CHAPTER TWO
M AGNUS T HOROLF HAD already been in a foul mood when he arrived at this hotel. It was a version of the foul mood he’d been stewing in for the last fourteen years, ever since he’d been plucked from his training session on a ski hill in Norway and shuffled into a van by men in suits and sunglasses.
One blood test later, he was deemed the legitimate heir to the Isleif throne, something his mother could have told him at any time in the previous eighteen years of his life.
I was afraid they would take you away from me , she cried when the truth came out.
That was exactly what had happened.
His life, which at the time had been filled with endless possibility, had shrunk to duty and protocol and service to a crown he had no desire to wear.
Which suggested he didn’t love Isleif, but that was the furthest thing from the truth. The best memories of his life were summers and Christmases at his mother’s cottage in the windy island nation, chasing his brother and sister down a beach or across a snow-covered field. He couldn’t think of that time without a knife of nostalgia turning in him.
Ignorance really was bliss.
It certainly had been an hour ago, when a woman had snared his attention and he’d thought he might have amenable company in his bed tonight.
He wasn’t even sure how or why she’d caught his eye. Yes, she was beautiful. Her blond hair was swept to the side, exposing one of her high cheekbones. Her pillowy lips were painted an earthy red, her eyeshadow bronze to match her gown.
The gown itself had been both elegant and sexy as hell. The silk had wrapped her throat then left her shoulders bare as it parted to cradle her ample breasts. It was fitted to her waist and hips, then fell open across one thigh, making the most of her stunning figure.
So, yes, she was easy to look at, but beautiful women made themselves available to him all the time, not that Magnus took full advantage of that small perk of his title. He’d had lovers, obviously. They were always vetted to within an inch of their life and his private secretary, Ulmer, damned near applied the condoms to Magnus himself.
Given the absolute dearth of spontaneity and the growing pressure to find a “suitable” partner and produce an heir, Magnus mostly eschewed sex—which probably contributed to his terrible disposition.
He’d grown numb to all of it.
Tonight, however, he’d felt something besides the frustration of living in a cage. Sure, it had been lust, but it was overwhelming lust. The sight of that woman had shaken him awake, spurring him with fierce need. When they danced, her voice and scent and grace had piqued his appetite. Not just for sex, although in his mind her legs had already been around his waist. No, he’d wanted her . It wasn’t rational or even civilized, but he didn’t care. From the moment their eyes had met, he’d made up his mind that she would come to his room.
Then she’d rejected him.
You should talk to your people.
He hated talking to his people. He hated what they said.
Not a good look, sir. Absolutely not.
Magnus had walked out of the gala, loathing these hellish appearances anyway.
He’d bumped into King Felipe of Nazarine on his way to the elevators. They had a friendly acquaintance, both facing a similar challenge of representing a small island nation on the greater world stage. They’d stepped into this breakout room long enough to agree to support each other’s position at an upcoming climate conference, then Felipe had escorted his wife, Claudine, to the ballroom.
“I saw a photographer in the mezzanine,” Ulmer said, barely looking up from his tablet. “We can avoid him by using the service elevator.” He signaled one of the bodyguards to check the catering hall.
At that moment, the door thrust inward.
Magnus caught a glimpse of bronze and blonde, heard a cry of alarm, then his guard shoved the intruder against the wall with far too much force.
“Let her go!” Magnus was across the room before any of the security protocols that had been drilled into him could register. He clasped his bodyguard’s shoulder in the bite of his hand and yanked him away from her, damned near throwing him across the room.
“Sir!” That was Ulmer, trying to prevent a scuffle as his bodyguard turned on Magnus in reflex before realizing his employer was the one attacking him.
“She could be armed, sir,” the bodyguard said, tugging his jacket straight and keeping a watchful eye on Lexi.
She turned so her back was to the wall, but her shoulders were hunched and her arms were folded upward defensively. She had one hand pressed to her cheek.
“In that dress? Use your eyes!” Magnus took hold of her wrist, trying to draw her hand down so he could examine her cheek.
She shook him off and slid sideways, still darting frightened looks around the room.
“Let me see,” Magnus ordered.
He placed himself between her and the rest of the men, trying to remember to be gentle as he crooked his finger under her chin, but he was beside himself with unnatural fury, especially when he saw how red her cheekbone was.
“If this bruises, I’ll give you one to match it,” he told his bodyguard in Isleifisch. It was a modern version of Old Norse that was more a dialect between Danish and Norwegian, given Isleif’s close ties to both countries.
Lexi brushed his hand off her face, still trembling.
“You’re safe,” Magnus assured her, belatedly switching to English.
She made a choked noise that held such lack of belief, the hair on the back of his neck rose. Then something caught her attention beyond him.
“There’s nothing in there but my phone and room card,” she protested crossly. “And that clutch is on loan. Kindly don’t destroy it.”
Magnus swore and held out his hand to Ulmer, who had turned out the lining of her rhinestone-bedecked handbag.
Ulmer was about to tear the silk open, but replaced the contents and disdainfully handed it to Magnus.
“It’s our job to protect you, sir,” Ulmer said in English, no hint of apology in his tone. “She’s already damaged your reputation. Now she’s followed you in here? Why?” He directed that last imperious query to Lexi.
“I wanted privacy to use my phone.” She snatched the clutch from Magnus. “You can all go to hell. I have my own threats to deal with.” She slid along the wall again, distancing herself as she placed a call.
“All clear, sir.” The bodyguard who’d been sent into the service hall came in the far door.
“Even more reason to use a discreet exit,” Ulmer muttered and looked expectantly to Magnus.
Magnus ignored the hint to leave. His hackles were still up, his attention fixated on Lexi. He sensed aggression rising off her, but it wasn’t directed at them despite how she’d been treated. It was the defensive kind that hunched her shoulders forward.
“Pick up the phone, you—Oh!” She halted as she arrived at the corner and kept her face to the wall. Her voice seethed through her clenched teeth. “How does Carmichael know where I am? Because he’s here . In Paris. At my hotel . Did Janet post about this trip? Because I told her to wait until I was home. And that child you hired as a bodyguard ate a bad shrimp and can’t leave the—”
She turned to pace the other way and froze as she saw they were all watching and listening. The flags of color across her cheekbones deepened to crimson. Her mouth tightened.
“Call me back.” She ended the call and let her arm fall to her side. Her throat flexed as she swallowed, but she kept her chin up. “Which one of you is in charge?” she asked loftily.
“Ha!” Magnus barked. “Who the hell do you think?”
Her spine stiffened a fraction more. “If you needed a bodyguard right now, immediately, who would you call?”
“Money is no object?”
“It’s definitely an object, but so long as I get my money’s worth, I’ll pay whatever is necessary.” She was pretending to take all of this in stride, but he heard the quaver of real fear underpinning her words.
It was disturbing, further abrading his protective instincts.
Magnus touched his smartwatch, sliding his fingertip to place a call.
“Your Royal Highness,” a pleasant female voice answered. “How may I assist you?”
“I need someone in Paris as soon as possible, Kiran.”
“Can you wait one moment, please?” She put him on hold long enough for Ulmer to mutter a dismay-laden, “Sir.”
Magnus understood his private secretary’s concern. Magnus was involving the very security firm that trained his own men, but they were the best. And they hadn’t become the best by allowing themselves to be compromised by actresses with soiled reputations. Involving them would allow Magnus to run a dossier on Lexi and learn very quickly if she posed any real threat to him.
“Sir?” Kiran’s voice returned. “My brother, Vijay, is on his way to Paris as we speak. He said he will join you first thing in the morning. If your team forwards more information, he should have everything you require in place by then. Will that suffice?”
“Thank you, Kiran. Lexi Alexander has a stalker, last name Carmichael.” He glanced at Lexi.
“Aaron,” she provided. “There’s ample coverage of it online. I have a restraining order against him.”
“Did you get all that? He’s here in our hotel,” Magnus added.
“I’ll make hotel security aware of that and have them forward tapes for any legal action that may arise. Shall I ask them to provide a guard for Ms. Alexander?”
“No,” Magnus decided with a leap of dark satisfaction. “She’ll be safe with me until Vijay arrives.”
Magnus ended the call, then waved Lexi toward the door to the service hall, where one of his bodyguards was still stationed.
She hesitated, but when she thought of walking out to the mezzanine and around to the elevators, toward Carmichael, her blood congealed.
Forcing a swallow past her dry throat, she complied. She ought to protest that she only needed an escort to her own room, but the fact was, she really needed a moment of feeling safe so she could compose herself and think this through.
Not that her brain managed anything except sparking awareness, crammed into an elevator with the prince and three other men. She pressed into the back to make room. Magnus joined her there, facing her, while the rest of the men entered and faced front.
Disapproval was wafting like musky cologne from the white-haired man who’d gone through her handbag. He didn’t like her at all .
Prince Magnus didn’t seem to care. He touched beneath her chin again, angling her face slightly before he caressed her still-tender cheek with the pad of his thumb.
“It’s fading.”
She touched where the knock had happened, probing, but also using it as an excuse to brush away his touch because it was far too disturbing, sending trickles of sensual awareness into her throat and down to her chest.
“Why are you helping me?” she asked.
“You know why.”
A learned cynicism had her wondering if he expected sex in exchange for his help, but she wasn’t sure she minded if he did. Which was a troubling thought.
The elevator stopped and opened, allowing fresh oxygen to rush in.
They had arrived in a laundry room where a guard waited. He nodded a confirmation that seemed to reassure everyone.
Magnus took her hand, sending a zing of electricity up her arm and into her torso. He led her through a kitchen where two staff stopped to nod as they went by.
“Are you hungry?” he asked as they moved through a dining area into a luxurious lounge decorated in shades of gray and ivory with accents of sapphire blue. The drapes were closed and several table lamps glowed.
“No. Thank you.” She wriggled her hand free of his, then closed it into a fist, holding on to the sensation of his fingers woven between her own.
His bodyguards dispersed in all directions, checking behind doors and stepping onto the terrace, then checking beyond the door to the hall.
“Are you in danger?” she was compelled to ask. “You seem to have a lot of protection.”
“An abundance of caution. The previous king—my father —” his lip curled with irony “—was assassinated.”
“I’m so sorry. That must have been horrible for you.”
“It happened years ago. I never met him.” He shrugged off his tuxedo jacket and removed his sash, handing them to that circumspect fellow who was still giving off vibes of hostility and suspicion. “Sit. I’ll save you the trouble of looking me up.”
Magnus hitched his tuxedo trousers and lowered into an armchair that faced the sofa, instantly turning the chair into a throne with the simple act of lounging his magnificent body upon it. He pulled his bow tie free and discarded it on the side table, then released the button at his throat, shoulders relaxing.
She lowered into the corner of the sofa, sparing a moment for how surreal this was, sitting to converse with a prince. The force of his undivided attention was like a spotlight, hot and blinding.
“Isleif was on the brink of financial collapse and King Einer was living high. I mean that literally as well as figuratively. He was a fan of party drugs and places where they’re offered in abundance. He had built a network within the government that was helping him cut inside deals for offshore drilling. In exchange for greasing those wheels, he was given anything he wanted. I’m not telling you anything that isn’t in the six-part documentary series.”
“He sounds...” She cleared her throat. “Larger than life.”
“ Corrupt is the word most use. It’s a wonder he only had the one illegitimate child.”
“You?” She widened her eyes.
“Yes. And believe me, I’ve looked for more. So has Queen Katla, his legitimate heir. She took the throne when he died, but she has never been able to conceive. There had long been rumors in the palace that the king had fathered a child with a commoner, after he lost his son, Katla’s older brother. She found me and I was brought to the palace as her successor.”
“That sounds like a fairy tale.”
“Written by the Brothers Grimm, perhaps.”
The grumpy assistant returned. He carried an ice bucket and two wineglasses. He showed Magnus the label on the bottle and Magnus nodded.
“No wine for me, thank you. I don’t drink alcohol,” Lexi said.
“What would you prefer?” Magnus asked.
“Soda with lime?”
He held up two fingers and the other man disappeared with the wine.
“I don’t mind if you drink,” she said. “My teetotaling is for PR purposes.”
His brows lifted in a command for her to elaborate.
Since she was rarely given a chance to tell her side of things, she did.
“When I was sixteen, one of my brother’s friends put drugs in my bag. It was hard stuff that I never would have touched. My father managed to keep me from being charged, but I did a stint in rehab, then a year of community service.”
In some ways, the counseling had been a blessing. She probably would be a drug addict by now without that perspective, given all she’d been through. At the time, however, her counselor had feared she was in denial, lying about not having a drug issue.
“I live sober now,” she added. “It’s simpler.”
Her phone burbled in her clutch, but she ignored it.
“Probably my brother calling me back,” she said when the Prince’s gaze dropped to the noise. “Half brother,” she clarified. “He runs the entertainment agency that manages me.” The agency her career had built, if she wanted to be petty about it, which she definitely did. “Our father was an entertainment lawyer. Mom worked in hair and makeup before I was born. They had an affair, but he was already married. I was born on the wrong side of the blanket, too.”
A choked noise came out of Ulmer as he set a soda with lime on the table beside her.
Magnus gave the man a laconic blink. “You have an opinion you wish to share?”
“You know my opinion, sir.”
“I do. Pack it with your things from your room.”
“You’re not firing him!” Lexi blurted. “I get way worse from trolls online. And I know what the press says about me. I don’t blame him for wanting to keep you out of that blast radius.”
“If only I could fire him,” Magnus said with pained tolerance. “Ulmer serves at the pleasure of the queen. Her goal is that I experience no pleasure at all. I’m actually doing him a favor, giving him the means to report truthfully that he made every effort to offer you a bed that wasn’t mine, including providing his own.”
“I—” Her throat tightened, cutting off her voice while heat suffused her chest. He was taking a lot for granted! Wasn’t he?
Maybe not. She kept imagining how it would feel to straddle him in that wide chair while she finished unbuttoning his shirt.
He held her gaze in a way that suggested he knew exactly what she was thinking. And wanted that, too.
The heat under her skin sizzled into her cheeks and streaked downward into the pit of her belly.
“The hotel is full. Ulmer will need to stay in your room. Give him your key. Unless you have something to hide?” Prince Magnus was like a cat, she realized with a leap of her pulse. He appeared lazy and bored, then surprised with a lightning move that trapped his prey in his sharp claws.
“Only a racy historical romance on the night table. Don’t lose my place in it,” she said as she opened her clutch.
“Send back something for her to wear in the morning,” Magnus instructed.
Lexi thought about insisting on going back to her room. She could ask hotel security to check it, but she knew from experience they were no more qualified than Nishan. She would lie awake all night, fretting they had missed something, terrified by every footfall outside her door, waiting for Carmichael or someone else to break in.
“Will you have one of the men look for cameras, please?” she asked as she offered her key. “That’s what Carmichael did the last time he got into my hotel room.” She shuddered remembering all the snippets of film that had been shown in court.
Ulmer plucked the card from her with a tsk .
“I don’t want to need protection,” she said shakily, using anger to cover the way she was inwardly cringing with shame. She knew exactly how badly she had already tarnished the prince’s reputation. Judging from what he’d said of his father, he couldn’t afford any smudges.
“I’ll see that you have something comfortable to sleep in, too,” Ulmer said stiffly.
“Are you suggesting my bed isn’t comfortable?” Magnus taunted at the man’s back.
Ulmer sniffed and walked away.
“Please don’t make this worse for me,” Lexi pleaded. “If you needle him, he’s liable to plant something incriminating in my room as retaliation.”
“He won’t. That could blow back on me. Besides, he prefers to tattle so I can be called on the carpet for a lecture from my sister. It’s very tiresome. Let’s talk about something else.”
“Such as?”
“Tell me why your reputation is so far in the gutter.”
“Your people haven’t told you?”
“They told me you were involved in a lawsuit. That you are a lightning rod for sensationalism. That you encourage it.”
“That last part is not true.” She sat back and exhaled, wishing there was somewhere far enough she could retreat to. A remote jungle in Indonesia, perhaps? “I’ve always tried very hard to be professional and a decent role model to the younger generation.”
“You’ve been acting from a young age, Ulmer said.”
“I was famous before I knew what acting was. I was a cute baby so Mom put me in commercials for diapers and whatnot. She didn’t need the money. Dad paid her support. He paid her to stay in Scottsdale, let’s be real. But I had a temperament for it.”
“Acting?”
“Being on set and doing as I was told, yes. I’m patient. A bit of a pleaser. I was then, anyway. I was cast in a soap opera and that led to Paisley Pockets.”
His brows went up again.
“A girl who shrinks and travels in pockets. That went for six years and it was very wholesome. Then I did some coming-of-age movies and campy comedies and had just landed a part in a superhero movie when the drugs were found. That was my first scandal and a huge setback career-wise. I tried to drop acting, actually, and went back to college, but notoriety followed me. Frat houses would claim I was at their party and it would turn into a riot when fans showed up and I wasn’t there. The dean asked me to leave. My father had just died and Hadley took over the agency. I needed to support myself so I let him talk me into doing a reality show that was bikini-based. The money was great, but it got me a fan base I really wish I could undo.”
“Like the stalker?”
She nodded jerkily. “Carmichael got off on a technicality. I could have appealed, but I had already lost three years of my life to him. And the cost.” She rolled her eyes. “There was no upside to staying in that fight. Half the time the press framed it as a stunt I had pulled because I was an attention whore.” Tightness invaded her chest. If only people knew how badly she would love to disappear into obscurity. “From a producer’s viewpoint, I was too expensive to hire because I need on-set protection. My image was blonde bimbo from the reality series so no one was considering me for serious roles. I couldn’t get work, but I needed security.”
“From Carmichael? Or are there others?”
“From everyone.” She lifted helpless hands. “Most of my fans are perfectly rational and nice, but the volume is challenging. I need walls and gates. Long story short, I became the face of a cosmetic brand that paid for all of that until they switched out some ingredients due to supply chain issues. It was something the FDA hadn’t approved. It reacted with other products and people started getting chemical burns.”
He swore under his breath.
“It was very bad,” she agreed, nauseated every time she thought of it. “I did everything I could to make it right. I took responsibility for promoting it and paid a huge fine. I sold a bunch of my assets to pay the legal fees because people wanted to sue me , even though I had nothing to do with creating the actual product. Anyway, I’m not allowed to put my name behind anything anymore, not that anyone wants it. That’s another drawback to hiring me. These days, every film has merchandising licenses attached to it. No one wants me to be the next action figure sold to children. I’ve made a million apologies and I’ve donated to every organization I can find, but the bottom-feeding gossip sites still frame me as a monster who doesn’t care who she harms so long as she gets ahead.”
“Tonight was another photo op? Is that why you danced with me?” His tone held a lash of cynicism.
“That’s why I stopped dancing with you,” she corrected frostily, but her insides shriveled. “I don’t want to be performative about giving to charity. I know how icky that is.” She hated that she was reduced to this. “But if my mistakes are going to be made into headlines, I might as well have some good press to balance it. Mostly I came here to meet a director who was supposed to attend. Bernadette Garnier.” She rubbed her eyebrow. “I have a project I genuinely think she would find interesting. One that could help me stage a comeback or at least keep the lights on a little longer. She wasn’t there, though.”
He sat in a comfortable slouch as he regarded her, so casually sexy it was difficult to look at him without more fantasies exploding in her head.
He couldn’t want her now, though. Not after she’d laid bare all her flaws and drawbacks. He ought to ask her to leave.
Ulmer stalked back into the room. He held a small valise and paused behind Magnus to send her a hard glare over the prince’s shoulder.
She held her breath, awaiting banishment.
“I’ll text if I need anything,” Magnus said without so much as turning his head.
Ulmer’s mouth tightened. Seconds later, the door closed firmly behind him.
“He’s not wrong,” she pointed out, still wobbly on the inside. “I’m accepting your help because I don’t have many friends left. I had to come all the way to Europe for a chance at work. You don’t want to be associated with me.”
“True.”
The single word was an arrow straight into her chest, stopping her heart and lungs before radiating a sharp pain through her entire being.
He rose in a graceful move that was so abrupt it took her heart on a fresh dip and roll, and offered his hand. “I’ll show you to your room.”