Prince Charming Undercover

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Prince Charming Undercover Page 29

by Debra Salonen


  Nick rolled them to their sides and did his best to oblige as quickly as possible. “Love, honor and obey. I like that,” she said, licking her lip in a sexy way that cost her a nip on the belly button.

  Her laughter made him want to slow things down. They had so much to talk about.

  “Later,” she whispered in his ear. “Sex now. Talk later.”

  He didn’t ask how she knew what he was thinking. She was a Gypsy princess. Her mother was Puri Dye. Besides, although he didn’t plan to mention it, he knew what she was thinking, too. Because he felt exactly the same fire.

  They were linked. Somehow. By fate. Through time. He didn’t understand it, but neither did he doubt it.

  She reached between their bodies and touched him. “Do we need…?” he asked, looking into her eyes.

  Her lips curved in a smile. “Not if you trust me. I’m not pregnant. My period started the day I came home from the hospital. And I’ve been taking the pill faithfully.”

  “I was an ass about that. If you want to know the truth, I was hoping you were pregnant, so I didn’t have to worry whether or not you loved me. We would have gotten married because it was the right thing to do.”

  “Me, too.”

  “Thank you for loving me, Grace.”

  She moved against him. “You’re welcome. Now, dazzle me with brilliance. I flew two thousand miles and just lost at cards. It’s the least you can do.”

  He scooted downward until his lips brushed against the credit-card size bandage on her side. “Does this hurt? Do we need to be careful of reopening it?”

  “A mere scratch,” she said breathlessly, but he was so attuned to her feelings he knew she was lying.

  “R…right,” he said, moving lower. He brought her close to the edge then backed away as she writhed with yearning.

  “You…do that…again…and…”

  Her threat was lost in a gasp of pleasure as he took them exactly where they needed to be.

  Afterward, Grace wasn’t sure she could move. Her body had traveled into a sphere that she didn’t recognize. Another world. A beautiful place, warm, safe and filled with peace. She never wanted to leave, but a small child, a boy, was sitting just outside the light. She couldn’t quite see him, but she knew he was there. Alone. And frightened.

  She went to the edge of the circle and waited for him to look up. When he did, she smiled and held out her hand. “I’m Grace. I’m here. You don’t have to be alone anymore.”

  He didn’t come to her right away, but she was patient. She knew this was important. Maybe the most important thing she would ever do in her life. She waited, and finally he reached out and took her hand.

  And stepped into the circle.

  “You’re home,” she said, returning to the world where a solid chest was under her cheek, moving up and down with each breath.

  What did it mean? She didn’t know, but the vision filled her with peace and a sense of wholeness. That was enough for now. She might think about it later.

  “Do we need to talk more?” Nick’s voice was husky.

  She snuggled a little closer. “What more is there to say? You won. Me. My future. Our future.” She lifted her chin and turned her head to look at him. “Although you do understand that doesn’t mean I’m some kind of chattel. This is the twenty-first century.”

  His chuckle rumbled under her ear. “I didn’t think it meant you were my sex slave. You’re my princess. I’m only sorry you didn’t get your prince.”

  Grace gave him a look that said he’d lost his wits. “How do you figure that? The man I’m going to marry is noble, gallant, generous and kind. He takes care of the people in his life and the citizens of the world at large. He’s handsome and dashing and he loves me. What more could a princess ask for?”

  “Gold? Treasure? A palace?”

  She looked around. “This place has potential. It just needs…me.”

  He laughed and kissed her. His kingdom was complete, or would be when they had a passel of children around them.

  “I love you, princess.”

  “Thank goodness. There’s big money riding on this, you know.”

  “There is?”

  She nodded somberly. “Apparently, Claude set up odds at one of the small casinos. So far, bets are running heavily in my favor, but a few silly people thought I’d come back alone.”

  Nick shook his head. Only a fool would throw his money away like that. When it came to love, Nick was—now and always—betting on Grace.

  “Well, we’ll show them. I’m thinking...wedding at the Bellagio?

  Her mouth dropped open and her eyes went wide. “Really? You want to get married in Vegas? With all my...I mean, our...crazy family invited?” She blinked back tears. “Oh, my gosh, I know the perfect place. It’s sorta been my dream, to be honest. I just never thought it would happen.” She glanced around. “Where’s my phone? I’ll show you.”

  Our crazy family. Nick hadn’t thought his heart could feel any fuller, but he knew she’d sealed their fate with those casual three words.

  He could finally admit to himself: I miss Vegas. Without his dad’s presence at the station, he hadn’t felt completely in sync back at work. He found himself checking in with Nick more often than necessary, making excuses to stay on top of the case against Charles. One foot in one world, one in the other.

  Who am I kidding? I’m moving to Las Vegas. Maybe not right away. If his promotion came through he’d have to take it--for his dad’s legacy as much as for himself, but eventually his world would come full circle. Of that he was certain.

  He laughed and rolled them over to make sure he had her full attention. “Later, princess. We can make all the arrangements you want after we’re done consummating our proposal.”

  Will they or won’t they...get married? You will find out if you keep reading the Betting On Love series. Kate’s story begins here: THE DADDY GAMBLE.

  Betting On Love #2: Kate’s story

  CHAPTER 1

  “You’re fired.”

  Kate Parlier Grant glanced around the empty parking lot, glad she’d tested the words aloud before actually saying them to the man who was meeting her here.

  Thanks to television and a certain real-estate tycoon, the phrase had turned into a cliché. Kate needed to find a different way of telling Rob Brighten that he wasn’t her lawyer anymore.

  “Your services are no longer needed.” Yeah, right! Rob had met her family—and had defended several members. If anyone needed an attorney on retainer, it was the Parlier clan.

  “Rob, this isn’t working out,” she tried.

  No, too relationship-ish.

  The fact was she liked Rob. And she appreciated everything he’d done for her family, but this was about Maya. And she couldn’t take any chances where her daughter’s future was concerned.

  She walked back to her ten-year-old Subaru wagon and turned around to face Romantique, the restaurant she owned with her sister, Grace. Sighing, she rested her butt on the faded silver fender. The day was already heating up and the wind—a constant in Las Vegas—whipped her hair about her face.

  She parted the curly mop with her fingers and pushed as much of it as she could behind her ears. She’d left the house in such a hurry she’d forgotten her visor and sunglasses. The bright morning sun was already giving her a headache, but as soon as she’d resolved this matter with Rob, she’d escape into Romantique.

  March had been a lion of a month for Kate and her family. Four long weeks of stress. First, they’d found out Nikolai Sarna, houseguest and distant relative, wasn’t an out-of-work ex-con at all. He was really a cop investigating Charles Harmon, the man Grace had planned to go into business with. Then Grace managed to get shot, and Charles, who’d been arrested for insurance fraud and a bunch of other charges, had directed his fury at the Parlier family. Using his many connections, he’d created havoc, including the E. coli firestorm that had closed Romantique.

  But that had only been part of Kate’s ordeal. I
an Grant, her ex-husband, had somehow managed to convince the State of Nevada parole board that he was fully rehabilitated and should be released early after serving just two years of his six-year sentence for embezzlement. She’d hired Rob to argue against parole at the hearing, but apparently her fear that Ian might take their daughter and disappear—as only a Gypsy can—didn’t impress them.

  Ian was being released soon. And he wanted shared custody. Rob had failed her.

  He was a nice guy but new to the area—and young. He’d handled her family’s legal troubles with finesse but hadn’t been able to block Ian’s bid for freedom. Why? Was it because he didn’t believe her when she told him Ian was a threat? Or was he not that interested in child custody cases? He hadn’t even handled the case himself.

  Maybe Maya is right, Kate thought. Although only four and a half, her daughter was quite astute when it came to reading people. “He doesn’t like kids,” she’d told Kate not long after being introduced to Rob.

  Kate hadn’t given the charge much credence because, at that point, price and expediency had been her main criteria for picking a lawyer. Besides, Maya usually managed to find something wrong with every man of dating age that her mother came into contact with. Kate knew why. Maya’s most cherished dream was having a mommy and daddy who lived together. “Like a real family,” as Maya put it.

  Which was never going to happen.

  Ian was a charming con man who couldn’t be trusted. Period. And Kate would do whatever it took to make sure her ex didn’t have easy access to his daughter. Even if that meant firing her current lawyer and going into debt to hire the toughest family attorney in Las Vegas.

  Pushing off from the car, she resumed her pacing. She’d called Rob’s cell phone on her way to work, thinking she might be able to handle the matter on the phone—or even better, leave a message. But he’d answered on the second ring and had immediately offered to stop by the restaurant, as if the detour weren’t miles out of the way.

  She walked to the back door of the building. She loved this place almost as much as she loved her daughter. She’d poured her heart and soul into the restaurant after her marriage failed.

  The burnt sienna stucco walls and dark green canvas canopies, which required replacing twice a year thanks to the beating they took from the Las Vegas sun, had been her idea. “I want to create a Tuscan flavor,” she’d told Grace.

  Her fingers closed around the greasy yellow caution tape and ripped it away. Her anger simmered at the undeserved, malicious charge. The blow to Romantique’s reputation had been disastrous, perhaps even fatal. They wouldn’t know until they reopened. If they reopened.

  With Grace out of the picture—and Kate distracted by the threat Ian posed, Romantique’s future looked shaky at best.

  The distinctive sound of a sports car engine intruded into her thoughts. Seconds later, a sleek silver status symbol pulled into the parking lot her restaurant shared with an upscale strip mall in northwest Las Vegas.

  Her heart rate sped up a notch. Because of what she had to do, not because of Rob’s presence, she told herself. Unsuccessfully.

  Robert James Brighten.

  Rob.

  If she were honest, she’d admit that part of the reason she needed to let him go was the disturbing attraction she felt toward him. Which was crazy. Not that he wasn’t damn appealing, but the timing couldn’t have been worse—even if he weren’t all wrong for her. Single. Never been married. Childless. Four years her junior. Not to mention, the son of her friend and right hand in the kitchen, Jo Grant.

  Thank goodness he’d never given her any indication that he was attracted to her, she thought, bracing herself for what she had to do.

  The Lexus purred to a stop. Kate waited on the sidewalk as the driver’s side door opened. Rob unfolded his long legs and rose with the amazing fluidity of the young and fit. Once standing, he leaned over to retrieve something and her gaze zeroed in on his derriere. Elegantly sculpted in a tailored pinstripe suit. She tried not to ogle, but a person who had been without sex for as long as she had been could only muster so much willpower.

  As usual, he was dressed conservatively. “His ex-fiancée brainwashed him into believing that dull and boring made him look older and more lawyerlike,” his mother had complained one time. Jo’s antipathy for the woman her only son had planned to marry had been obvious.

  Kate couldn’t help smiling when he turned to face her. A pale plum shirt rested beneath a red-and-silver tie. Maybe his ex-fiancée’s influence was wearing off.

  “’Morning, Kate,” he hailed. “I’m glad you caught me before I got to the office—or should I say the Black Hole?”

  The wind attacked his thick brown hair, which was long enough to graze his collar. She recalled thinking the first time she met Rob, when Jo had brought him to Romantique for lunch, that he possessed a hint of renegade under the guise of his staid suit. A touch of Gypsy, she’d privately called it.

  After Ian, who was Romani, Kate had vowed that if she ever got involved with another man, he wouldn’t carry a drop of Rom blood in his veins. Rob fit that criterion. Too bad he was wrong for her in every other way.

  “Thanks for coming. We need to talk.”

  He nodded, pausing to toss his expensive-looking sunglasses on the seat of his car before he locked the door. “You heard about the parole hearing, I take it.”

  He stepped closer, squinting against the bright light. His eye color had intrigued her from the first. An odd combination of gold and green that reminded her of a desert shrub she couldn’t name.

  His smile was friendly, concerned. His demeanor that of a person you could trust. If Kate had any trust left. Which she didn’t.

  Ian had made sure of that.

  “What went wrong? I thought you were filing a motion or something. Don’t victims have some say when a convicted felon comes up for parole?” she asked, trying to keep her emotions from showing in her voice.

  “In the past, yes. But nowadays the bottom line is money. The state of Nevada has more prisoners than it wants to feed, clothe and provide medical care for. White-collar criminals like your ex-husband are deemed a low threat to the community at large. Plus, he has health issues. They couldn’t wait to get him off their books.”

  “What kind of health issues?”

  “Apparently, he has hepatitis C. As I understand it, hepatitis involves an inflammation of the liver and spreads through contact with infected blood, like AIDS, but the recovery rate is better, with proper treatment.”

  She’d heard of hepatitis in a vague way. “Are they absolutely sure? Ian is a consummate liar. If there was a way to fake some illness to play on the parole board’s sympathies, he’d do it.”

  Rob shook his head. “No, his illness is legit. And he had a young, idealistic law student helping make sure his paperwork was in order. He did everything right at the hearing, and I didn’t.”

  Kate blinked, shocked to hear such a bald confession.

  “I blew it, Kate. In California, the process would have been handled differently. We’d have had more time to present our case. But that’s no excuse. I should have gone to the hearing myself, instead of sending my associate.”

  “Why didn’t you?”

  He met her gaze, his green eyes truly troubled. “I honestly felt a woman would hold more sway with the board, since she was reading your letter. I gambled…and lost. But my gut says nothing we argued would have made a difference. They based their decision on economics.”

  Money. That Kate understood. Her savings account was just about depleted, and she still hadn’t gotten a bill from Rob’s firm.

  “You won’t be billed for this, by the way,” he said as if reading her mind.

  “I beg your pardon?”

  “I failed, Kate. I sure as hell don’t plan on charging you. Talk about adding insult to injury.”

  Pride made her say, “I’m not a charity case, Rob.”

  “I know. You’re a businesswoman. And you know the importanc
e of maintaining positive customer relations, right? Bad PR can kill you when you’re just starting out—or, in my case, just starting over.”

  According to Jo, Rob had had mixed emotions about being assigned to the Las Vegas branch of the law firm he’d worked for since passing the bar. He claimed to welcome the challenge and was delighted to be living closer to his mother, but Jo said he still had one foot in the Bay area. Whether that meant property-wise or emotionally, Kate hadn’t asked. She knew he’d made an offer on a house here but the negotiations had fallen apart. Jo claimed that whole thing had been for the benefit of his bosses—to show he was a team player and in for the count.

  “He hates the desert and can’t wait to get back home,” Jo had said. “But he also knows that buying property is a good thing, especially in this kind of market.”

  Kate wanted a house so bad she sometimes dreamed of floor plans.

  “So where does this leave me?” she asked, forcing her mind back to her most immediate problem. “Ian is definitely getting out of prison, right?”

  “Correct. According to the state of Nevada, he’s paid his debt to society and deserves a chance to start life fresh, although he’ll be on parole for the next two years.”

  Debt to society, she silently fumed. What about his debt to her? To their daughter? “I don’t care what he does as long as he leaves us alone, but that isn’t going to happen, is it?”

  His frown made him look older. “He’s Maya’s father. He’s petitioned the court for joint custody. There isn’t a hearing date set up yet, but you and Ian will both meet with a court-appointed mediator who will evaluate the situation and make a recommendation.”

  Kate’s heart rate sped up recalling the dream she’d had the night before. A nightmare, actually. Her daughter being carried away on the back of a giant white spider. A spider with Ian’s eyes. “He’ll take her and run. I know he will.”

 

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