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Sheikhs of Hamari: The Complete Series
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Sheikhs of Hamari
The Sheikh’s American Lover
The Sheikh’s Fake Marriage
The Sheikh’s Pregnant Nanny
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales, is entirely coincidental.
RELAY PUBLISHING EDITION, JUNE 2020
Copyright © 2020 Relay Publishing Ltd.
All rights reserved. Published in the United Kingdom by Relay Publishing. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Leslie North is a pen name created by Relay Publishing for co-authored Romance projects. Relay Publishing works with incredible teams of writers and editors to collaboratively create the very best stories for our readers.
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Sheikhs of Hamari
The Complete Series
Leslie North
Contents
The Sheikh’s American Lover
Blurb
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Epilogue
End of The Sheikh’s American Lover
The Sheikh’s Fake Marriage
Blurb
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
End of The Sheikh’s Fake Marriage
The Sheikh’s Pregnant Nanny
Blurb
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Epilogue
End of The Sheikh’s Pregnant Nanny
Thank You!
About Leslie
Also by Leslie
Blurb
Single-mother Hannah Fisher is fine just the way she is. She works hard, earns an honest wage and raises her son without any support. So when Prince Sheikh Chakir decides to “rescue” her from her rather un-royal life, she can’t help but challenge his every move.
Prince Sheikh Chakir can’t believe how much he enjoys spending time with Hannah as he prepares her son for royal life. If only his elders didn’t disapprove of her. For things to work out between them, he needs her to be traditional, silent and proper: not independent, opinionated or quite so sexy…
But with the crown unconvinced of their compatibility and Hannah ready to pull away from her hot chemistry with the Prince, Sheikh has a serious decision to make: break a few rules or risk a broken heart.
1
“You can’t do this, Greg.”
Hannah crossed her arms over her chest and tried her best to look placid. Completely placid, like her stomach wasn’t churning and the back of her neck didn’t feel hot one second and frozen the next. Greg, her landlord, was not her favorite person. When she came home from work at six every day—the after-school program she ran for extra cash kept her an hour later than she’d like—she drove past his house as quickly as possible, hoping the light in his living room would be on. If the light was on, he was in for the night.
Knowing that pattern had served her well for the last several years, but tonight it had failed her.
“You’re three months behind on rent.” Greg’s face offered exactly zero sympathy. She hadn’t expected much, if any—he was in a terrible mood on the best of days, when the weather was beautiful and nothing particularly bad was happening in the neighborhood. “I have every right to put you out of here, and that’s what I’m going to do.”
Hannah’s feet ached, and she shifted her weight from one to the other as subtly as possible. Looking weak wasn’t going to help her. She wasn’t weak, anyway. She spent all day, every day, at Brookside Elementary school, where she was an assistant kindergarten teacher. The job had her crawling under the low tables where the kids sat and jumping up to retrieve balls they kicked onto the bleachers from the minute she arrived in the morning to the minute she left. It was not a job for a fragile soul.
But tonight she blinked away a gritty feeling in her eyes. Ryan hadn’t slept well the night before. He’d sleep for maybe an hour, and then his cries would start up again—Mama, Mama, Mama. It was the most mournful sound she’d ever heard. And while Hannah tried to maintain some small boundaries in her single mom life, she’d broken sometime near dawn and pulled the five-year-old into bed with her.
“I’ve got Ryan, Greg.” It was mid-May, almost the end of the school year, and the night air was already the sultry temperature of high summer. A bug buzzed around Greg’s head. The sneer never left his face. “I need more time. Not forever.”
“That’s what you said last month, and the month before.”
“I know that.” She hated saying it. She hated saying any of it. In her mind, she’d been convincing—some flashy explanation that would get Greg off her back. Now it deserted her.
This entire scenario was a waking nightmare, because Hannah was not the kind of person who got behind on rent. She’d made it work for all five years of Ryan’s life. Sure, sometimes she’d cut it close, but the checks from Tahir always came through in the nick of time.
Then he’d had to go and die.
A duller pain wound its way around her heart and squeezed. Tahir hadn’t been the love of Hannah’s life. He’d been the love of one part of her life—a period of about three months, six years ago. They’d run into each other on the sidewalk outside a luxury hotel in downtown Chicago, and the rest was history. Her “relationship” with Tahir had been a fireworks show—bright, loud, and over in a flash.
There’d been one last surprise out of the whole thing: Ryan.
Damn it, they’d promised. She and Tahir had promised that they’d always help each other out. For her part, she’d sent pictures of his son when he was in Hamari, the Middle Eastern kingdom where he was…a member of the royal family, somehow. Cousin to the king. Something like that. It had never seemed important. Especially not now. Being connected to the royal family hadn’t saved him from the car acci
dent, and the fact that he’d left a son behind wouldn’t save her from getting evicted.
“Good. You know.” Greg rolled his eyes. “Then you also know it’s time for you to get out. The end of the weekend is good for me.”
“It’s Friday. It’s Friday night. You and I both know that once you serve me, I’ve got five days to—”
“Yeah. Yeah, that’s right.” Greg slipped a white envelope from the back pocket of his jeans and thrust it into Hannah’s hand. “Here’s your notice. You’ve got five days, and then I’ll sue. I’ve got a lawyer who’ll eat you alive.” He laughed, his voice echoing around the front porch. “Be gone by the end of the weekend.”
Hannah put on the calm, accommodating face she wore to greet kindergarteners at the beginning of the day and swallowed the nervous lump in her throat. “Come on, Greg. Everybody’s had a rough couple of months. But I’m almost—”
“Almost. Doesn’t. Count,” Greg growled, and Hannah sucked in a breath that felt razor-sharp. The hair on her arms leaped upright at the black disdain in her landlord’s eyes. But Ryan was sleeping inside. How was she going to pack the little house, find a place to live, and still get him to bed on time all weekend? How was she going to find a place when she didn’t have the money for the first and last months’ rent? It was a stupid situation to be in. She knew that. At twenty-seven, she should have…savings. A rainy day fund. Something.
But she didn’t. Being an assistant teacher didn’t pay much, and Tahir’s death had been the first in a chain of catastrophes. Her car had broken down. Her auto-payment on her student loans had failed, so she’d owed two months at once not to default. Ryan had outgrown all his clothes in the span of two weeks. And, and, and. The rent hadn’t been there.
“Another couple of weeks.” She fought to keep desperation out of her voice. “I’ll bring the check to the door myself. I’ll bring cash, if that’s what you want.”
“Not a chance.” Greg rocked back on his heels and spit on the porch.
“There’s some chance.” She sounded pathetic. Completely pathetic. It made her teeth hurt like she’d been chewing through ice. “If you think about it—”
“What’s going on here?”
The voice came from just behind Greg’s shoulder.
Greg’s eyes narrowed, his mouth curved down into a sharp frown, and he turned.
And when he turned, Hannah saw the man behind him.
Man? The god behind him.
Her entire body lit up with hope, every nerve ending firing with warmth. The night air against her skin felt smooth and forgiving, like letting her fingers trail through bathwater. And the parts of her that would be submerged under that bathwater…
A shiver ran down her spine. His accent. It was so like Tahir’s.
Royalty.
He was royalty, without a doubt. He held himself like she imagined a prince would.
A king.
Hannah tried to get her thoughts in order, but her brain felt short-circuited by the cut planes of his cheeks and the golden-brown eyes that had locked on hers in the dim porch light.
“None of your business,” said Greg through clenched teeth. “This is a private discussion.”
The king—the royal—didn’t so much as glance at the landlord. “Are you Hannah Fisher?”
Every word out of his mouth seemed soaked in honey and power. Should she tell the strange man standing on her little strip of sidewalk that she was indeed Hannah Fisher? Maybe not. But would she?
“Yes. Yes, I am. I’m Hannah. Fisher,” she added.
Greg’s shoulders dropped an inch, and he buried his hands in his pockets. “End of the weekend,” he said again.
The prince—or king, or whoever he was—stepped up onto the porch next to Greg. “Then you must be Mr. Gregory Bolton.”
Greg wore the expression of a man who’d just swallowed spoiled milk. “Yeah. What’s it to you?”
It was the handsome man’s turn to pull an envelope from his pocket. “My family has been contacted to pay the rent.” The next thing to appear from his pocket was a slimmer paper—a check. “My name is Chakir Al-Shafar.” Next, a pen. What else did he have in his pockets? “This check will settle the debt.”
“No,” Hannah said, the word flying out of her lips just before Chakir’s pen met the check. “No, you don’t need to do this.”
His eyes flashed to hers. “I certainly do.”
And now she was in the position of siding with Greg, somehow. “This—this is a private negotiation. I don’t need anyone’s help.”
“This isn’t a matter of charity.”
“What is it, then?” Hannah’s heart did a slow turn in her chest. “Are you from Tahir’s family? Is that what this is?”
“Oh, yes.” A smile flickered across Chakir’s face and disappeared. “I would rather have my cousin here to do this himself.”
“Do what, exactly? Pay the rent?”
Chakir looked at her for a long moment, then signed the check in his hand.
“Wait—”
He didn’t wait. He pressed the check into Greg’s hand. “That will cover the outstanding rent and the lease for the rest of the year.”
Greg folded the check in his hand. “Fine.”
“But Miss Fisher will no longer be your tenant.”
The landlord practically cackled. “Best news I’ve heard all day.”
“What?” What was this bizarre charade? “I haven’t agreed to go anywhere. I haven’t—”
Prince Chakir—she couldn’t help thinking of him that way—turned those eyes on hers again. “You won’t be this man’s tenant because it’s unacceptable for Ryan to remain here.”
Her hackles rose as high as the moon. “Stop right there. There’s no way I’m letting you take my son.”
“No.” Chakir raised a hand in the air. “Not that. I’m here to take you and Ryan back to Hamari. This—” He gestured at the house, the street, Greg. “This is unacceptable for him.”
“Why?” Hannah’s face heated. The neighborhood wasn’t that bad. And she’d kept the house as safe as she could, with extra deadbolts, with everything she could think of… “Why would you think it’s unacceptable?”
Chakir looked her in the eye. “Because Ryan belongs with his family. His Al-Shafar family. You son is a prince of Hamari. He needs to be at home.”
2
“A prince? But you’re a prince,” Hannah blurted out. All her thoughts jumbled together in her mind, crashing together like the bugs that swarmed her porch light. “Actually, I don’t know if you’re a prince, but you can’t come here and—”
“Get her out by the end of the weekend.” Greg issued the gruff command, then thundered down the porch steps. Hannah watched his retreating back with a strange mix of anxiety and relief.
“Seems like as good a time to go as any,” Chakir said, his smooth accent a balm to her ears after the gravelly assault of Greg’s voice.
It was all happening too fast. “That’s not—” She took a deep breath. Now she owed Chakir. He’d paid off the debt that had been hanging over her head for three agonizing months, and…now what? Her mind scrambled for a way to pay him back. Across the street, Greg’s front door slammed. The light in the front window turned on. “I’m not sure going with you to another country is feasible right now.”
“May I come in so we can discuss it?”
Of course, she thought. Anything to hear more of that voice.
“For a few minutes,” she offered, keeping her tone firm. “It’s late, and Ryan will be up early tomorrow.”
She led Chakir into her house, deadbolted the door behind them, and took the first right into the living room. Her heart bounced back and forth between her throat and her chest in a wild rhythm. Was there a subtle way to wipe her palms on her Casual Friday jeans? She settled for sticking them in her pockets.
Hannah stayed standing in the center of the room, and Chakir followed suit. “So, you’re…” She stopped and cleared her throat. “Chak
ir.”
“Formally, I am Sheikh Chakir Al-Shafar.”
God, he was a fantasy. A living fantasy. Hannah’s mouth watered from looking into his golden-brown eyes. She’d never seen eyes quite that shade before. The word that came to mind was precious, but Chakir was anything but. He wore a crisp black suit that looked like it had been made for him—she didn’t doubt that it had been—and his hair was so perfect, every strand falling into place, that she wanted to run her fingers through it and muss it up a little bit. She wanted to wrap her legs around him and—
Whoa.
“So you are a prince.”
“First in line to the throne of Hamari,” he confirmed. “Your son isn’t in the direct succession, but he is in the line of succession, despite the circumstances.” His eyes traveled over her living room. He had to be judging her. Hannah kept a tidy house—she couldn’t help it, not after a childhood of cleaning other people’s houses alongside her mother—but parts of it would seem worn and shabby to a man like Chakir. Even Tahir had never visited this house. When he’d been in the US, they’d met at different hotels when they had the money.