least for an
hour or two, if nothing else.
"You know what? Why not? But you're inviting me."
"My pleasure, m'lady!"
For the first time in
weeks, Nadia breaks into a genuine smile as they walk
into the warm station, and for the first time in months, she feels like a
woman.
***
Daniel used to always
make Nadia feel
like a woman. It was one of the reasons she fell so deeply in love with him.
With Daniel, she was never
bland, never tired, never weak. She was always sexy, alive, confident, strong.
According to him, she was exquisite. Like a porcelain doll in an antique shop,
apparently. She used to feign offence, and would ask him if he was implying that
she was old. Sometimes he would say yes, other times he would say no. Either
way, they would laugh, or he would tickle her, and she would feel like the most
beautiful thing in the world.
Their first few months of marriage
were perfect. They hated being away from each other, and every moment apart was
spent in longing. They would cook together, clean together, sleep together,
shower together. They became so close that Nadia forgot what it was like to be just her, not
one half of Daniel and Nadia. She was so in tune with his feelings that she often
knew what he wanted to say before he said it. She could read him like children's
book. Whenever he squinted, she suggested having a nap, whenever he began to
fidget, she dragged him out for a walk, and whenever he stared out of the
window, she knew to leave him alone.
Until one day, everything she did was wrong. The book was no
longer in English. She didn’t know what the letters were.
The
naïve Nadia, with her heads in
the clouds, didn’t even realize he was unhappy until he had already made up his
mind about Dubai. And by that time, it was too late.
Looking back, deep in her
heart, Nadia knows
that she is partly to blame for the disintegration of her marriage. She knows
that it didn’t break down overnight, that it was a gradual erosion of
self-worth, self-confidence, self-belief. A slow, painful emasculation process
that stripped Daniel of everything he ever though he was.
And when he stopped believing in himself as a husband, he
stopped believing in them as a couple. And when he stopped believing in them, it
was over.
Nadia, still as naïve as ever, kept thinking that maybe things
would be okay.
***
"Are your eyes always this sad?"
Prince Charming asks Nadia as they walk through Regent's Park, their
hands stuffed into their coat pockets, and their noses red from the chilly March
wind.
"Of late, yes," she replies, surprising herself with her
honesty. Prince Charming is far easier to talk to than she expected, and she
finds herself admitting things she would never admit to someone she actually
knows. In fact, he doesn’t even know her name, she doesn’t know his, and she
cannot help but find this sense of anonymity strangely liberating.
"Of late? What century are we in?"
he teases, and she shoves him in response, feeling shy all over again. In just
three short hours, Prince Charming has already succeeded in crawling
under Nadia’s skin, and during
these three, short hours, she has barely thought
about Daniel and
her thirst for revenge. The absence of Daniel and payback plots from her cluttered mind
is refreshing, and in those three hours, London has burst into colours. Through
the grey, she is noticing the vivid green grass, the splatters of bright yellow
as Spring's first daffodils emerge from the ground, the painfully blue sky
decorated with tufts of cartoon-like clouds.
And then there’s the chocolate of
Prince Charming’s skin, the specks of gold in his coffee coloured eyes, his soot
coloured hair. It is easier to forget Daniel who teetering on the brink of baldness,
when she is next to someone far superior in the looks department.
It’s a shame he’s not Muslim, she thinks for
a fleeting moment, before shoving the thought into a dusty corner of her mind.
She cannot allow herself to open a door of possibilities. It’s
just today, she chastises herself. Nothing
more. There will be no tomorrow. You don’t need anymore complications in your
life.
There is a familiar sound in the
distance and Nadia stops mid-step and mid-thought to
listen.
"What –" Prince Charming begins,
and Nadia hushes
him, her eyes closed.
"Shh…can you hear that?" she whispers.
"Hear what?"
"That voice in the distance? It's so amazing. Listening to it,
you'd think we were somewhere in the Middle East, yet here we are, in a public
park in the middle of London…"
"The adhaan, you mean?" Prince
Charming asks, and Nadia opens her eyes in surprise.
"That's very culturally aware of you," she half-teases, secretly
impressed. "You must know that it’s time for prayer then. Mind if we go to the
mosque so I can pray?"
They start walking again, towards
the minaret in the distance. It is partly hidden by the trees surrounding the
mosque, and when the golden dome is finally within
sight, Nadia stops
again to devour her eyes. Prince Charming watches her in amusement, and she
catches him looking at her and shrugs helplessly.
“It’s just so
beautiful!” Nadia says, smiling sheepishly and turning to
face the minaret again. “I know it must seem weird to you, and I don’t even know
how to explain it myself, but right now, I’m in a pretty dark place and my faith
is the only thing that’s keeping me going.”
She stops talking and glances at Prince Charming from the corner
of her eye, wondering what his reaction to her open testimony of faith is. There
is no disgust, pity, or even confusion in his expression though. Rather, he
appears to be deep in thought, so she continues, searching deeper within herself
to articulate what she is experiencing.
“Just when I’m about to fall, something will happen to remind me
of why I was created. Like, I’ll see a mosque, or I’ll hear the adhaan, or I’ll
come across a verse in the Qur’an that touches me, and suddenly, it’s like
everything will be okay again.”
They reach the entrance to the
courtyard and pause for a moment. Nadia wonders if Prince Charming will wait for
her outside or whether he is curious enough to venture into the peaceful grounds
with her.
"I'll let you in on a secret," he
says, his voice light but the look in his eyes strangely
serious. Nadia says nothing and waits for him to continue,
assuming that he will confess that he has been inside a mosque
before.
“I actually converted to Islam a few years ago.”
Nadia stares at Prince Charming in shock. This is definitely not
the confession she was expecting.
“Erm, okay,” she says eventually,
unsure whether to be pleased or troubled by this short, simple admission of fact
that has suddenly and drastically altered the dynamics between them. All this
time, there was no possibility of anything ever happening between them. It was
supposed to be nothing more than a beautiful afternoon between two strangers who
would never cross paths again. It was this lack of possibility
that Nadia found
so liberating and that allowed her to open up in a manner usually alien to
her.
“Don’t look too thrilled,” Prince
Charming says wryly, noting Nadia’s wary expression.
“Sorry, it’s just… I don’t know. I didn’t expect this.”
“Well, why don’t you go and pray, I’ll do the same, and I’ll
meet you back here in about 15 minutes?”
They walk together through the
spacious courtyard and part ways when they reach the foyer of the
mosque. Nadia slips into the women’s section, taking off
her black cashmere coat and unwrapping her grey hijab as she does so. Rolling up
the sleeves of her slightly fitted black woolen jumper and taking off her boots
and socks, she sits on a stool and begins performing ablution, the hot water
instantly heating up her cold skin. She dries her face, arms and feet using
tissue paper and then stares at herself in the mirror, wondering what it is
about her that Prince Charming likes so much.
Her face, void of even a smear of Vaseline let alone any makeup,
looks plain and tired. She pinches her cheeks in a pitiful attempt to add a
little colour, but even that isn’t enough to brighten her complexion. Sighing,
she wraps the scarf back around her head and pins it place before climbing the
stairs to the prayer area.
The women’s prayer hall is almost
empty, with the exception of a couple of Arab-looking women sitting on the floor
with their backs against the wall, reading the
Qur’an. Nadia looks around the room, at the familiar
thick, red carpet, the glistening chandeliers, and the magnificent dome,
engraved with verses from the Qur’an, and remembers the times she would come
here to get away from whatever was bothering her. It used to be her secret
hideaway, her respite from the outside world. The emotions connected to the room
are intoxicating, and Nadia blinks tears away from her eyes.
In Dubai, she had nowhere to go. Everywhere was unfamiliar,
uninviting. There was no place that she could look upon with fondness, nowhere
that held special memories.
The imam begins the prayer, his
melodic voice filling the hall, and Nadia joins the line of women in prayer, as they
follow the imam through all the various motions. When her forehead touches the
soft carpet, she feels tears rush to her eyes again, and this time, they fall
down her cheek.
When the congregational prayer is
over, Nadia holds
up her hands and offers her personal supplications to God, begging him to help
her through the darkness, to give her the strength to
leave Daniel, and to give her a
sign that the future holds some form of happiness for her.
She sits in prayer for over an hour, and it is only when her
phone beeps with an incoming text message that she remembers that there is
someone waiting for her outside. She tries to get up quickly, but her knees are
sore from kneeling for so long, and even her feet have fallen asleep. Hobbling
over to the shoe rack, she somehow manages to put her boots back on as she
stumbles down the stairs, hoping that Prince Charming hasn’t given up on her and
left.
Rushing out into the courtyard, her
coat still in her hand, Nadia is confronted by the ice-cold wind as she
looks around the empty area for Prince Charming, cursing herself for forgetting
all about him. Her hijab flailing in the wind and the tip of her nose already
turning red, she struggles to put her coat back, her heart already beginning to
ache with loneliness.
Don’t be such an idiot. You only
knew him for a few hours, she tells herself as she does up the buttons with
cold, stiff fingers. But those few hours were more real than the thousands of
hours before it, and Nadia knows in her heart that soulmates are hard
to come by. It is not every day you meet someone and feel so drawn to them, so
inexplicably intertwined with them.
If he hadn’t been Muslim, she would have easily walked away,
telling herself that nothing could possibly happen.
But he was. Which meant that one day, if not today, or even next
year, when she was ready, when her wounds were beginning to heal, something
could have happened.
Shoving her hands back into her pockets, she walks away, each
step laden with a newfound emptiness, one that was different from the emptiness
she felt the day before.
“Don’t tell me you’re leaving me after making me wait almost an
hour for you!”
Nadia spins around to find Prince Charming jogging up to her,
holding his coat in his hands with a bewildered expression on his face.
“Oh, you’re still here? I thought
you had left,” she mumbles indifferently, her heart skipping a beat. His
presence breathes life into her and now that he hadn’t actually disappeared, and
she had confessed her true feelings to herself for no
reason, Nadia feels more disorientated than
ever.
“You didn’t think I was going to stand out in the cold all that
time did you? I was in the bookshop. Anyways, it’s freezing out here. Let’s go
and get something to eat. You up for it?”
“Yeah, why not,” she concedes, still trying to remain impassive
whilst acutely aware that their relationship was beginning to take a dangerous
turn.
Oh screw it, she thinks as they walk up Park
Road, past rows and rows of grandiose apartments. It's not like
Daniel gives a shit. Is it really so bad if I enjoy this man's company for the
next two days?
Prince Charming stop outside
Mumtaz, an Indian restaurant Nadia has never been to before, and gestures for
her to follow him inside. As they open the door, they are welcomed by a blast of
heat and Nadia takes off her coat before she begins to
perspire. As she does so, she notices Prince Charming running his eyes over her
body with appreciation. They make eye contact and he blushes, embarrassed at
being caught out.
“Nice jumper,” he says sheepishly, looking away.
Turning red
herself, Nadia hurriedly plants herself on her chair and
clears her throat, anxious to change the subject.
“So why did you become Muslim, but more importantly, why didn’t
you say anything to me sooner?” she says, hoping that the question will dampen
the charged atmosphere.
“Do you want the long answer or the short answer?”
“How about short, and if it’s interesting, you can tell me the
long one later.”
“Alright, here it goes. I met a Muslim girl when I was at Uni,
we started dating, I fell madly in love with her but she wouldn’t go all the way
as she was a bit strict like that. Hormones, love and a little bit of interest
in Islam inspired me to convert, so I did, and we got married in secret.”
Prince Charming pauses and looks
at Nadia, who stares back at
him in astonishment.
“It’s like something out of a movie,” she says, genuinely
intrigued. “Go on, tell me more.”
Prince Charming laughs and takes a
sip of sweet lassi. He licks his lips and Nadia tries not to stare at them by focusing on
his nose instead.
“Okay, so we got married in secret and obviously did everything
married people do. Well, not really, as it was a secret so I couldn’t exactly
meet her family or anything.”
“And then?”
“Then she got pregnant. She confided in one of her cousins, who
she thought was her friend, who actually grassed her up to another cousin, and
before we knew it, her whole family had found out that their precious angel was
knocked up. Only the thing is, her bitch cousin failed to tell them that we were
married. She only told them the pregnant part.”
“Oh my god.”
“Exactly. So her brothers and her cousins came after me, beat
the crap out of me and pretty much left me for dead. Here, see this.”
Prince Charming stands up and much
to the horror of the rest of the customers, lifts up his white hoodie to reveal
a long, deep scar against his taut torso. Nadia stares at it.
“It’s beautiful,” she says simply, looking away. “So what
happened next?”
“Her brother was arrested, but he got out of it as he obviously
had a million alibis and they didn’t have enough proof that it was him. And then
she disappeared. At first I thought they did something to her. I went crazy
looking for her everywhere. But then I heard that she left town and that she
didn’t want anything to do with me. The last time I saw her was when she told me
she was pregnant. And that was it. I never heard from her again."
“That’s so
sad," Nadia whispers, touching her chest with her hand.
"So you went through all that for nothing?”
“Yeah that pretty much sums it up.”
Prince Charming feigns indifference but it is obvious
to Nadia, from the slouch in
his shoulders and shadow in his eyes, that he’s still hurting. She leans over
and takes his smooth hands into hers, and he looks at her in surprise, but she
says nothing.
“So what’s your story?” he croaks after a while, pulling his
hands away.
“Long or short?”
“Short of course.”
“I met a guy. Fell in love. Got married. Moved to the other side
of the world to be with him. Then found out he’s been cheating on me with
various women pretty much from the get go. Only he doesn’t know that I know and
I’m working out what to do about it.”
“Ouch. That’s harsh.”
“Yeah.”
Nadia and Prince Charming eat the rest of their meals in
silence, barely tasting any of the strong flavours, both lost in their own
thoughts.
“You know, it’s so weird how we
know so much about each other but we don’t even know each other’s
names,” Nadia says
after a while, breaking the comfortable silence they had fallen into. "Somehow,
it doesn’t seem to matter though."
“How come you never asked me before?” Prince Charming asks,
raising his eyebrows.
“I didn’t see a
point,” Nadia admits, her voice quiet.
“And now?”
“I see a point.”
There is another silence as Prince
Charming weighs up the depth of Nadia's words.
“Well," he says
eventually. Nadia looks at him in trepidation, wondering what
he will
say.
He's going to tell you to forget about it. You're married. He
doesn’t want you. You have too much baggage.
"How about we start again then?" he
says with a smile, holding out his hand. Nadia laughs in relief, and accepts his handshake
with enthusiasm.
"Alright love? My
name’s Jayden. Jayden Lynch. What’s yours?” he says in his most charming voice,
puffing out his chest like a proud peacock.
“Nadia Ziani,” Nadia replies with an exaggerated coy smile,
trying not to laugh.
“Pleasure to meet
you Nadia.”
“The pleasure’s mine, Jayden.”
Nadia and Jayden burst into laughter and this time, it is him
who reaches across the table and takes her small, cold hands into his. The
warmth of his touch runs through her veins and she smiles at him, hoping he
doesn’t let go.
He doesn’t.
Instead, he draws her hand closer to him and brings it slowly up
to his lips.
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