Book Read Free

Blitzed by the Brit: A Secret Baby Sports Romance

Page 44

by Jessica Ashe


  Had I rushed her into the decision? My proposal at the coffee shop had been a little abrupt, but she’d been leaning towards saying yes anyway. Plus, this benefited both of us. Sophia had confessed that she wanted a visa. This way she got to stay in the country after her degree, and I got to inherit a small fortune.

  But still…

  “It’s not too late to back out,” I whispered in Sophia’s ear. “I can take the blame if you want.”

  “Are you having second thoughts?”

  “No, not at all. But if you are… well, I just don’t want you too feel under any pressure to do this.”

  “There’s no pressure. It’s just a piece of paper. My life won’t be any different tomorrow.”

  “Actually, you’ll be a princess and potentially a future Queen of England.”

  “Oh yeah.”

  “Small change.”

  “I can live with it.”

  I couldn’t stop a smile from spreading across my face. If anyone saw us, we would look like a genuine couple in love and ready to spend the rest of their lives together.

  Sophia started fiddling with her breasts, so I looked over her shoulder and caught Ellie’s eye. Ellie had been cool about this entire thing. She was close to Sophia, but she wasn’t a crazy, overprotective friend. That might have lulled me into a false sense of security, because looking at Ellie now, I knew that if I hurt Sophia there would be hell to pay. I also knew I would never do that, and not because I was scared of Ellie. Well, not just because I was scared of Ellie.

  The staircase creaked as a couple walked down the stairs hand in hand, followed by a flock of bridesmaids, men in suits, and women hidden under big hats. They were all so caught up in the wedding that they walked right past us and out of the door without so much as a glance in our direction. That was how it should be.

  A few minutes later, our minister walked halfway down the stairs and called out for us to follow him.

  “Here goes,” I said to Sophia, trying my best to give a reassuring smile.

  “Hang on,” Ellie yelled out. “George, you need to go up first, and then we need to walk behind Sophia and hold up her train.”

  “I don’t have a train,” Sophia argued. “You’re just going to be holding up my skirt and getting an eyeful of my ass.”

  “We’re doing it anyway,” Ellie insisted, as her and Dani got in position.

  “I think I’d like to stand behind her as well,” I suggested. “Sounds like there’s a great view.”

  “Get up those stairs, George,” Dani snapped.

  “Christ, I knew married life would involve being bossed around, but I’d assumed that would be coming from the missus.”

  I jogged up the stairs and introduced myself to the minister.

  “Oh wow,” he said, when he shook my hand. “I’d seen the names on the calendar, but I assumed someone was playing a joke. It’s really you.”

  “It’s really me.”

  “Didn’t think I’d ever conduct a royal wedding.”

  “Didn’t think I’d ever be in one.”

  Our conversation ended with the ear-splitting noise of a northern girl and a welsh girl screeching “here comes the bride” at the tops of their already loud voices.

  “You’re definitely going to remember this one,” I said to the registrar, who looked like he was on the verge of putting his hands over his ears.

  He’d remember it, and so would I. The top floor of the building was a large open space which had probably once been a large attic, but now had a small archway and a modest amount of chairs for guests. Technically, we could have just sat down at a table, said a few words and signed the paperwork, but Ellie had insisted we at least make it look vaguely like a real wedding. Neither Sophia nor I had put up much of a fight. That still surprised me.

  I blocked out the noise—I mean singing—and focused on Sophia as she appeared at the top of the stairs and walked towards me. Regardless of my feelings for marriage, I couldn’t help but be moved at the sight of her walking slowly in that dress with Ellie and Dani picking up the rear.

  It’s not real, I reminded myself. It’s a legal requirement, and it means nothing.

  So why was I nervous? Grooms were supposed to be nervous on their wedding days, but that was because they were in love. And stupid. The two usually went hand in hand.

  “Please join hands,” the registrar said. I took Sophia’s hands in mine. It had been many years since the act of holding hands had ever been a thing to set my heart racing, but that’s what was happening now. “George, we’ll start with you. Please repeat after me.”

  Chapter 15

  Sophia

  It was all over in three minutes. A bit like the night I lost my virginity, except not as painful and my friends hadn’t been watching that night. I hoped not, anyway.

  “So that’s it?” I asked. “We’re married?”

  “Not quite,” the registrar explained. “You still need to sign a paper to make it all legal.”

  He ushered us over to a table in the corner where the paperwork lay out ready for us to sign. This bit scared me more than the ceremony. Ellie and Dani putting on a fuss had been so over-the-top for the occasion, that I’d found the entire thing more comical than serious. Until I’d reached the altar, at least.

  The second George took his hands in mine, my heart started fluttering wildly and inconsistently, and I suddenly felt rather nauseous. I told myself it wasn’t real again and again, but when I’d had to repeat the vows to George, they’d sounded real enough.

  But then it had all ended. Now there was just the simple matter of committing fraud as the first step towards getting a visa to live in England. None of this seemed to bother Ellie and Dani, who happily signed the document as witnesses to this whole affair.

  “Okay, congratulations,” the registrar said. “You are now husband and wife.”

  “Photo time,” Ellie screamed loudly. “Get together you two. Sophia, kiss him on the cheek.”

  I pressed my lips up to George’s cheek, but made sure not to actually make a kissing motion. If there was no noise it wasn’t a real kiss.

  “George, do the same to Sophia.”

  George placed his lips on mine, but there was definitely a noise this time.

  “Come on,” Dani pleaded. “You’re not cousins. Look like you care.”

  George squeezed up close to me and placed his hand on my thigh. It would have been an innocent enough gesture between husband and wife, but I felt like he shouldn’t be touching me that way in public. Contact from George sent a heat coursing through my body, and made me want to be somewhere private. No doubt I’d be bright red in this photo.

  Our lips touched and we held the pose for five seconds while Ellie and Dani took photos. This time it was definitely a kiss.

  Ten minutes ago, I’d been a single lady—now I was officially married to a man who would soon be recognized as a prince. That made me a woman about to be confirmed as a princess. It was a lot to take in for an American girl from a small town in California.

  George and I walked down the stairs hand-in-hand, and headed straight to a small park across the street. I stuck to the path because my heels would be instantly lost in the grass, and I’d end up on my ass in no time at all. Going commando, that could be a big problem.

  “I need to go make a quick call,” George said. “See you soon, wifey.” He smiled awkwardly and kissed me on the cheek, before disappearing around the corner.

  “I can’t believe someone’s made an honest woman out of you,” Ellie joked.

  “I don’t know if ‘honest’ is the best word to use, given the circumstances.”

  “Good point. But I’m still jealous.”

  “There’s nothing to be jealous about,” I insisted. “We’ll be divorced in six months.”

  “I hope you’re at least going to enjoy your wedding night,” Dani said. “You can’t let a man like that go to waste. I don’t know about the whole fraudulent visa thing, but I know that not screw
ing George would be criminal.”

  “She’s right,” Ellie added. “Besides, isn’t it a legal requirement to consummate the marriage?”

  “I very much doubt it. Look, I didn’t mind you making a big deal of the wedding, but now we need to get back to normality. I’m still a student with coursework to complete.”

  “Sorry, but it doesn’t work like that,” Dani said. “You’re going to be a public figure. There’s no way you can just go back to living a normal life now. There will be parties, fundraisers, art galleries to open, and all that other bullshit.”

  “You make being a princess sound difficult,” Ellie said.

  “It is,” Dani replied. “I wouldn’t do it. I enjoy my freedom too much. I want to be able to shag who I want, when I want. I definitely don’t want the press recording my every move. Mind you, for George I would be tempted.”

  “That’s why George doesn’t want to become a prince,” I pointed out. “He enjoys his freedom.” Which for him, meant screwing as many women as possible. For some reason, I couldn’t get all that excited about helping him achieve that particular goal.

  “You’ll still have freedom,” Ellie said. “It’s not like it was in the olden days. Royals are just celebrities, really. Sure, it’s a bitch to have no privacy, but you’re also rich and famous. That has to be good.”

  “You’re forgetting that this is temporary. It’ll be over before you know it.”

  “All the more reason to enjoy those six months of fame. Speaking of which, when are you going to come out as a married couple? You won’t be able to keep this secret for long. Someone’s going to tip off the press.”

  “I think that’s what George is discussing now with his friend. I guess this means I’m going to have to tell my mom soon.”

  “You haven’t told your Mom?” Ellie screeched. “My God, she’s going to go mad.”

  “Yep, probably. We haven’t spoken that much lately. She was furious at me for walking out on the wedding. The last one. There was lots of screaming and yelling, and we never really made up. We weren’t that close to begin with.”

  “That sucks,” Dani said.

  Dani and her mom were like sisters. Just a few days after I’d met Dani, I’d overheard her having a really explicit conversation about a couple of guys she’d slept with in the last month. I turned red just listening to the details, but I practically keeled over in shock when she said “bye, Mom” at the end.

  Mom and I were nowhere near that close, and I didn’t have any siblings. After the incident with Stan, I didn’t have many friends either—not ones I could count on anyway. Ellie and Dani more than made up for it though. Better to have two great friends than ten average ones.

  “Are you both heading back to school now?” I asked the girls.

  “It’s university, not school,” Ellie corrected. “You make us sound like sixteen year olds.”

  “I still don’t understand the difference, but whatever.”

  “I guess we should head back,” Ellie said. “I’m getting hungry. Turns out being maid of honor is enough to work up an appetite.”

  “George suggested we all get lunch together if you fancy it?”

  “We could go to the pub on the corner?” Dani suggested. “They do a great roast.”

  “The cocktail selection sucks though,” Ellie pointed out.

  “True.”

  “It’s only just midday,” I pointed out. “Isn’t it a bit early for cocktails?”

  Ellie and Dani looked at each other and shook their heads. “You really haven’t adapted to the British way of life yet, have you?” Ellie asked. “Pubs open at eleven in the morning for a reason.”

  “Alright,” I said, holding up my hands. “But let’s go somewhere nice. George is paying.”

  “Oh, well why didn’t you say so,” Dani replied. “I know just the place.”

  “I thought you might. I’ll go hurry George up.”

  George had disappeared from sight, but he couldn’t have gone far. I hobbled over as quickly as I could in my high heels, and saw him standing on the corner of the park with his back to me.

  I slowed to a walk and called out his name, but he didn’t hear me. He sounded like he was finishing up his conversation anyway.

  “Let me know what she says,” George said to the person on the other end of the phone. “Good news, or bad news, I want to know.”

  I stood back to let him end the call. It was a bit early to be a nagging wife demanding all his time and attention.

  He muttered something else incomprehensible into the phone, and then a few more words that I did catch.

  “Okay, speak to you soon, Tabitha. Love you. Bye.”

  Chapter 16

  George

  The news of our marriage had leaked out before we’d even left the pub after lunch. Ellie and Dani had jumped in a taxi to get back to university, but Sophia and I fled home where—despite me offering—we did not get to consummate the marriage.

  Sophia attempted to go to class once, but the media chaos stopped her even getting close to the lecture hall. After that, the university doubled down on security, but Sophia decided to take some time off from her studies. She’d catch up easily enough.

  The media eventually moved on from the shock of my existence, and started debating what the hell was going to happen to the order of succession. The consensus was that the current royal family were fucked. My claim was valid, and I could easily prove it with a DNA test.

  Right now, there was a Queen on the throne likely quite concerned about the need to move house soon, and a Prince and Princess watching their future disappear down the drain. They had every reason to hate me, and yet for some reason we got an invitation to dinner at Clarence House.

  I would have declined, but Sophia got hold of the invitation and insisted we attend. At least it was another excuse to see her in a formal dress again. That was worth a night spent talking to the royals I was about to usurp.

  If I were ever King, the first thing I’d do is cut down on the eleven layers of security it took to enter a building. It seemed fucking rude in my book to invite someone to your house and then treat them like criminals on the way in.

  Not to mention, one of the guards had the nerve to put his hands on Sophia. I hadn’t even done that yet. Not recently, anyway.

  If the ride from the airport had taken one minute longer, I wouldn’t have been responsible for my actions. The dark blue silk clung to her body enough that I could picture her completely naked. The dress was nearly entirely backless, revealing a part of her I hadn’t seen yet, but as usual, it was the legs that had me captivated.

  Had I always been a leg man? I certainly was where Sophia was concerned. Perhaps standing all day for work was a good way to keep the legs toned. It certainly hadn’t done her any harm.

  The dinner turned out to be a rather intimate affair, but that was just fine with me. Just Prince Stuart and his younger sister, Princess Mary. Plus about twenty servants.

  “I’m afraid Mother couldn’t make it,’ Stuart said, referring to the Queen. “Well, that’s not quite true. She could, but she thought it would be inappropriate to meet at this stage.”

  “No problem,” I replied. As much as I liked to play it cool, meeting the Prince and Princess had set off a few butterflies in my stomach. Meeting the Queen would have been something else entirely.

  I probably shouldn’t be here anyway, but Sophia and I agreed it would be best to keep the appointment. We wanted to look like a normal couple for the time being, and normal couples wouldn’t turn down trips to meet the royal family. Besides, if my plan went wrong, I might still need to play the part of a prince for a bit. That thought held less appeal with each passing minute.

  We all sat down at a table that was far too large for just the four of us. A servant appeared over my shoulder to pour wine. Not exactly my drink of choice, but perhaps it was a little early for whiskey.

  “It’s lovely to meet you,” Mary said.

  “Same,�
� I replied briefly.

  “I love your dress,” Sophia said enthusiastically. I was used to American accents, but tonight her accent stood out a mile in a place where even the servants spoke the Queen’s English. It just made me want her even more.

  “Thank you,” Mary replied. “Yours is absolutely divine. Mother would never let me wear something so risqué.”

  “To be honest, neither would mine,” Sophia admitted. “She’ll have a fit when she sees me on television later.”

  Mary immediately warmed to Sophia, although she looked like she hadn’t spoken to a ‘normal’ person in years. When Mary found out Sophia was from California, she asked her if she’d “bumped into” any celebrities. I opened my mouth to point out that California was actually bigger than the UK; you didn’t just ‘bump into’ celebrities on a regular basis. I decided against it. I’d already displaced her in line for the throne; no need to make her look stupid as well.

  “I’d love to meet Jennifer Lawrence,” Sophia admitted, after Mary had asked her what the Oscars were like. “I suppose I’ll be able to do that now.”

  “I’ve met her,” I said, the words slipping out before my brain could stop them.

  “When?” Sophia asked.

  “Uh, nevermind. Story for another time perhaps.”

  Butlers came out and served us the first course to save me any further questions on that topic.

  “Start from the outside in,” I whispered to Sophia, who looked confused by all the cutlery choices.

  “How do you know all this stuff?” she asked.

  “Must be in the genes.”

  Stuart must have overheard because he suddenly turned red and looked distinctly uncomfortable. He’d been calm all evening, but it wouldn’t have escaped his notice that I stood to push him down the pecking order.

  “We should probably deal with the large elephant in the room,” Stuart said. “I want you to know that you won’t have any issues at our end if you want to stake your claim to the throne.”

 

‹ Prev