The Duke's Boardroom Affair / Convenient Marriage, Inconvenient Husband. Yvonne Lindsay
then, they had put their differences aside and now behaved like brothers. Not that they didn’t occasionally butt heads.
“When will she come?” Phillip asked.
“Saturday.”
“We’ll need to see that a suite is prepared,” Sophie said. “I suggest housing her in the guest suite at first, with restricted privileges to the residence.”
“I agree,” Phillip said. “Lizzy, can you please handle the details?”
Lizzy nodded eagerly. Going from full-time employment to royal status had been rough for her. And despite a somewhat trying pregnancy, she was always looking for tasks to keep her busy until the baby arrived. “I’ll take care of it immediately.”
Phillip turned to Sophie, who handled media relations. “We’ll have to issue a press release immediately. I don’t want to see a story in the tabloids before we make a formal announcement.”
Sophie nodded. “I’ll see that it’s done today.”
“Speaking of the tabloids,” Alex said, “you know they’re going to be all over this. And all over her.” Having recently been a target of the media himself when his ex-wife fed them false information about his relationship with the princess, he knew how vicious they could be.
“She’ll be instructed on exactly what she should and shouldn’t say,” Charles assured him. “Although given her position in society, I don’t think handling the press will be an issue.”
“I’d like to keep this low-key,” Phillip said, then he rose from his seat, signaling the end of the meeting. “Keep us posted.”
Hannah tugged on his sleeve. “Are you forgetting something, Your Highness?”
He looked down at his wife and smiled. “You’re sure you want to do this now?”
She nodded.
He touched her cheek affectionately, then announced, with distinct happiness and pride, “Hannah is pregnant.”
Everyone seemed as stunned as they were excited.
Sophie laughed and said, “My gosh! You two certainly didn’t waste any time. Frederick is barely three months old!”
Hannah blushed. “It wasn’t planned, and I only just found out this morning. We’d like to keep it quiet until closer to the end of my first trimester. But I was too excited not to tell the family.”
“I think it’s wonderful,” Lizzy said, a hand on her own rounded belly. She shot Sophie a meaningful glance. “At this rate we’ll have the palace filled with children in no time.”
Sophie emphatically shook her head. “Not from me you won’t. Alex and I have already discussed it and decided to wait until he’s not traveling back and forth to the States so much.”
“You say that now,” Lizzy teased. “Things have a way of not working out as you plan.”
She would know. Her pregnancy had been an unplanned surprise. She’d gone from palace employee to royal family member with one hasty but genuinely happy I do.
“What about Charles?” Sophie said, flashing him a wry grin. “He’s not even married yet. Why not pick on him?”
“When it comes to marriage,” Phillip said, sounding only slightly exasperated, “yet is not a word in Charles’s vocabulary.”
Phillip was absolutely right. And this was not a conversation Charles cared to have any part of. The last thing he needed was the entire family meddling in his love life.
“Wow,” he said, glancing down at his watch. “Would you look at the time. I should be going.”
“What’s the matter, Charles?” Sophie asked. “Have you got a hot date?”
In fact he did. Even though the “date” in question didn’t know it yet.
Phillip just grinned. “If you hear anything else from Melissa or her attorney, you’ll let us know?”
“Of course.” He said the obligatory goodbyes, then made a hasty retreat out into the hall. Before he could escape the residence, Ethan called after him.
“Charles, hold up a minute.” He wore a concerned expression, which was enough to cause Charles concern himself. Ethan was one of the most easygoing people he knew.
“Is there a problem?” he asked.
Ethan paused for a moment, then sighed and shook his head. “I guess there’s really no tactful way to say this, so I’m just going to say it. The family is asking, as a personal favor, that you not have an affair with Victoria.”
For an instant, Charles was too stunned to speak. Then all he could manage was “I beg your pardon?”
“You heard me.”
Yes, he had. But he must have been mistaken. He’d devoted his life to his family, true, but that didn’t give them the right to dictate who he could or couldn’t sleep with. “What are you suggesting, Ethan?”
Ethan lowered his voice. “I don’t have to suggest anything. It’s common knowledge that the employees you sleep with don’t last. Normally that isn’t a problem because they’re your personal employees, and how you run your firm is your own business. But Victoria is an employee of the royal family, as are you, and as such, policy states there can be no personal relationship. If we can convince her to stay, her expertise will be a great asset to the Royal Inn. That isn’t likely to happen if you and she become…intimately involved.”
“That’s a little hypocritical coming from you,” Charles said. “Seeing as how you knocked up a palace employee.”
It was a cheap shot, but the arrow hit its mark.
Ethan’s expression darkened. “Make no mistake Charles, this is something the entire family is asking. Not just me.”
And what if Charles said no? What if he slept with her and she refused to stay? Would he be ousted as the family attorney? “This sounds a bit like a threat to me.”
“It’s nothing more than a request.”
Though only a cousin, Charles had always been an integral part of the royal family. For the first time in his life he felt like an outsider.
And he didn’t like it.
“Do whatever it takes to make her stay,” Ethan said, and there was a finality to his words that set Charles even deeper on edge.
“I need to go fetch my assistant,” Charles told him, then he turned and left before he said something he might later regret.
He found Victoria in the main business office with one of the secretaries. For the life of him he couldn’t remember her name. She was explaining the phone and security system to Victoria. As he approached they both looked up at him.
“Finished already?” Victoria asked.
Charles nodded. “Ready to go?”
“Sure.” She thanked the secretary, whose name still escaped him, grabbed her purse, and followed Charles out. She practically had to jog to keep up with his brisk, longer stride. He led her out the back way this time, where she would come and go should the position ever call for her coming back to the palace.
“Meeting not go well?” she asked from behind him, as they passed the kitchen.
“What makes you think that?”
“You’re awfully quiet. And you seem to be in a terrible rush to leave,” she said, sounding a touch winded.
He made an effort to slow his pace. It wasn’t the meeting itself that was troubling him. That had gone rather well, all things considered. “It was fine,” he said.
The car was waiting