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Mister Diamond

Page 117

by Chance Carter


  I tried not to think about it most of the time, especially since I couldn’t be sure what any of the feelings rattling around my ribcage meant.

  Tonight, I was alone, and that made it harder not to think about. Joanne and Tristan were out causing mischief somewhere, and Alexander was at a party at the palace, celebrating the royal pregnancy, otherwise I would call him and get a little distraction.

  The Friday night programming should have been enough to entertain me for the few hours until Jo came home, but loneliness dug sharp nails into my spine and refused to let my concentration drift. All I could think about was how much I wished Alex was there, how I wanted to squeeze out every second of our time together. Two months seemed like a long time, but between everything on my plate and everything on his, I wondered how much of that time we’d get to spend together. It was a horrible thought to dwell on, but I couldn’t help myself.

  I was flipping through channels when my buzzer screeched, startling me. Jo must’ve forgotten her key or something. I dropped the remote on the couch and walked over to answer it.

  “Hello?”

  “Special delivery,” came a rich male voice. I knew that voice.

  “Alex?” I jammed my finger on the buzzer. “Get inside.”

  I sprinted to the bathroom and checked my face in the mirror, then sprinted back to the kitchen and tried to appear casual, while adrenaline shot through my system like a flaming arrow. What was he doing here?

  He knocked on the door and I opened it, mouth dropping open at the sight of him.

  “Why are you wearing a tux?” I asked.

  Alex laughed and entered the room, hands in his pockets. “Just be glad the dress code for these things isn’t still white jacket or tails.”

  “Is the party really over so soon?” I glanced at the clock. “It’s only eight o’clock.”

  “Aren’t you glad to see me?”

  “Of course I am.” I stepped up to him, wrapping my arms around his hips and leaning into his chest. His touch brought immediate relief, like cool water on a burn. “I’m confused, though.”

  Alexander tipped my chin up and smiled down at me, green eyes sparkling. “I got bored,” he explained. “I snuck out.”

  I blinked up at him. “Can you do that?”

  “Of course I can.”

  “No, I mean—should you do that?” When that garnered no reaction, I pressed further. “Won’t your family get mad?”

  “Kitty Kat, you worry too much.” He released me and took a step back, brushing a hand over my cheek. He smirked. “I’d be more worried about Teddy. He’ll be pissed when he finds out I came here and not his cousin’s castle party. He’s been badgering me for weeks to go and I’ve told him every time that I couldn’t get out of this family event.”

  “That’s hardly comforting,” I muttered. “Now both your family and Teddy will think I’m a bad influence.”

  “Tamara,” he said in a voice so smooth, so cool, that a shiver worked down my spine. “I’m here because I want to be here. You didn’t force me. And anyway, it’s too late to worry about all that now. I’m here and that’s that.”

  He had a point, but I still couldn’t move the slow gnaw of dread in my gut. I didn’t believe in premonition, but something didn’t feel right.

  “Go put on some warm clothes,” Alex instructed.

  I furrowed my brow. “Why?”

  “We’re going out.”

  “Where?”

  “That’s a—“

  I interrupted him, putting up a hand. “Don’t say the word surprise. I’ll shove you right back out that door.”

  Alex’s cocky smile melted straight past my defenses but I kept up my stern expression. “Okay, I won’t say it. But I’m not telling you until we get there.”

  I sighed, though inside my stomach was flipping and flopping with giddiness. As much as I didn’t like surprises, Alex’s always turned out well. I hurried off to my room to change.

  “Where’s Jo tonight?” Alex called from the living room.

  “Out with Tristan.” I shoved a sweater over my head and put on a pair of jeans.

  “Good thing I didn’t bring Hank, then.” He chuckled.

  I returned and held my arms out for his inspection. “Warm enough?”

  Alex nodded. “Let’s go.”

  Alex’s SUV was outside, and the further into the city center he drove, the more nervous I got. The city meant people, and people meant the possibility of being seen. The fact that he ditched such an important event was reckless enough as it was—did he really need to push his luck?

  Thankfully, Alex didn’t stop the car in front of a packed night club or a fancy restaurant. He parked by a river dock with a canal boat moored alongside it, decorated with strings of twinkling fairy lights. I got out of the car and the breeze lifted the melodic crooning of a Frank Sinatra song to my ears.

  “Are you taking me on a romantic canal cruise?” I asked, suppressing a laugh.

  Alex walked around to my side and grabbed my hand. “Would it be a problem if I was?”

  “No, it’s just...” I bit my lip and smiled up at him. “Incredibly cheesy.”

  Alex narrowed his eyes. “Call me cheesy one more time, Kitty Kat.”

  Oh, easy.

  “You’re cheesy,” I said. “Like a big ‘ol ball of mozzarella.”

  Before I knew what was happening, Alex had hoisted me over his shoulder and was walking toward the boat. I shrieked in surprise and smacked his back, but he simply smacked my butt in return.

  “Let’s just hope I don’t drop you while we board,” he said. “The river can be awfully chilly.”

  “No!” I protested. “I will kill you!”

  “I do believe you’ve just uttered a threat against a member of the royal family, my darling.” He patted my rump again before setting me on my feet on the deck. “I should warn you the penalty for such a crime can be quite severe.”

  “Oh yeah?” I spat out a chunk of hair that had made it into my mouth while he carried me. “Do your worst.”

  Alex’s lips curled and ignited an inferno in my belly. I gulped.

  “My worst?” He took a step closer, pressing his body against mine. “Kitty Kat, you tease me.”

  “I think you’re the one doing the teasing,” I managed to whisper.

  “In that case...” He leaned down and pressed his lips to the shell of my ear. “Your punishment, Miss Callahan, is this: a romantic, starlit canal cruise.”

  He pulled back and his grin had softened from seductive to goofy. I nearly keeled over.

  “Hardly seems like much of a punishment,” I replied.

  “Talk back again and you’ll earn yourself a spanking.”

  “Is that a promise?”

  Alex laughed. “What am I going to do with you?”

  He took me by the hand and led me up to the front of the boat, where a love seat covered with blankets waited for us.

  “Before you get too many filthy thoughts, I should mention I won’t be driving this rig,” he said. “There are a couple of crew members on board so I’d caution you to resist throwing yourself at me.”

  “As if I would,” I said, sliding down onto the love seat and pulling a blanket over my knees.

  Alex sat next to me and wrapped an arm around my shoulder. Sounds of movement behind us indicated we were casting off.

  “Oh, come on,” he drawled. “You can’t help yourself. I’m your James Bond dream man in this tux.”

  Was he ever. Not that I’d admit it.

  “James Bond? More like James Bland.”

  Alex rolled his eyes and cuffed me on the shoulder. “Very clever.”

  The boat started drifting down the river, a light breeze picking at my curls as we gained speed. The bank slid by, and the sounds of the city seemed distant even though we felt too close for comfort.

  “Any news on your charity project?” I asked.

  “Actually, yes. There’s a royal midsummer garden party in a couple of week
s and Edward has given me the green light to announce it then.”

  “That’s incredible!” I said. “You must be excited.”

  “Thrilled.”

  A note of sadness dipped into his voice and I looked up out of curiosity. “You don’t sound too thrilled.”

  “No, I am. It’s just...” He sighed. “I’m worried. What if I make a mistake and screw it all up? What if everything doesn’t go perfectly? This project means a lot to me.”

  The sincerity in his eyes tugged at my heart strings. I clasped his hand in mine and squeezed. “The great thing about charity is that you’re winning just by showing up.”

  He smiled weakly. “I want it to be a success though. I know that it would be if she were still here.”

  I should have figured earlier that the memory of his mom would add extra pressure to his plan. It wasn’t enough just to launch the charities in her name—he needed them to succeed. Failing wasn’t an option for him, because in Alexander’s mind if he did anything less than stellar work he would be sullying the memory of his mom.

  “I know you’re going to succeed, but she would be proud no matter what,” I said. “I didn’t know her, obviously, but I’ve known people like her. My grandmother on my mom’s side, she died when I was still a kid, but that woman was a powerhouse.”

  Alex blinked and some of the lines in his face relaxed. “Tell me about her.”

  I smiled at the few memories I had of her, eating fresh strawberries and blueberries by the carton in the summer heat, gardening together even though I had no idea what I was doing, winter nights when she visited us up north and complained about the cold leeching into her bones.

  “Her name was Rhetta,” I said. “She grew up a poor black woman in the South, but even though she had every reason to grow bitter at the world she never did. During the Civil Rights Movement, she went head to head with some of the nastiest people ever to dig their way up from the mud but she never let it dampen her innate kindness.”

  “She sounds truly inspirational.”

  I snuggled in closer, pulling Alex’s arm around my shoulders and resting my head on his chest. “She was. I try to channel her as much as I can, but I’m afraid I don’t have the same kind of patience.”

  “You’ve put up with me, haven’t you?”

  I grinned and tilted my head to look up at him. “Not that you gave me a choice.”

  Alex bent his head to kiss me, a sweet, soft press of his lips that made my toes tingle.

  “What was your mom like?” I asked. “In private, I mean.”

  A faint smile ticked his lips. “Not all that different from how she was in public,” he replied. “Poised, kind, always smiling. She had time for every person, no matter how insignificant the rest of the world thought they might be. She never put herself first. Even when she got sick, she would fret endlessly about the people she cared about, whether they were her family or the people she built those charities to help.”

  “I can’t imagine how hard it must’ve been to lose her.”

  He nodded thoughtfully. “It’s still hard sometimes.”

  “She would have been proud of you, you know,” I said. “Even without everything you’re doing for her charities. You’re a good man.”

  Alex’s arm tightened, tugging me closer to his chest. His lips pressed into the top of my head but he didn’t say a word. He didn’t need to.

  “You really didn’t need to walk me all the way up to my apartment,” I said, chuckling.

  “I’m a gentleman.”

  I narrowed my eyes at him and inserted my key into the lock. “Sometimes.”

  The fire in Alex’s eyes promised that maybe I was about to see his not-so-gentlemanly side and that thought tickled between my thighs. We’d had such a good, deep evening and a little fun would do us both some good.

  I opened the door and flicked the lights on. From the direction of the couch came a dull thud.

  “Ow!”

  I paused in the doorway and peered toward the source of the noise. Jo’s head popped up above the back of the couch. “Tristan! Are you okay?”

  Alex and I entered the flat and closed the door behind us, rounding the couch to find Tristan sprawled on the floor, rubbing the back of his head. Both he and Jo’s clothing were disheveled, and she started madly buttoning her shirt.

  Tristan’s eyes locked on Alex and he froze. “Your Royal Highness!” He scrambled to his feet, knocking the empty wine bottle on the coffee table to the floor, and lurched down into an awkward bow.

  Alex laughed. “Tristan Noble, right?”

  Tristan rose and nodded. His face was flushed from more than just the wine, but I suppose he didn’t expect to run into the crown prince at his girlfriend’s sister’s apartment. I’d asked Jo not to mention anything to him.

  “I’ll be out of your way,” Tristan said, fumbling around on the table for his wallet.

  “No, stay,” Alex said. “I should actually be heading home.” He turned to me, smiling. “Much as I wish I didn’t have to leave, it’s probably for the best. They’ve probably noticed I’m missing by now.”

  He kissed me lightly on the lips and waved at Jo and Tristan, then strolled out the door.

  I turned back to the young lovers. “It’s nice to meet you, Tristan,” I said. “I’ve heard a lot of nice things about you and for now you’re in my good books, but if you tell a single soul what you saw today I will personally strangle you with your own necktie. Capuche?”

  Chapter 18

  Alexander

  I woke to slobbery kisses and groaned. “Hank! Get off me.”

  He whined.

  Cracking open my eyes I saw him hovering inches above my face, tail wagging. He needed to go out. Fair enough.

  I took him outside and grabbed breakfast from the kitchen on the way back to my apartment. The weather outside was clear and warm, not a breath of wind in the air. It was going to be a calm day, the perfect kind of morning that heralded good things on the horizon.

  No sooner had I taken my first bite of croissant than my father stormed into my apartment without knocking. I couldn’t remember the last time he’d even been in here, never mind the last time he thundered in.

  My father’s weathered face and bristling mustache swam into view as he marched up to my table, brandishing a folded newspaper. Before I could ask what he was doing, he slapped the paper down on the table and pointed an accusing finger to the image that took up half the front page. Tamara and I were at the front of the boat, my arm around her shoulder and her head on my chest. There was a caption underneath.

  REBELLIOUS PRINCE SNEAKS OUT OF PALACE TO TAKE ROMANTIC CANAL CRUISE WITH SECRET ACTRESS GIRLFRIEND, it read. INSIDE SOURCE CONFIRMS RELATIONSHIP. DETAILS ON PAGE 10.

  Inside source? Who had they talked to?

  “Who the hell writes these things?” I muttered, trying not to show how affected I was. I knew something like this was bound to happen eventually, but last night was a decidedly inconvenient time for that to be the case.

  “I cannot believe you!” Father growled. “You snuck out? Are you a child?”

  I gestured to the seat opposite but he remained standing, glaring at me with a fury I hadn’t seen in him for many years.

  Irritation bubbled in my chest for the child comment.

  “What does it matter?” I asked. “Nobody noticed I was gone.”

  His eyes narrowed on me. “It was a family event, Alexander. You’ve exhibited a blatant lack of respect for me and for everyone who cares about you.”

  “Whoa, whoa, whoa.” I rose to my feet, palms facing my father. “Let’s not get confused here. There were very few actual members of our family there. It was a press event, and you know that.”

  “We are royalty, Alexander.” He stood a little taller. This man couldn’t have been born into a more suitable vocation than king. “The country is our family and we have a duty to uphold. Letting them into our lives through ‘press events’ is part of the deal, and you know that.


  I didn’t much fancy having my words slung back at me, but my father had made one critical error.

  I pointed to the picture of Tamara. “Here you go. They’ve wheedled their way into a critical part of my life. We’re even.”

  His frown dipped even further, if that was possible. “We are not even. You owe an apology to Edward and Clarissa.”

  “Fine,” I said.

  Honestly, that seemed fair. I would’ve come to that conclusion with or without my father’s interference.

  He took a closer look at the image, and I could see him running her face through his internal database to find a match.

  “Tamara Callahan,” I filled in. “You obviously haven’t flipped to page ten.”

  His eyes returned to mine. “I don’t make it a habit to read this filth.” A second later, his brow furrowed. “Is this why you’ve been behaving so rudely to Svetlana?”

  Did everything in this place revolve around that Swedish princess? I already had Edward jumping down my throat about her, the last thing I needed was for my father to join in.

  “I wish you would all leave that alone,” I said through gritted teeth. “I don’t know how many times I’ve told Edward that I’m not marrying that girl.”

  “Because she’s a princess,” Dad said, indicating that he and Edward had spoken about it. Of course they had. They probably had a binder full of ideas on how to fix me.

  “Princess or no, I’m not interested.”

  He shook his head, and for a second his anger flickered into something a lot less easy to swallow. Disappointment.

  “You’re a fool, Alexander,” he said. “Whether you were going to marry the girl or not, it was cruel of you to behave as you did. You were unkind to her strictly to give your family the middle finger.” He stared at me hard. “Your mother may have been a princess of the people, but she was still a princess. And she would be ashamed of you right now.”

  That blow hit me harder than a brick to the chest. I didn’t even think—I just stalked around my father and to the door, calling out for Hank before slamming the door behind me.

 

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