Chapter 12 Sebastian

Sebastian

Aheadache pulsed behind Sebastian’s right eye and fatigue weighed him down like the chains of Marley’s ghost, but the Canadian ambassador seemed far from done with his long-winded explanation of how negotiations would proceed.

Jacobs, it seemed, was a thorough man. For a split-second, Sebastian’s gaze collided with the Kachusov’s who served as diplomatic secretary for the Belarian government and host to their back-room talks.

The faint smile accompanied by a roll of eyes united them on this issue.

They both wanted the ambassador to be quiet.

An illuminating moment considering the window dressing set around the opportunity for a member of the Andraste family to negotiate directly with the Kachusovs.

A whisper of fabric behind him and motion warned Sebastian of Vidal’s approach.

Each representative was allowed one bodyguard or personal aid.

“Please forgive the intrusion, Your Highness, but there’s been a development.” The man’s low-voiced warning was interrupted when the doors to the darkened conference room opened and Sebastian’s heart hurtled to his feet.

Meredith stepped inside with Gencome a single pace behind her. Every man at the table rose. If Vidal hadn’t tapped his arm, Sebastian would have circled the table to rush Meredith right the hell back out of the room.

The Canadian ambassador turned with a wide smile.

“Oh, excellent. I was worried I would have to further bore my audience. Forgive me, gentleman,” the ambassador continued.

“Please allow me to introduce Doctor Meredith Blake. She’s a professor of mathematical theory and I think you will find her insights are invaluable to our negotiations, particularly with regard to the variables we’re discussing.

Also, I hear congratulations are in order.

Since we’re all discreet here, I would like to welcome the next member of the Andraste family to the table. ”

If his heart had been attached to a yo-yo string, it couldn’t have rebounded from the ground to chest and back again with greater alacrity.

Meredith met his gaze with a smile, but instead of walking straight to him, she paused to shake hands with each of the attendees and accept their congratulations.

Others spoke to him, and he must have nodded and responded correctly, but he never took his attention away Meredith, not when she stopped right in front of the Kachusov attaché.

“I was not aware the grand duke announced an engagement to such a lovely American.” The man’s hand lingered on Meredith’s, but she shrugged.

“We are waiting to the end of the semester. I’ve been exceptionally busy teaching and am mentoring several doctoral candidates.

Couple my academic responsibilities with His Highness’ public schedule, and we thought it best to wait.

Once his calendar is free, he can take a step back.

It’s lovely to meet you.” And then she was on the move again.

What the hell is she up to?

It was an agonizing three minutes before she’d reached his side. When she tilted her chin up and gave him an expectant look, he obliged her with a kiss to her cheek. Violently aware of their audience, he paused to murmur against her ear. “What are you doing?”

“Making a choice,” she replied and slipped out of her jacket. Sebastian helped her and pulled out her chair. Once she was seated, everyone resumed their places and Gencome took a stance directly behind her.

“What choice?” He clasped his hands together and directed the low-whisper to her.

Instead of answering, Meredith glanced at their audience.

“Now, gentlemen, please forgive His Highness. I’ve caught him rather off guard.

Surprising him is half the fun, but onto more serious matters…

after conversations with Mr. Jacob and Mr. Hannah,” she gestured to the Canadian and Australian ambassadors, “as well as my own research, I realized this is more of a trade negotiation. You’re all looking to make the most equitable arrangements possible which means the biggest question on the table is how to get what each of you wants without giving up things you don’t want to lose. ”

Her gaze fixed on the Kachusov attaché, and he leaned back in his chair. “Indeed, Doctor Blake. That is exactly what we all want, though I doubt any of us would put it so boldly.”

“Because you’re diplomats and business people. I’m a teacher. I know my students can’t answer a question if they don’t know what the actual question is.”

“Well said.” Hopkins, the British Ambassador smiled. “With Dr. Blake’s wisdom in mind, gentleman, let’s take the time to address what we want and then see who has the power to make it happen.”

Pockets of conversation erupted around the room and Meredith glanced at him finally, her nut-brown eyes filled with utter sobriety.

“Talk to him,” she said quietly. He didn’t have to ask who she meant.

Like him, the attaché was there for just such an opportunity and all the smoke and mirrors in the room were designed to allow him to liaison directly with the family who wanted his dead.

Sebastian wasn’t sure whether to be furious with her or grateful. The last place in the world she should be was exactly where he’d always wanted her—at his side. “Meredith…” Words failed him.

“I know, but the variable of time is not going to wait for us. Tick tock, make peace, Your Highness.”

Catching her hand, he lifted it and kissed her knuckles once before he turned to face Kachusov.

By silent agreement, they both rose and moved away from the others.

Up close and personal, Mikael Kachusov was an inch shorter than him and he possessed thinning hair on his pate, but he wasn’t more than a decade older.

“So, we shall put our cards on the table. That was quite the gamble, bringing the professor.” Kachusov half-smirked. “Interesting ploy with the woman.”

“Have a little respect for her.” Sebastian folded his arms. “She’s got more sense than the two of us put together. But she’s right, we do need our cards on the table. No more half-truths, innuendo or polite, political discussions.”

“Very well.” Mikael nodded once. “You and your family should cease any and all efforts within Belaria and go away. We do not want you here.”

“Your party doesn’t want us here. The royalists do.

But you’ve never bothered to find out what the Andrastes want.

” He’d been trained for as long as he could remember to avoid direct statements.

To couch terms in the expedient, if polite, terms and to avoid committing to any one true course.

Suggestion, his father often said, allowed listeners to draw their own conclusions, favorable or not.

The other man studied him with a frown. Reaching into his pocket, he brought out a half-crushed pack of cigarettes. “Do you care if I smoke?”

“Not at all. One good thing about closed door sessions is we can smoke, drink or dance around naked.” The last earned a half-smile and Sebastian waited a beat while the other man lit his cigarette. Vidal was nearby, as was Kachusov’s man, but both guards kept a discreet distance.

“An odd turn of phrase for a prince,” Mikael said on the exhale.

Sebastian shrugged. “I’m an odd kind of prince.”

“Are you?” The tip of the man’s cigarette flared. “You all seem rather the same to me. A mere accident of birth places you ahead of others.”

“The only thing my birth granted me was a life surrounded by bodyguards and a target on my back from families like yours who assume our genetics predispose us to ruling.” There was something freeing about addressing this entire topic in blunt form.

“Then perhaps a different life would be more suitable—and safer—for you and your brothers. One well beyond the limelight.” Mikael straightened.

Negotiation had been Armand’s idea, as he wanted a peaceful settlement.

Sebastian, however, was done with being threatened, especially with Meredith sitting less than a half-dozen steps away.

“And less thuggish tactics might benefit your family because you realize there are only really two ways to respond to the way you’re playing the game. ”

He had the man’s full attention. “That sounds very much like an implied threat.”

“Well, then let me restate myself so I’m explicitly clear.

” Sebastian hardened his tone and his heart.

“Mikael, you’re a minor functionary in your family.

You have no military record and no real pull with your grand-uncle, the colonel.

However, what you do have is a family of your own—a wife and children.

Your uncle keeps coming after my family because he’s worried we’re a threat to your political control.

The consistent and regular attempts on my family’s lives stops or our lack of interest in the throne is going to evaporate. ”

He paused for a moment to let the man absorb the information.

“And I’m going to walk out those doors and announce the return of the Grand Dukes of Andraste to Belaria.

We just donated seven million dollars to the health care fund, and another ten million to house orphans and single mothers, a really rampant problem in the declining economy of your nation.

Who do you think the people will want? A dictator or a King? ”

“You’re bluffing.”

Any other time, Mikael might have been right.

“Why should we bluff? You’re going to try to assassinate us no matter what we do, so why shouldn’t we satisfy the people?

We’ll leave it to the people of Belaria to vote.

How do you think they’d like it if your family ended up on the wrong side of this issue?

It’s not like radicals would take offense to your trying to kill us.

” Sebastian let his smile chill because while he’d never asked for this life, he was through running. “Or try to even the score?”

Mikael put out the cigarette. “It would broker civil war in my country. My country.”

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