Page 40 of Double Team
âIs that what youâre into?â I ask, looking her over. âI could have guessed that youâd be into some kinky shit.â
âOh my God, I am not into any kinky shit,â she says.
âI donât believe you, luv,â I say. Itâs always the nice-looking ones, the most straight-laced, prim-and-proper ones, who are the wildest in the sack. Although that might not be true in this case. Little Miss Do-Gooder seems to have quite the stick up her ass.
âWell, youâre never going to find out,â she says, crossing her arms over her chest as she shakes her head. She looks at me, her nose wrinkling like sheâs smelling something bad. âDo women fall for this whole Casanova act?â
âWorks like a charm,â I say. I donât have to do much actual work to get women to take off their panties. Itâs one of the benefits of being royalty.
Life is a buffet of pussy, and Iâm a damn connoisseur.
âWell, just so you know,â she says. âThat is not on the table here.â
âWhatâs not on the table?â I ask. âSex? I wasnât thinking of fucking you on the table, luv. Not the first time, anyway. Iâd take my time with you, the first time. Or maybe not. You seem like you'd like it hard and rough â something public, maybe? The threat of getting caught turns you on, doesnât it?â
She interrupts, holding up her hand to silence me. âI just left an irresponsible, no-good, womanizing dickhead. And, well, okay, so I apparently drunkenly married another one in whatâs, in retrospect, an extremely regrettable incident. But thereâs not going to be any fucking happening here. Thereâs going to be no coming. In fact, I wouldnât sleep with you if you were literally the last prince on earth.â
I canât help but smile, and I donât even try to hide it. âIâm going to remind you that you said that.â
âYou wonât need to remind me,â she says. âBecause Iâm not going to forget it. Why are you smirking? Itâs so annoying. I just said I wasnât going to sleep with you. How is that remotely funny?â
I shrug. âWhat can I say?â I ask. âYouâre amusing. I enjoy a challenge.â
I canât even recall the last time anyone told me no. Thatâs one of the benefits â or drawbacks, depending on your perspective â of being royalty, too. No one ever says no, no matter how ridiculous the request. You have hundreds of people dedicated to carrying out your every ridiculous whim.
It sounds fantastic. But honestly, itâs really fucking boring.
When was the last time a girl told me no?
When was the last time a girl didnât know who I was when she met me? Or spent a night with me, laughing and talking drunkenly because she thought sheâd never see me again?
Thatâs happened exactly once in my life.
It just doesnât happen when youâre a prince.
âThatâs so patronizing,â she says.
âWhat is?â
âCalling me amusing. Implying that Iâm a challenge,â she says. âIâm not an obstacle course.â
I open my mouth to say something about exactly what obstacles on her Iâd like to climb, but she glares at me, speaking before I can.
âDonât even say it.â
âWhat?â I ask innocently.
âYou were about to make some disgusting, reprehensible comment,â she says.
âYouâre so observant,â I say. âDonât you want to know what Iâm thinking?â
âUgh. No,â she says. âHow are you even a prince? Arenât princes required to maintain some sort of regal bearing?â
âThatâs for public, luv,â I say. âAll bets are off in private.â
âSomehow I doubt youâre any different in a public setting,â she says. âSo how are we going to take care of this catastrophe?â
âWhat catastrophe are you referring to, exactly?â I ask. âThe one where are parents are getting married, sis?â
âDo not speak that word again,â she says.
âSis?â I ask. âBut weâre going to be related now. Would you prefer that I call you wife?â
âBoth of those words are off-limits.â
âThereâs a giant list of things that are off-limits with you, arenât there?â I ask. âHas anyone told you that lifeâs a lot more fun if you loosen up a little bit?â
âYouâre loose enough for both of us.â
âThatâs a terrible thing to say to your husband.â
âStop calling yourself that,â she says. âItâs a fake marriage. We were intoxicated. How could they marry us? I donât think itâs even legal to get married while drunk.â
I shrug. âYouâd be surprised what a little extra cash will do.â
âYou bribed a wedding chapel?â she asks, disbelief evident in her voice. âWhy in the world would you do that?â
Why, indeed?
âWhatâs that saying -- when in Rome?â I ask. âWhen in Vegas. I figured Iâd never have the opportunity to get married by Elvis again.â
âItâs not legal,â she says. âIt was a dare. A joke. It should be easy enough to annul.â
âIâm sure you have someone you can trust to do that. Someone who wonât leak it to the press,â I point out.
âNo, I ââ She stops. âOf course I donât. Iâve been in Africa for the past two years. I was only in Vegas for a few days before â well, all of this with you. You have to get it annulled.â
âNo,â I say. The word escapes my lips before Iâm even sure of what Iâm saying, before Iâve had a chance to think it through. But as soon as I speak it, Iâm certain. âI donât think I will, actually.â
âWhat do you mean, you donât think you will?â she asks, her voice rising again, the way it did when she first saw me.
I shrug. âI donât think I feel like it right now,â I say. âMaybe I will later, if you ask politely.â
âI just asked nicely,â she says, through clenched teeth. âYouâre really not going to get it annulled?â
âCome on, luv,â I say, not bothering to hide my grin. âIsnât it more fun this way?â
I donât wait for her response before I press on the electronic keypad that opens the door to the passageway. I think I hear her protest, but I donât wait for her response.
Iâm whistling as I walk down the hallway, my footsteps on the plush carpeting suddenly light as air. Iâd only come back to the palace because my term of service in the Royal Protrovian Army was up, and my father had a heart scare that turned out to be an ulcer, not a heart attack. And because he wanted me to get to know his future wife â Sofia Kensington.
Even in the military, I was treated with kid gloves, as the son of the king. So Iâm enjoying the fact that Little Miss Do-Gooder isnât taking any shit. She gives back as good as I dish out.
Maybe coming back to the palace wonât be as damn boring as I anticipated.
4
Belle
That dickhead.
That stupid, arrogant, childish, irresponsible ass.
I pull open the drawer that holds the clothes I arrived with â one duffel bag, nothing fancy. In fact, it was so un-fancy that the butler who escorted me to my room when I arrived a few hours ago practically sniffed at me, disdain written all over his face. I wonder if my bag has already been burned, so as not to contaminate the palace.
Rummaging through my clothes â perfectly folded and placed in the drawers for me, each item separated by fancy lavender tissue paper embossed with the royal crest in gold filigree -- I yank on a pair of jeans and a t-shirt. I want out of this stupid dress and these uncomfortable heels.
In fact, I should just get a flight out of here. I could head back to the States.
I mean, sure, everything is different now. It's been two years since I've lived in the States. I was supposed to go back and move in with Derek.
Derek and I had been in a long-distance relationship while I was in Africa, which seemed like the thing to do at the time, although in retrospect, it was obviously a stupid idea. But we'd dated throughout college, and my mother and his paren
ts were friends. It's not as if we had no history together.
It was expected that weâd be together. But if I were being honest with myself, Iâd admit to myself that I was never in love with him. Not really.
It was far too easy to leave him for two years to go to Africa. It shouldnât be that easy to walk away from someone you love.
To say that my mother will be disappointed with my breakup will be an understatement. Itâs the reason Iâd been avoiding her phone calls for the past week, hiding out while I got my shit together after the Vegas debacle. She had to send bodyguards and a private plane to escort me to Protrovia, ostensibly because I was avoiding her calls, but also because thatâs just like her, to do something like that for dramatic effect.
Thereâs a single knock on the door, and the door swings open without hesitation. My mother closes it swiftly behind her, standing with her hands on the doorknob behind her back as if she needs it to support her. âIsabella Kensington,â she says, her tone harsh.
âI understand you're upset, Mother," I start. "I had planned on telling you about what happened with Derek. I just needed some time."
"No," she says, walking toward me with long strides, her expression calm. You'd never know she was upset in the least, not to look at her. "Upset isn't the right word to use in a situation like this. Right now, Iâm devastated."
I choke back a laugh. "Devastated?" I ask. "You're devastated about my broken engagement? I think that's how I should feel."
She holds her hand up, making a silence gesture. "I tolerated your need to run off to that God-forsaken continent to save the world. I was more than understanding."
"Yes, you were the epitome of support," I say, my tone bitter. I applied for the two-year position without telling anyone, using my motherâs maiden name and keeping my secret until I knew Iâd gotten it without any connection to my mother or the Kensington fortune. I only told her after Iâd already made the decision and accepted the position.
"There's no need to take that tone with me," she says. "And your little outburst today was appalling."
"I'm sorry you found it disturbing," I say. "Perhaps you'd find it as upsetting to know that your favorite almost son-in-law was fucking Adriana? Or that he's been doing it for years?"
"Derek is a man," she says. "All men have indiscretions, particularly men like Derek. What matters is that he's marrying you. And, if you recall, I never liked Adriana.â
I shake my head. "Weâre not getting married anymore," I say. "And I don't believe that. I don't want something like that."
She raises her eyebrow. "Please tell me I raised a daughter who's not naive enough to believe in some ridiculous notion of true love."
I don't know why the words surprise me, but they do. "It's not ridiculous," I protest, my voice weak.
Except I'm not sure I believe that. Maybe it is ridiculous and naive.
"Fairy-tales," she says. "I blame that nanny of yours. She was always reading you stories like that when you were young. It's time to grow up, Isabella. Life isn't one big fairy-tale."
"You're marrying a king, mother," I say. "You don't see the irony of that? You're telling me that fairy-tales don't exist when we're literally standing in a palace?"
"Don't be stupid," she says. "You're not a stupid girl. It's beneath you. As are fairy-tale notions of life.â
"You didn't fall in love with a king..." I question, my voice trailing off.
She looks at me for a long time. "You will fall in love with Derek. You'll smile and take his arm and stand by his side when he becomes the Governor of New York, just like his father. And then you'll stand beside him when his family money ensures he becomes President. And you'll turn the other way when he shares his bed with someone else. You'll smile and look beautiful because it's what you do."
"I'm not a teenager," I protest. "I'm twenty-three. And, despite what you might think, this isn't the eighteen hundreds and you can't force me into a marriage. I'm not doing it."
"Weâll discuss it later,â she says, waving her perfectly manicured hand dismissively. âThere are more important matters at hand right now.â
âLike the fact that youâre marrying a King,â I say sarcastically. Obviously, thatâs her most important concern here.
She raises her eyebrows and gives me a disapproving look. âYes, Isabella,â she says. âWeâre talking about making history. I know that you donât seem to have an appreciation for rules and tradition and â God knows, I tried to instill that in you ââ
âYouâre from the United States,â I say. âYouâre not even a native of Protrovia. You arenât connected to their history or tradition.â
âWe are making history,â she says. âDo you understand that? The Kensingtons â your family â your fatherâs name, God rest his soul. We are making history. Years ago, the idea of the King of Protrovia remarrying â to a foreigner, no less â would have been unacceptable. It would have been appalling. But today, itâs different. And we are a part of that. Do you not see the importance of this?â
I shake my head. âI donât want to be a part of this,â I say, feeling strangely detached from the entire thing. âIâm going back to the States, mother. Coming here was a mistake.â
Of course, Iâm already a part of this, I think. Iâm married to the Crown Prince.
I force the thought out of my head. Itâs inappropriate. And something Iâll just have to rectify before anyone finds out. The last thing I want is to become part of a public scandal, my life spread out before the world like an open book.
âItâs very important to me that youâre here for the summer,â she says, her tone calm. But itâs clear that itâs not a request.
Well, she canât tell me what to do. Iâm not a child anymore.
âI canât stay here,â I say.
âThe last thing you want is a public scandal,â she says. âI know how much you despise being the center of attention.â
âWhy would anything be a scandal?â I ask, trying my best to keep my voice calm despite the guilt that surges through me at the thought of the secret I share with Albie.
âStaying for the summer, getting to know the king and your new family, is what people expect, Isabella,â she says. âAny behavior different from that is going to raise red flags. It will cause more media attention than I know youâd like to have on you. Reporters will track you down wherever you go in the States. The wedding will be the media event of the year. Here, in the palace â in Protrovia â we can protect you. There is a whole PR team dedicated to managing the publicity. There are bodyguards, security. The entire thing will be controlled. Everything will be handled.â
âI donât know,â I say, shaking my head.
âIâm disappointed, Isabella,â she says. âIâd hoped youâd realize the potential for all the good you could do in Protrovia.â
âWhat do you mean?â
Sofia sighs heavily. âYouâve always missed the forest for the trees,â she says. âYou think that being in the thick of things, administering shots to children and wiping sweaty foreheads, is noble. Itâs far more noble to be the person that provides funding for other people to do those things.â
âAnd thatâs your goal, being Queen of Protrovia?â I donât bother to hide the doubt in my voice. My mother has been involved with charity for years, but Iâm not sure the power isnât the most alluring part of all of this for her.
âThink of all that you could do as a princess, Isabella,â she says. âIâve already set up work for you with refugees, with childrenâs organizations. Youâll have a virtually unlimited budget at your disposal compared to what you had in Africa. Think of what you can do. Think of the children who need your help.â
âI have to think about it,â I say, already feeling like the most selfish person on earth. My mother is offering me the chance to do a world of good, and Iâm actually considering not taking it, just because I donât want to spend the summer in the castle with my new stepbrother, who just happens to be th
e hottest thing Iâve ever seen.
âI know youâll make the right decision,â she says, smiling at me. âTake some time. Youâre jet-lagged. Iâm sure youâre tired. Relax, and gather your wits. Then you can tell me when youâve made the right choice.â
Itâs less of a suggestion than it is an order. That much is