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McKinnon's Royal Mission

Page 8

by Amelia Autin


  Then the dreams had turned erotic. Each memory had ended with a twist that was fantasy, not reality. Each dream had ended with the throbbing release he was fast coming to fear he could only find with her. Then he’d woken each time, hard and aching from the release he hadn’t found.

  Cut her some slack, Liam had said. Right.

  Then he remembered the other part of what Liam had said, about taking the princess to visit Keira and Alyssa. Maybe he should. At least with other people around—people he felt at home with, unlike her household staff—he’d be distracted from thinking about her all the time. And maybe she’d enjoy the novelty of seeing how ordinary folks lived—Liam was right about that. I’ll ask her at breakfast tomorrow, he thought. If she turns me down, no harm done.

  Part of him hoped she would turn him down. He didn’t want to see her the way he’d seen her last Sunday, as a normal woman with normal wants, needs, desires—too dangerous for his peace of mind, especially after what had nearly happened on Mount Evans. He didn’t want to think of her as anyone but the princess she was.

  But another part of him was hoping she would accept his invitation, the part of him that had led him into his often dangerous line of work. The part of him willing to take risks. The part of him willing to step into the line of fire.

  And that’s exactly what he’d be doing if he let himself get too close emotionally to the princess—deliberately stepping into the line of fire.

  * * *

  With Special Agent McKinnon directing her, Mara drove to Keira and Cody Walker’s house in the small city of Golden, Colorado, west of Denver. When he’d casually invited her at breakfast, she’d jumped at the chance to meet someone close to him, despite the way he’d been treating her ever since their trip to Mount Evans. She already knew from Alec and Liam that Keira had been Special Agent McKinnon’s partner for three years, and the two DSS agents had been full of praise for their younger sister. Mara wanted to see how he acted around other women—was it the same with every woman he came into contact with, or was it just her?

  “Turn here,” Special Agent McKinnon told her. “This is it.” Mara pulled into the driveway, drove through the open gate and up the lane, then parked. She stared for a moment, admiring the way the house seemed to blend into its surroundings. Not for the Walkers the cookie cutter look of some of the newer subdivisions they’d driven through. Theirs was an older-looking house, but distinctive and meticulously maintained, set on a fenced acre of land.

  “It is nice,” Mara said before getting out of the car. “It has character.”

  “Yeah. Their house is special—and a lot like them. It’s also highly defensible.”

  “Defensible?” Mara was surprised by the word. Special Agent McKinnon looked as if he wished he hadn’t mentioned that, so Mara hurried on. “They are your friends, yes? Alec and Liam said—” She stopped short, realizing that Special Agent McKinnon might not appreciate being the topic of conversation between her two other bodyguards and her.

  But all he said was, “Yeah. It’s a little complicated because Walker is also my boss. But they’re good friends. And their daughter is my goddaughter.” He smiled to himself, and for the first time Mara realized he was a man who could be emotionally vulnerable. “They even named her after me. Can you believe it? Alyssa Tracy Walker.” There it was again—that curious combination of pride and humility. But Mara didn’t have time to consider what it might mean because Special Agent McKinnon said, “Come on, Keira’s expecting us.”

  They rang the doorbell, which was almost immediately answered by a lovely woman with red-gold curls, warm brown eyes and a dusting of freckles. “Trace!” she said with a welcoming smile. She looked toward Mara and started to speak, but Special Agent McKinnon interrupted her.

  “Keira, I’d like you to meet Her Serene Highness, Princess Mara Theodora of Zakhar. Princess, this is Keira Walker, my former partner.”

  Keira held her hand out to Mara. “Very pleased to meet you finally,” she said with a warm smile. “Alec and Liam have told me a lot about you.” She shot a look at her former partner that Mara didn’t understand before she added, “And it’s Dr. Marianescu, right? I was so impressed when my brothers told me. There aren’t enough women going into math, science and technology careers, even after all this time. And it had to be especially difficult for you, under the circumstances. What I mean is—”

  “Can you continue this after we get inside?” Special Agent McKinnon asked drily.

  Keira laughed, stepped back, and pushed the door wide. “Sorry about that,” she apologized. “Trace knows that once I get started on this subject I can go on for hours.”

  As they walked in an angry wail came from upstairs. “Oh, dear,” Keira said ruefully. “Alyssa’s awake already. I was hoping she’d sleep a little longer. Excuse me for a minute, but please make yourselves at home.” She started for the stairway, but before she’d taken four steps a tall, rangy man with blond hair and blue eyes walked down the stairs and into the living room, cuddling a one-year-old baby girl in the crook of his arm.

  “I’ve got her,” he told his wife unnecessarily, smiling at the baby in his arms. He raised that smile to Mara and held out his hand. “You must be the princess.”

  “Yes,” Keira said, “but that’s just an inherited title. She’s also Dr. Marianescu, and that title she earned.”

  Mara beamed at Keira, whose words indicated she understood. “Yes, but will you not call me Mara?” she asked both Keira and her husband as she shook his hand. “Alec and Liam call me Dr. Marianescu, but that is because they are pretending to be my students when they guard me at school.”

  “Of course,” Keira answered promptly. “Mara, this is my husband, Cody. And that bundle of inexhaustible energy is our daughter, Alyssa.”

  Mara looked at the little girl, whose copper-colored curls and angelic face seemed to combine the best of her mother and father. She wasn’t crying anymore, and when she saw the tall dark-haired man at Mara’s side she gurgled excitedly and clapped her hands together. “Dace!” she babbled, holding out her arms to him. “Dace!”

  Mara saw Special Agent McKinnon throw a startled glance at Keira, who told him with an understanding grin, “Oh yes, she’s talking now. Her vocabulary consists of about ten words, including Mama, Dada, Gamma—that’s my mother,” she explained to Mara. “Dace—that’s you, Trace,” she told Special Agent McKinnon. “And bat—that’s bath, which is her very favorite thing in the world.”

  Special Agent McKinnon walked over and took Alyssa from her father’s arms. “Come to Trace, baby,” he told her, and she went to him willingly, then smiled contentedly and snuggled against his shoulder.

  Mara went very still, feeling as if the world was somehow out of kilter. She glanced from one man to the other, their open love for the little girl reflected on the faces of both men. Special Agent McKinnon—no, she thought. I cannot think of him as anyone but Trace. Not here. Not holding Alyssa. Here he is a man. Just a warm, loving man, like Andre. Trace was talking to Alyssa in a soft voice, teasing her and tickling her tummy as she gurgled with laughter again and again.

  “He spoils her rotten,” Keira told Mara in an aside, but her voice held amused indulgence. “She turned one a couple of months ago, and you should have seen what he gave her for a birthday present.”

  Mara didn’t say anything, but a variety of emotions churned through her. Wistfulness and honest bewilderment ended up on top. “She is a beautiful child,” she told Keira. “But your husband—did he not wish for a son?”

  Keira glanced at her sharply, a frown starting to form. But then she seemed to see beneath the surface of the question into Mara’s wounded heart. “No,” she said gently. “In fact, before Alyssa was born Cody refused to let them tell us if we were having a boy or a girl. He said, ‘Not knowing now will make it all the sweeter...later.’”

  She smiled a
t Mara, woman to woman. “And when I gave birth to Alyssa, Cody was right there in the delivery room—she was born into her father’s eager, waiting hands. That’s the only time I’ve ever seen him cry, but they were tears of joy, not disappointment.”

  “Oh.” Mara couldn’t think of anything else to say. She needed time alone to consider this. To analyze it in detail the way she would a complex equation. Because if what Keira was saying was the truth, if it was right and natural for fathers to cherish their daughters the way they cherished their sons, then...

  * * *

  Trace watched Keira and the princess take Alyssa upstairs to change her diaper. Keira had demurred at first, but Mara had insisted. “Please,” she had asked in her pretty, faintly accented voice. And when she’d added, “I have never been around babies, but I would like to learn,” Keira had smiled and accepted the offer of help.

  After they left, Cody pulled Trace into the kitchen. “Spill it,” he demanded, almost before the swinging door closed behind them.

  Trace hesitated. “Not sure what you mean.”

  “C’mon, McKinnon,” Cody said. “Something happened.”

  “It’s all in my report.”

  “Don’t give me that. I know you. Maybe the State Department bought that report about what happened on Mount Evans, but I don’t. And don’t give me that poker-faced look, either,” Cody added drily. “Keira’s been giving me the high sign practically since the minute you and the princess walked in. So is there a problem? Something I need to know about the princess...and you?”

  Trace’s jaw tightened. “Not a thing,” he told his boss, trying to convince himself at the same time. “There’s not a single, solitary thing you need to know.”

  Cody’s expression hardened as he became more the boss than the friend. “You’d tell me if there was, right?”

  “Right.” Trace almost believed it. Almost.

  * * *

  That night as Mara lay in her bed she relived her visit with the Walkers and their daughter, Alyssa. And Trace. He was Trace to her now. She would never think of him as Special Agent McKinnon again. Because when he was with his friends, when he held his goddaughter in his arms, he was so much like her brother, Andre, her heart ached.

  She tucked a hand beneath her cheek. But it is not as a brother you see him, a little voice inside her head tormented her. He is a man who makes you understand what it is to be a woman.

  Mara remembered the way Trace had held Alyssa, remembered the expression on his face as he gazed at the little girl. Remembered also the look on Alyssa’s face as she smiled up at him and cuddled in his arms. She adored her “Dace” as she called him, and he could not have loved the little girl more if he had been her fath—

  Father. But fathers didn’t love their daughters. Did they? Or was her own father the aberration? She had known for years that her father wasn’t just indifferent to her, he actually hated her, and she’d known why. And except for her brother, it was reinforced by the attitude of the majority of men—particularly those in power—all around her. But why had she accepted her father’s hatred? Why had she accepted his assessment that she had no value, that she was a worthless addition to his family?

  Andre had never felt that way about her. She was special in her brother’s eyes. He had protected her, fought for her, loved her. And she had made him proud of her when she obtained her PhD, something she might never have achieved without his assistance.

  She smiled softly to herself. She would never forget the mingled love and pride on Andre’s face as she’d accepted her Oxford diploma and the trappings of her new status in a ceremony that dated back centuries. Then her smile faded. Why had that not been enough for her? Why had she looked in vain for her father beside her brother? Why had there been a gaping hole in her heart as she realized that even in this, her supreme moment, she had failed to win her father’s love? The fault was not in me, she realized with a sense of shock. The fault lay in my father. Andre was right all along. It was not anything I did or did not do.

  Her thoughts returned to today. Keira said her husband cried tears of joy when Alyssa was born. That is how a father should feel. That is what my father should have felt at my birth. He did not. I could have brought him great joy, just as Alyssa has brought to her father. But he chose to turn away from me, chose to hate me instead. That was his loss. Not mine. All these years wasted seeking his approval. Seeking his love.

  It hurt terribly to realize now just how much of her life had been wasted pursuing something that could never be. It hurt even more to realize she’d allowed her father to control her emotionally, had allowed him to make her fear rejection so much she’d come to expect it and steel herself against it, afraid to risk her heart with any man other than Andre. Even though her father had been dead for more than two years he was still controlling her through that fear. But no longer.

  Chapter 7

  You have been a coward long enough, Mara told herself with sudden conviction. Not a physical coward—she’d never balked at taking a fence when she was riding, and had been thrown more than once. She’d always picked herself up, dusted herself off and climbed back into the saddle, determined not to let fear control her. But that same dauntless courage had failed her time and again when dealing with her father.

  Not anymore, she vowed. He is dead, and he will not control me anymore.

  Mara felt like a butterfly emerging from a chrysalis, struggling to free herself from the confining cocoon that had bound her for years to a false conclusion—that her father hadn’t loved her because somehow she was unworthy of love. Yes, Andre loved her, but her brother had always been a perfect, God-like being in her eyes, so far above mere mortals that she had discounted his love for her as the exception. Andre’s love was like God’s love—immutable. It was her father’s lack of love she’d always struggled to overcome. Her father’s assessment of her as worthless she’d always fought to disprove.

  If that wasn’t true...if her father had been wrong...if she could be loved for who she was...not as a princess, but as a woman, loved by a man...

  A picture of a man rose in her mind—a tall, handsome man with dark hair and bluer-than-blue eyes, with a smile that made her heart ache and her body tingle. A man who handled a gun and a baby with the same easy competence. A man who made her keenly aware of herself as a woman, with a woman’s body, a woman’s heart, a woman’s emotional needs. A man who looked and was dangerous, but who also paradoxically made her feel safe.

  Trace.

  Mara turned over restlessly, the silk sheets rustling. Trace. He already filled her thoughts, day and night. He even filled her dreams. But until now she had accepted his dislike for her as just something that was, the way she’d accepted her father’s hatred.

  If she could pick one man to love her, she would pick Trace. Not because he was drop-dead gorgeous, although he was. Not because he had a body that rivaled Michelangelo’s David, although he did. Not even because he made her feel safe, although that was true, too. She would pick him to love her because there was a deep well of love within him he kept hidden from most of the world, love such as the overwhelming love he showed Alyssa, a child not his own. If Trace loved a woman, there would be nothing held back. Nothing he would not do for her. Nothing he would not share.

  Could she win his love? Was it possible? She’d never been able to win her father’s love, but now she knew it was because he had no love to give—his love had died with her mother. But Trace wasn’t like that. There was love in him to be won...by the right woman. And if she was worthy of being loved, why not try?

  Determination grew in Mara, the same determination she’d once dedicated only to riding and mathematics. Yes, she told herself with a new confidence. Keira had understood—Mara had earned the title of Dr. Marianescu by dedication and hard, grueling work. She could earn Trace’s love the same way.

 
Starting tomorrow she would map out a plan of campaign. Starting tomorrow she would put that campaign into action. But now...just for tonight...she would let herself dream of him. She would let herself imagine what it would be like to be loved by him in every way a man could love a woman.

  She needed to visualize the goal in order to achieve it, just as she’d done when she’d learned to ride. Just as she’d done when she achieved her PhD. And she desperately wanted to achieve this new goal of earning Trace’s love...because she was fast falling for him.

  * * *

  The next morning Mara woke early. She propped herself up against the pillows and set her mind to work planning her campaign. She briefly considered getting a complete makeover—turning herself into the glamorous woman her mother had been. She could probably do it. She knew she resembled her mother closely enough that it was possible to achieve that polished, beautiful veneer, but she discarded the idea almost immediately. If she changed herself in obvious ways, not only would she be uncomfortable with herself, she might draw unwelcome attention from others, especially the paparazzi. And besides, Trace would see it for the ploy it was. A man with a face and body like his probably had all kinds of women angling for his attention.

  No, it had to be something subtle, something that would make him look at her in a new light, but in a way that wouldn’t push him behind that impenetrable barrier. Surprise is the essence of attack. Where had she heard that before? She needed to take Trace by surprise, to make him see her as something other than the princess he was guarding.

  Mara ran a finger along her bottom lip. What was that English expression? Come up on his blind side? That was all well and good so long as she didn’t do it literally—she’d seen how fast he was at drawing his gun, and she didn’t want him to shoot her.

 

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