Reign: A Royal Military Romance (9 page)

BOOK: Reign: A Royal Military Romance
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11
Hazel

W
hen I get back
to my bedroom I sit on the edge of my huge four-poster bed, still wearing Kostya’s shirt, and put my head in my hands.

What the fuck are you doing
, I think.

I take a deep breath, grit my teeth, and remind myself that nothing actually happened. Yeah, we both got half-naked sort of in public, and now I’m wearing his shirt and my entire core is one feverish, hollow ache because he
does
things to me, but we barely touched each other.

I take another breath.

We didn’t do anything
, I think.
See? No international relations problems.

Slowly, I lay back on my bed. I stare at the ceiling because every time I close my eyes, I see Kostya standing in front of me, shirtless, that massive bulge in his jeans.

Holy
hell
.

My eyes snap open and I stare at the ceiling, clenching and unclenching my fists.

Despite myself, I think about Kostya leaning over me, one hand on the wall behind me. Still shirtless. So close that if I’d moved at all we’d have touched.

Zloyushka
, I think. The memory of his voice saying it low and slow sends a shiver down my spine, and the ache inside me deepens.

I sigh and slide my hand under my shorts, unsurprised to find that I’m wet as fuck, my underwear pretty much soaked through. I squeeze my eyes shut and rub myself fast and hard, thinking of Kostya in the moonlight, until my toes are curling against the bedsheets.

I come
hard
, and as I do, I wonder whether Kostya’s doing the same thing.

* * *

A
fter breakfast
— sardines, thick yogurt, and toast, which is actually much better than it sounds — I wander the palace halls for a bit. There has to be a library here
somewhere
, and that library’s going to have a Russian dictionary in it.

I could probably just ask someone, but I have no idea what it means. I don’t
think
Kostya is calling me a stupid gorilla vagina or something, but I still prefer to find out from a book, not someone who can make a face at me.

Zloyushka
is a challenge, and I fully fucking intend to at least show Kostya that this loud, awkward, déclassé American can at least use a dictionary.

Well, after I find the library.

I walk around for twenty minutes, and start to wish that this place had a directory, like a mall or something. I’ve always had a good sense of direction, and I could find my way
back
to almost anywhere in the palace, but these doors aren’t labeled, and I’m not about to be the idiot American girl who just walks about opening doors in a foreign ruler’s house.

At last, staring a big double door in a stonework arch, I hear someone clear his throat behind me, and I turn around.

It’s Nikolai, one of the king’s aides.

“Miss Sung, correct?” he asks very, very politely.

“Yes,” I say. I walk toward him and hold out my hand. “Please, call me Hazel.”

He doesn’t smile, but he does shake my hand.

“Are you lost, Miss Sung?” he asks.

Shit
, I think. I’d been hoping he’s remind me of his full name, because it makes me feel like a dick that he knows mine and I don’t know his.

“I’m actually looking for the library,” I say. “I wanted to learn a little more about Sveloria’s fascinating history.”

And also find out what the prince keeps calling me
, I think.

He raises both eyebrows so slightly that I could be imagining it.

“It’s on the ground floor,” he says, and points down a corridor. “Down the main stairs, to the hall on the right. Heavy wooden door with a stained glass inset.”

I nod once, very slightly, and remind myself not to smile.

“Thank you,” I say.

He nods formally, and we walk in opposite directions.

The library is exactly where he said, and unlocked to boot. There are high, iron-wrought windows set in all the walls, and the place is beautiful and sunny. I’m practically humming as I grab a thick Russian dictionary, an English-to-Russian dictionary,
A
Guide To The Svelorian Dialect For English Speakers
, and a pencil and scrap paper.

The first challenge is figuring out how to spell it in Cyrillic, the alphabet that Russian is written in. I’m not exactly sure what the difference is between some of the letters without someone here to guide me, but I give it a shot.

Then I crack open the dictionary to the end and scan the page, biting my lip.

Zloyushka
isn’t in it, and I sigh dramatically, leaning my chin in my hand. I consult the English-to-Cyrillic guide again. I look back at the Russian dictionary, scanning my eyes down the page.

This time, my gaze falls on
zloy
, and I almost laugh out loud.

Duh, Hazel
, I think.
It’s a root with some stuff tacked onto the end. You know, the thing languages do?

Z
loy (adj
). Bad; wicked; naughty.
See also
ploho, neposlushnyy.

I
stare
at the word and think for a long second. There’s a suspicion bubbling up in my brain, and I flip to the front of the Russian dictionary where the section on nicknames and diminutives is.

I read it, frown, stare at the wall, and think for a long moment.

Then I grab
A
Guide To The Svelorian Dialect For English Speakers,
and flip through it until I get to the nickname section.

I read it. Then I read it again, just to make sure I’ve got it right.

I look at the word I’ve written in terrible Cyrillic on the scrap paper, and despite myself, I start smiling. The -
ushka
ending is a diminutive, something that attaches to a name to make it into a nickname.

Russians in Russia don’t attach diminutives to adjectives to create nicknames, but Svelorians do. The most literal translation of
zloyushka
would be something like
naughty little female person
.

Bad girl
. The crown prince is calling me
bad girl
.

That means I’ve got no choice but to meet him tonight, right? So I can tell him I figured out his stupid nickname?

It would be rude not to.

At least, that’s what I’m going to tell myself.

* * *

T
he rest
of the day seems endless. I play some badminton with my dad, go visit the horse stables, and walk along the beach for a spell. Even though I was enjoying the break at first, I can feel myself start to get a little itchy at the inactivity, like there something I ought to be
doing,
but instead I’m hanging out at a palace being absolutely useless.

At eleven, I head back to my own rooms, because I feel like my face is one giant billboard that says I’VE GOT A SECRET.

I tear through my closet, and finally pick out ankle boots with a low heel, dark skinny jeans, a green tank top and a black, long-sleeve shirt. The shirt zips diagonally up the front, so it’s at least a tiny bit stylish.

Not that I have any idea where we’re going. It could be a black tie event for all I fucking know, in which case I’m wildly underdressed, a feeling I’ve already gotten a pretty good grasp on during my short time here.

The minutes tick by. I pace back and forth, flipping through TV stations on the TV, but they’re mostly in Russian, though I think there’s one where they’re speaking Turkish. We’re not far from Turkey, after all.

At 11:40 I give up and tiptoe to my door, and then I stand there with one ear to it, listening.

It quickly occurs to me that I’m being ridiculous. I’m allowed to leave the room, after all.

For that matter, I’m allowed to walk to the garden, and I’m allowed to have a conversation with Kostya. Hell, I’m
allowed
to go wherever he’s taking me. I’m a guest, not a prisoner.

I just
probably shouldn’t
.

With that in mind, I walk through the palace as casually as I can manage, like I’ve never even heard the words
clandestine meeting
in my life. I see a few staff members, but they just nod at me.

Finally, I’m there. At the bench, by the arch, the heavily sweet smell of roses trickling through the air. My stomach is tied in a million knots, or maybe it’s one giant knot. Maybe it’s a million knots that have formed themselves into one big knot, like some kind of anxiety Voltron. It doesn’t fucking matter.

At exactly 12:00am, a dark form steps through the stone arch and looks around. I stand, adjusting my shirt, and step forward.

“Kostya?” I murmur.

The other person steps forward, and the second he moves, I know something’s wrong — he’s a little shorter than Kostya, and he’s got a very, very slight limp. I stop short and hold my breath, but it’s way, way too late.

Run!
I think wildly.
He’s got a limp, he won’t catch you!

I force myself to stand there. If I run, someone’s going to think there was an assassin in the garden, the whole palace will go on alert, and I don’t need to cause any more trouble.

“Miss Sung,” a familiar voice says.

I exhale.

“Nikolai...” I say, trying desperately to remember his formal patronymic. “Sergovich?”

I’m almost positive that’s not it.

He inclines his head very slightly.

Oh, my god, just tell me what your fucking name is
, I think.
I already feel like an asshole
.

“It’s a lovely night,” he says, very formally.

“Yes,” I say. “I couldn’t sleep so I was taking a stroll through the gardens. They’re very beautiful, and also relaxing and mesmerizing.”

Mesmerizing?
I think.
Moron.

He just nods again.

“I frequently walk through them when seeking calm,” he says. “Pleasure to see you again, Miss Sung.”

“The pleasure was mine,” I say.

He walks on, disappearing as he rounds a bend in the path.

Shit fuck shit fuck shit cock damn hellfire
, I think.

I wonder if I should give up and just go back to my rooms, because now Nikolai knows I was expecting to see Kostya in the garden at midnight, and if that’s not suspicious as shit, I don’t know what is.

You haven’t even done anything
, I remind myself.
Besides get high on the roof, but there’s nothing between you to keep secret.

It just feels like there is.

More footsteps. I take a deep breath and turn to see
another
figure standing in the stone archway. This time I keep my mouth shut as the figure walks toward me, approaching until he’s towering over me, so close I think I can feel the body heat radiating off him. I swallow hard.

“I was right,” Kostya says, his voice low.

12
Kostya


I
figured out your nickname
,” Hazel says, looking up at me.

She’s always got this expression in her eyes like she’s laughing, and I don’t know whether she’s laughing at me or at the world or whether I’m misreading, but there’s something enticing about it. Like she and I share some joke, some secret from the outside world.

No one’s ever looked at me that way before. I don’t know what it means, but I know I like it.

“And?” I ask.

“It just means
bad girl
,” she says. “I’m disappointed. I thought maybe you were more creative.”

“Is that a request?” I ask. “I can send you to the dictionary every day if that’s what you want.”

“There’s already enough here I don’t know,” she says. “I like at least knowing you’re not calling me a squirrel scrotum or something.”

“Squirrels are revered animals in Svelorian folklore,” I say, keeping my face perfectly straight. “Their scrotums have a long, storied history in alchemy and magic here.”

Hazel looks up at me and pauses, narrowing her eyes.

“That’s a joke,” she says, but she sounds uncertain.

I stare at her for another moment before I crack, letting myself smile.

“It’s a joke,” I say, and offer her my arm. “Would you care to stroll the gardens with me?”

She wraps her fingers around my forearm, and even through my leather jacket, I can feel her warmth sinking into my skin, sending jolts of electricity through me. We walk on between the rose bushes, the mostly-dark windows of the palace above.

“You still haven’t told me where you’re taking me,” she says, keeping her voice low.

“We’re going to the ugly part of Velinsk,” I say.

“There’s an ugly part?” Hazel says, then frowns. “Wait, the Shadow Quarter?”

God, what a ridiculous name.

“Do the English maps still call it that?” I ask.

“Don’t tell me it’s really called something else,” she says. “
Shadow Quarter
sounds romantic and exotic, like it’s where the brothels and opium dens are.”

“Brothels and opium dens are romantic?”

She laughs softly.

“Wrong word,” she says. “I just mean interesting and dangerous.”

“You won’t be disappointed, then,” I say. “The gray district doesn’t have brothels or opium dens, but it’s both of those things.”

Her hand adjusts on my arm, and we stroll under another arch, entering another section of the gardens, this one filled with willow trees.

“And yet I’m letting you take me there, no questions asked,” she murmurs.

“You’ve asked quite a few questions,” I point out.

“Sounds like I haven’t asked enough,” she says.

“We’re meeting some friends of mine at a bar,” I say, and glance over at her.

“That’s it?” she says.

Then she frowns.

“Wait, I thought there were no bars in Velinsk,” she says, her voice suddenly hushing.

“There are no legal bars in Velinsk,” I say, dropping my tone to match hers. “My father shut them down when he re-opened the summer palace here.
There can be no hint of immorality in a ruler’s surrounding
s,” I say, imitating my father’s stern voice.

“I watched him down at least six shots of vodka the other night,” she says.

“It’s not the drinking,” I say, wondering how the hell I can explain this to an American, the iportant difference between bar-drinking and home-drinking. “It’s the rowdiness in a public place. The congregation of too many people all under the influence.”

She looks at me very, very skeptically, even as her hand tightens on my arm.

“My father sees every opportunity for people to gather as a threat to his reign,” I say softly.

“I thought Sveloria was stable,” she says, her voice just above a whisper.

“It is
now
,” I say. “But twenty years ago my father made it that way by blood and fire, and he knows that twenty years isn’t very long. To him, every face he doesn’t know will always be a threat. Soviet loyalists around every corner, communists, anarchists, all just waiting to put an end to everything he’s worked for. So he still rules with a metal fist.”

“Iron fist,” Hazel says.

“A fist is a fist,” I say.

I’ve been trying to get him to loosen his grip ever since I got back from the Royal Guard. Other countries have bars where people get drunk together and don’t overthrow their governments. Other countries have a free media that reports on anything and everything, and power still transitions in an orderly fashion from one ruler to another.

But I know he’s never going to change. There are lessons you just can’t unlearn.

“So we’re going to an explicitly illegal speakeasy in a dangerous part of town,” she says.

“There’s still time for you to feel chickens,” I say.

“The phrase is chicken—”

“I know,” I say.

“Sorry,” Hazel says, laughing.

I stop. We’re in the middle of a grove of willow trees, their long green branches waving around us in the same breeze that just barely moves Hazel’s long black hair.

Skip the bar and stay here
, something inside me whispers, something that doesn’t give a shit about the stern talk my father gave me.

The ground is soft enough. No one would hear you. It’s late, no one else is out.

Just once.

I nearly snort out loud. I can already tell that once would never be enough. I’m already being stupid and reckless, out here, alone, with the first girl who’s ever made me feel like I can’t help myself.

I’m playing with fire. I know it.

I also don’t care.

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