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Desert Flower

The Gift (Part 2)

The Gift (Part 2)

Dec 09, 2025

This content is intended for mature audiences for the following reasons.

  • •  Sexual Content and/or Nudity
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Finally, they rode out of the gate. The Sultan exchanged a few words with a passing patrol and, having learned that all was quiet in the area, steered his horse past the main road, straight into the desert. Anzhelika followed him across the sands, now covered in shadows, past the occasional thorny trees and bushes—onward, toward the horizon, now shrouded in mist. Salah ad-Din rode to the top of a nearby hill and surveyed the surrounding area with a careful gaze. Anzhelika, having collected her thoughts, tore her gaze away from his slender figure, rode closer, and also surveyed her surroundings. The desert was quiet and tranquil; in the distance, a group of Arab warriors patrolling the area leisurely rode past.

"All is calm," the Sultan concluded.
"I don't see any enemies either," Anzhelika agreed. Salah ad-Din urged his horse down the hill, and the girl followed him. Upon reaching the bottom, the Sultan suddenly spurred his stallion on and, slightly breaking away from Anzhelika, reared the horse right before the astonished girl's eyes.

Anzhelika sighed, covering her mouth with her hand, staring wide-eyed at Salah ad-Din, who was sitting upright in the saddle, seemingly effortlessly, somehow. She'd watched videos like this many times, and this was the first time she'd seen this trick performed in person right beside her by a rider. And what a rider...

Finally, he lowered his horse back to the ground, looking slyly into her wide, admiring eyes.

"We'll go for a little ride while it's still light, and then we'll be back for dinner. Beware of snakes and scorpions," Salah ad-Din warned, grinning and adding: "When I was a boy, my friends and I weren't allowed to run away into the desert."
"But you certainly did," Anzhelika finished with satisfaction, catching her breath finally. The Sultan nodded, smiling, and guiding his horse onto a narrow path. The girl, following him, continued: "All children probably have a certain area where you're strictly forbidden to go, but it's where you yearn with all your heart. And you run to it as soon as your elders aren't looking. My friends and I were forbidden to go to the river when we were kids. Mmm, what wonderful times we spent there..."

Salah ad-Din laughed.
"Your Arabic is wonderful, Angelica," he said.
"Thank you," the girl smiled, and as the Sultan led his horse along the path past the dunes, Anzhelika recalled how her older sister, Vika, had once come to visit her parents on vacation just as the younger sister was preparing to enter university.

"Why Arabic Studies?" her sister asked curiously, nibbling on a cookie.
"I like it," Anzhelika said dreamily.
"A beautiful language," Vika agreed, "but I personally would be driven mad learning their writing... Well, good luck. You'll marry a sheikh later," her sister joked kindly, and Anzhelika laughed heartily. She later graduated from the institute with a degree in translation... inspired by the man now sitting freely and nimbly beside her on the horse.

The evening's peace and quiet descended upon the desert, but feelings far from quiet reigned in Anzhelika's soul. The girl cast an approving glance at the Sultan, his straight back, his slender hips, barely perceptibly guiding his horse... Feeling herself blush, she turned her gaze to her horse.

A warm hand lightly touched her arm.
"Hold the reins gently, Angelica," a soft, husky voice advised. The girl nodded, unable to look up. And when did he manage to remove his glove?

Salah ad-Din, in turn, slid his gaze over Angelica's delicately flushed cheek, then lower, to her graceful neck, and then lower still, to the neckline of her green blouse. He wondered what her skin was like under the expensive silk—the same golden-peach or even paler, like cream?

With an effort, the Sultan tore his gaze away from the girl and fixed it straight ahead. His hands gripped the reins a little tighter than necessary.

He quickly asked her:
"Are you comfortable in your new home, Angelica?"
"Yes, everything's great, thank you," the girl enthusiastically joined in the conversation, "especially the mirror—it's a gorgeous thing."
"It's just a modest trinket," Salah ad-Din replied, "its purpose is to reflect true beauty."
Anzhelika smiled happily, closing her eyes.

"How did you become a healer?"
"Well, by accident, actually," the girl chuckled. "I learned this craft out of boredom and never planned to make a living from it... And then one day it just so happened that no one could do the job better than me."
"I understand," Salah ad-Din rubbed his chin with his fingers. "I didn't plan to become a Sultan either." Anzhelika looked at him curiously, and Salah ad-Din continued: "In my youth, I studied the Quran because I wanted to become a lawyer. I wanted to bring peace and justice to my people... But a little later, it became clear that bringing them here and now is impossible without a sword."
He looked at Anzhelika expectantly, as if searching for something in her face.
"It happens," the girl nodded, "when times are really bad."
The Sultan turned away again, but his face now seemed to be that of a man who has found inner peace.

They rode side by side beneath a pale crescent moon in the evening sky, the horses' hooves barely audibly touching the sand. Anzhelika stole a sideways glance at Salah ad-Din's masculine profile against the sunset sky, and her gaze settled admiringly on his luxurious, fluffy black eyelashes. "I wish I could touch them..." she thought dreamily, when suddenly she noticed his questioning gaze returning her gaze.

"Salah ad-Din, can you jump over obstacles?" Anzhelika asked quickly.
"Of course," the Sultan replied, his black eyes even a little surprised.
"Will you teach me?" the girl asked, narrowing her eyes. "I once wanted to ask my riding instructor at home, but he almost fell into a ditch, and I lost the desire..."

The instructor, however, had a very good reason. That time, Anzhelika wanted to ride a horse like in the Middle Ages—in a long, ankle-length skirt, riding a man's saddle. Riding up to a wild rose bush in a field, she pulled her skirt up above the knee—away from the thorns—while picking the flowers. And then, the poor instructor, who had been watching the spectacle, encountered a ditch... Anzhelika spent a quarter of an hour asking him if everything was okay, and she no longer felt like going on adventures that day. (Only much later did she understand the reason for the guy's failure.)

"Alright," Salah ad-Din agreed, scanning the area and finding a suitable fallen tree. He waved his hand, pointing it to Anzhelika, and said, "See that tree? We'll break into a fast trot in front of it, and when I say 'go,' nudge Luna slightly with your legs—she's well-trained and will understand what to do. And rise up in the saddle and lean forward slightly as you leap. Understood?"

Anzhelika nodded thoughtfully.
"And hold on tight," the Sultan advised, quickening his horse. "Don't worry, if anything happens, I'll catch you."

Without a moment's hesitation, Anzhelika sped up after him. They reached a straight line in front of a fallen tree and galloped off. Anzhelika felt a burning excitement in her blood, as always happened before some adventure. Salah ad-Din rode alongside her, and the girl, looking straight ahead, felt rather than saw his encouraging presence.

"Come on," a voice rang out next to her ear. Anzhelika nudged Luna with her knees, rose up in the saddle, and felt the horse lift off. The world swung before her eyes for a moment, and Anzhelika only exhaled when Luna returned to the ground.

"Excellent," she heard a hoarse voice very close.
Anzhelika turned and looked at her companion with shining eyes.
"Congratulations on your victory," Salah ad-Din said to her with a sly wink. The girl laughed joyfully.
"How could it be otherwise? I have a wonderful teacher," she returned the compliment.
Salah ad-Din nodded, smiling, and said:
"It's getting dark, we should go back." Hearing her capricious, disappointed sigh, he suppressed a smile and added, "We'll go for a ride again, I'll definitely find the time."

The last crumbs of pink gold flowed into the sand along with the last minutes of this magical evening. Salah ad-Din closed his eyes slightly and silently thanked Allah for everything. For the opportunity to lift Angelica onto the horse... For the opportunity to take her hand, gently touching her smooth skin, as if only to tell her that the reins should be held lightly, without strain... For the opportunity to look into those pale green eyes beneath dark brows as she listened intently to him... For that admiring look when he reared the horse, and that sly look when she asked him to teach her to jump, and that look of triumph when she landed on the other side of a fallen tree, looked at him, and laughed...

Salah ad-Din would have pulled her towards him, sat her on his lap, and kissed her until she fell back exhausted in his arms, breathing heavily and looking with her green eyes into his as if nothing and no one else in the whole world existed for her...

The Sultan tugged at the reins and turned his horse back toward the city. It wasn't time yet. Many matters remained to be resolved... before then.

The two returned home, reluctantly but hurriedly: night was falling, and they needed to get beyond the city walls as quickly as possible.
anya_gordeychuk
Anya Gordeychuk

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A modern girl, a child of the age of sarcasm, cynicism, and memes, accidentally finds herself in a real medieval setting at the height of religious wars. But Anzhelika isn’t one to despair, and by the way, now the noble Sultan Salah ad-Din, who has intrigued her since her school years, is very close by...
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13 episodes

The Gift (Part 2)

The Gift (Part 2)

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