Read The Wronged Princess - Book I Online
Authors: Kae Elle Wheeler
Candlelight flickered
,
casting
dancing shadows along the walls, competing with
a
roaring fire in the grate
.
So accustomed to the rich red and golds of the chamber, he ceased to see them as his memory regenerated the surprising
, and miracle, if you will,
of the ball
.
A ball his dear
mamán
had insisted
upon to facilitate the finding
of
his
bride
.
A bride for which he’d had no desire—until now.
After all, ten and nine was much too young
for marriage
.
Even for an heir apparent
.
Modern men married older these days, he grimaced
.
Mayhap, someone should enlighten
Mamán
.
But…a vision in creamy ivory silk floated before him
.
Though h
ours had since passed,
seared in his memory was the entrance
of
the
spellbinding
beauty
appearing
a
top the grandiose staircase
far
above
the
ballroom
.
Her path
blazed
with the
light
of a thousand candles
.
She’d needed no introduction
.
He’d been stymied from the moment he’d set eyes on her
.
And he hadn’t been the only one
.
Stunned silence rumbled through the ballroom
.
Just before the
snippets
of buzzing rippled
all round as he made his way to her
.
“Who is she?”
they’d breathed.
“Where did she come from?”
they’d whispered.
“Such a beauty,” they’d murmured.
Star struck gazes riveted his attention
.
But they focused
,
not on him
.
Non
.
’Twas a
n unusual sensation, to be sure
.
Mouth dry, he tried to swallow as nothing short of death could tear his eyes from the w
hite velvet
,
trimmed gown
.
A
left
shoulder
bared
accentuated her
graceful neck
and
slender
shoulders
but for the sliver of a delicate gold chain adorned by a single teardrop diamond
.
T
he sight before him
had the room shimmering
with
an iridescent
glow
.
Her arrival held
the entire population enthralled
—t
he entire
kingdom
ceased
to exist.
H
e forged forward,
his
path
opening
magically
.
Long
,
slender
fingers
slid along the
massive balustrade, stealing his breath
, constricting his
chest
.
He found
himself
afraid to blink le
st she disappear
.
But step after step, the folds of her
graceful
gown billowed over fragile glass slippers
—
until
that moment
.
The moment
she’d moved straight into his waiting arms
.
H
e twirled her through the ballroom with one
perfect
waltz following another
.
Knowing he’d stepped, or
danced
, past the stricture of protocol,
helpless against
its
pull
.
Rich
mahogany
locks lay
piled high on her head in a sophisticated
twist
clasped into place with a small
,
elegant jeweled crown
.
No curls to mar its thickness or beauty.
He was breathless, speechless
,
captivated
.
Whomever this mysterious princess was, she was his now
.
Or soon would be
.
He must remember to thank
Mamán
for her insistence on
searching out
his
bride
.
He grinned at the frescoed ceiling.
T
he
air
had
shimmered
round her
like the halo of an angel
,
eyes of the darkest, most decadent chocolate one could only dream,
and
full lips that tremble
d
with a timid and tremulous smile.
He was caught.
“
Will
I love you because you’re
beautiful?
” he
said softly against her cheek
.
“
Or because
you’re
wonderful?
”
“I am but a dream,” she responded.
Her voice matched her, soft, enticing, mysterious.
“Perhaps,” he agreed
.
He did not know
.
He could not know
.
He only knew he wanted to sing from the rooftops
.
A defining moment, he decreed
.
Because he now knew…he’d found…
Princess
Charming.
The evening
raced
past in a whirlwind of dancing where no words
were
needed
.
They would have a lifetime to talk
.
Right now
’
twas enough to
revel in the feel of her arms, the scent of her hair
.
She floated like the whisper of a cloud, the mist of a ghost.
’
Twas
a
lovely night
.
One
he knew he’d never see, again.
Then—
disaster
struck
.
As sure as the stroke of midnight sounding from the tower clock. Twelve bongs that would change his life
—f
orever.
It seemed only t
en minutes
since
he’d met her
.
“What’s that noise?” she’d asked
.
Her voice was as soft as
feather down
.
Her smile
disarmed him so
.
He smiled back.
“The tower clock,” he’d responded, mesmerized
those
luscious, full
,
red lips
.
“The night is young, my lady
.
’
Tis only midnight.
”
He could not decide if the fragranced blooms inundating his senses came from the surrounding gardens, or the flower in his arms.
“Midnight
,
”
she breathed
—then blinked
.
She’d
stilled at the word
.
H
alt
ed
in the middle of the dance floor
, a
larm
marring
her
lovely
features
, panic colored
her voice
. “I-I must go.”
B
efore he’d realized her intentions, she’d spun,
and
r
u
n from the garden, through the ballroom
.
Flying, up the stairs and out
of his life
.
The ballroom doors parted as if on command, allowing—
no
n
—
assisting
her escape
.
And yet, there he’d stood, dumbstruck, bewildered
.
His limbs thick, heavy leads of steel as hundreds of people cleared the way, mindful of her haste
.
He jerked to the present, torn from his dream.
He should have them all beheaded.
Prince bounded from the bed
and
pace
d
his large
,
opulent
chamber
.
He was a man who had never wanted for anything in
all his nineteen years
, he reasoned
.
Of that, his parents had made certain
.
He was
Royalty
.
“Royalty, I say!” he yelled
to
the empty room.
“Sire?” His
annoying
friend and companion
, i
n truth, his cousin, though he’d deny the fact if asked
.
Arnald poked his head through the door
.
Prince frowned.
“Nothing, Arnald
.
Be off.”
It confounded the mind why a young and beautiful princess would run
.
From
him
.
He could understand their running from Arnald whose manners resembled that of an ox.
Prince
stopped before a luxuriously padded-chair and sunk down,
chin
rested on
his
fist
.
But, alas, she was gone
.
He
tried to summon his anger
.
’
Twas
impossible
.
She was
too beautiful for him to be truly angry
—t
oo sweet for his outrage.
Lovestruck
.
That’s what he was
, he thought glumly
.
Mayhap,
really
’
twas
all a dream.
Restless, h
e
stood
again
and gazed out at the night sky
.
’T
would be dawn soon
.
The sun would rise and he
with
no idea where
to find her
.
He
’d
not even
learned
her name
.
“Why
?
Why had she run?”
“Because you are such a child,” Arnald said.
“I thought I told you to be gone,”
Prince
snapped.
“Hah
!
Who else have you to talk to?”
Prince scowled at the truth of that statement
.
“I have
much to offer
.
A home, large coffers
.
Overflowing
coffers.
”
Prince resumed his pacing
.
“
Lands, clothes, servants
—”
He stopped.
“And?” Arnald prompted.
And…
Love
?
He dared not spout that to his cousin
.
He would ne’er hear the end
of such drivel
.
He cleared his throat
, p
aused, before changing his tactic
.
“
Young women were known to fantasize their notions of romantic love
,
non?
” He said slowly, carefully keeping his eyes averted from the teasing light he would
surely
see in Arnald’s.
“I vow that is so.”
“I must marry regardless,
oui
?”