The Royal Treatment. MaryJanice Davidson
you are. Then how come you can’t wipe that silly grin off your face?
Sleep was hard in coming; she spent entirely too much time thinking about the lean-in, and replaying the look in his eyes. For the first time, she didn’t worry so much about what she was getting herself into.
Chapter 11
“Look, Eddie—”
“Edmund.”
“—don’t take this the wrong way or anything—”
He sighed. “I am bracing myself, because you always say that before coming out with something thoroughly offensive.”
“Cracked my code, eh? Anyway, I’m going to be the princess, right? So who cares what fork I use when? I mean, I’ll be…” She snorted a giggle through her nose. He fervently hoped she would get over the habit of laughing like a loon whenever she contemplated her future station. “…royalty, and all.”
“Exactly why you must set an example.”
“Me?” He noted she nearly fell out of her chair in surprise. “Set an example?”
“I admit,” he said, admiring the way the sunlight bounced off her shoulder-length waves, making the blond strands look like beaten gold, “it pains me to speak of it.”
It was fortunate she had excellent hair, because there was a truly unpleasant expression on her face at the moment. In fact, her dimples had entirely disappeared. They were, he privately thought, her best feature. They made her look mischievous and charming at the same time. “Edmund, I’ve got a real news flash for you. People don’t give a crap what fork royalty uses.”
“I beg to differ.”
“Ed—they totally don’t.”
They glared at each other and then Edmund, who had battled the king for years, switched tactics. “Of course, if you want people to disparage His Highness because he chose a commoner who refused to rise above her station—”
“Whoa, whoa. You’re saying David will have to eat shit if I’m not a good princess?”
“In a word, yes.”
“Well, son of a bitch!”
“On the contrary, my mother was an extraordinarily patient and kind woman.”
“Uh-huh.” She grabbed a hank of hair and chewed on it. A loathsome habit he needed to break her of before she appeared in front of television cameras. “Hey, Edmund, can I ask you something?”
“You mean, something else?”
“Yeah, yeah. How come you’re doing this? Aren’t there, like, a zillion underlings here in the palace who could be doing this? Tell me you wouldn’t rather be just about anywhere else.” She added in a mutter he heard perfectly well, “God knows I would.”
“I lost the coin toss,” he said, striving for the right note of cool disdain. She really was quite something. He had seen instantly why the king had been charmed, and why David had dropped his I-don’t-care-who-I-marry pose. She would be a splendid queen, if he could get her to lend an attentive ear.
And naturally, such a vitally important job could not go to just anyone. He would oversee her education himself. Even if it killed him. “Now. Again—oyster fork, soup spoon, marrow scoop, fish knife, entrée knife, main course knife, salad knife—”
“—fruit knife, dessert spoon, dessert fork, and a partridge in a pear tree!”
He stared at her, completely surprised. “Oh. Oh! Well, that’s very good. Ah…if you understood all along, then why…?”
“Well, I’ll tell you…I just can’t resist yanking your chain.” She tipped her chair back (French Louis XIV, circa 1860, listed for $972 Alaskan at Sotheby’s) and grinned at him. “What do you think of that, Eds?”
“Edmund.”
“Whatever. What’s next on my agenda from hell?”
“You have a history lesson in thirty minutes with our palace historian.”
The legs hit the carpet with a thump. “History lessons?”
“If you are to be a member of the royal family, it’s important you know something of Alaskan history.”
“Can’t you just pick up that fruit fork and stick it in my eye instead?”
“It would be improper before dessert is served, my lady. After history, you’ll be meeting with Horrance, your wedding gown designer. We try to use local artisans whenever possible,” he added, pretending she was remotely interested in an explanation, “to aid the economy.”
“Super. As long as he doesn’t stick any pins in my ass. Then?”
“Then lunch with the prince and the king. Then a meeting with the caterer. Then the florist. Then—”
“Eds, how come I have to do all this stuff? (A) where’s David, and (B) you’d be so much better at it.”
“(A) David is in Allen Hall, doing the morning feeding, and he will be joining you, and (B) that’s very true, but it’s not my wedding, is it, my lady?”
“Don’t call me that, I hate that. Call me Chris.”
He looked down his nose at her. “I think not.”
“Fine, Chris-teen-uh then. Anything but My Dork-o Lady.”
“My lady jests, pretending she will not have a title all her life.”
“Also, it really creeps me out when you talk about me in the third person. Seriously. Don’t do that.”
For the first time all morning, Edmund cracked a smile. “Nobody likes it. Thus, I do it as often as I can.”
“Well, how would Edmund like it if I talked about him in the third person? Doesn’t Edmund think that’s fucked up?”
“No. Edmund doesn’t. Now, if my lady has tired of etiquette lessons, why don’t we cover something you might find more relevant?”
“Yeah, why don’t we? What’s on your fiendish mind, Eds?”
“Only this.” He paused delicately. Christina’s eyebrows arched, disappearing under her bangs, a gratifying sign of her full attention. “You must always be wary of the name Domonov.”
“That’s Queen Dara’s maiden name.”
He could not mask his surprise. “You know?”
She yawned behind her palm. “Us magazine.”
“Ah. Well, contrary to the lurid interpretations of the American press—”
“Whoa, whoa, easy on the America bashing, pal.” “—Her Majesty the Queen was not a bloodthirsty cannibal with a stone for a heart.”
“I think ‘bloodthirsty cannibal’ is redundant.” “At any rate, the queen’s family is slightly…unreasonable…on the subject of His Highness Prince Nicholas.”
Her eyebrows arched still higher. “Oh-ho.” “Furthermore, they have no love for their king and have tried many times to strike at him, any way they can.”
She frowned. “Um, okay, that sucks, but how come Al doesn’t toss them in the clink?”
Privately, Edmund thought that was an excellent question. “The king would, but as he is still very fond of his late consort, his heart is soft toward her family and the Domonov in question is soon released. Also, the king may have said something along the lines of, ‘I can take care of my own damn self—I don’t need the courts to help me.’”
Конец