Authors: Marion Lennox
She thought fast, forcing her confused mind to focus. This was a five-star Australian hotel. Henry was an Australian citizen. Marc could hardly drag the baby from her arms and remove him. If he was planning on removing Henry from the country illegally he'd hardly have gone to the effort of finding her in the first place.
No. This man was a Head of State. He'd have to do things above board.
He could try and persuade her all he wanted. She could afford to listen.
âWe'll have dinner,' she told him.
âI'll organiseâ¦'
âNo. I'll organise dinner. We'll have Room Service here in my room, where I can watch Henry.' She glanced back
at the security officers and managed a smile. âWe'll be fine,' she told them. âHis Royal Highness has a temper, but he's trying his best to fit into civilised society. If he promises to behave then he can stay. You guys are on call if he steps out of line again, aren't you?'
There was a sharp intake of breath behind her but she didn't care. Serves him right, she thought, rubbing her wrist.
Serves him right.
âWe're at the end of the phone, miss,' one of the guards told her. Clearly in this hotel they were accustomed to all sorts, and violent patrons were nothing new. âDial 8 or scream. Either way we'll be here in seconds.'
But they weren't speaking to Tammy. They were speaking directly to Marc, and their body language said they'd like to haul him out of there right now.
âG
REAT
.'
âGreat?'
âDo you know what you've just done for inter-country relations?' Marc demanded as the door closed. âThese people know who I am and now they're thinking I'm somewhere between Godzilla and Attila the Hun.'
âAs if I care.'
âYou might not, but I do.'
âWere there reporters out there with cameramen attached?' They were both past fury now, and moving on to a level they didn't know. Sparks were flashing off them like two electric cables coming into contact. You could practically smell the burning. âAre the press in this country interested in the doings of some tinpot prince? I don't think so. Broitenburg is a tiny country. I think you have an exaggerated idea of your own importance..
Your Highness
.'
She ended her words on a note of bitter sarcasm.
Tinpot princeâ¦
She'd called him a tinpot prince.
The words hung between them
With anger still driving her, she turned her back to check Henry. The child was obviously accustomed to sleeping through noise. Now he snoozed on, tiny lashes fluttering closed over his dark eyes. She'd wrapped him snugly in a blanket and he was using a corner of it for comfort, sucking it in his sleep.
Henry was the important one here, she thought, trying desperately to get her thoughts in some sort of order. Henry. Not some crazy foreign prince with an overblown idea of his own importance.
âWill you tell me what was in the letter?' Marc asked, and Tammy whirled to face him again. She had so many emotions spinning in her head it was hard to know where to begin. His voice had calmed, but
she
was still a long way from anywhere approaching calm.
He saw it. His hands came up in a gesture that said he wanted to placate, not inflame the situation further. âYou must be hungry,' he said softly. âI know I am.' He picked up the Room Service menu and flicked it open. âLet me order dinner for both of us and we'll eat and talk at the same time.'
âHere?'
âOf course here. You've made that plain.' He managed a smile. âIf I object your very efficient security officers will come and eject me. They'll create an international incident and that will be that. So⦠I'm in your hands, Miss Dexter.'
She backed off a pace and glared. âWhy don't I trust that smile?'
âYou can trust me,' he said, so softly that she hardly heard.
But she did hear. She looked at him for a long moment. Their eyes locked and she found her colour mounting. This time it wasn't from anger.
You can trust me?
Did she? What was it about this man?
âFine,' she stammered. âOrder. Only not frogs' legs.'
âOr kangaroo steak,' he said gravely. âAgreed?'
âAgreed.'
âAt last. We have consensus.'
Â
They might have had a consensus on dinner, but they sat at either side of Tammy's tiny table and eyed each other as if either could produce a loaded automatic at any minute.
Marc poured wine, and Tammy eyed that, too, with distrust.
âNo, Miss Dexter,' he told her. âThe wine doesn't contain poison, and I'm not trying to get you drunk.'
âI wouldn't put it past you.'
Marc closed his eyes. When he opened them the humour had gone. There was bleak acceptance of where she was coming from.
âWhat was in the letter?'
âI'd imagine you know.'
âI know very little,' he told her. âI had little to do with my cousin. Our families were not close.'
âHow can you be Prince Regent if your families were not close?'
âI never expected to inherit the crown. Jean-Paul had an older brother, Franz, who was killed in a car racing accident five years ago. After Franz's death Jean-Paul inherited the crown. With two cousins before me I'd never imagined it could come to me. And I don't want it.'
She frowned. âYou don't want it?'
âBelieve it or not, no.'
âSo whyâ¦?'
âThere's no one else,' he said heavily. âExcept Henry. Tell me what was in the letter.'
Tammy bit her lip. She took a sip of the wine, which was gorgeousâMarc certainly knew how to order wineâand thought about it. The letter was intensely personal, but maybe the time for keeping secrets was past.
She focused on the food for a bit: lobster and salad and fries. It was a combination that was just what she felt like. At some level she was very, very hungry.
But overriding hunger was the sensation that maybe she needed to be honest with this man.
There'd been enough secrets.
âMy sister seemedâ¦desperate,' she told him. âHer letter sounds like she was way out of her depth. She apologised for not letting me know about her marriage and her preg
nancy. She said our mother engineered her meeting with Jean-Paul and pushed them both into marriage. I can believe that.'
âI can believe it too,' Marc said softly. âI hate to say it, but your sister seemedâ¦well, she seemed a wimp. I only met her the once, at her wedding. She was a fairytale princess but a wimp just the same.'
âLara always did what my mother wanted,' Tammy said sadly. âFrom the time Isobelle took any notice of her Lara was her puppet. Fights are all that was ever between my mother and me, from as far back as I can remember, but by the time Lara was ten or eleven she was beautiful and she was biddable. Isobelle schooled her well in the art of making it in the world by using men.'
âSo Jean-Paul would have seemed desirable?'
âIsobelle used to call Lara a princess,' Tammy said, and the old bitterness was still in her voice. âShe wanted it so much. My father was titled and moneyed, and for a while Isobelle thought she'd scored a title for herself. That was why she got pregnant with me. But even after she had me my father refused to marry her. It was a waste of a pregnancy so far as Isobelle was concerned. And maybe it explains why she hates me so much.'
âShe hates you?'
But Tammy wasn't about to be sidetracked onto things that didn't matter. âIsobelle married four times,' she told him. âLara was another pregnancy to force some man to marry her. And she succeeded. The marriage lasted for a whole eighteen months.'
âLara was like her?'
âObedience was her way of getting affection. We did what our mother wanted or there was no affection at all.'
Marc's eyes watched Tammy. He knew what she was saying. There was a lifetime of bitterness behind the words.
But he didn't comment. He waited for her to continue, and in a while she did.
âAnywayâ¦anyway, as Lara got older my mother dragged Lara with her in her stupid schemes. Lara was too weak to see the pitfalls of the men my mother found for her. According to her letter, Jean-Paul scared her but she was too spineless to do anything about it. She let Isobelle push her into marriage. Then when Henry was six months oldâthey were in Paris and Isobelle had dropped in for a flying visitâLara went shopping and returned to find one of Jean-Paul's crazy friends trying to feed Henry drugs. Jean-Paul thought it was funny. That was enough to get through Lara's thick skull. She wasn't bad. She was justâ¦spineless.'
âSo she sent Henry back to Australia with your mother?'
âShe sent him to me.'
âTo you?'
âAccording to her letter she asked Isobelle to bring the baby to me.' Tammy shrugged. âI'm the one who's dragged Lara out of trouble in the past. Even though we were separated, Lara knew I wouldn't have refused.'
âBut Isobelle didn't bring Henry to you?'
âNo.' Tammy shook her head, still thinking it through. âHow could she have brought the baby to me? She would have had to find me, for a start. Then she would have had to explain what was going on and I might have yelled at her. It was far easier to dump Henry in a hotel with his nanny and tell Lara she couldn't find me. Or that I wasn't interested. Or she might even have told Lara that I was involved in caring for him. Heaven knows.' She bit her lip and her face hardened. âIsobelle will tell me.'
Marc looked across the table at her, his face thoughtful. âSo there's no love lost between you and your mother?'
âNone.'
âLara's hardly blameless. Surely a mother would have checked on her baby?'
âBy the sound of itâ¦' Tammy said, her voice fading to a whisper. âBy the style of the writing it seems as if Lara was out of it, too.'
He thought about that and nodded. âI wouldn't be surprised. If I'd had live with Jean-Paul maybe that would have been the only way I could face him.'
âHe was that bad?'
âHe was that bad.'
âMy mother must have known.'
He didn't respond. There was no response to give. For a while there was total silence.
âYour fries are getting cold,' he said at last, and Tammy caught herself.
âIâ¦yes.'
âThey're good.'
âThey are, aren't they?' she said, and managed a smile. He smiled back at her.
There it was again. That smile. It was a knockout. It brought sunshine where there'd been only blackness. It seemed as if where there was this smile her world couldn't be all that dreadful.
Not if this man was in it.
Now, that was a crazy thing to think, she thought savagely. This man and his family were the cause of all thisâ¦mess.
Henry.
Her eyes slid sideways to the cot and Marc followed her gaze.
âIt's not a total disaster,' he said softly, and her eyes swung back to him in surprise. As well as everything else, did he have the capacity to read minds?
âWhy do you want him to go homeâ¦?' She corrected herself. âTo go
back
to Broitenburg?'
âHe must.'
âYou surely don't want a child?'
âNo, butâ¦'
âCharles called you the Prince Regent. So that makes you the ruler of the country. Right?'
âYes, butâ¦'
âBut what?'
He sighed, refilled his wine glass and settled back, like a man prepared to lay his cards on the table.
âThe country is in a mess,' he told her honestly. âJean-Paul behaved like an absentee landlord for years, and so did his brother before him. The government's corrupt. Everyone who's anyone has made themselves positions of power. Charles, for example. Why does a country as small as Broitenburg need an Australian embassy? It doesn't. Yet here's Charlesâbeing paid a sickening stipend, driving the car you saw us in, living in an embassy that would house a dozen families. Broitenburg is..
was
âa prosperous little country, yet when Franz and then Jean-Paul came into power it was bled dry by corrupt officialdom. The whole thing needs a dose of salts.'
âAnd you're just the man to give it to them,' Tammy said thoughtfully, and Marc grinned.
âActually, yes.'
âWhy bother?' she asked curiously. âWhy do you care?'
âIt's a wonderful country,' Marc said softly. âI was brought up there and I love it. My cousins didn't give a toss about it, but Broitenburg under my grandfather's rule was magic. It breaks me up, seeing what's happening now.'
âSo?'
âSo what?'
âSo why can't you thunder in and kick some butt?' Tammy demanded. âInstead of throwing obscene amounts of money at me so you can spend the next twenty years babysitting, why not just go home and rule?'
âThere's a problem.'
âWhich is?'
âThe succession is Henry's, not mine. The constitution makes me a caretaker monarch. When he reaches twenty-five, the job is his.'
Tammy thought that through. A twenty-five-year reign and then honourable retirement? It didn't sound bad to her. âThat gives you twenty-five years of playing king,' she said thoughtfully. âIsn't that enough?'
âIf that's what I haveâbut I don't. Not at the moment. My Regency only holds true if Henry's in the country. If Henry isn't living in Broitenburg then I have no power at all.'
Tammy thought about that for a bit more. She was still confused, and, as well, she found she wasn't sympathetic. She glanced over at the sleeping baby and the thought of Henry inheriting a crown seemed little short of ridiculous. Monarchies were all very well, she decided, but she was a modern girl. An Australian. Did a country really need a royal family?
âYou mean, if Henry doesn't return the country would revert to a democracy.'
He shook his head, his eyes bleak. âIf it did there'd be no problem, but Jean-Paul has left the place to be run by power-hungry despots. I have no time to change things. Without a monarchy the country will self-destruct, and I can't let that happen.'
Help. The more she thought about it the more she didn't like it. Not one bit. âSo Henry needs to go back?'
âHenry needs to go back.'
She glanced again across at the cot, where the baby was still fast asleep. He was so little. He was soâ¦needful. âYou'd put the country's welfare above Henry's?'
âI don't have a choice,' he said gently. âI swear he'll be looked after.'
âHe doesn't need looking after,' she blurted out. âHe needs love.'
âI'llâ¦care for him.'
She stared up at him, trying to read his face. Once again she read sincerity. This was a man doing what he thought was best.
What was there in it for him?
The Regency. Twenty-five years of playing ruler of the country, she thought, and the idea hardened her heart. If Henry didn't return, this man would be nothing.
âI've told youâI don't want this,' he told her, and she stared.
âWhatâ¦?'
âYou're thinking I want Henry's return to ensure my own power base, but it's not true. I never wanted power. I don't want it now. If leaving Henry here meant Broitenburg could move into a progressive democracy then I'd leave him. You must believe that.'