Paper Princess: A Novel (The Royals Book 1)

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Paper Princess: A Novel (The Royals Book 1) Page 23

by Erin Watt


  That’s the last instruction he’s ever going to give me, I think, and then I nonchalantly swipe a fruit bowl off the table and hit him over the head with it.

  He rears up with a shout. “What the hell!” Stunned, he clamps one hand to the back of his head.

  “I told you the bowl was too weak,” Savannah says, bursting out of the bathroom. Before Daniel can leap away, she whips up a bottle of hairspray and sends a stream of stinging solvents straight into his face.

  “Motherfucker! You three are dead meat!” Daniel roars. He stumbles to his left and bangs into the windows.

  The three of us laugh.

  “I don’t want to kill him, just maim him,” I remind Savannah. “How about the candlestick?” I swing the heavy silver weapon and strike Daniel in the shoulder. Savannah brings the matching one down on the top of his head, and Daniel slumps over.

  Valerie picks up one sash and tosses me the other one. “You’re right, Ella. This guy is a creep.”

  As quickly as possible, we truss him up like a turkey. With Daniel momentarily dazed, it’s easy for us to secure his hands behind his back, tie his ankles together and then loop a length of sash between the two sets of bindings.

  “Too bad we don’t have tape.” I pick up a banana from the floor and toss it in the air. “We could tape this to his ass.”

  “That’d be awesome,” Valerie crows.

  Savannah scowls. “I have something to stick up his ass.” She stomps over, draws back her leg and delivers the harshest kick I’ve seen outside a movie. Apparently smashing a five-pound candlestick into his skull didn’t quite lessen her anger toward him.

  The impact of her delicate foot to his butt is surprisingly hard. It jolts Daniel from his stupor, and he releases a yowl of pain. An ugly smile stretches across Savannah’s face. Valerie and I watch as she bends close to whisper something to him, something that makes him shudder.

  Then she straightens up and runs a hand over her hair, smoothing all the strands to lie flat against her pretty head. “I’m ready. I don’t want to spend another minute with this piece of garbage.”

  “Hold up,” Valerie says. We turn to see her throwing an apple up in the air.

  A grin slowly spreads across my face. “Are you thinking what I’m thinking?” I ask. The plan is so evil. I love it.

  Savannah starts laughing and is almost laughing too hard to help us pull open Daniel’s mouth and shove the apple inside, but one dazed, naked boy is no match for the three of us.

  “Let’s go.” I run to the door and find Sawyer there. “We’re ready.”

  “So are we,” he answers with a grin. “Did you kill him? Because that yelp back there sounded bad.”

  “I think Savannah wanted to but we held her back.”

  “I’ve always liked that chick,” Sawyer says.

  I lean back and gesture for the girls to exit. Savannah and Valerie slip out the sliding doors leading to the beach. Once they’re down at the shore, I hit the lights and the button for the remote control curtains. The Worthingtons made this whole thing easy for us. As the lights flicker on and the curtains part, Sawyer and I haul ass after the girls, who we find standing with Sebastian.

  Once we arrive, Seb places a hand on the shoulders of Valerie and Savannah. “Can’t believe we’re missing the show,” he says glumly.

  I’m bummed too, but we decided it wasn’t a good idea for me and the girls to be part of the crowd during Daniel’s unveiling. If any of his buddies figure out we were behind it, they might turn on us. The twins are down here serving as our bodyguards in case that happens.

  We stand and wait, straining for the sounds that will mark the reveal of Daniel—tied up and on display like a pig at a luau.

  The first noises we hear are a chorus of gasps. There’s a shout that we can’t make out and then a moment of silence. After what seems like a long time to me, but must feel like an eternity to the naked and bound Daniel, there’s a shout of “Oh my God!” and “Holy shit, is that Daniel Delacorte?” Other voices join in until it seems like every guest is commenting on the scene before them.

  There’s clapping, whistling, and screaming, and for some reason I start shaking. I tremble so hard I have to lean against Sawyer. He puts an arm around me and rubs a hand against my side.

  “I-I don’t know why I’m so weak,” I stutter.

  “You’re coming off an adrenaline high.” He digs around in his pocket and then hands me a roll of mints. “That’s all I got. Sorry.”

  “S’okay,” I mumble and shove two in my mouth. I concentrate on chewing the candies, and whether it’s the tiny shock of sugar that helps or just focusing on something other than the stunt I just participated in, my shaking stops and I start warming up. “Where’s the rest of the Royal crew?”

  Sebastian gives me an amused glance as if he knows exactly which Royal I’m curious about. “Witnessing Daniel’s humiliation with the rest of Astor Park and making sure the right story is being spread.”

  “What story is that?”

  “The truth. He got beat up by a girl.”

  “Three girls,” I correct.

  “It’s a better story when it’s only one girl,” Sawyer pipes up.

  “But don’t you want to take credit, too?”

  “Publicly? Naah. It’d get back to Dad and then he’ll be on our asses about the military school thing again.” Sawyer grins. “But we’ll know we did this, and that’s all that matters.”

  A commotion at the top of the embankment catches my attention. The three other Royals are coming. Sawyer grabs me by the arm and herds me down the beach. Valerie shouts after us that she’s catching a ride home with Savannah, and I give her a quick wave as I race off with the twins. Their brothers aren’t far behind us.

  “You should have seen the look on his face—” Gideon starts.

  “Man, his dick is teeny weeny,” Easton crows. “Was that shrinkage or is he really that small—”

  “The bruise on his forehead looked nasty. Did that come from you?” Reed sounds impressed.

  Three Royal brothers converge on us, all talking at once.

  “Whoa, whoa, whoa.” I raise my hands. “I can’t handle all of you at once.”

  “You did good.” Gideon surprises me by ruffling my hair.

  “It was perfect,” Reed drawls, and the approval in his eyes makes me feel warm and gooey inside.

  Easton picks me up and whirls me around. “You’re a boss, Ella. Remind me never to piss you off.”

  A racket of shouts and curses has us turning back toward the Worthington place. Easton lets me slide to the ground as we see a crowd form on the top of the ridge. There’s a splash—did someone just get pushed into the pool?

  “He just dunked Penny Lockwood-Smith into the pool!” someone from the party yells before erupting in laughter.

  “Here he comes,” Gideon says with a sigh.

  He is Daniel, who’s charging through a line of people. Even in the dark blue of the night, we can see that he’s furious.

  “Don’t let him bite you,” Easton murmurs in my ear. “He might have rabies.”

  Daniel stops at the edge of lawn and scans the shoreline. When he sees us, he roars, points, and then leaps down onto the sand in one jump. It’s an impressive athletic move.

  “Look at him go,” I marvel.

  “He is on the lacrosse team,” Sawyer reminds me.

  “I’m going to kill you. All of you! Starting with you, you gutter trash.”

  Reed’s face breaks out in a grin as he turns to the rest of us. Figures that this would be the moment he unleashes one of his rare smiles. “That sounded like a threat, right?”

  Easton nods. “I think Ella’s in imminent danger. You know Dad wouldn’t like that.”

  Happy as I’ve ever seen him, Reed pushes me behind him as Daniel runs down the sand, clad in only his khaki shorts. Small pinpoints of light pop up as a number of the partygoers decide that this scene should be immortalized. The Royals shuffle me backward
and I have to force my way between the twins to see what’s going on.

  And I’m just in time, too, because as soon as I stick my head out between the mountain of Royal muscle, Daniel launches himself at Reed with a growl. Reed takes one step forward and smashes his fist into Daniel’s jaw.

  Daniel drops like a stone.

  29

  We’re all in high spirits as we head back to the mansion. I shoot Valerie a quick text to make sure she’s cool driving home with Savannah, and she assures me it’s fine. It turns out the Carringtons live around the corner from the Montgomerys.

  Easton walks beside me. The twins are up ahead, still laughing about the scene we’d left back at the Worthington house. Their voices float toward us.

  “He knocked him out cold in one second flat.” Sawyer is chuckling.

  “New record for Reed,” Sebastian agrees.

  Reed and Gideon trail behind us. Every time I turn around, their heads are bent close in conversation. It’s obvious those two have secrets that Easton and the twins don’t know about, and that bothers me, because I was really starting to buy into the motto about Royals sticking together.

  We reach the house but I halt at the steps leading up to it. “I’m going to walk along the water for a bit,” I tell Easton.

  “I’ll walk with you.”

  I shake my head. “I kinda want to be alone. No offense.”

  “None taken.” He leans in and smacks a kiss on my cheek. “That was some first-class vengeance tonight, little sis. You’re my new hero.”

  After he’s gone, I leave my shoes on a rock and walk barefoot along the soft sand. The moon lights my way, and I haven’t taken twenty steps when I hear footsteps behind me. I don’t need to turn around to know it’s Reed.

  “You shouldn’t be out here alone.”

  “What, you think Daniel is going to jump out from behind a boulder and attack me?”

  Reed reaches me. I stop walking and turn toward him. As usual, his gorgeous face makes my breath hitch.

  “He might. You humiliated him pretty good tonight.”

  I have to laugh. “And you knocked him out. He’s probably at home right now icing his face.”

  Reed shrugs. “He had it coming.”

  I stare at the water. He stares at me. I can feel his gaze burning into my face, and I shift my head again, smiling wryly.

  “Let’s hear it.”

  “Hear what?”

  “Some more lies. You know, how last night was just you doing me a favor, you don’t really want me, yada, yada.” I wave my hand.

  To my surprise, he laughs.

  “Oh my God. Was that a laugh? Reed Royal laughs, folks. Someone call the Vatican because an honest-to-God miracle has occurred.”

  That gets me another chuckle. “You’re so annoying,” he grumbles.

  “Yeah, but you still like me.”

  He goes quiet. I think he’s going to stay that way, but then he curses under his breath and says, “Yeah, maybe I do.”

  I feign amazement. “Two miracles in one night? Is the world ending?”

  Reed grabs a chunk of my hair and gives it a tug. “That’s enough outta you.”

  I step closer to the water, but it’s even more freezing than usual. I squeal when it touches my toes, then dart back.

  “I hate the Atlantic,” I declare. “The Pacific is way better.”

  “You lived on the west coast?” He sounds grudgingly curious.

  “West, east, north, south. We lived everywhere. Never stayed in one place for long. I think the longest was a year, and that was in Chicago. Or I guess Seattle was the longest—two years—but I don’t count that because my mom was sick and we didn’t have a choice but to stay put.”

  “Why did you move around so much?”

  “Money, mostly. If Mom lost her job, we had to pack up and go where the money was. Or she’d fall in love and we’d move in with her latest boyfriend.”

  “She had a lot of boyfriends?” His voice is harsh.

  I’m honest with him. “Yeah. She fell in love a lot.”

  “Then she wasn’t really in love.”

  I look over quizzically.

  “That’s lust,” Reed says with a shrug. “Not love.”

  “Maybe. But to her, it was love.” I hesitate. “Did your parents love each other?”

  I shouldn’t have asked because he goes stiffer than a board. “My dad claims they did. But he sure as shit never acted like a man in love.”

  I think Reed is wrong. Just hearing Callum talk about Maria, you can tell that he loved her deeply. I don’t know why his sons refuse to see that.

  “You guys all miss her, huh?” I move the subject somewhere safer, but it doesn’t erase the tension in his face.

  Reed doesn’t answer.

  “It’s okay to say it. I miss my mom every day. She was the most important person in my life.”

  “She was a stripper.”

  His mocking reply makes my shoulders tighten. “So?” I come to Mom’s defense instantly. “Her stripping paid our bills. It kept a roof over our heads. It paid for my dance classes.”

  Sharp blue eyes focus on me. “Did she force you to strip when she got sick?”

  “No. She never knew about it. I told her I was waiting tables, which was true. I did do that, and I also worked at a truck stop, but it wasn’t enough to pay all her medical bills, so I stole her ID and got a job at one of the clubs.” I sigh. “I don’t expect you to understand. You’ve never had to worry about money a day in your life.”

  “No, I haven’t,” he agrees.

  I’m not sure if I move first, or if he does, but we’re walking again. A few feet of distance stretch between us at first, but as we walk, we get closer and closer until our bare arms are brushing with every step. His skin is warm, and my arm prickles each time we make contact.

  “My mother was kind,” he finally reveals.

  That’s what Callum said, too. I think of the woman that Steve married—Dinah, the awful shrew who has naked pictures of herself all over her home—and I wonder how two friends could have married such dramatically different women.

  “She cared about people. Too much, maybe. She was a sucker for a sob story. She always went out of her way to help people.”

  “Was she good to you? And your brothers?”

  Reed nods. “She loved us. She was always there for us, giving advice, helping with our homework. And every day she’d spend alone time with each of us. I guess she didn’t want any of us to feel neglected or like she had a favorite. And on the weekends we’d all do stuff together.”

  “Like what?” I ask curiously.

  He shrugs. “Museums, the zoo, kiting.”

  “Kiting?”

  He rolls his eyes at me. “Flying a kite, Ella. Don’t tell me you’ve never done that.”

  “Nope.” I purse my lips. “I did go to a zoo once, though. One of my mom’s boyfriends took us to this shitty petting zoo in the middle of nowhere. They had a goat and a llama and this little monkey that threw poop at me when I walked by.”

  Reed throws his head back and laughs. It’s the sexiest sound I’ve ever heard.

  “And then it turned out the zoo was a front for a drug dealing operation. The boyfriend was just there to buy weed.”

  Neither of us comment on the drastic differences in our childhoods, but I know we’re both thinking about it.

  We keep walking. His fingers graze mine. I hold my breath, wondering if he’s going to take my hand, but he doesn’t, and the disappointment is too much to bear.

  I stop in my tracks and meet his eyes. Not a good idea, because I know he can see the longing on my face. It causes his gaze to grow shuttered, and I bite back my frustration.

  “You like me,” I announce.

  His jaw tics.

  “You want me.”

  Another tic.

  “Dammit, Reed, why can’t you just admit it? What’s the point in lying?”

  When he doesn’t answer, I whirl around and
march off, my bare feet kicking up sand. Suddenly I’m yanked backward, and my shoulders collide with a solid male chest, stealing the breath from my lungs.

  Reed’s chin comes down to rest on my shoulder, his lips millimeters from my ear. “You want me to say it?” he whispers. “Fine, I’ll say it. I want you. I fucking want you.”

  I feel the hard length of him pressing against my butt and I know he’s not lying. As a thrill shoots up my spine, Reed twists me around and his mouth crashes down on mine.

  The kiss is hot enough to turn the Atlantic into lava. My lips part and he slides his tongue past them, devouring my mouth in greedy strokes that leave me breathless. I cling to his broad shoulders, then slide my hands down to his trim waist.

  He groans and cups my bottom, rotating his hips so I can feel every inch of him. Then, after one more drugging kiss, he releases me and staggers backward.

  “I’m leaving for college next year,” he says hoarsely. “I’m leaving, and chances are I’m never coming back. I’m not selfish enough to start something I can’t finish. I’m not gonna do that to you.”

  I don’t care, I want to say. I’ll take him any way I can, even if it’s for a short time, but I don’t voice the words, because I know they won’t sway him.

  “Let’s go back to the house,” he mumbles when my silence drags on.

  I follow him without a word, my lips still tingling from his kiss, my heart still aching from his rejection.

  * * *

  I’m just drifting off to sleep when my bedroom door creaks open. I groggily lift my head. Within seconds I’m wide awake.

  Reed climbs into bed beside me. He doesn’t say a word. The room is too dark, so I can’t see his expression, but I can feel the warmth of his body as he slides closer. The heat of his palm as he strokes my cheek before grasping my chin and tilting my head toward his.

  “What are you doing?” I whisper.

  His voice is pained. “I decided to be selfish.”

  Happiness explodes in my chest. I wrap my arms around his neck and pull him closer. His lips hover over mine, but he doesn’t kiss me.

  “Just for tonight,” he tells me.

 

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