tall bookshelves filled with everything from rare first editions to her old copies of
Lorenzo had been gone five years. He’d never known about Danny, hadn’t lived to see Joe and Darcy marry. Right now she missed the old man and his gruff ways. She had a feeling he would cut right to the heart of the matter with Rafael.
But what would he say? Would he tell her to marry the father of her son and be a good wife or would he shake his head and say that in a world that runs by computers, who needs princes?
The door opened. Mia tensed slightly, not sure she would welcome any interruption. Then Rafael stepped into the room and she felt her heart flutter in anticipation.
Great. She was falling for him again. Just what she needed, because her life wasn’t complicated enough these days.
“I am interrupting?” he asked.
She shrugged. “Not really. I’m going over my classes for the fall term at law school. I’m getting down to the serious stuff for my specialty and it’s…” She blinked at his look of surprise. “What?”
“You plan to continue to attend law school?”
She put the catalog on the desk and scrambled to her feet. “Did you think you would stop me?”
“Of course not, it is just if we are married, you will not be able to practice law. Not in the traditional sense,” he added quickly, then smiled. “You are right. You should complete your education, so when you speak before our parliament, you know exactly what you want to say.”
She wasn’t totally buying the sudden transformation. “Why would I be speaking before parliament?”
“Because you will never be silent, Mia. It is, how do you say…Not your style? You are life and you must be a part of things. I think that if you were to come to my country, you would want to tax the casinos more to pay for education. Perhaps you would start a teaching hospital so our future doctors did not go away to France or England.”
“So you’re saying I could affect policy.”
“Of course. As queen you can do anything.”
Except live a normal life.
He motioned to the chair she’d been in and waited until she sat before claiming the one next to it.
“What troubles you?” he asked. “I know you are finding it difficult to resist my charms.”
She laughed. “That pesky ego. Doesn’t it ever get heavy, carrying it around all the time?”
“No. I am used to the weight.” His smile faded. “Tell me, Mia. I wish to know.”
She drew in a breath, not sure she could even articulate her concerns. “Calandria is very far away.”
“That is true. However, you will have access to several private jets to take you wherever you want. Your family is no more than eight or nine hours away. They would also be welcome to visit us whenever they wanted.”
“I’m not really princess”-she couldn’t bring herself to say
His gaze narrowed. “What more would you require to be special? You are uniquely yourself.”
She sensed that he was going to reach for her hand and snatched it back just in time. He grasped air, then raised his eyebrows.
“I know you enjoy my touch,” he began.
“Too much,” she muttered. “There will be no more touching until I get things figured out.”
He smiled with the contented confidence of a man who knows how to please women. “You are afraid I can seduce you.”
“I’m not afraid, I’m prudent.”
“A good quality in a wife.”
“You could say the same thing about a dog.” She shook her head. “You would have to let go of the hot-and- cold-running women at your house on the rocks.”
“There have been women in my life. Of course, I’m a man. But none at the house. I take no one there, Mia. You will be the first.”
Whoa. “You’re serious?”
“Why would I lie? You could easily check the truth. I have not brought a woman to my house.”
Good to know. “It’s just I…” She clutched the arms of the chair. “You’re different. I knew Diego. I understood him. But Rafael is a mystery to me.”
“We are not so different. Not the Diego you knew.”
“What about the real one?”
He shrugged. “He was angry. By a fluke of birth, he lost the crown. His brother never cared, but Diego was angry from the time he understood what it meant to be king.”
“Did it change you to pretend to be him?”
“I am already a man ready to take what I want,” he said. “But Diego was a fool.” He dismissed the other man with a flick of his fingers. “Now he is dead.”
The ruthlessness didn’t surprise her. She’d seen it in him before. Men only crossed Rafael once. Which made his sense of humor and flashes of tenderness more fascinating. Rafael could laugh at the world. More important, he could laugh at himself.
“Why me?” she asked.
He stared directly into her eyes. “Because in all the years we have been apart, I have never forgotten you. I am very good at forgetting women.”
He rose. “I wish to return home, Mia, but my business there will wait. You are the most important part of my world. I will stay here until you are comfortable with me.”
“And if it takes years?” she asked, not sure she believed him.
“I am a young man. Despite what you have heard, I am also a patient one. You are worth waiting for. Take your time. I will be here.”
He left and she was alone. A normal person would have felt relief, but suddenly she was lonely and wanted to call him back.
He’d always been a smooth talker. She had to remember that. No one came into a situation like this without an agenda. But he had an answer for everything and she didn’t know how to deal with that.
Worse, she didn’t know how to stop herself from wanting to believe it was all true.
8
“Not at all. I dance in the corps and I live in San Francisco, which, as you know, is about the most expensive city next to New York, so it’s not like I have a lot of extra cash.”
Mia eyed Kelly as the tall, slender redhead pulled on a skinny-strapped sundress Mia hadn’t been able to fit into since before Danny was born.
“So go to the mall.”
“Your closet is closer.” Kelly turned and studied herself in the mirror. “It’s too short.”
“And too loose. God, I hate you.”
Kelly grinned. “I happen to know you adore me, despite my height and lack of body fat.” She spun in the pale green dress, then pulled it over her head. “What’s next?”
“Have at it,” Mia said, pointing at the closet. “My old clothes are your old clothes.”
Kelly flipped hangers. Mia studied her narrow back and the clearly visible bones of her shoulders and ribs.
“Not to get too maternal on you,” Mia said lightly, “but are you sure you’re eating enough?”
“Uh-huh.”
“But you’re so-”