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Authors: MaryJanice Davidson

BOOK: The Royal Pain
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Chapter 27

“H
i, Dad!” she said, giving the king her brightest smile as she swung the door open. She tightened the belt on her robe, then nearly went sprawling as her father marched past her.

“Got some good staff downstairs,” he commented. “You wouldn't believe the shit they were shoveling in order to stop me from coming up.”

“What shit?” she asked innocently, raking a hand through her hair.

“Apparently, you're drunk, with a migraine, and going into withdrawal from the heroin treatment, and can't have visitors. To my own face they're telling me this! I could have them imprisoned for fifty years!”

“I am getting a bit of a headache,” she admitted.

“My ass you are.” He was looking around the suite, then spotted Shel. His blue eyes went narrow and squinty and he lunged forward.

So did Alex, wrapping her arms around his (slightly thickened) middle. The tops of her feet dragged across the lush carpet as he dragged her a meter and a half, then gave up.

“For Christ's sake, Alex. Leggo.”

She did, thudding to the carpet, then leaping to her feet before her father or Shel could help her up. “Dad, I'm warning you.”

His eyes went wide, and the corner of his mouth turned up in an expression she knew well: He was pissed, but trying not to laugh. “You're warning me? Sweetheart, you might want to check the history books. I've got rank.”

“Dad, I'm serious. Don't you touch him. Not one finger, not one knuckle. I'm twenty-five years old, for God's sake!”

“Yeah, and I've been telling you for about that long to watch out for fortune hunters,” he snapped back. “This kid doesn't have a penny to his—”

“Fortune hunters?” Shel repeated, sounding like he'd found a snake in the toilet. Alex groaned and made frantic throat-slashing motions, to no avail. “Not fucking likely! What, you think that's the only reason someone would be interested in your daughter?”

“Who's talking to you, boy?”

“Because it's not, mister! King! Whatever! She's smart and sexy and funny and chilly and tough and—”

“Quiet, you. Alex, what the hell? I gotta read this in the papers?”

“It's not like that, Dad.”

“What's it like, then?”

“Private. That's what it's like.”

“You didn't tell him
anything
about us?” Now Sheldon sounded as if the snake in the toilet had hatched babies in his shoes.

“I did! Remember, Dad, on the phone the other—”

“Yeah, yeah. Get some pants on, boy,” the king ordered. “Then join me outside.”

“‘Join me' better not be a euphemism for ‘let me beat you until you need a cast,'” Alex warned.

“You could stand to put some pants on, too,” the king said, mildly enough, and then stepped out of the room.

Chapter 28

“S
ir,” Jenny said nervously, “you have to admit, she's sleeping better.”

“Yeah, real novel way to fight insomnia,” the king snapped.

Alex laughed and, when the king scowled more, laughed harder. Shel, who had been trying to remember if it was against the law to have sex with a member of the Alaskan family out of wedlock, did a double take. He had so rarely heard her laugh like that…uncomplicated and joyous.

“You hypocrite,” she said, ignoring Jenny's blanch. “You're not going to pretend you went to your wedding bed a virgin. Did you even make it into your late teens? How many royal bastards are running around?”

“You hypocrite,
Your Majesty.
I also answer to ‘my king'. And we're not talking about me, we're talking about you. I'm in my—well, I'm not a kid anymore, but you are.”

“I'm a quarter of a century old, Dad. When you were my age, you were married and had kids.”

The king ignored her impeccable logic, turning again to the cringing brunette who looked as if she wished to be anywhere, anywhere but in that room. “Jenny, you're killin' me. You're supposed to keep an eye on her! Are those blue jeans?”

Jenny blushed so hard, Shel thought she was going to have an aneurysm on the spot. “My king, they are. I was enjoying a private engagement earlier when I was made aware of—of your joyous visit.”

“Yeah, are you gonna be okay?”

“Fine, sir. Thank you for the washcloth.” In fact, Jenny had nearly fainted on the spot when she burst into the suite and took in the sight: Sheldon and Alex, hastily dressed, and the king, breathing fire. The king had taken pity on her, made her sit down, and put a damp cloth on her forehead, which she had only given back in the last minute.

“How about your date? What happened to him?”

“My king, when I got the emergency call—I mean, when I was made aware of the occasion of your happy visit, he drove me back to the hotel and went home.”

“Okay. Well, now that I'm sure we're not going to lose you, let me repeat, you're killin' me. You're not watching out for her?”

“Sir, she is her father's daughter.”

“So?”

“So,” Alex interrupted, “pull the other one, Dad. Why are you here? It's…” Alex glanced around for a clock.

“Eleven fifty-five,” Jenny supplied helpfully.

“I haven't been getting any reports from you.”

Alex looked at Jenny, who went redder, if possible (which perfectly matched her bloodshot eyes) and said, pretty much without taking a breath, “With all due respect sir and miss that's not true I've been filing reports at oh-eight-hundred and twenty-hundred hours each day.”

“From
you,
sunshine,” the king said to Alex. “Think I care what ribbon you cut or what jerk you had lunch with? I've got official reports coming out the yin-yang. This…
this
is the stuff I want to know about.”


This
is none of your damned business.”

“Guess again, Princess In-So-Much-Trouble. You, how about you?”

“Me?” Shel practically gulped. He was having trouble figuring out what was happening, and if a beating was imminent. Bad enough to be busted by a girl's dad…but a king? And now they were drinking decaf coffee in the suite's parlor, all of them sitting around the table like pals? Was death imminent? Deportation? Firing? Arm wrestling? What?

“Yeah, what's your story?”

Jenny leaned forward. “Dr. Sheldon Rivers, head of the—”

“Hush, Jenny,” the king said, pleasantly enough, and she instantly hushed and stared down at her hands.

“Well, I'm—uh—I work at the Institute. I met your daughter her first day here and we've been…” He coughed. He had three cups of coffee in him; why was his mouth so dry? “We've been seeing each other.”

“Seeing?” the king asked.

“Seeing?” Alex smirked, which was no help at all.

Shel felt his temper start to fray; it was like a rope being yanked along the top of a glass wall. “She's right,” he said, almost snapped. “It's none of your business.”

“Yeah, yeah.” The king dipped a finger into his breast pocket and took out a small string that looked like an eight-inch length of dental floss. He started cleaning his teeth with it.

It
was
dental floss.

“Oh, Dad!” Alex cried, shielding her eyes from the horror. “Do you have to do that now?”

“Hey, I had a T-bone for supper. It's been driving me crazy.” The floss twanged as he cleaned his incisors. “So, kiddo, when are you coming back?”

“I haven't decided yet.”

This was news to Shel, who thought that perhaps the evening might be salvaged after all.

The king grunted. “Yeah?”

“Yeah.”

“What if I told you to come back on the plane with me tomorrow morning, that David's finished up his projects and can take over for you here?”
Twang, pa-tang!

“I'd tell you,” she said cheerfully, “to take a flying fuck at a rolling donut.”

“This is how she talks to her father,” the king complained to Shel and Jenny. “Nice language.”

“Who do you think I picked it up from?”

“I assumed TV, like everyone else.”

“Maybe we should go,” Shel said to Jenny.

“No,” the king and princess said in unison.

“Kiddo, is this the way to go about fixing things?” the king continued, tucking his floss back in his pocket.

“You're not even going to throw it away?” Alex gasped.

“Waste not, want not.”

“Dad, you're the
king
of
Alaska
. You can afford to use a new piece of dental floss now and again. My God, I'll buy you a new pack. A case. A factory. Just please, please throw that disgusting thing in the garbage.”

“Hey, this way it's right here when I need it again.” He patted his pocket.

She groaned into her palms, then looked back up at her father. “Every time I think I've figured out your disgusting habits, you come up with a new one.”

“And you're avoiding the question. This the way to solve things?”

“What
things,
Dad?” she asked, exasperated.

“The insomnia-bad-dream-scared-all-the-time-things,” Shel volunteered.

He got a double blast of Baranov blue—a glare from Alex; a look of surprise from the king.

“Never mind,” Alex said.

“Huh,” Al said.

“Never
mind
.”

“So, boy, you're a doctor? Bio guy like my son?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Don't call me sir, I work for a living.”

“Dad! What's he supposed to say, ‘hey schmuck'?”

“Army brat?” the king continued, pretending he wasn't being repeatedly interrupted.

“I'm sure it's in all your reports.”

“Yeah, but who reads 'em? So, whaddya think of my kid here?”

“Daaaaaaaaaaad!”

“I think she's glorious,” he said with perfect truth.

“Yeah? Huh.” The king belched lightly against the back of his hand. “Plane food. It's always bad. Even if you own the plane. You free for dinner tomorrow night?”

“No,” Alex said.

“Yes,” Shel replied.

“You ever have dinner with a rich asshole before?”

“Sure,” he said, and then he found out where Alex got the laugh.

Chapter 29

“Y
our fish okay? Need another drink?”

“My fish is fine, King Alexander, and I need about five more drinks.”

The king smiled. “I hear you. And it's Al.”

“Dad, for God's sake,” Alexandria broke in. “He's not going to call you Al. It's absurd.”

“She's right,” Shel agreed. “I'm not.”

“What?” The king sounded wounded. “I'm trying to be nice. I'm all friendly and stuff. We're having a nice meal. I'm not putting him in crutches. I didn't declare war on his country. Why're you still bitching?”

“You wouldn't dare,” Sheldon almost sneered. “America could kick your ass.”

“Is that a
dare
, boy?”

“Stop it! Cut it out, you two, my God, it's like watching a couple of wolves in the backyard at home.”

“Yeah, and there's only one alpha,” King Al warned him.

“I was just thinking the same thing,” Shel said mildly.

“Cut it out! I'm choking on all the testosterone in the air, I swear. What are you looking at?” she snapped, and all the guards at the next table hurriedly looked elsewhere.

“Don't take your mad out on the staff,” her father said in a tone that brooked no argument.

“Sorry,” she said, and meant it. It had been one of the rules since earliest childhood: always smile, never fob the job on someone else, Edmund is always right, and never take a bad day out on the staff. “Okay, sorry. Sorry, guys,” she called. Then she turned back to the two men in her life. “But Dad, honestly. ‘Don't call me Sir, I'm Al'…give me a break. Do you think Prince Charles goes around saying ‘hey, call me Chuck, how's it hangin'?' How about Princess Sophia of Greece? Do you think she says, ‘call me Sophie, how 'bout some more salt on your grouper?' No.”

“Aw, shaddup and eat your sushi.”

She pursed her lips, then did as he commanded. Frankly, as far as dinners with a lover and her father went, the evening was, so far, a smashing success. Shel looked like he was about to jump out a window, but who could blame him? As if eating with her dad wasn't bad enough, there were six armed men at the next table.

“So, boy, what made you decide to be a marine biologist?”

“It's Shel. And I love the ocean.”

“And you live here in NoDak?”

“Yes.”

There was a long pause, but Shel didn't elaborate. The king tried again. “So, you ever been married?”

“You know I haven't, King Alexander.”

“Well, it's overrated.”

“Dad,” Alex said warningly.

“Hey, I'm not saying she was a bad mom. Just a bad wife.”

“Dad!”

“Man, the temper on her! Oofta. Reminds me of someone else,” he said, glancing at Alex out of the corner of his eye.

“I read some stories about her.”

“Oh, yeah?” the king asked warningly. The scandal surrounding Queen Dara's death had only been matched by the baying of the media dogs.

“Yeah. Something about on her way to her hairdresser's?”

It had actually been on the way to her lover's beach house, but the Sitka Palace, of course, had told a different story. In Alaska, it was very bad form to discuss the truth as opposed to the glossed-over press release.

The king relaxed. “Yeah. Damn shame, too. She was a beautiful woman. Sure didn't need any help from a hairdresser.”

“Dad. Shel. Can we talk about something else, please?”

“Like what?” the king asked, clearly exasperated.

“Anything. God, anything! The melting ice caps. The rising American crime rate. Porn. We could talk about porn!”

“I'm not talking about porn with your dad,” Shel informed her. “Not even if you stick a gun in my ear.”

“Is that a dare, boy? Hey, Krenklov! Gimme your Sig.”

“It's not a dare, Dad! You just put that right back in your holster, Terry.”

“Spoilsport. You guys don't know from porn,” the king said, and finished his beer. “Modern conveniences make porn a totally different undertaking.”

Alex rested her head on her hands. “God, God…”

“Internet porn. Ha! You young men have it easy these days. When I was a kid, you got your porn the old-fashioned way: you sent your butler out to buy it, and you hid it where your mom's maid couldn't find it.”

“Great,” she sighed. “Just when I thought the evening couldn't get any weirder.”

“Yeah,” Shel agreed. “That was kind of naïve of you.”

“Cheer up,” the king told them. “Only three courses to go.”

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