Stefan watched Eve ride the horse with a combination of grace and sensuality that mesmerized him. He couldn’t help remembering the way she’d ridden him, bringing both of them to incredible, forbidden pleasure. He wanted her again. Worse, he craved her. She’d made him feel whole and fulfilled. The sensation couldn’t last, he assured himself, for Eve or him. But until it faltered, he was determined to keep her.
He allowed her to lead the way on the path to the beach even though Black protested. He clearly wanted the alpha role. Stefan would allow that on the return ride.
As soon as they hit sand, however, Gus began to run. Seconds later, Black followed, easily passing Gus. A few seconds later, Stefan saw the fire his staff had built in preparation for his evening with Eve. He reined in Black.
Hearing the slowing hoofbeats of Gus, he glanced over his shoulder and saw Eve reining in her mount. She glanced at the fire. “How did this happen?” she asked.
“I’m a magician,” he said. “I wish for it and,” he snapped his fingers, “it happens.”
She paused a second. “You’re full of bull.”
He laughed. “Just sharing a legend. Myths and legends are important.”
“Maybe,” she said skeptically, but dismounted. “Is this when we eat?”
“Sounds like a good time to me,” he said and dismounted Black. As soon as Eve slid off of her mount, he led both horses to a tree and tied them to it. “Behave,” he said to Black and patted the horse.
Turning around, he looked at her as she sat on the blanket. She’d removed her black Stetson and her hair splayed over her shoulders and down her back. With the fire lighting her skin, she glanced up at him and her lips tilted in a mysterious smile, making him wonder what she was thinking.
She looked into the basket and pulled out the sandwiches the chef had prepared, along with the bottle of wine and chocolates. “Not bad, but I imagine this is a step down from Paris.”
“Not at all,” he said, sinking to the blanket beside her. “The company is far superior.”
Her smile grew. “Oops. You’re being charming. I better watch out.” She unwrapped a sandwich while he poured the wine into two glasses. “Was the trip successful?”
He nodded. “Three of the consultants are committed to working on events that will include Chantaine.” He gave her a glass of wine and clicked his against hers. “Enough about my trip. What has been happening here since I left?”
“The veterinary specialist came to evaluate Black as a stud,” she said.
“And?” he asked.
“In human language, he’s quite virile and has the capacity to make many prize foals.”
He grinned at her evaluation. “There’s more value in being one of many.”
“One?” she said, in exasperation. “You’re not suggesting that Black should only sire one foal?”
“No, but we will be very selective about which mares will be allowed to carry on his line.”
She relaxed slightly. “No problem. I’m sure we can get the best mares lining up for a stud anytime you say the word.” She swirled the wine in her glass. “Speaking of stud service, your sister has decided you need a wife. She’s putting together a list of prospects to…relax you.”
The notion of Bridget having a clue about what kind of woman he would want was so hilarious that he roared with laughter. He quickly noticed that Eve didn’t share his amusement.
“You realize how ridiculous that is, don’t you?” he asked her.
“You need to get married sometime,” Eve said with a shrug. “You need a wife to perform all the royal duties including continuing your family’s line.”
“Now you’re sounding like the advisers,” he muttered and took another sip of wine.
“They want you to get married, too?” she asked.
“They’ve wanted me to get married since I turned twenty-one. You have no idea how many times I’ve heard the line ‘for the good of the country’ when it comes to my love life,” he said.
Surprise flickered across her face. “You seem to embrace all of your other duties easily enough. Why shirk this one?”
“I’m not shirking it. I just refuse to be pushed into it. I have plenty of time,” he said. “If you see my name matched with a woman, rest assured it’s wishful thinking.”
“So there’s no fiancée waiting in the wings,” she said. “Because I wouldn’t want to feel like I’m—poaching.”
He leaned toward her and slid his hand behind her neck to bring her lips closer to his. “You’re not,” he said and lowered his mouth to hers.
They enjoyed a companionable meal and a walk along the edge of the ocean. He slid his hand through hers, liking the combination of calluses and smooth skin. “Are you still homesick for Texas?”
“Some,” she confessed. “I miss my aunt and the familiarity of everything there. And barbecue. There’s no barbecue here.”
“I’m sure the chef could prepare barbecue—”
“Don’t you be giving your chef any extra work because of me. He has enough to do pleasing you, your sisters and guests,” she fussed.
“Our chef is accustomed to preparing dishes for all our international guests. Why should you be any different?” he asked.
“I’m not a guest,” she said. “I’m staff.”
He scoffed. “Maybe I want barbecue,” he said.
She laughed and the sound created a ripple of pleasure inside him. “You’re crazy.”
“Maybe,” he said and pulled her against him, inhaling her scent. “It’s good to see you, to be with you tonight.”
Her gaze met his and she nodded. “It is.” She closed her eyes for a second, then opened them. “It’s almost magical, the breeze, the time alone….”
His gut twisted and he was filled with a shocking longing to steal Eve away for a week or more away from everyone and everything. His schedule was packed. It was impossible. But it didn’t keep him from wanting. He allowed himself another taste of her, taking her lips and kissing her.
She slipped her arms around him and he felt the thud of arousal in his blood. If he were anyone else, he would take her on the beach with the breeze kissing their skin and the sound of the surf flowing over them. But he wasn’t someone else. He was the Crown Prince of Chantaine, and he refused to be the same kind of man his father had been. Hearing Black snort and paw, Stefan held Eve against him for a long moment, then released her reluctantly. “We should go. The horses are getting restless,” he said.
They returned to the barn and each put away their mounts. Stefan ached with the need to bring Eve back to his suite with him, but he wanted her one way: willing. He kissed her lightly on the lips, then moved away. Any longer would have presented too much of a temptation. “I don’t want you to feel like I’m giving you a booty call, so the next move is yours. You have my cell number. You can call or text me.”
Eve gaped at him. “Excuse me?”
“I said, you make the next move. Thank you for a wonderful evening. I’ve instructed one of my security to escort you to your quarters. Good night,” he said and turned away.
“We don’t do that in Texas,” she said, stopping him mid-stride.
He turned around. “You don’t do what?” he asked.
She almost squirmed. “Women don’t give booty calls.”
Amused, he lifted an eyebrow. “You’re not in Texas anymore.”
She shook her head and gave a sound of frustration. “How exactly am I supposed to give a crown prince a booty call?”
Pleased that she was interested in calling him, he smiled. “You’ll figure it out. Ciao, Beautiful.”
“I’m not beautiful,” she called after him.
“Come to my bed and you’ll never say that again,” he said over his shoulder and let her stew over that. He knew she would. It was small comfort considering he would be taking an ice-cold shower before he went to bed tonight.
Exasperated beyond sanity, Eve stared after him as he walked away and stuck out her tongue. As if she would ever give a booty call to anyone, let alone a prince. It didn’t matter who it was, she just wouldn’t do it. She stomped around the barn, doing a last check on the horses, then turned out all the lights except one. Still grumpy, she stared at the door where she’d last seen his smart, sensual mouth curve into a sexy smile and stuck out her tongue again.
Someone cleared their throat, scaring the wits out of her. “Who is it? Who’s there?”
“It’s Max Roberts, ma’am, with his Royal Highness’s security,” an extremely fit gray-haired man said as he stepped from the shadows. “I’m sorry if I startled you. His Highness requested that I escort you to your quarters.”
“How long have you been here?” she asked suspiciously.
“Since His Royal Highness departed the building,” he said.
“Oh, great,” she said. “I suppose you’ll tell him all about the fact that I stuck out my tongue at him.”
Max’s lips barely twitched. “It would bring me great joy, but I wouldn’t dream of bringing you any pain.”
She laughed, despite her discomfort. “A gentleman,” she said. “How did I get so lucky?”
“A beautiful American,” he echoed. “How did I get so lucky?” He paused a half beat. “Don’t worry. I’m not hitting on you. You’re just loads more interesting than most of the visitors I’m asked to escort.”
“Such as?” she asked, moving toward him.
“I’m not at liberty to disclose that information.”
“Discreet,” she said. “You’re a man after my own heart. Take me home, Max. Any insider info you can give me on His Highlyness?”
“You just said you appreciated discretion,” he said as he led her out the door.
“Yes, but there’s a difference between discretion and stinginess,” she said, because she had to try.
“What kind of music do you like, Ms. Jackson?” he asked, clearly changing the station.
“Stingy it is,” she said with a sigh.
That night, Eve tossed and turned. She threw the covers off of her, then dragged them back over her. Her dreams held images of Stefan. She ran to him, but then he disappeared. By the time she awakened before dawn, she was completely cranky. Sipping a cup of coffee after her shower, she scowled at her cell phone. Why did she have to be the one to call? She scowled again.
Through her irritable mind, an idea occurred to her. The more she thought about it, the more she liked it. Taking a deep breath, she gathered her wits and dialed Stefan’s number.
“Good morning, Ms. Jackson,” he said, sounding far more awake than she did. “How are you?”
“Great,” she said, her heart racing. “And you?”
“I’m good. What can I do for you?”
“May I join you for breakfast?”
A silence passed, and she wondered if she had made a mistake. “Or not,” she said. “If it’s not convenient and—”
“I would like that very much. How soon can you join me?” he asked.
She raked her hand through her damp hair and glanced at her robe. “Twenty minutes?”
“Make it ten,” he said. “And take the north entrance using the pass code of 3663. See ya,” he said, mocking her Texas drawl before he disconnected the call.
Eve stared at her cell phone, then shook her head. “Nine minutes,” she muttered and stripped off her towel as she headed for her bedroom. She dressed in clothes for work with her hair drying in damp waves. Clamping her hat on her head, she dashed out her apartment door and ran down the stairs to the narrow cobblestone road. She rushed, then realized she shouldn’t, and deliberately slowed her gait. Entering the code, she pushed the door open and climbed the stairs to Stefan’s suite.
She barely knocked on the door before he opened the door, dressed in an unbuttoned white shirt and black slacks. She suspected a tie and meetings were in his future.
“I’m impressed. You almost made it on time,” he said and motioned her inside.
She removed her hat and shook her head. “It occurred to me that a gentleman should never rush a woman, and ten minutes is rushing.”
“The rush was for me,” he said. “I wanted as much time with you as possible. Full American breakfast.”
Eve saw the table set with fine china and sterling-covered serving dishes and was stunned. “Do you do this every day?”
“Absolutely not,” he said. “I have boiled eggs, a protein shake or a protein bar.” He lifted one of the sterling covers. “And never ever sausage gravy and biscuits.”
Eve was flattered beyond words. “Sausage gravy and biscuits?” she echoed. “I don’t know what to say.”
“Don’t,” he said. “Just eat and remember a protein bar is in your future tomorrow.”
She laughed and looked down at the table. “Yes, Your Highlyness.”
“That name is irritating to me,” he said.
“My aunt coined it with your sister Valentina,” she said and dug in to her meal. “It’s a term of affection.”
“Why don’t I believe you?” he asked.
“Because you’re a suspicious, jaded, cynical man?” she asked and took a bite of a biscuit with gravy that was almost as good as her aunt’s. “This is so good. Almost as good as—”
“Your aunt Hildie’s?” he asked, taking a bite of eggs and biscuit. “She gave the recipe to the chef when she visited with Valentina.”
Eve laughed. “So like her. She left something out. I can taste it.”
Stefan frowned. “What? She tricked my chef?”
“Not exactly tricked,” Eve said. “She just didn’t tell all. Think about it. You don’t always tell all, do you?”
“Such as?” he asked.
“Just curious,” she said. “How serious was that relationship you had with the Swedish model a few years ago?”
Stefan groaned. “Maja. Big mistake. Drama queen, and after we’d become involved, she decided she wanted to be Crown Princess of Chantaine.”
“You broke her heart,” she said.
“Hardly,” he said. “Two days after we broke it off, she was in the papers with a French billionaire. Soon after, she got pregnant with his daughter and they got married.”
“Were you heartbroken?” she asked.
“I came to my senses,” he said.
The same way he would come to his senses about me, she thought and deliberately pushed it aside. “Just curious. What was so wrong about her?”
“You’re very curious this morning. Are you this way every morning?” he asked.
She smiled. “I rarely have such amazing company for breakfast. You didn’t answer my question.”
He folded his hands together and met her gaze. “For a true marriage, I believe a man and woman must connect on several levels, physically, emotionally, intellectually. Maja and I didn’t have that. My father was dying at the time. She provided a temporary diversion, but it wasn’t enough to go the distance. I knew it at the start and told her exactly how I felt.”
Eve smiled slowly. “In that way, you’re like a Texan. We’re not big on pretending.”
He nodded. “What do you have planned today?” he asked, changing the subject.
“The farrier is coming. I’m working on some gait issues with one of the geldings. I’ll put Black through his paces if you don’t plan to ride tonight.”
“That would be a good idea. What do you have planned for the evening?” he asked.
“What part of the evening?” she asked. “Dinner? Bedtime?”
“Evening,” he repeated, his gaze causing all kinds of jittery sensations inside her.
She set down her fork and folded her hands in her lap. “Well, I’m a Texas lady,” she said. “And we don’t believe in chasing men. We don’t make booty calls. I made a breakfast call,” she said. “The ball is in your court.”
Stefan smiled. “Rascal woman.”
She met his gaze. “Who, me?”
“Okay, you’ve forced my hand. Meet me in my quarters at 10:00 p.m.”
“That’s pretty late for this working girl,” she said.
“I have a working dinner with a visitor from Egypt. Would you like to join us?”
“Ten, it is,” she said and put her hat on her head and stood. “Please give my compliments to your chef. Marvelous breakfast.”
“I’ll pass along your compliments. Maybe you can shake loose a few secrets from your aunt about her favorite recipes,” he said, standing.
“Good luck with that,” Eve said. “She can be a little ornery at times.”
“Just like her niece,” he said.
“If you’re going to compare me to my aunt Hildie, you’ve given me a huge compliment,” Eve said.
He nodded and walked toward her, tilting her hat off her head. “Interesting version of a booty call.”
“It wasn’t a booty call,” she protested. “It was a break fast call.”
“Close enough,” he said and then pressed his mouth against hers. “Best morning I’ve had in a long time. You can work on the booty part later.”
Eve kept herself busy until dusk, which in this case was 8:00 p.m. She’d eaten a peanut butter and jelly sandwich with lots of water. She took a shower and would have normally gotten into bed and read before she fell asleep. Tonight, she dressed in a sundress but still thought about her pj’s. She thought more intensely as each moment passed. Her cell rang at nine-thirty. Stefan.
“Would you join me for a cocktail on my balcony?” he asked.
She took a deep breath. That sounded so much better than a booty call.
“A Texas Rose?” he asked, and her mind turned to the romantic night they’d shared.
“I’m good with water tonight,” she said.
He gave a low chuckle that rolled over her nerve endings like honey. “I have plenty of that. Max will arrive to escort you in a few moments.”
“That’s not necessary,” she said.
“Yes, it is,” he said firmly.
Just as Stefan had said, Max arrived a few minutes later and walked her to the palace door. “Enjoy your evening, Ms. Jackson.”
“If I call you Max, then you can call me Eve. Thanks for the escort,” she said and made her way up the stairs to Stefan’s quarters. Her heart hammering in her chest, she lightly knocked on the door.
He opened it immediately and ushered her inside. “Good evening, beautiful,” he said and pulled her into his arms. “Is the dress for me?”
She felt herself flush with self-consciousness followed quickly by a prickle of irritation. “No. I was actually planning on clubbing tonight. You called right before I planned to leave,” she said, tongue in cheek.
“Clubbing,” he said with a frown then studied her face and laughed. “You’re a bloody tease, Eve Jackson.”
“Not at all,” she said. “You’re just too accustomed to everyone tripping over themselves to try to please you.”
“Funny you don’t have to try, yet you still do,” he said thoughtfully, then pulled back and waved toward the balcony. “Come out. I have a little surprise for you.”
Curious, she followed him outside and saw a table set with bottled water, milk and a plate of cookies. She felt a twist of nostalgia. “Oh, my aunt used to fix this as a snack for me whenever I visited her. Are they chocolate chip?” she asked, sinking into the chair he offered.
He nodded and took the chair next to her. “Since you weren’t interested in a Texas Rose, I thought you might like a different taste of home.”
“How did you know?” she asked and took a bite of the cookie.
“I have ways,” he said.
She studied him suspiciously. “You talked to Hildie again, didn’t you?”
“You know how tight my schedule has been. When have I had time to call your aunt?” he asked.
“True,” she said. “But you could have gotten someone else to call her. Thank you,” she said.
“I never said I did it,” he said.
“Okay,” she conceded, but was secretly thrilled that he would have gone to such trouble to please her. “What was your favorite bedtime snack when you were a kid?”
“My diet was zealously monitored by a strict nanny from the time I was eight until I went away to school at age twelve.”
Eve winced. “That doesn’t sound like much fun.”
His lips twitched. “I had sources. It wasn’t a bedtime snack, but I wanted peanut M&M’s and Skittles as often as I could get them. One of my uncles slipped me some on occasion. I hoarded them.”
Eve laughed at the image. “Oh, my gosh, and I would have thought you’d been given everything you wanted.”
He met her gaze for a heartbeat that made her lose her breath. “You would have been wrong.” Glancing away, he took a drink of his water. “I can’t deny I was given a life of enormous privilege, but for some reason, my family always felt fractured. We didn’t feel like a family. Valentina and I were closer than the rest. I keep trying to make us more of a family, but sometimes I wonder if it’s too late.”
Her heart twisted and she realized what her gut had told her. She and Stefan shared more than anyone would believe possible at first, or even second, glance. She knew the pain of a family that just couldn’t seem to come together. She lifted her hand and covered his. “Some people would say it’s never too late.”
“What about you?” he asked.
“I work at believing, but it’s tough. My mother and father were a dysfunctional mess.”
“Mine were, too,” he said.
“But they had six children together,” she said.
“The duty of progeny,” he said.
“Six?” she said in disbelief. “There’s duty and there’s duty.”
He leaned back and sighed. “My father wanted to marry someone else, but the woman dumped him. My mother was supposedly second choice. I think the first five years they gave it their best. After that, my mother tried to keep his interest by having more children. Jacques was her last desperate attempt. My father took mistresses on a regular basis and their marriage became more of a business arrangement.”
“Did she love him?”
“She was a very young and innocent French countess when they married, twelve years younger than him. Nineteen years old on the day they married. I’m sure she was enamored by his position, excited to be the object of adulation from the people of Chantaine and at times, the rest of the world.”
“Nineteen. Wow, that was young.”
He nodded.
“How do you feel about the whole taking-a-mistress thing?” she asked.
“Why do you think I’m delaying marriage?” he returned. “I don’t want the same kind of relationship when I take a wife. It may be damn hard, but I want a real family.”
“I understand that. You think the odds are against you?” she asked. “I figure with my background, they’re against me.”
“Possibly,” he said. “I’ve heard that expression you Americans use. The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. But I’m already a different man than my father was. A different leader with different goals. I’ll do what it takes to be taken seriously so I can improve my country. I won’t be marrying a Playboy model or beauty-contest winner. I won’t choose a wife purely on the basis of her title or her beauty.”
“Good for you,” she said. “You and I have that in common. I won’t be marrying a Playgirl model or a boy toy. Well,” she added in a light, mocking tone, “unless he worships the ground I walk on and knows how to fix amazing baby back ribs.”
“Baby back ribs?” he echoed. “I think I remember Valentina talking about ribs when she attended college in Texas.”
“If she was referring to baby back ribs, she wasn’t talking,” Eve said. “She was moaning, saying oooohhh, ahhhh…I want more.”
Stefan narrowed his eyes. “What the hell is the recipe for these ribs? Do they have some kind of aphrodisiac in their flavoring?”
She laughed. “No. They’re just amazingly delicious and there are a gajillion recipes. People get into fistfights over what’s the best way to fix ribs.”
“Sounds primitive,” he said.
“And redneck,” she added. “But once you’ve tried to fix them, you become a redneck.”
“This sounds like one of the exclusive fraternities at university that I refused to join,” he said.
She shrugged. “Bet they didn’t know a thing about fixing ribs.”
He gave a slow smile and folded his hand around hers. “True. Learning how to cook ribs was not a priority for the students at Oxford.”
“Well, that shows you how education is deteriorating even in the U.K.,” she said, making a tsk-ing sound and shaking her head.
Stefan gave her a sharp tug and pulled her onto his lap. “Thank God you’re here to correct my deficient education,” he said.
His low chuckle against her ear sent a ripple of pleasure through her body. “I live to serve,” she managed, a little more breathlessly than she intended.
“Yeah, right,” he said, chuckling again. Then he cupped her chin and looked deep into her eyes. “Stay with me for a while.”
Eve felt herself sinking into him. She could have fought it. Well, she liked to believe that she could have fought it. But when she looked into his eyes, the word no was completely absent from her vocabulary.