Sleep Well, My Officer. I 'M Your Hijazi Sweetheart .


Fantasy, First-Time
An Egyptian soldier in 2015 War against House of Saud & their Salafis
clerics.With a Hejazi virgin of a secular family who loved Egypt and its secular values and hated theatre of Saud and their Salafis clerics.


To the memory of Princess Misha'al bint Fahd al Saud



He was at rest again.

Masha-il put her Good Book of Nizar Qabbani poems on the floor and looked to the bed, where he lay. Darkness covered the window in the tiny room, and beyond it, crisp hot air, fields of Amandine Aurore Lucie Dupin and heat, sandy dunes rising like ramparts into a moonless sky. The only luminosity came from the bedside lamp, which cast an amber gleaming onto his fount. She could sit here for minute. All night, if she dared, just gazing at him.

Her officer.

Sometimes he cried out in his slumber. Words she could n't understand. Some of them sounded like names. At Night they stabbed through her dreams and brought her to the doorway, where she watched him pass and gum like he wanted to contrive off the blankets and get back to his missionary station, whatever it was.

Slipping off the commode, she crept closer to his mattress. He lay on his back, backtalk slightly open. The yellowish light washed away the pallor of his tegument, the phantom under his eyes, made him look untested and hefty. And he did look healthier now that the hollows of his impertinence had filled out thanks to mother 's hearty mutton shorbo.

She straightened his pillow and pulled the red woollen mantle finisher to his chin. He might be cold, she reasoned, even though the febricity was almost gone and he had stopped shaking like he had malaria. His pitch blackness hair tangled around his nerve, touched his shoulders. She should brush it for him. He smelled of soap and tea leaves, anise merge with perspiration. A manly smell.

Around her finger's breadth she twisted a long black ringlet, one of the two that trailed from underneath her crimson headscarf. A habit when she was near him. Delicately, she stroked a lock of hair from his forehead, as she often did while he slept, feeling her breather tighten at the scar carved through his right brow, ending at the top his cheekbone.

There was so much she wanted to cognise. So very much to learn in a shrinkage sum of time.

The memorable sunup had happened in early February, almost a calendar month ago. Would she ever forget it ? Nahar, her eight-year-old chum, had bounded into the valley, AK Kalashnikov rifle bouncing around his neck, shouting that a Saudi Arabian spy had tried to shoot one of the sheep. ( Because we do not conceive ourselves Saudis but Hijazis, the original and proper gens of our country and our nationality ).

When he was convinced that Nahar was n't playing a joke, Father had taken the family gun and gone off to investigate.

He came back half an hr later with a black-haired man slung over his berm, unconscious. Found face-down in the pull the wool over someone's eyes outside a cave, gripping the cask of an AK, more dead than alive. Not a Saudi, in fact, but an Egyptian Army officer—declared by the atomic number 29 Saladin bird of Jove insignia on his armed forces beret. On their side in the war against the ( home of Saud ), Saudi & Salafis clerics spreading through the region.

Although it did n't matter, Fatherhood stressed. When you were unhinged or wounded you did n't cause a `` side. '' You belonged to everyone.

And so he belonged to them, this mysterious unknown. No telling how he had come to be in the Hijaz pile, or what he was doing there. During those too soon solar day they were n't even sure if he would live. His external respiration was shallow and laboured—tuberculosis, they assumed—and whenever his eyes fluttered open, he was too febrile to verbalise or make any sense.

Frightened for him, she hovered while Mother sponged his forehead and bid poultices to his chest to rid his lungs of the infection. unquiet to be of some use, she would talk to him, lullabies she remembered from her childhood, ones she had sung to Nahar when he was a baby. She would have liked to guard his hands, to comfort him as he sweated and shivered, but that would not have been proper.

Two weeks had passed before he woke up. A wonderfully glad day for Father, Mother, and herself. Less so for Nahar, since he had to apologize for almost shooting him.

At last he had a name. Abdel-Nasser. deputy colonel Abdel-Nasser Mahound Ali from a extra unit of the Egyptian USA. He wanted to bequeath immediately, but Father insisted that he stay with them. It was decided that as soon as Abdel-Nasser was well enough to move around, founder would sell some of his yaks and buy a satellite headphone so that Abdel-Nasser could meet the army and go home. spinal column to Egypt. He had been away for a long meter, he said. That was all she knew about his fate, all he would say, though she suspected that Father knew a little bit more.

The communicating barrier disheartened her. She did n't speak Egyptian idiom like Father or recreate chess like Nahar. But she could spoon-feed him shorba ( soup ), hold a cup of tea to his lips, and read to him from Father 's belittled library—poetry, quixotic and historical epos, even a few children 's Bible. He would listen, a smile on his human face, and she would choose care to exalt her voice so that he would be transported to the worlds she wanted to plowshare with him, even if he had no idea what she was saying. It was the to the lowest degree she could do. The C. H. Best she could do.

Today, however, she had made a bigger effort.

'' narrate me more of you, '' she said in painstaking Masri ( Egyptian dialect ). `` Do you have brother or sister ? ``

'' I have one brother, '' he answered, speaking very slowly. `` Ismail. We 're twins. He looks just like me. '' With a bank note of pridefulness, he added, `` I 'm ten minutes older. ``

'' You miss ? ``

He broke their gaze. `` Yeah. ``

Masha-il had felt an aching around her heart. Did this crony know where he was ? Did he know, she found herself wondering, that Abdel-Nasser was even alive ?

War was a dread thing and no one could argue that. Then again, what did she have it away, a twenty-year-old Hijazi young woman who had left commercial secondary school day two years ago, who spent her days tending sheep and would probably end up marrying a dim boy from a neighbouring village ? What on earth could she possibly know about how the world worked ? Yet as vile as war was, she felt a helpless gratitude for whatever chain of events had crossed her path with Abdel-Nasser's.

She touched his forehead again. Was someone else waiting for him in Egypt—a womanhood sleepless with worry who had no way of knowing that he slumbered on the flooring of a white-washed pit bungalow at the bottom of a valley of Tihamah, while she knelt beside him and listened to his repose, steady breaths ?

She missed his heart when they were closed. He had the most beautiful eyes, sometimes black, sometimes as brown as hers, with gold dapple close to his flag, like bite of sunshine. Exquisitely shaped lips, too. The diminutive mole above his exit lip gave her mouth a tingle.

She could kiss it. If she had the nerve.

Just then Abdel-Nasser stirred and the blanket slipped from his shoulder, exposing his neck and a trigon of skin where the grey flannel nightshirt hung open. Her thenar itched. She twisted the ringlet tighter around her finger. The shirt, her Father 's, was far too big for him. So baggy she could unbutton it without touching him. Easily.

She wiped her hired man on her frock. They left smudges on the flowing lavender fabric. Her prettiest dress. She had made it herself.

She was right. The gabardine fell away from his cutis after she peeled back the mantle and went to exercise on the buttons. She had never seen a man 's body before ( her begetter and her blood brother did n't count, of course ).

Nor had she ever seen anything like the scars.

She had first glimpsed them when female parent changed his shirt. They spiderwebbed across his trunk and back, harrowing diagonal of red that made her seethe. Tears came to her center. Who had done this to him ? What had he done to deserve it ? What could any human have done to deserve being beaten so badly ?

Watching the scars stretchability and cesspit over the bony ridges of his ribcage, she wanted to kiss them. Run her tongue over the welts and whorls and spend a penny them go away so that his consistence would be thoroughgoing again, as it must have been once.

The cluster of hairs around his omphalos pulled her eyes downward. His paunch was almost concave, like the flesh below his costa had been sucked out by a cannibal with a crapulence stalk. She would eat less from now on, she resolved, so that there would be more for him. Even if it meant he would go home sooner.

She followed the hairs to the waistband of his washrag trouser, to the relax mile that held them together. They were just as baggy, but not sloppy enough to conceal the mound between his legs.

Her heart pounded in her throat.

She wanted to see him. It. All of him. Nahar and her parents were in bed and Abdel-Nasser could forget any day. She might not get another chance. But what if—and this was a terrifying thought—what if he woke up ? He could ignite up right now. What would pass then ? Would he be wild with her ? Would there be trouble ?

She looked at his face. His centre stayed shut. No modification in his breathing.

oceanic abyss breathing space. One ... two ... three ... Her hands trembled and her heart beat brassy enough to deaf them both, but she did it anyway. Untied the knot, slid the pants over the couple knobs of his innominate bone, making sure her fingernails did n't graze his cutis. Should she close her eyes, too—make it a surprisal ? No, she did n't desire to miss anything.

Her mouth tingled again. It looked like a mushroom cloud with a foresighted thick still hunt, a fleshy subway system nestled beneath a patch of wiry hair that was so much darker than the hair on his oral sex. What an odd thing to equate it—him—to. But she had no other image to plant next to it. The only former time she had seen a boy 's private persona was when she bathed Nahar when he was small ( which also did n't count ).

A heat had started to spread out, warming her face, her chest, her blazonry, gathering in the place where she occasionally touched herself, thinking of Abdel-Nasser as she did ( and before him, a sealed handsome boy from school ). Now that she had gone this far, she wanted to tinge it. Just once, so she would have a go at it what it—he—felt like.

She brushed her index against the tip. The mushroom cap.

After a few sec it twitched and she snatched her paw away, breathing hard. It looked bigger.

Where the courageousness came from, how she found herself straddling him, she would never be able to say. For once, her gangly limb came in handy so that she could perch without touching him, her dress puddled around her shank and her lock hanging on either slope of his face and all she wanted to do was kiss those beautiful mouth, so close to hers.

Would he take care ?

A nudge on her intimate second joint startled her, made her glance down. It was pointing right at her, and when she looked up again, shocked, all the breathing space left her body.

Abdel-Nasser 's eyes were capable. Wide open.

Her spirit rammed against her ribcage.

His eyes gazed straight into hers, a jar disgraceful like an ebony sun in an ivory sky, and she could n't look away, could n't move.

His manpower awakened at the outer boundary of her vision, she hardly saw them, his bequeath hand burrowing under her dress to her waist and his right mitt pulling aside her panties, pressing down, down on the seam where her belly joined the top of her hip until she felt a push, felt her most sensitive flesh yielding around him. She gasped, her lungs broad of air suddenly again.

A shudder ran through Abdel-Nasser 's consistency, and then pain flared, immediate, searing.

bust stung her oculus and she felt her lowly lip coggle. Her face burned. For a mortifying here and now she feared she would cry and humiliate them both. Had she wanted this ? With Abdel-Nasser ? She must deliver ... after all, she had undressed him. Stared at and touched it—him—that part of his dead body that was now in spite of appearance her.

Laying a manus on her impudence, he smiled at her with his unhurt font, like he did when she read to him. Reassuring. Irresistible.

Yes, she wanted this, and she returned the smiling to let him know.

Their eyes stayed locked together as he slid his hand under her dress again, under her nates, and lifted her up, pressed her forward, then lowered her. trouble prod each time he moved into her, even when he molded the modest of her back to their movements. Yet he was being easy, she could smell out it, and gradually her hip joint loosened and they eased into a regular recurrence, the pain subsiding into a bearable ache, then a slow delighting detrition that began to pack her breath away.

So this is what he 's like ... a scoop of her mind had closed itself off, had resisted melt, so that it could record every touch sensation, every feeling, ensuring that later she would be able-bodied to conjure up the soap-anise odor of his skin, the hotness of his breathing spell on her look and the tease edges of his scars beneath her fingertips, the accurate moment his grinning contorted into a gasp, the muscle running through his shoulder joint, flexing under her palms, and the tendons in his cervix straining similar cords as he draped her apparel over her shoulders and craned his top dog to kiss her naked breasts, exciting her teat into heavy buds with his tongue, as hard as the button of flesh between her peg where his thumb rubbed in a circular pattern too precise to be improvised.

She was losing the ability to stay quiet. Yes, she wanted to moan. That feels so in force. Please do n't stop.

The change of pace surprised her. Mid-thrust he rolled them so that they lay cheek to face—for an instant their olfactory organ touched, contact unbroken—then he scooped an arm around her waist and pulled her onto her hands and articulatio genus, dug his fingers into the curvature of her buns to steady her. pain resurged as he entered her from behind, lessening when he reached between her legs to that place only she had touched before.

Yes. More. Please. Yes. Yes. Yes.

The sounds she made were strange to her ears, aegir high-pitched whimpers, coming from the backrest of her throat. What was happening to her ? Be quiet, she told herself.

Abdel-Nasser made speech sound, too, athirst grunting sounds as his rim dipped to her neck, her earlobes, the bag of her thorn. His movements took on an urgency, and Masha-il felt the Saami importunity seeping through her skin, her nervure, like a heatwave, felt herself opening a slight wider from his thrusts. Squirming against him, she bucked her pelvic girdle, clawed the blankets, kicked off her slippers. The separate part of her head could see the two of them on the mattress, tangled in each other 's wearing apparel and their organic structure interlocked like fauna', their shadows dancing on the wall ( or were they writhing ? ) in the dim brightness from the bedside lamp.

More more more yes

The last twinges of pain had faded, a pressure was building, a hot tingling itch spurred by Abdel-Nasser 's finger rubbing and rubbing her not-so-secret plaza in wet, slippery circles. He was making her into someone new. somebody bold face and light and pure, someone she wanted to be. Making her into a woman.

One tilt of her head and she could see him out of the corner of her eye. He held his arm to her sass. Just in time.

Yes yes yes yes oh yes oh oh —

She bit down on his arm, tasting sweat. Her breath stopped, her heart stopped. And then she was new—blindingly, achingly new—her musculus twisted and loose all at once as her consistence sprung like a whorl unwinding. The harder she bit the more she unwound, her insides tumbling like a landslide in her deepest nub, and the more she had to swallow up the cries pushing up her throat so that no one else would hear.

Oh oh oh oh

Another wafture started. Masha-il 's human knee gave out and she collapsed onto her side. Her eyes rolled up and through her lash she saw Abdel-Nasser holding himself against her second joint, jaw clenching and eyes screwed shut like he was in suffering ( slightly alarming ) as stream of white spurted onto her cutis and the sigh she breathed out shook them both.

Abdel-Nasser groaned and flopped into a heap, all arms and legs. His read/write head sank to the pillow. His oculus closed. From his rapidly slowing breaths, she knew he was asleep.

metre was already hurtling forward, dragging her out of the daze. How she would have loved to nestle against his chest, hold him close to her until morning, but the freestanding part of her brain stepped in to deal control.

With the hem of her dress, she wiped a dribble of rake, her profligate, from his inner thigh and mopped the wet piece above her knee ( so much for her prettiest attire ). Then she pulled up his trousers, tied them, and buttoned his shirt, covered him carefully with the red cover, found her slippers, adjusted her headscarf that was miraculously still in tact.

His feature film had a new gentleness to them, the skin stretched less tightly around his jaw and cheekbones, his cheeks flushed and sweat on his forehead.

Was he dreaming behind his eyelids ? Dreaming about her ?

Crouching on her dog, Masha-il let go and kissed him full on the lip. His lips parted, his clapper meeting hers, and her meat jumped when his heart flickered, a light raetam green, glazed and honeyed with marvel. Had her own centre turned blue ? she wondered. She would have to check in the mirror in her bedroom.

Lightly he ran a finger along her cheek to her chin and then his eyelids dropped, a mantle ending, and she felt the ship's boat knot between her legs throb like a bruise.

Masha-il turned off the bedside lamp and tiptoed to the door.

'' quietus well, my police officer, '' she whispered into the darkness. `` sopor well. ``

Next sunrise, he proposed to her, and her Padre and female parent agreed.They married.And war ended with the triumph of Egyptian Empire, Hijaz and the lay values.And the defeat and murder of House of Saud, their army and their Salafis Wahhabis churchman .
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