worried about being taken out at dawn and shot. But we have Blake to stop that happening, right?’
‘Um, right.’
‘Then what else is there to worry about?’ she said. ‘Apart from Hoppy, and there’s nothing I can do about him until they let us out of here. So we might as well sleep. Sleep!’
‘Yes, ma’am.’
And he did. He closed his eyes, and when he opened them again to his unutterable astonishment he’d slept for hours.
Rose was still deeply asleep, curled against his breast as if she belonged there. He was still holding her, his left arm underneath her, tugging her tight against him even in sleep. His right arm was resting lightly on her shoulder. He had to move slightly to see his watch, but she didn’t stir.
She must have been exhausted, he thought. Damn, he should have researched her background further. He wanted to know…
He did know.
He’d never lain with a woman like this. Never. She felt different, amazing, exciting…warm, and…as if she belonged.
She did belong, he thought, with a sure knowledge starting deep within. It had started that first night he’d met her, and it had grown deeper last night as he’d watched her work the crowd with an intuitive empathy he’d never seen in his years of working in the international legal community. Then last night, tossed into prison with a man she hardly knew, losing a dog she obviously loved deeply, thrown into an uncertain future…
She’d been brave beyond belief. She’d been upbeat and courageous, laughing whenever she could, refusing to be intimidated, treating the situation as something to be faced with optimism.
She stirred a fraction in his arms and his hold on her tightened.
This woman was affianced to be his wife, he thought with something approaching incredulity. His wife.
In name only.
But now things had changed. What was inside him had changed.
Had he fallen in love?
The thought was so startling that he must have moved or gasped-or maybe she could feel the sheer force of what he was thinking. She lay motionless in his arms, but he could feel that she was awake.
He didn’t speak, letting her make the first move. If she wanted to wake up slowly, well, she’d earned the right. She’d earned the right to do whatever she wanted, he thought. Rose…
‘What’s the time?’ she whispered, and he knew she didn’t want this time to stop.
‘Seven.’
‘Do you think they’ll feed us?’
As if on cue the door swung open. A tray was put on the floor and shoved forward, and the door was slammed shut before they could see who their jailer was.
‘I guess the answer to that is yes,’ he said, and as she stirred he reluctantly released her and sat up. It was unbelievable what he was feeling about her right now. His world had changed.
‘Don’t look like that,’ she said, suddenly getting businesslike, sliding to the end of the bed so she could get out without pushing past him.
‘Like what?’
‘I don’t know. I don’t know what you’re thinking, and I don’t intend to ask,’ she said briskly. ‘I bags the bathroom first, and don’t you dare eat all the toast.’
There wasn’t toast. There was cereal and long-life milk, tepid water and instant coffee.
‘Not what I had in mind when I decided to be a princess again,’ Rose muttered. ‘Is this a good time to tell you I’m addicted to good coffee and if I’m deprived I’m scary?’
‘Me too,’ Nick said.
‘So what do we do now?’ Rose asked, finishing her coffee resolutely, even though wrinkling her nose in distaste.
‘I guess we wait.’
‘How long do you reckon?’
‘Twenty years?’
‘They’ll have to give us a pack of cards, then,’ Rose said, seemingly unperturbed. ‘Otherwise I’ll write a letter to the United Nations.’
He smiled. Things firmed even further.
They sat down to wait.
If anyone had told Rose that she’d tell her complete life story to a man she’d met once almost a month ago, she would have said they were crazy. Nuts. She wasn’t an extrovert. She’d married Max, but even Max had needed time to coax her out of her shell. Finally she’d learned to trust him, but that trust had landed her into a mess over her head. Her privacy had become the shared concern of Max’s family. Everything she told him his family had known too, as well as the whole village. So she’d learned once more to shut up.
Yet here she was, handing out private information like it was free.
Why? Maybe it was because Nick didn’t really want it, she told herself. He was asking because he was bored and there was nothing else to do. When this whole fiasco was over, no matter how it ended, he’d head back to his city law-firm and she’d be isolated, just as she desperately wanted.
So he was asking questions, and there was no pack of cards, and she didn’t want to spend time thinking about all the various fates in store for someone who tried to take the crown-so what was a girl to do, but answer his questions honestly and ask questions herself and pretend to be interested in the answers?
Actually she
‘Do you play tennis?’
‘No, but I love hockey. I was hopeless, as I didn’t play until I got to England, but I love it now. I still play. Or, until last week I played.’
‘You’re kidding. I played hockey for my university.’
‘Forward?’
‘Centre-forward mostly. You?’
‘Mostly right full-forward,’ she said. ‘I hit harder to the left.’
‘If we had a couple of sticks now we could have a battle.’
‘If we’re stuck in this place much longer we could pull the bed apart and use the planks,’ she said. ‘So let’s delay the hockey match till tomorrow. Meanwhile, what about ice cream? What’s your favourite flavour?’
‘I’m a chocolate man.’
‘With choc chips?’
‘Ugh, no. I like my chocolate melted in, triple or quadruple-strength chocolate, and no crunchy bits to deflect the taste.’
‘Yum,’ she said, feeling suddenly hungry. ‘When do you reckon lunch will arrive?’
‘I think our chances of ice cream for lunch are minimal. What about swimming?’
‘Five strokes and then I go under,’ she said. ‘This place never ran to a swimming pool. Maybe it has one now. Here’s hoping. What about you?’
‘My foster mother’s cottage just outside Sydney had a dam in the back paddock. We all had to learn to swim across it before we were allowed out of Ruby’s sight.’
‘So Ruby taught you?’
‘Ruby taught me everything.’
‘Lucky you,’ she said.
‘For having a foster mother?’
‘I…I guess. Sorry. Dumb comment.’
‘No, it’s okay. But you-when we get to live in this luxurious palace with an Olympic-sized swimming pool…’