again, and she opened it cautiously.

The corridor outside was dimly lit, and empty except for one man.

‘Good evening,’ Daniel said with a smile. ‘Forgive me for arriving at such an untimely hour, but I thought it best to be discreet.’

‘Of course,’ she agreed, backing away to let him in.

Daniel quietly closed the door behind him. Lizzie went to the main light switch, but he halted her with his hand on her wrist.

‘I think not,’ he said, switching on a very small table lamp. ‘This will be sufficient.’

The tiny lamp gave a reasonable illumination, while still leaving the room half hidden in shadow. But she could discern enough of Daniel to feast her eyes. He was in day clothes, but without a jacket, his shirt open at the throat, looking more informal than she’d seen him before.

Lizzie felt at a slight disadvantage. She was sufficiently worldly wise to have realised that this moment would probably come. Even to hope for it. But had she hoped for it quite so soon?

Then she put her chin up. She was alone with the most dangerously attractive man she’d ever met, his dark eyes were regarding her with appreciation, and if she couldn’t cope with that then it was time she retired from the fray and took up something easier, like taming lions.

‘I’m sure you understand why I’ve come here so late, and so discretely,’ he said, still with his eyes on her. ‘In fact, I’ve been sure that we shared a perfect understanding from the first moment. Neither of us is exactly inexperienced in the ways of-shall we say-intrigue?’

She smiled, beginning to feel at ease. ‘Does it matter what we call it?’

‘Some people believe that to define things exactly is essential. Others feel that if the essence is right, the rest is froth. You clearly belong in the second group, which I must admit surprises me a little.’

‘Oh? Why?’

‘As a historian I should have thought you valued precise definition. And you are here as a historian, are you not?’

‘In the presence of a king I am always a historian,’ she riposted. ‘Among other things.’

He laughed. ‘Yes, let us not forget that I’m a king, because if I weren’t you wouldn’t be here.’

Not strictly true, she thought, looking at his throat and the few inches of chest she could see beneath it, rising and falling with some emotion that excited her. There was more excitement when he touched her face and wreathed his fingers in the hair that fell over her shoulders, drawing her swiftly close to cradle her head against his shoulder.

He covered her mouth swiftly and suddenly, kissing her with lips that demanded more than caressed. There was no tenderness, just an assertion of power, but while one part of her rebelled at this, another part, infuriatingly, was thrilled at the complete, unquestioning confidence of this man. His power came less from his rank than from his ability to drive a woman into a turmoil of dizzying sensation by his kiss alone. When he released her she was gasping, and shocked at how easily he could make her want to yield.

His face bore a look of resolution, as though he’d just come to a decision. Lizzie waited with pounding heart for what he would say next. But when the words came, they were the last she had expected.

‘I think the time has come to drop all pretence between us,’ he said in a voice that was curiously hard for a man in the throes of passion.

‘I’m not sure I understand you.’

‘I believe you do. When we spoke in London I had-shall we say certain suspicions? Which you obligingly confirmed. You’ve come here to sell, and I am prepared to buy.’

‘Prepared-to buy?’ Lizzie echoed slowly, trying to silence the monstrous thought that had reared up in her brain.

‘At a sensible price, yes. You obviously know the value of what you bring to market-’

‘And what exactly is it that you think I bring to market?’ Lizzie asked, her eyes narrowing.

He looked surprised for a moment, but then shrugged. ‘You’re quite right to put negotiations on a businesslike footing. I’m prepared to be reasonable about money, even generous, but don’t try to overcharge me-’

He got no further. What he might have said next was cut off by a stinging slap from a very angry woman. Then they were staring at each other, each trying to believe that it had happened.

Lizzie had never slapped a man’s face before. She considered it undignified and violent. Now, in a turmoil of hurt pride, hurt feelings and sheer outrage, she was discovering how satisfying it could be.

‘Have you any idea,’ he said slowly, ‘of the penalty for attacking the King?’

‘Don’t make me laugh!’ she stormed, in the worst temper of her life. ‘All right, go on. Summon the guards and tell them that you tried to buy your way into my bed and got your face slapped. I don’t think so. No man has ever had me for money, and no man ever will. King or no king! And if you thought I was for sale when you invited me here, boy, did you make a mistake!’

He was paler than she’d ever seen any man. Doubtless from the shock of being treated so disrespectfully, she thought with grim satisfaction.

‘And I,’ he said at last, ‘have never needed to buy my way into a woman’s bed. Nor am I interested in your charms.’

‘That’s a lie,’ she said, casting caution to the winds.

He shrugged. ‘Possibly. But I have never allowed my personal desires to interfere with politics, and you would do well to remember that in our dealings.’

‘We’re not going to have any more dealings,’ she said breathlessly.

‘That is for me to say. When we’ve discussed business I will inform you of our future dealings.’

‘Why, you arrogant-’

‘Of course I am. I’m a king; what did you expect?’ His eyes gleamed at her. ‘We’re not just characters in books. There’s still a reality behind the title, and the reality is power, especially here and now. I’ve wasted enough time. I want the letters.’

‘Letters? What letters?’

‘Oh, please! You know what you’re here for.’

‘I know what I’m not here for, and if you come any closer-’

His eyes flicked over her without interest. ‘You flatter yourself-at least for the moment,’ he said coldly. ‘All that concerns me is the bundle of letters in your possession.’

‘I don’t know what you’re talking about.’

He sighed. ‘Very well, we must play the game out-although I had credited you with more intelligence. When we were in London, you yourself told me of the relationship between your great-aunt and my grandfather.’

‘Well yes, except that nobody really knew for certain-’

I know for certain. They were lovers. Their correspondence leaves no doubt of the fact.’

The historian stirred in her. ‘Correspondence?’

‘When I assumed the throne I went through all my grandfather’s possessions. Among them was a locked chest that turned out to contain a pile of letters. They were from an English woman who signed herself “your own Liz, for ever”.’

‘You mean they were love letters?’

‘Yes, they were love letters, and they totally undermine my grandfather’s reputation.’

‘I don’t understand.’

‘He was known and respected as a rigid disciplinarian, a stern patriarch and an aloof monarch. Royalty, he believed, should “keep a proper distance”. Because he lived up to his beliefs he was deeply respected, all over the world.’

‘But he didn’t “keep a proper distance” from this lady?’

‘It would appear not. The letters are emotional and indiscreet, and they strongly suggest that his replies must have been the same.’ Daniel’s eyes narrowed. ‘But I imagine you could tell me about that?’

‘Me? Why should you think I know anything?’

‘Because the replies are in your possession. You are Dame Elizabeth’s heir, the one she trusted to preserve her

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