A Princess for Christmas

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A Princess for Christmas Page 8

by Jenny Holiday


  And why was that disappointing?

  Marie reminded herself that Leo’s romantic attachments or lack thereof were no concern of hers, had absolutely no bearing on her life.

  Some awkwardness settled as they made their way to the lunchroom. Munchkins and flying monkeys and all manner of creature were milling around, reunited with proud parents. Marie’s awkwardness wasn’t only that she didn’t want to out herself as royalty, but that she felt her otherness. Her apartness. She wasn’t a parent. There were no children running up to hug her—and she probably wouldn’t have known how to act if there were. There was no place for her in this circle of warmth and goodwill.

  She tried to tell herself this was nothing new. She was accustomed to feeling like she didn’t belong—like she wasn’t charming enough, or graceful enough, to meet people’s expectations. It happened all the time. At parties—like last night on the boat. Anytime she had to dance. When she was trying to get her father and his advisers to let her allocate some time and capital to what they snootily called her “do-gooder projects.”

  But it actually made sense that she felt like an outsider here, at this middle school in the Bronx. She was one, objectively speaking.

  So why did that fact make her so sad?

  Marie watched Daniela approach Gabby. She had the dog that had played Toto—and that had been in the taxi the other night—on a leash. They embraced, and soon they were talking easily. Dani didn’t have a child here, either, but she had an ease about her that Marie envied.

  Her brooding was cut off by the appearance of Leo by her side.

  “There you are. I was starting to wonder if you’d turned into a pumpkin.”

  She tried not to smile. She didn’t want to be so easy for him to amuse. “I think it was the carriage that turned into a pumpkin, not Cinderella.”

  “Whatever.” He hitched his head toward the center of the gathering, where Gabby and Daniela were still smiling and laughing. “Come on.”

  “I don’t want to intrude.”

  “Are you kidding? She would murder me in my sleep if she found out you were here and she didn’t get to say hello. Actually, no, she wouldn’t wait for me to fall asleep. She’d just do it here, in cold blood. Do you want my blood on your hands?”

  “I do need someone to drive me around this weekend.”

  “Follow me.” Leo cut a path for them through the crowd, nodding at the occasional parent. As they passed Dorothy, who was huddling with Glinda the Good Witch, he leaned over and spoke low in Marie’s ear. “Contrary to appearances, Dorothy and Glinda are first-class bullies.”

  “Is this the source of the social trouble your sister is having?”

  “I think so. She seems to want to be friends with them, but I’m not sure why. They seem awful.”

  “Like the Plastics.”

  “Like the what?”

  “From the movie Mean Girls.”

  “I haven’t seen it.”

  Marie was tickled that she could pull out an American pop culture reference Leo didn’t know. “The only thing to do, really, is to wait it out. Grow up and have your revenge.”

  “Is that what you did?”

  “What do you mean?”

  “I mean Lucrecia von Bachenheim,” he said without hesitation.

  She was surprised he remembered her actual name, given that he’d been calling her Lucrecia von Whatever yesterday.

  “Well, I’m not sure I really achieved revenge. I guess my revenge is more in my position, but I was born to that, so I can’t really take credit for it.”

  “Did Lucrecia von Bachenheim address the United Nations yesterday?”

  She was saved from having to respond, because they’d reached Gabby, but she took his point. In fact, his point made her smile to herself.

  “I told her you were here but that you wanted to keep things locked down,” Leo whispered.

  “Hi!” Gabby whisper-yelled. Then she started to curtsy. It was impossibly cute and completely unnecessary, so Marie, before she could overthink it, intercepted her with a hug. See? She could do this.

  “You were wonderful!”

  “I can’t believe you came!”

  Marie glanced at Leo. It wasn’t like she’d been planning to come.

  Leo winked at her. “She said she couldn’t miss it.”

  “Gabby, you were so good!” A voice from behind Marie caused her to turn, but not before she’d caught sight of the look on Leo’s face.

  It was Dorothy, with Glinda by her side. Hmm.

  Gabby stiffened. “Oh, I only had one line. You guys were the ones who were so good!” Her enthusiasm was clearly forced. Marie had no idea precisely what these girls had done to Gabby, but she found herself inclined to dislike them on sight. That inclination was ratified when Glinda outright ogled Leo in a way that was entirely inappropriate for an eighth grader to look at a grown man. “Hi, Leo.”

  “Girls,” Leo said, and Marie wondered if he was stressing the word to remind them of the age gap.

  “I don’t believe we’ve met,” Dorothy said to Marie, the formal phrase making her sound like a little girl impersonating an adult.

  “This is my friend, Marie,” Leo said quickly, and though she appreciated that he was rushing to introduce her like that so her cover wouldn’t be blown, Marie had changed her mind on that front. What was a little unwanted attention if it would earn Gabby some social capital?

  So she lifted her chin, tried to channel her mother, and said, “Good afternoon. I am Marie Joséphine Annagret Elena, Princess of Eldovia, and I’m a friend of Gabriella’s.”

  Well, eff him. Leo didn’t know whether to laugh or to whoop in victory. The bomb Marie had dropped on Rosie and Allison, aka Dorothy and Glinda, literally struck them dumb, something he would have thought impossible.

  Marie took advantage of their silence, waiting only a few beats before turning to him and saying, in that snootily regal tone of hers, “Gabriella, Leonardo, Daniela, shall we be going?”

  “Why yes, Your Royal Highness,” he said—no fake honorifics this time—“I think we shall.” He held his arms out wide, intending to encompass all three of the amazing women he had in his charge this afternoon, and gestured toward the exit. He caught a glimpse of each of their faces before they turned to leave. Gabby, with her eyes wide and jaw dropped, looked like the surprised-face emoji. Dani was clearly holding back laughter. Marie had notched her chin even higher and was positively radiating regality.

  Neither her face nor her bearing changed as they wound their way through the crowd in the lunchroom, drawing stares. It wasn’t until they were outside on the relatively sparsely populated sidewalk that she became more herself. Dani started outright laughing, and that cracked Marie’s facade. She smiled, and the dimples—the real ones—came out.

  “I like you,” Dani said, and Max yapped happily, as if to signal his agreement. “This is Max,” she said, gesturing to the mutt.

  “Oh!” Marie exclaimed. “I met him yesterday!” She smiled. “I know a Max. A human one. This one is much cuter.”

  Suddenly there were more people. People with phones taking pictures. Leo could see why Marie hadn’t wanted to blow her cover, though he appreciated the hell out of the fact that she had. “All right.” He shooed the women and the beast down the sidewalk toward where he was parked. He needed to get Marie out of here. “Do we need to get Max’s crate?” he asked Dani.

  “Nope. Let’s get it later. I think it’s best for us to make our grand exit right now.”

  And so once everyone was buckled in, they did.

  “I hope I didn’t overstep there,” Marie said. “Those girls just seemed like they could use some . . .”

  “Moral correction?” Dani supplied cheerfully.

  Marie laughed. “Yes.”

  Leo turned to her. “If you don’t mind, I’ll drop Dani at our building before taking you back to the hotel.”

  He thought for a moment that Marie was going to argue, probably something along the l
ines of she could make her own way back, but he shot her a look that successfully quashed whatever it was she’d been about to say.

  They rode in silence a ways until Marie surprised him by twisting around to look at Gabby in the back seat. “Would you like to come to tea at the Plaza Hotel tomorrow afternoon?” Then she gestured to him and to Dani. “All of you. I would love to have you.”

  “Oh my gosh, like Eloise!” Gabby said.

  “Like who?” Leo asked.

  “There’s a famous book set at the Plaza,” Dani said. “About a girl named Eloise.”

  Must have been before his time. It was strange sometimes, to be so enmeshed in the minutiae of Gabby’s life now but also to have these big holes in his knowledge of her past. He knew what she was reading today—Wonderstruck and that book of fairy tales their mom had given her. She never seemed to grow out of that. But he’d missed Eloise and everything that came before the accident. It wasn’t that he blamed himself for that, particularly. He was fourteen years older than she was and hadn’t lived at home for years by the time of the accident. But the gaps in his Gabby-knowledge felt like shortcomings all the same. He added this one to the list.

  “Oh, can we, Leo? Please?”

  He sort of felt like he should say no. Would having tea with Marie at the Plaza be like taking charity? He sure as hell was going to feel out of place. He glanced at Dani in the rearview mirror. She always knew what to do.

  “I would adore tea at the Plaza,” she said, spearing him with an intense look.

  “Sounds great,” Leo said, the fact that he had to clear his throat to get the sentence out torpedoing the casual delivery he was going for.

  “If you like, you can invite your . . . friends,” Marie said to Gabby.

  Leo knew what she was doing, offering more of her princessness for Gabby to use as currency at school. He hoped Gabby would say no. As much as tea at the Plaza was not his thing, having his sister’s teen tormenters there would guarantee that nobody would have a good time, not Gabby and not Marie, either. Marie would be in princess-performance mode, which made her project a stiffness and snootiness that wasn’t really her—though it was a little startling to realize he knew her well enough to say that.

  “No thanks,” Gabby said. “I think it will be more fun if it’s just us.”

  Atta girl.

  A few minutes later, Leo was pulling up at home.

  “I don’t have anything planned this evening if you want to stay with me rather than go with Leo,” Dani said to Gabby.

  He could see Gabby waffling. On the one hand, the drive into Manhattan and back would take a ridiculously long time. On the other hand: princess.

  “We can watch some more of I Am Not a Robot,” Dani added.

  Gabby got out of the car. “Yes!” But then she paused and looked back at him. “But we should wait for Leo to watch.”

  Oh, this girl and her big heart. She was going to kill him.

  He’d insisted on Thursdays for their formal K-drama nights because he hadn’t wanted to tie Dani up on weekend nights, in case she wanted to go on dates or out with friends. But Dani’s social life was about as exciting as his was, and she didn’t have guardianship of a tween and impending financial disaster as excuses. Still, it gratified him to know that their little ritual meant as much to Gabby as it did to him. He cleared his throat. “Don’t wait for me to start the show. I’ll bring home pizza.”

  “Oh, we’re waiting for you,” Dani said.

  “How else are you going to know what happens to Seung-ho and Ji-ah?” Gabby said teasingly.

  “I’m sure you’ll fill me in.”

  “We’re waiting,” Gabby confirmed, and he could not argue.

  “Leo.” Marie placed a hand on his forearm. “I am going to call a car to take me back. That way you can—”

  “Nope.” She was paying him a ridiculous amount of money to drive her around, and drive her around was what he was damn well going to do. That aside, Leo definitely owed her for what she’d done for Gabby today. Marie Joséphine Annagret Elena, Princess of Eldovia, was getting a ride back to the Plaza whether she wanted it or not.

  “But I don’t want you to have to postpone—”

  “Will you hush?”

  She hushed.

  It was very gratifying.

  She didn’t stay hushed, though. As soon as they got on the road, she started interrogating him. “It sounds like you’re watching a television program with Daniela and Gabriella? Is it one I would know?”

  “Probably not. It’s a Korean drama. A soap opera, basically. Dani got us hooked on them.”

  “I’ve heard about those! I should try one. Do you have any recommendations?”

  He must have looked as puzzled as he felt—it was hard to wrap his mind around the idea of the princess doing something as mundane as watching TV—because she said, “I watch a lot of TV.”

  “You do?”

  “But only American TV. I should branch out.”

  Leo chuckled and shook his head, because, again, he wasn’t seeing it. Ice skating in the Alps, yes. Bending over watches with one of those eye things jewelers wore, okay. But sacked out watching Real Housewives? Not so much.

  “My mother was educated in America, and she developed quite a fondness for American TV,” Marie said. “When she came to Eldovia—she was French, but she married my father right after her graduation from Yale—she brought a trunkload of VHS tapes and DVDs with her, and she continued to order them.”

  “And you watched with her.”

  “Yes.”

  “Is that why you don’t have an accent?”

  She laughed. “I don’t think so. If I’d learned diction from American TV, I would totally talk like a valley girl, like oh my gosh.” She had attempted—and failed—to deliver that last line with a valley-girl accent. “My mother’s favorite show was Beverly Hills, 90210.”

  “Well, I’ll be.”

  “But I should switch to something else,” she said with an odd sort of vehemence.

  “Why?” Even if Beverly Hills, 90210 hadn’t been from before his time, he was pretty sure it wouldn’t have been his thing. But he wasn’t one to shit on other people’s choices.

  Marie didn’t answer right away. She turned her head to look out the window, in fact, so he thought she was dismissing him. So he was surprised when she said, very quietly, “Because watching them without her hurts too much. And yet I can’t seem to stop.”

  “Ah.”

  “Do you have anything like that? Any routines that are part of your life that remind you of your parents?”

  He sure did. Reading the fairy-tale book with Gabby. Looking at his mom’s handwritten recipe cards. Driving past buildings he’d worked on with his dad’s crew. “Yeah,” he said, his voice having gone all gruff. “Though I mostly try to avoid them.”

  “Like Fifth and Fifty-Eighth?” she asked gently.

  “Like Fifth and Fifty-Eighth,” he confirmed, feeling a bit sheepish. “But you know what? Not that I’m an expert, but I don’t think it matters whether you face those things or try to ignore them. It hurts just the same. So I say, watch 90210 if you want to.”

  She didn’t speak for a while. Maybe he’d overstepped. Really, who was he to give lessons on grieving? He didn’t know shit.

  But then the quiet voice was back. “I think you are a very wise man, Leonardo Ricci.”

  He wasn’t sure he agreed with that, but hell, he’d take it.

  “Is your butler going to be mad at you for being gone all afternoon?” he asked as they crossed into Manhattan.

  “He’s not a butler,” she said with a laugh.

  “So you keep saying.” Leo shrugged. “Looks like a duck, walks like a duck.”

  Marie looked out the window. “Yes, he will probably be angry with me. I texted him that I was going to the play with you, but he’s . . . displeased. The larger issue, though, is that my father will be angry with me.”

  “He’s going to tattle to your father
?”

  “He no doubt already has. He’s my father’s equerry, not mine.”

  That was the second time she had used that word. Leo made a mental note to look it up when he got home. “So let me get this straight. You had nothing else to do, so you weren’t shirking any duties. But still, going to a school play is gonna get him mad at you.”

  She huffed a small laugh, as if she realized how silly that sounded. “That is correct.”

  Well. “I hope it was worth it.” He was kidding. There was no way the Bronx Technology Charter School production of The Wizard of Oz was worth the wrath of a king.

  When she didn’t laugh at his little joke, he glanced over at her.

  “It was.” She smiled at him. “It was worth it.”

  Chapter Six

  Saturday morning Marie hosted a breakfast in her hotel suite for friends of the crown. This was an older crowd, people who were friendly with her father. And most of them had known her mother, too. Some of them shared reminiscences, and the morning turned out to be both more enjoyable and more emotional than she’d anticipated.

  After that, she had two more appointments with watch retailers, and Leo had taken her to those.

  And, more remarkably, Torkel and Mr. Weiss had not accompanied her. She hadn’t even had to push very hard. When she’d said she was going alone, they’d grumbled but acquiesced. Perhaps they had finally come to trust Leo.

  “Well?” Leo asked when she emerged from her last shop. He’d inquired after every meeting, no doubt spooked by her vast overreaction—crying, for heaven’s sake—to yesterday’s final appointment.

  “Oh, fine.” Marie waved a hand dismissively as he opened the passenger-side door of his car for her. “Today’s retailers are smaller ones. The stakes are lower.”

  Leo narrowed his eyes like he didn’t quite believe her. It was oddly charming.

  “I actually got one of them to increase his order by ten percent over last year,” she said laughingly.

  It wasn’t nearly enough in the grand scheme of things, but it seemed to appease him. He stepped back so she could get in the car.

 

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