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Once Upon a King
Once Upon a King
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Once Upon a King

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“I can’t forget,” he said.

She kept walking.

“Go away or I’m going to call security. They’ll arrest you for sure. I’m a guest of this country and I have friends in high places.”

Okay, so Parker’s parents weren’t really friends, but she imagined they’d help protect her from a lunatic ex-lover.

“Tell me where you’re going,” Michael ordered, still walking by her side. His legs were much longer than hers, so she had to take about a step and a half to every one of his long, loping strides.

“None of your business,” she said, trying to lengthen her own step, not wanting to be at a disadvantage. “Leave me alone, you cad.”

“Cad?” he said, his smile quirking sort of sideways with amusement.

“You gigolo.”

“Gigolo?” He chuckled.

That soft, throaty laughter had haunted her dreams for three months.

He placed a hand on her shoulder, as if to slow her down.

She shrugged free and tried to walk even faster. “Stop that, and stop following me.”

“I can’t stop following you. I was sent here to pick you up and take you to the castle, Cara Phillips.”

“You work for the king?” she asked, feeling as if a lightbulb had gone off over her head. “That’s why you were on Perry Square, in Erie. He sent you to try and make Parker go home, didn’t he? Then you met me, figured you could have a bit of fun before you ran back to Eliason. You figured you’d never see me again. Well, let’s pretend it worked, that you never met me back on the square. You can take me to the castle, then get on with your duties and forget we ever met.”

“I’m afraid I can’t do that, cara mia.”

The endearment whipped at her tenuous self-restraint. “Don’t call me that,” she said, hoping he couldn’t sense the emotion that was riding ever closer to the surface.

“I can’t do that either. You are my cara mia, my beloved,” he said.

He reached out as if he were going to touch her again, but drew his hand back. “I’ve been looking for you.”

“Ha.”

“And I can’t leave you alone because my father asked me to assist you in whatever way suits your needs.”

“Your father?” she asked. A sudden sick pitch settled in her stomach as a glimmer of an idea struck her. An unsettling, horrible, the-fates-couldn’t-do-it-to-her kind of idea.

“Your father?” she repeated.

“My father, King Antonio Paul Capelli Mickovich Dillonetti of Eliason.”

This time Cara didn’t just feel weak-kneed, she actually sort of sagged.

Mike caught her elbow and steadied her.

An immediate awareness slammed through her system.

“What’s your real name?” she asked weakly, though she knew.

“I’m Antonio Michael Paul Mickovich Dillonetti. There are a lot of titles that come after that. But my friends call me Michael.”

“Well, Your Highness—”

“Michael,” he corrected.

“Your friends call you Michael, and I assure you I am not your friend. I’ll stick with Your Highness.”

“You’re right of course,” he said, using what he must have thought was a soothing tone.

In reality, it was too husky, too enticing to be soothing.

“You’re not a friend….” he began. “You’re more.”

Cara couldn’t stand it.

She knew that Parker and Shey were counting on her to keep this wedding intimate and not a circus like so many other royal weddings were. But she couldn’t do this.

She couldn’t be here, working with him every day.

Parker and Shey would understand. They’d have to.

She turned and headed for the ticket window.

“Where are you going now?” he asked, once again on her heels.

This time she realized there was a small group of men trailing after Michael as he followed after her.

Bodyguards?

Probably. After all, a prince had to have his entourage.

A prince. The rat.

“To buy a ticket home,” she said without turning around to look at him.

“You’re running away again?” he asked, his voice much softer now.

She whirled around and found herself face-to-face, just inches separating them. “What do you mean again? I woke up and you were gone. There was nothing to do but go. I left, but I certainly didn’t run away.”

Had he been there, she was certain she’d have stayed as long as possible.

“I went to buy us breakfast only to return to the room and find you’d left,” he said softly.

Cara felt light-headed.

“You were coming back?” she whispered.

“Of course. You were in my room, after all.”

Oh, no. He hadn’t left her. He hadn’t used her then discarded her. Her hand fell to her stomach. Her baby’s father wasn’t a scum-sucking Casanova.

Another thought occurred to her.

Her baby’s father was a prince.

Even worse, he was the heir to the Eliason throne.

Cara groaned as she realized that her baby was, in fact, royalty as well.

Oh, no, what had she done?

The blood rushed from her head and Cara did something she’d never done before. She fainted.

Two

There wasn’t much in life that scared Michael.

All right, he wasn’t overly fond of heights. But although he always avoided the window seats in planes, he dealt with the fear and never let on that he was bothered.

But at this moment, he didn’t know how to hide his fear, much less deal with it. Cara collapsed in his arms and it was a thousand times worse than any height he’d ever experienced.

He eased her down on the ground without releasing his hold on her.

“Call an ambulance,” he barked.

Marstel was on his mobile before he even finished the sentence.

Satisfied help was on the way, he focused all his attention on Cara. Her eyes fluttered and then opened.

He inhaled deeply and finally felt as if he could breathe again.

“Cara,” he whispered.

“What happened?” she said, trying to sit up.

“Stay still. You collapsed. Marstel is calling for an ambulance.”

“No. I don’t need an ambulance, I’m fine. It was just a long flight. I’m sure that’s all.”

“If your collapse was due to just a long flight, I suspect more of the people on the plane would have collapsed. But as far as I can tell, yours is the only body on the floor. You need to see a doctor.”

“I don’t,” she said, sitting up, even though he tried to keep her down. “Let go.”

“Cara, you’re seeing the doctor.”

She struggled to her feet, looked a bit unsteady for a moment, then stood firm and glared at him. “I won’t.”

Michael stood as well and faced her.

This Cara, spitting mad and glaring at him, didn’t quite match the mental image of the sweet woman who’d spent one passionate night in his arms. It was clear Michael had things to learn about Cara.

“You will see the doctor,” he said just as firmly. It was a tone he rarely used, but it had always produced the desired result, in the past.

Obviously, not this time.

Cara crossed her arms over her chest and said, “Listen, Your Highness, just because you’re a prince, doesn’t mean I’m going to play the loyal subject. I’m not seeing a doctor.”

She glanced past him and noticed Marstel, phone still in hand. “Call off the ambulance, I won’t get in it. They’d be wasting a trip, and it could endanger someone who really needs help.”

Marstel looked from Cara to Michael, who just shrugged. “Fine, call it off. I’ll have Dr. Stevens meet us at home.”

Cara shot him a small, brittle smile. “I hope you’re having him meet you for tea, because he’s not touching me.”

She whirled around and started down the hall toward baggage claim.

“Are you always so stubborn and argumentative?” Michael asked, easily matching her pace.

Her expression softened. “Believe it or not, no. I’m generally quiet and easygoing.”

“So, it’s only me who is blessed with seeing this side of you?” He shot her a grin.

She shrugged. “Guess so.”

She wore a small smile, though he could see her struggle against it.

It wasn’t much of a smile, just a brief upturn of her lips, but it was a start. A quick reminder of the woman he’d known.

“Lucky me,” he said in a teasing voice.

“Why are you following me?”

“I’m your ride home, remember?” he said. “You have decided to come home, right? I mean, you don’t want to let your friends down, do you?”

The smile was gone now along with his gentle cara mia. The real Cara Phillips was back and said, “I am going to the castle, but only because I love Parker and Shey. But I’m not going with you. I’ll take a taxi.”

“There you go, being argumentative again.”

“I wouldn’t have to be argumentative if you weren’t annoying.”

“And I wouldn’t seem nearly so annoying if you weren’t so stubborn and argumentative.”

“I guess we have a stalemate,” Cara said.

“So, why don’t you simply get in my car and let me take you home?”