How to Catch a Prince
Page 26
Corina checked her saucer. On the bottom she found a crown crossed with a sword that matched Adelaide’s. Underneath were the letters H of S. “House of Stratton.”
“He used to serve his guests, rich or poor, noblemen or common men, with a whole set. Only these two remain.”
“And I’m to do the same?”
“If you want to wear the tiara, then you must be willing to drink from the cup.”
“If I want to wear the tiara, then how can I sign the papers?” Corina said, setting down her tea and snatching up the annulment.
“That I cannot tell you. What’s in your heart?”
“That I love him. I came over here thinking I could win him back, you know? Love well. But maybe too much time has passed. We’re not the same people we were six years ago.”
“Just because he’s not changed his mind doesn’t mean you’ve not loved well. You’ve not failed.” Adelaide finished her tea with an “ahh,” and set it on the tray. “Now I must be off.”
Adelaide collected the tea set and left Corina alone in her room with so many questions. Crossing to the desk, Corina fished her pen from her purse and hovered over the papers.
Love well. If she had her way, she’d tear up the papers, but she’d made a deal with Stephen. What if the first step of loving well was letting go? Of wearing the tiara of faith and drinking from the cup of esteeming another higher than herself?
“Lord, what do I do?”
Closing her eyes, breathing in, she peered at the documents. And signed. She’d messenger them to the King’s Office this afternoon.
By the time she returned to the Beaumont Post, her journey would be complete. She would be a single woman, having loved well, in word and deed, and through every shifting shadow.
TWENTY-FIVE
This just arrived for you.” Robert crossed the room with an envelope on a silver tray.
“Is this all?” Stephen tossed the envelope to his desk, sure it was the annulment papers. After he dropped her off at the Manor Friday morning, what more could be said or done than to formalize the end?
She’d promised to sign the annulment if he told her the truth. So he did. Ignoring the code of silence that went with classified.
The last two nights he woke in the darkest hours of night with the twinge of regret. Once she signed the annulment, she’d be out of his life forever.
What a very sad thing. No man should ever lose a woman like Corina Del Rey.
“Will there be anything else, sir?” Robert said. “Are you ready for luncheon?”
“Not yet, thank you.” Stephen had gone straight to physio after he dropped Corina at the Manor. But feeling no strength in his ankle, he cut the session short. At the moment, the pain level nearly matched the hours right after surgery.
His vision of returning to the pitch for the Premiership blurred and faded.
Stephen sat, shoving away from the desk, taking a long, narrow view of the envelope. Come on, chap, you flew all the way to America for this. Don’t lose your courage now.
A childhood catechism slipped across his mind. Love is patient, love is kind . . .
Stephen lunged forward, snatched up the envelope, and emptied the contents. However, instead of finding the thick annulment agreement, he found a single slip of paper with an address.
Agnes Rothery,
10 Mulchbury Lane,
Dunwudy Glenn, Brighton Kingdom 12R49-H
Bird’s girlfriend. He’d be jiggered. The King’s Office had located her. At his request after the Madeline & Hyacinth Live! show last week. Bravo, King’s Office.
Stephen tapped the address into his iPhone. Dunwudy Glenn was a lovely, quaint village north of the city, two hours’ drive. The map routed him straight to Agnes Rothery’s home.
He considered his next move. Agnes knew nothing of how her man died. Just that he died a hero. She asked no more questions. Letting Bird and the past rest in peace.
But, by George, Stephen was tired of hiding from life because one rogue insurgent came gunning for him. While he’d not divulge national secrets to Agnes, he would at last keep his promise to Bird.
“If anything happens to me, see to Agnes, will you?”
“You have my word.”
To carry on anew, he must deal with all the Torkham fallout. Mend his broken promises. Then perhaps, maybe, he’d feel somewhat worthy of the air he breathed.
Gathering the paper and his phone, Stephen went to his room, showered, and pulled on jeans and a button-down. He found Robert in the dining hall.
“Ring Thomas, please. Tell him he has the rest of the day off.”
“Yes, sir.” Robert frowned, the light in his eyes dimmed. “Might I ask where you are going? You know the King’s Office doesn’t like for you to—”
“Here’s the address.” He passed over the single sheet of paper. “I’ll drive myself. But I’m going to pick up Miss Del Rey.”
“Sir?”
“Taking her with me if she’ll go.”
“You’ll have your mobile?” Robert knew little to nothing of the events in Afghanistan, only that he was to keep vigilant regarding the prince’s safety.
“I have my mobile.” Stephen offered up his phone as he headed down the long corridor to the garage. “I’ll return late.” Stephen paused before turning the corner. “Take the rest of the day for yourself, Robert. Go to the park. Enjoy the festivals and the city in the sunshine.”
As Stephen zipped through traffic, the tension in his chest eased, the weight on his shoulders lifted. The wind cutting through his open window tousled his hair as warm sunbeams tanned his arm, resting on the door.
He beat the caution light at Market Avenue, taking a wide turn onto Crescent, then taking a cut through to the northbound lane to park by the Manor.
Was this ridiculous to call on her unannounced to ask her to ride along? He didn’t care. Thirty minutes ago he anticipated her signed annulment. Now he was at her door, inviting her on a journey.
Besides, it would be good for her to meet Agnes. They shared something no one else shared. The men they loved dying in a terrorist blast intended for the Prince of Brighton. Perhaps they would form a fast friendship and heal together.
He also considered how much he might need Corina’s courage and strength as he told Agnes he was five and a half years overdue on his promise.
About to enter the Manor, he saw Corina round the corner with a box of puffs under her arm.
“Hey.” She slowed her step. “W–what are you doing here?” Her dark hair framed her face, flowing over her shoulders, and her amber-colored eyes were wide and clear.
“I’ve come for a favor.” He bowed toward her. “You’re free to answer no.”
“What’s the favor?”
In short order, he explained Agnes and Bird, how he promised Bird he’d see to her if anything happened to him and how he had failed on his promise. Time to make amends.
“I don’t want to go alone, you see. Can’t face all my demons alone. I thought perhaps you might enjoy meeting her. Bird and Carlos were the real heroes that day in Torkham.”
“Are you going to tell her everything you told me?”
“No. But I want to see to her. Make sure she’s all right.”
“It’s been five and a half years. Agnes has probably moved on, Stephen.”
“But I must see. If she has, then so be it. That doesn’t negate my promise to Bird. She loved him and I’d like her to know he died with honor.” Something tender flickered across her expression. Something he’d not seen before he deployed. A piece of her heart. “Only if you want.”
She glanced toward his Audi. “Where’s Thomas?”
“This trip is just you and me, love.”
“Stephen, I don’t understand. I thought we were over. You told me the dark secret of it all, so why are we taking a journey together? Why do you need me to help you face your demons?”
He sighed. “Then I’ll be getting on by myself.”
“Oh for
crying out loud.” Corina shoved the box of puffs at him. “They’re fresh from a Franklin Bakery vending cart. Give me a minute to get my phone.”
“Is this a pity response?” He followed her inside the Manor.
“Yes,” Corina said, running upstairs while he waited in the small, quaint lobby, the thick, raw beams only inches above his head.
A small woman with a big smile approached. “Lovely to see you, Your Highness.”
“Thank you. You’ve a nice place here.”
The woman offered him tea, but he declined, unnerved by the intensity of her gaze and the sensation of heat it created in him.
But he felt drawn to her. Almost changed in her presence.
“Corina speaks highly of you,” he said. “Seems you came to her rescue when she arrived in town with no reservation at The Wellington.”
The woman’s eyes sparked. “Indeed. No reservation at The Wellington. Well, we think highly of her. And you.”
Stephen exhaled when Corina bound into the lobby, wearing a pair of jeans and a top, her hair back in a thick, sleek ponytail. Beautiful. Perfect for him. Princess on Monday night, soldier’s wife on Friday afternoon.
Too late. Too late.
They were quiet in the initial moments as Stephen made his way out of town toward His Majesty’s Bridge and the northern highway toward Dunwudy Glenn.
He had the radio on low for a soft serenade of music.
When he hit the open road and settled back, Corina opened the conversation. “How did you play rugby? Wouldn’t you be a danger to the players and the fans?”
“Keeping everything classified helped. But I almost left the team the first week of training, realizing the risk I placed on everyone, my teammates, the players, and fans worldwide. It was too much to bear. Though I was half crazy with desire to play. Rugby became my therapy. My way to forget. I needed to run, compete, make a try. For them. The six who died.”
“I get that, I do. I stayed home. Wasted five years thinking I could bring Daddy and Mama, especially Mama, out of her grief.”
He pressed his hand on her arm, ruing any implications of a tender touch. Telling her the truth bonded them. As friends anyway.
“Dad saw my dilemma, stepped in and organized meetings, spurring a great deal of discussion behind closed doors with Rugby Union, Brighton Eagles, and the defense minister. With a promise from the Rugby Union to heighten their own security, as well as ours, it was agreed I could and should play. When Brighton Special Forces knocked out the cell Asif had been a part of, we felt more confident my life was safe, and thus the rugby world.”
A bit more music in the silence, but he didn’t mind. It was peaceful.
“Hey, remember the dress I wore to the Military Ball and to our wedding?” She held no reserve about speaking of their past. Stephen peered over at her. She was different. Changed from just yesterday.
“The white one with the feathery skirt? Designed by some recluse designer?”
“But he took so long I never got to wear it for its intended purpose.”
“I remember you looked beautiful and, might I add, sexy.” His teasing laugh followed. She popped him lightly on the arm.
“Exactly. Thank you, and it was made for me. There’s none like it in the world. I went home for it before coming here.” She slowed her confession, thinking. “Mama donated it and it was sold at a charity auction. I’d only been gone from the house a few months.”
“Brutal. Did she give you a reason?”
“She made up something about me not needing it, but Stephen, it’s like Carlos died and she tried to bury me with him. She turned my bedroom into a quiet room. Mine. I’m the one still coming home. Not to mention the house has thirty rooms. But she turns mine into an indoor garden shrine to Carlos.”
“Much like my memorial?”
She regarded him for a second. “You two would get along then.”
“Though I agree she should not have taken over your room.”
“My room was across from Carlos’s, and we had this adjoining second-floor veranda that wrapped around our rooms. The windows opened right onto the porch, so we used to climb out at night with sleeping bags when we were supposed to be in bed and stare at the stars, dreaming. He wanted to help people as young as ten. In high school, he was always rescuing people, coming to the aid of the defenseless.”
Stephen swallowed, his skin hot with her confession. He powered down his window for a gulp of fresh air. He was the defenseless Carlos died for when he should have been the defender. He should’ve charged Asif and taken him down.
“You’re quiet. What’s wrong?”
“Thinking.”
“Of that day?”
“Of what a sacrifice you and your family paid.”
“Maybe now that the truth is out, at least with me, and you’re making good with Agnes, you can move on.”
“That’s what the rugby pitch is for, love.”
“What happens when your game ends? When you can no longer play?”
“I cannot imagine. I cannot.”
The conversation went to gentler things, safe things—the art auction, philosophy, and puppies. She loved all things furry.
The shadows above the highway were long and lean by the time Stephen turned down a tree-lined Dunwudy lane with seventeenth-century cottages on postage-stamp-sized lawns.
From the passenger seat, Corina counted the house numbers. “Five, six, seven . . . ten. There . . .” She tapped her window when the car cruised past a brightly painted cottage with a golden thatched roof.
Stephen slowed and eased down the narrow driveway. The reality of what he was about to do pricked at his nerves. When he called Agnes to say he was coming, she sounded dubious.
“The Prince of Brighton is coming here?”
Cutting the engine, he rattled the keys against his palm, staring at the house nestled between giant royal sycamores.
“It’s going to be fine,” Corina said.
“I guess so.”
Out of the car with Corina by his side, Stephen made his way up the walk, carrying the weight of his delayed promise.
At the front stoop, he rang the bell. The door eased open and a boy, about five years old, naked from the waist up, glared up at them with big green eyes. “Mum, it’s a man and a lady.” His shorts were dirt stained, and his muddy socks were sinking into his shoes. A shock of his blond hair curled away from his freckled forehead in a classic cowlick. Stephen liked him instantly.
“Baby Bird, step back.” A woman came from down a narrow, dark corridor. Baby Bird? Bird had a son?
“Your Highness, please come in. I can hardly believe it. The Prince of Brighton in me own home.” Agnes pulled the boy aside, smoothing her hand over his hair, making way for Stephen and Corina to enter, offering a weak curtsy. “Sorry about the boy. He just came from his gram’s, playing in the mud by the looks of him.” Agnes waved her hand at her son, shooing him down the hall.
“Not to worry. We’re sorry to barge in. I appreciate you letting me come.” Stephen ducked under the small doorway, thinking he should be bowing to her. Honoring her sacrifice. “This is Corina Del Rey.”
“Of course. I see’d you in the papers. Loverly to meet you.”
Corina extended her hand. “It’s my honor.”
Agnes and Baby Bird’s home was small and warm, clean and tidy, fragrant with tomato sauce. But the afternoon air floating through the opened kitchen window was no match for the heat.
“Sorry about the heat. We’ve no central air in these old homes.” Agnes turned a floor fan toward the sofa, motioning for Stephen and Corina to sit. Her voice quavered as she hugged Baby Bird to her, sitting in an adjacent chair, her eyes glistening. “I can’t believe you’re here. Bird used to write me all the time about you. Stephen this, Stephen that.” Her laugh refreshed the room. “ ‘Hardly believe he’s a prince,’ he’d say. But Bird always said if something happened to him, you’d come.” She leveled a pure, tender gaze at him. “I was a-won
dering if he’d just made it up.”
Stephen brushed his hands down his jeans, nervous, captured again in the reality of pain his life caused. “I’m sorry, Agnes. I just couldn’t—” His confession exposed his weakness. His shame. “Losing Bird and the others hit me hard. I couldn’t make sense of it all.”
“You being the only one to live, I get it, sir. Survivor’s guilt.” She pointed to a stack of books in the corner. “I read all about it. It helped me, you know, to understand why he died and how I was to go on. We was going to get married before he deployed, but we couldn’t afford the license, so we waited, planning to use his hazard pay.” She laughed again, popping her leg. “Imagine, using hazard pay for a marriage license. Ain’t that some kind of irony?”
Then she fell silent and Baby Bird reappeared with clean clothes but mud still covering a good portion of his body. He buried his face against his mum, peeking at Stephen under his golden bangs.
“Agnes, I should’ve come sooner. Especially because I am a prince. Please . . . forgive me. I’m sorry.”
“Nothing to forgive, Your Highness. ’Twas a dark time for us all.” She twisted her fingers together. “You are a prince, after all. With duties to tend. And a star winger. Baby Bird here loves rugby. Oh, where are me manners? I’ve tea and biscuits.” She shoved the boy aside, heading for the kitchen.
But she stopped cold as a sob rolled through her.
“Agnes.” Stephen rose and gently held her shoulders. She turned and fell into his chest. With a glance at Corina, whose eyes brimmed, Stephen cradled Agnes, letting her weep.
This disturbed Baby Bird, and he tugged on his mum’s skirt, wanting to know why she was crying. Corina slipped from the couch.
“Your mama is just happy to see the prince. I hear you like rugby. Do you have a ball?”
He curled his lip at her. “You talk funny.”
“Baby Bird!” Agnes peeled away from Stephen, wiping her eyes with her hand. “I’m so sorry.”
“That’s all right.” Corina tweaked the boy’s nose. “I’m from America and I think you talk funny too. Now, where’s that ball?”
He ran off without another word.