The Prince's Second Chance
Page 1
“I can just imagine the headlines that are scrolling through your mind,” he said, a definite edge to his voice.
She smiled, unable to resist taunting him. “I doubt that you can.”
“Why don’t you give me a chance to tell my side of the story?”
“Because I’m not interested in anything you have to say.” She started to move past him, but he caught her arm.
The jolt of heat that shot through her veins in response to the contact was as unwelcome as it was unexpected. She had to wonder what it said about her that the briefest touch could send her pulse racing. It was as if she were hard-wired to respond to this man as she’d never responded to anyone else before or since their long-ago affair.
His fingers uncurled. His hand dropped away. “Of course not,” he said sardonically. “It’s just about selling papers, right?”
“That’s my job,” she reminded him.
Dear Reader,
Gabriella Vasquez and her “Dear Gabby” column were originally created to introduce the Reigning Men series on eHarlequin. She was only supposed to be a promotional tool, not a heroine. I certainly had no intention of giving her a story of her own.
But as Gabby wrote her columns, there was a common thread in her responses to readers—an animosity towards the prince regent’s cousin, Cameron Leandres. And who could blame her? In the original series, he tried to usurp the throne from Prince Rowan and he put the moves on Prince Marcus’s girlfriend—and almost every other female in sight.
Still, Gabriella’s aversion to the prince seemed deeply personal, and I began to wonder: What could have happened to make her dislike him so much? And I began to worry: Could I make this prince into a hero?
Because obviously there was some kind of history between these two characters…and it was a story I needed to tell. The Prince’s Second Chance is that story—I hope you enjoy it!
Best,
Brenda Harlen
THE PRINCE’S SECOND CHANCE
BRENDA HARLEN
Books by Brenda Harlen
Silhouette Special Edition
Once and Again #1714
*Her Best-Kept Secret #1756
The Marriage Solution #1811
†One Man’s Family #1827
The New Girl in Town #1859
**The Prince’s Royal Dilemma #1898
**The Prince’s Cowgirl Bride #1920
††Family in Progress #1928
**The Prince’s Holiday Baby #1942
‡The Texas Tycoon’s Christmas Baby #2016
‡‡The Engagement Project #2021
‡‡The Pregnancy Plan #2038
‡‡The Baby Surprise #2056
§Thunder Canyon Homecoming #2079
**The Prince’s Second Chance #2100
Silhouette Romantic Suspense
McIver’s Mission #1224
Some Kind of Hero #1246
Extreme Measures #1282
Bulletproof Hearts #1313
Dangerous Passions #1394
BRENDA HARLEN
grew up in a small town surrounded by books and imaginary friends. Although she always dreamed of being a writer, she chose to follow a more traditional career path first. After two years of practicing as an attorney (including an appearance in front of the Supreme Court of Canada), she gave up her “real” job to be a mom and to try her hand at writing books. Three years, five manuscripts and another baby later, she sold her first book—an RWA Golden Heart winner—to Silhouette Books.
Brenda lives in southern Ontario with her real-life husband/hero, two heroes-in-training and two neurotic dogs. She is still surrounded by books (too many books, according to her children) and imaginary friends, but she also enjoys communicating with “real” people. Readers can contact Brenda by email at brendaharlen@yahoo.com or by snail mail c/o Silhouette Books, 233 Broadway, Suite 1001, New York, NY 10279.
In memory of Catherine Elizabeth Witmer
~writer, reader, reviewer & friend~
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Epilogue
Chapter One
“Do you have a minute?”
It wasn’t every day that Cameron Leandres looked up from his desk to find Rowan Santiago, his cousin and the prince regent of Tesoro del Mar, standing in the doorway of his office.
“Of course,” Cameron said, because he couldn’t imagine responding in any other way to the ruler of the country. “But not much more than that—I’m meeting with the Ardenan Trade Minister at nine-thirty.”
“Actually, that meeting has been…postponed,” Rowan told him.
Cameron frowned. “No one told me.”
“I just got off the phone with Benedicto Romero.”
He immediately recognized the name of Ardena’s king and waited silently, apprehensively, for his cousin to continue.
“He’s furious about this morning’s paper and threatening not to renew our trade agreement.”
“I skimmed the front section,” Cameron said. “I didn’t see anything that would impact our negotiations.”
“Did you check the society pages?” The prince regent tossed the paper onto his desk.
The photo and the headline battled for his attention, but it was the bold words that won out: Prince Cameron Adds New Notch to His Bedpost?
It was a mockery of the headline that had run on the front page only a few days earlier, Prince Cameron Adds New Title to His Portfolio, announcing that he’d been named the country’s new Minister of Trade. He didn’t want to know what this article claimed, but his eyes automatically began to skim the brief paragraph.
Apparently his new responsibilities on the political scene haven’t curbed the prince’s extracurricular activities. In fact, just last night the prince was spotted at Club Sapphire making some serious moves on the dance floor—and on the King of Ardena’s youngest daughter.
Cameron clenched his jaw, holding back the vehement curse that instinctively sprang to his lips. He glanced at the photo again, recognizing the woman who had plastered herself against him on the dance floor.
“I didn’t know that she was the king’s daughter,” he said, ruefully acknowledging that truth wasn’t much of a defense.
“The king’s seventeen-year-old daughter.”
Cameron dropped his head into his hands, and this time he didn’t manage to hold back the curse.
“Did you sleep with her?” Rowan asked bluntly.
“No!” Maybe he shouldn’t have been shocked by the question, but he was. And while he might have told anyone else that it wasn’t their business, he couldn’t say that to the prince regent. They both knew his actions reflected on his office.
He was relieved to be able to assert his innocence in this situation, because even if he hadn’t guessed that the woman in the photo was underage, he had known that she was far too young for even a serious flirtation. While he hadn’t always been discriminating in his choice of female companions, he was thirty-six years old now and long past the age where he was easily seduced by a warm body and willing smile.
“I was there with Allegra de Havilland,” he explained, naming his frequent if not exclusive companion of the past six months, “and this girl—she only said her name was Leticia—came up to me on th
e dance floor while my date was in the ladies’ room. We didn’t even dance for two minutes. When Allegra came back, she and I left.”
His cousin nodded. “Then there’s no reason to believe that this can’t be salvaged.”
Cameron didn’t know how to respond. His cousin had taken a chance on him six years earlier when he’d first appointed him to his cabinet, after Cameron had done everything in his power to undermine Rowan’s position. At the time, he’d suspected that Rowan was subscribing to the old adage “keep your friends close and your enemies closer” and he couldn’t blame him for that. But over time, as they’d worked together on various projects, they’d developed a mutual respect for one another. And Cameron would forever be grateful to his cousin for giving him the chance to be something more than a worthless title in the history books.
When he finally spoke, it was only to say, “I regret that this has caused a problem with the king.”
Rowan nodded. “You need to be extra cautious and remember that, as a royal and a member of public office, everything you say and do is subject to media scrutiny.”
“Do you want my resignation?” He held his breath, waiting for his cousin’s response.
“No, I don’t want your resignation. You’ve been an asset to this administration.”
Cameron exhaled. “Do you want me to talk to the king?”
“No,” Rowan said again. “I’ve invited him to join me for lunch. Hopefully I can smooth things over with him then.”
Cameron refused to consider what the repercussions might be if his cousin failed. Rowan hadn’t been born for the position he was in, but he’d stepped in without missing a beat when Julian and Catherine, his brother and sister-in-law, were killed in a fluke explosion on their yacht.
Maybe Cameron had resented Rowan’s appointment back then, because he’d felt that he was just as qualified and capable of doing the prince regent’s job. But over the past half-dozen years, he’d realized that he didn’t want those duties and responsibilities, even on an interim basis. And he regretted that his own actions—however inadvertent—were making his cousin’s job more difficult.
“I also contacted La Noticia,” Rowan continued. “Because I was annoyed that Alex would run such a headline without at least giving us a heads-up.”
Alex Girard was the society columnist for the local paper whose fair and objective reporting had earned him several invitations to the palace and the opportunity to write exclusive stories about the royal family. Now that Cameron thought about it, it wasn’t only out-of-character for the reporter to launch an attack on a member of the prince regent’s cabinet but potentially detrimental to his own career.
“As it turns out, Alex didn’t have anything to do with the story. He’s out of the country for a couple of weeks so the society pages are being covered by another staff writer— Gabriella Vasquez.”
Cameron should have guessed that. Not that she’d always hated him. In fact, there was a time when they’d been extremely close. But that was long before she’d become “Dear Gabby” and started using her column to vilify both his character and his activities. And while her references to him had always been unmistakable, she was usually more subtle in her condemnation. Now she’d apparently taken the gloves off.
And he was prepared to do the same.
Gabriella wasn’t surprised when she received the summons to her editor’s office, but she did feel the tiniest twinge of guilt when she saw Allison Jenkins—one of her oldest and dearest friends—rubbing her forehead, as she often did when a major headache was brewing.
“You wanted to see me?” Gabriella said.
The editor looked up. “I’m sure you know why.”
“Since there wasn’t anything particularly controversial in my ‘Dear Gabby’ column this week, I’m guessing this is about the ‘Around Town’ segment.”
“Would you also like to take a guess as to how many phone calls I’ve received this morning? Or how many emails have flooded my inbox?”
Gabriella’s own office computer had actually been so overloaded with incoming messages that it had crashed, but she was unconcerned. Everyone knew that the newspaper business was suffering and anything that increased circulation—as her contribution to the society pages had done exponentially—couldn’t be a bad thing.
“So put your big girl panties on and deal with it,” Gabriella said. “That’s why they pay you the big bucks.”
Alli shook her head. “You’re not even sorry.”
“Why should I be? I didn’t write anything that wasn’t true.”
“You may have created an international scandal,” her editor warned.
“I wasn’t dirty dancing with the King of Ardena’s underage daughter,” she pointed out.
“They were dancing,” Alli repeated. “There is absolutely no evidence of anything more than that.”
“I never said that there was.”
“No,” her boss agreed. “But your text implies that the prince is a seducer of virgins.”
Gabriella knew that he was, but she didn’t intend to admit that to her boss. “Royal headlines sell papers,” she reminded Allison.
“And we get a lot of inside news because we’ve worked hard to establish a good relationship with the palace.”
“Do you really think anyone at the palace even noticed an article buried in the middle of page twelve?”
“I don’t think it, I know it,” Alli told her. “Because one of the multitude of phone calls that I received was from Prince Rowan.”
Gabriella swallowed. “The prince regent called you?”
“And he wasn’t very happy.”
“Then I’ll apologize for putting you in an awkward position,” she said. “But I can’t apologize for what I wrote. Prince Cameron uses his title and his charm to lure women into his bed and innocent girls should be forewarned.”
“Then take out a public service announcement with your name on it but don’t use this newspaper to pursue what is obviously a personal vendetta.”
Gabriella felt the sting of that reprimand because she knew there was some truth in her boss’s words. When Alex Girard had asked her to cover the celebrity watch while he was on vacation, she’d had mixed feelings about the request. For the better part of sixteen years, she’d been careful to steer clear of anyone connected with the royal family. Of course, that hadn’t been too difficult for a commoner who didn’t move in the same circles they did.
But this new assignment would require Gabriella to seek them out, to go to the places they were known to frequent, to rub elbows with their friends and acquaintances. Of course, the assignment was broader than the royal family, but everyone knew that the Santiagos and the Leandreses were the real celebrities in Tesoro del Mar.
“For Monday’s paper, I wrote about the prince regent’s picnic at the beach with his family. Tuesday, I covered Princess Molly’s book launch and her reading at the library. Yesterday, I was out of town interviewing the Hollywood elite who are filming a romantic comedy in San Pedro. In fact, I didn’t even want to go to Club Sapphire last night, but I got a tip that ‘several people of note’ were going to be there, so I went.”
“Who else was there?” Alli wanted to know.
“Most of the Hollywood contingent,” Gabriella admitted.
“Why didn’t you get any pictures of them?”
“Because I already have a ton of photos that were taken during the interview sessions.”
Alli dropped her head into her hands. “Are you trying to give me an ulcer?”
“I did my job,” Gabriella said.
“Which you could have done just as effectively by concentrating on the visiting actors—what they were wearing, what they were drinking, who was hooked up with whom.”
“And ignoring the prince’s presence?” Gabriella challenged.
“It would have been enough to reference the fact that Prince Cameron was there,” her editor insisted.
“With the king’s daughter,” Gabriella remin
ded her.
“I’m going to end up with an ulcer and a pink slip,” Alli muttered. “But at least I’ll have you to keep me company when I’m unemployed.”
“I didn’t cross any lines.”
“Tell that to the legal department when we get slapped with a libel suit.”
“It’s not libelous if it’s true,” Gabriella insisted.
“But the truth is often a matter of opinion, isn’t that correct, Ms. Vasquez?”
Gabriella recognized that voice. Even after more than sixteen years, the smooth, sexy tone hadn’t faded from her memory, and her breath caught in her throat as she spun around to face the door.
Cameron.
“This day just keeps getting better and better,” Alli grumbled, but not so loudly that the prince could hear.
Gabriella didn’t see her friend move—she couldn’t seem to tear her eyes from the man lounging indolently against the doorjamb—but she heard the chair slide and knew that Alli was rising to her feet in deference to the man at her door. She would probably even curtsy.
Gabriella refused to do the same. She wouldn’t bow and scrape to this man. Not now, not ever again.
But she couldn’t deny that seeing him made her heart slam against her ribs, and while she was determined to play the scene out coolly and casually, her knees had gone just a little weak.
He hadn’t changed much in sixteen years. His hair was still thick and dark and slightly tousled, as if he couldn’t be bothered to tame it. His golden-brown eyes were further enhanced by thick, black lashes and bold, arched brows. His perfectly-shaped and seductively-soft lips were now compressed in a firm line, the only outward sign of his displeasure.
He was dressed in a charcoal-colored suit with a snowy white shirt that enhanced his olive skin and a black-and-silver patterned tie. But in his case, it was the man who made the clothes rather than vice versa, and not just because he was a royal but because of the supreme confidence he wore even more comfortably than the designer threads on his back.