CHAPTER 4

SABRINA WANDERED through the royal garden maze, inhaling the sweet perfume that wafted on the still night air. Having grown accustomed to the night sounds of Manhattan—the traffic, the sirens, the blare of horns of the New York Times trucks racing down Broadway—she found the silence immensely soothing. It reminded her of lazy summer nights on her family’s Nashville farm.

But Montacroix was a long, long way from Nashville. And although the house that Sonny Darling’s royalties had built had once seemed the most magnificent home in the world, she now realized that as impressive as it had been, it was not the dazzling white palace she once believed it to be.

She shook her head, remembering how she’d believed her father to be a fairy-tale prince, come to carry her off to his castle, where she’d live happily ever after.

She’d been so young. So naive.

“So stupid,” Sabrina muttered now. Experience had taught her the hard way that any woman foolish enough to believe in happily-ever-afters was destined to be disappointed.

“Excuse me.” Startled by Burke’s unexpected appearance, Sabrina jumped as he emerged from the shadows. “I did not mean to intrude on your privacy.”

If there was one thing six years of marriage had taught her, it was to recognize a prevarication when she heard one. Some inner voice told her that Burke was lying.

“It appears that I was about to intrude on yours,” she said, regaining her composure. She glanced past him at the now-dark building. “How’s the car coming?”

The scent of gardenias rose from her skin, blending with the sweet perfume of the roses on the summer air. Her eyes, in the slanting moonlight, were the hue of sterling buffed to a warm sheen.

“There was an additional problem with the fuel mixture—the engine was running too lean—but I believe the situation is solved.”

“Did you check the microchips in the fuel computer?”

Burke gave her a sharp look that revealed his surprise. “The crew had installed the wrong chips. How did you guess?”

“My father was a die-hard racing fan. He drove stock cars when he was younger, but by the time I came along, Dixie had put her foot down about his racing and he had to console himself with just being a spectator. But he never lost his love of cars. When I was sixteen, when one of his albums went platinum, he bought a bright red Ferrari. A convertible, like Magnum P.I. drove.”

“Ferraris are very fine automobiles.” Burke had a Testarossa, along with a white winged Lamborghini Countach and Mercedes roadster parked in the palace garage.

“It was certainly a very fast car. Unfortunately fast cars have always been my secret weakness.”

She hadn’t owned a car in Manhattan; Arthur didn’t drive and refused to pay for garage space for the sporty Mustang convertible she’d left at the farm in Nashville.

Once again Burke saw the flash of annoyance come and go in her eyes. Once again he wondered at its cause.

“Daddy emphatically declared it off-limits, but I couldn’t resist and one night, when he was away on tour, I borrowed it.”

Forgetting that it was unwise to relax her guard around this man, Sabrina sighed with reminiscent pleasure. “I had it up to one hundred and ten miles an hour before the highway patrol caught me in a speed trap.”

“You could have been killed.” He could see her, racing down the highway, her hair streaming out behind her like a silver banner.

“That’s what Daddy said. But he put it a bit more strongly.” Her remarkable eyes were still laughing. “In fact, his language could have stripped paint. I was grounded for six months, but he gave in and suspended sentence after two weeks.”

Burke wasn’t surprised by her father’s surrender. He had a feeling it would be very difficult to deny this woman anything.

“That doesn’t explain how you knew about the fuel chips.”

“Oh, that. My father took the entire family to the Indianapolis 500 every year. And when he performed in Arizona, I flew out to see him and we went to the Phoenix Grand Prix. It was the most exciting thing I’ve ever seen.

“Dad had a pit pass,” Sabrina said offhandedly, as if such extraordinary privilege were run-of-the-mill. “I remember one of the drivers having a problem with his engine. It turned out to be the microchips.”

She had bittersweet memories of that halcyon afternoon. It was the last time she’d seen her father alive. If she’d only known, Sabrina considered, she would have cherished the day even more.

Burke viewed the shutter that seemed to come down over her eyes and heard her faint sigh. “I’m sorry about your loss,” he murmured. “It always hurts to lose family.”

After six months, the loss of her father still stung. Sabrina suspected it would for a very long time. Yet, after all the many words of condolences she’d received, Burke’s simple statement touched her.

She didn’t know that his own mother had been institutionalized when he was a mere infant. Yet when he’d learned that Clea Giraudeau had died by her own hand, three years ago, Burke had experienced a deep, visceral sense of loss.

“It was so sudden,” she murmured, as much to herself as to him. “And so unexpected.”

She felt the sting of hot tears burning at the back of her lids and blinked them away. “Daddy always seemed larger than life. And although I know that it’s irrational, I believed he’d always be there for me. For all of us.”

However, Sonny Darling had, unfortunately, proved distressingly human.

“I’ve often felt the same way about my own father,” Burke allowed. “Some men—some people—seem invincible. Although I’ve spent a lifetime preparing to be regent, lately I’ve worried about living up to the high standards set by my father.”

Burke was shocked to hear himself admit such a personal thought to a virtual stranger.

Sabrina Darling affected more than his hormones. She was, surprisingly, distracting his mind.

“From everything Chantal has told me, I have no doubt that you’ll be a wonderful ruler.”

Burke searched her face, seeking some flaw, some imperfection that would deflate the wild, romantic fantasies that had sprung full-blown in his mind.

Her lips lured; her scent enticed. His mouth was so very close to hers. All he’d have to do is lean forward, the least little bit and...

A gust of wind blew in off the lake, causing the nighttime temperature to suddenly drop. Sabrina shivered.

The involuntary shudder didn’t escape Burke’s shrewd eyes.

“You should go back inside,” he suggested, remembering his reason for seeking her out in the first place. “Before you catch a cold.”

“I suppose I should.” Her heart was thumping uncomfortably. What was it about this man that made her throat dry up and her nerves jangle?

Burke watched her lips tighten and mistook the reason for her frown. “I’m sorry if I saddened you by bringing up memories of your father.”

“It wasn’t you.” With a wistful sigh, she looked out over the moon-gilded waters of the lake. “I think about him all the time.”

“It sounds as if you and he were very close.”

“I adored him,” Sabrina said simply.

A very strong part of Sabrina still did. Another part which she knew to be irrational, continued to be angry at her father for not having been perfect.

“Enough to put aside your career to pay his tax bills?” It was a shot in the dark, gleaned from something Chantal had told him after dinner. If his sister had found his sudden interest in Sabrina strange, she had been thoughtful enough not to comment.

“My father was not a tax dodger!” Sabrina rose quickly and heatedly to Sonny’s defense. Just because she was angry with him didn’t mean that her loyalty toward the man had diminished.

“I’m sorry. I did not mean to offend you. Or your late father.”

Sabrina knew that her quick flare of anger had been an inappropriate response. She’d always had difficulty controlling the Darling temper, especially when her nerves were on edge.

“No, I’m the one who should apologize for snapping at you. Especially since it’s true that the only reason we’re on tour is to try to pay off the IRS.” Indeed, they’d signed an agreement that all royalties earned on album sales went directly to the government.

Burke had always admired family loyalty. “Repaying your father’s debt is an admirable undertaking.”

Sabrina made a vague gesture. “It’s not at all admirable. It’s simply necessary. And although I’ll admit to being a little touchy about the subject, that still didn’t give me an excuse to bite your head off.”

She managed a faint, self-deprecating smile. “I don’t suppose I could get away with blaming it on jet lag?”

Burke didn’t immediately answer. A brief silence settled over them. He found Sabrina as intriguing as she was finding him unsettling.

Having grown up with two half sisters, Burke knew that the clever use of cosmetics could make a pretty woman beautiful and a beautiful woman stunning. But Sabrina Darling was one of those rarest of women, a true natural beauty.

In heavy stage makeup, she appeared lush and sultry and vampish; at dinner, she’d possessed a nonconformist, individualistic type of glamour. But in the moonlight, with her bare face revealing a dusting of freckles, Sabrina Darling seemed delicate and vulnerable.

“A woman as lovely as you could use any excuse and a man would have no choice but to forgive her.”

His voice was smooth and silky. Something in his gaze set off warning bells.

“Is that a pass, Your Highness?” she managed with far more aplomb than she was feeling.

“Not a pass, merely the truth,” Burke assured her mildly. “I’m sure your presence—and that of your lovely sisters, of course—shall add much to the upcoming celebrations,” he added, swiftly changing the direction of the conversation.

Still vaguely shaken by the flare of desire she’d witnessed in his midnight dark eyes, Sabrina gave him a distant smile.

“You’re right. I really should be going in,” she said. “I’ve got a busy day tomorrow. Today,” she amended. “We need to check out the theater, begin interviewing musicians and, of course, we’ll have to coordinate logistics with the coronation committee.”

“I will personally ask the members of the committee to help you in every way. Will using local talent be a problem?”

Sabrina shrugged. “Nothing we can’t deal with.” She neglected to mention that Raven had hit the roof when informed that they wouldn’t be able to bring along their own keyboard player, drummer and guitarists.

“I realize that the situation is not ideal,” Burke allowed. “But when the opposition objected to having a foreign group perform, I felt that a compromise was in order.”

“Opposition?” Sabrina gave him a sharp, probing glance. “Please tell me that we’re not going to get booed when we come out onstage.” Wouldn’t that make terrific press.

“You needn’t worry. The malcontents are a very small group. Unfortunately they tend to also be very vocal, but I assure you that I won’t allow them to disrupt either the ceremony or your performance.” His tone provided immediate reassurance.

“It must be nice, having your own country.” And making your own laws. The subtle accusation, unspoken, hovered between them on the perfumed night air.

“It has its moments,” Burke agreed amiably.

Her extraordinary eyes, her soft, throaty voice, pulled him in two contradictory directions. Move closer. Back away. The second option was safer, the first eminently more appealing.

“Let me escort you back to the house.” He slipped his hands into the pockets of his jeans, resisting a sudden impulse to run his fingers through the golden slide of her hair.

Quicksand, Burke warned himself. Take one more step and you’re lost. For some reason that he didn’t want to dwell on, the idea was inordinately tempting.

As they walked back to the palace, side by side, Burke was all too aware of the ever-present shadow trailing a discreet distance behind.

Burke was almost grateful for Drew Tremayne’s silent presence. It had been one more reason for not giving in to temptation and kissing Sabrina Darling in the moonlight.

And as attractive as he admittedly found her, she was a complication he honestly didn’t need. Not now. Not with everything else that was happening in his life.

Sabrina was surprised when the tall double doors, which Dixie had informed them originally belonged to an ancient monastery, swung open at their arrival. The servant, a tall muscular young man in his early thirties, greeted Sabrina and the prince with a polite nod of his prematurely gray head.

“Do the servants always stay up until the entire family is in bed?” she asked as she and Burke climbed the ornate curving stairway to the family quarters.

“Kirk is very loyal,” Burke answered obliquely, unprepared to let Sabrina in on the small fact that Kirk Peterson was a former U.S. government agent, now in the employ of O’Bannion and Tremayne Security, Inc.

“He must be,” Sabrina murmured. “To still be up at this hour.”

She wondered idly what it would be like to have so many people at your beck and call, and decided it would be suffocating. Sabrina found herself almost feeling sorry for Burke. They’d reached the door to her family’s suite. They stood there, face-to-face, for a long, silent time, both loath to leave, and both equally reluctant to admit it.

“If you’d like, it would be my pleasure to give you the grand tour of the royal theater tomorrow.” Burke kept his voice low, to keep from disturbing her mother and sisters.

“Thanks, but as I told you, we’ve got a lot to do. And Noel’s already arranged to show us the ropes.”

“If you need any help locating musicians—”

“Chantal’s taken care of it. The first audition is scheduled for eight-thirty.”

“So soon,” Burke murmured, glancing down at his watch. Her schedule certainly didn’t allow for much sleep.

“There’s a great deal to do. And not much time in which to do it,” she said. Her own voice was little more than a whisper but easily heard in the hushed stillness of the palace hallway. “We want everything to be perfect.”

So, she, too, was a perfectionist. Burke told himself that along with an intense loyalty to family, this was another thing they had in common. Not that he was keeping score, he assured himself quickly.

“Well, then, I’ll say good night.” He took her hand, as if to give it a polite handshake.

“Yes.” As his long dark fingers curled warmly around hers, Sabrina’s feet seemed nailed to the floor. A trickle of anticipation raced along her skin. Even as common sense told her she should pull her hand away, Sabrina allowed it to linger in his much larger one, pleasing them both. “Good night, Your Highness.”

Caprice was an alien concept to Burke. Giving in to a rare impulse, he lifted her crimson tipped fingers to his lips.

“Bonne nuit, Mademoiselle Sabrina.”

Burke’s rich, deep voice, the touch of his lips against her skin, the warmth of his gaze, all conspired to stir something elemental inside her.

Oh, no, Sabrina begged silently. Please. Not again.

It wouldn’t happen.

She wouldn’t let it happen.

Even as she vowed not to make the mistake of falling in love with a man who was admittedly a dead ringer for that Prince Charming who’d starred in so many youthful romantic fantasies, Sabrina was still dwelling on that warm, wonderful, stimulating feeling twenty minutes later, as she finally drifted off to sleep in the magnificent canopied bed.

* * *

THE ROYAL MONTACROIX theater seemed, at first glance, to be a marzipan building decked with paper flags. A towering structure that seemed to belong more to fantasy than reality, on the outside, it was a dazzling alabaster affair of wedding-cake spires and cupolas trimmed in rich, gleaming gold.

Inside there were ascending rows of rich red velvet chairs, an Ionic colonnade trimmed with marble theatrical masks and garlands, and a trompe l’oeil coffered ceiling, adorned with the same gilt that dazzled the eye on the exterior of the building. Between the Ionic pillars were towering mirrors, designed to reflect the movement onstage, surrounding the audience with dramatic action.

Behind the scenes, the stage machinery consisted of an ancient yet still operating system of thick, hand-hewn beams and elaborately designed contraptions of block and tackle and cables. Fortunately, Sabrina discovered over the next three days of rehearsal, the architect of this fairy-tale theater had been ahead of his time when it came to acoustics—they were remarkable. And the lighting, while far from state of the art, was more than adequate for their purposes. The one glitch was the need for additional power to run the computerized video equipment.

Following the lead of Natalie Cole, who’d achieved unprecedented success by singing duets with old televised performances of her father, Dixie had come up with the idea of Sonny Darling’s three daughters singing along with him, in the same way they had when they were girls.

Although the idea of having the Darling sisters perform in Montacroix had been Chantal’s idea, Sabrina quickly noticed that it was Noel who provided the upcoming concert’s adept organizational skills. She was a paragon of quiet efficiency.

On the afternoon of her fourth day in the principality, Sabrina was in the theater, rehearsing with her sisters and the musicians when the lights flickered overhead and went out. The enormous screen darkened; Sonny’s larger-than-life picture faded from view. “We’ve obviously overloaded the electrical system,” Raven decided, her voice echoing in the empty, cavernous, turn-of-the-century theater.

“I’d say that’s a distinct possibility,” Noel, who’d been watching from the wings, agreed. She picked up the cellular phone she seemed never to be without and made the call to the director of palace maintenance. “An electrician will arrive momentarily.”

“It’s just as well the power went out,” Ariel decided. “My throat’s a little scratchy. I think I’d better have some tea.”

“With honey and lemon,” Noel said knowingly. “I’ve a thermos right here.”

Having watched her in action for the past three days, Sabrina was not surprised that Noel not only knew of Ariel’s preferred throat-soothing drink, but also had it on hand.

“I think I’ll take a walk while we wait for the power to come back on,” Sabrina said. “All the coffee I’ve had this morning has left me a little edgy.”

She was not about to admit that it had been too many sleepless nights that had her nerves on edge—nights spent gazing out her window toward the lighted garage and picturing Burke hunkered over his beloved race car.

She hadn’t seen him since their conversation in the gardens. He’d not shown up for breakfast or dinner, and during the day, she had immersed herself in rehearsals, while Burke was occupied with time trials and the whirl of social events that were part of every Grand Prix event.

Sabrina told herself that she should not care what Burke was doing. She assured herself that she had absolutely no interest in the playboy prince.

So why, she had asked herself innumerable times during the past three days, did her mind continually drift toward Prince Burke? And why had she found the picture of him in this morning’s paper, with Monaco’s glamorous Princess Caroline, so disturbing?

Sabrina had never experienced such a surge of hot, feminine jealousy as that caused by the sight of Burke’s devastating smile directed the princess’s way. Not even on that fateful day when she’d returned home early from the doctor and discovered her husband in bed with his mistress.

She left the stage and was halfway down the center aisle, headed toward the towering doors at the back of the theater, when a lone figure rose from one of the lush red chairs on the aisle.

“Oh!” The exclamation escaped her lips on a quick, surprised rush of breath.

“I seem to have an unfortunate knack of startling you,” Burke said as his gaze skimmed over her.

The first time he’d seen Sabrina Darling, she’d reminded him of a gypsy. Today she was wearing a black-and-white striped T-shirt, short black skirt, and black beret tilted over her blond hair that brought to mind an Apache dancer.

“I hope you don’t think I have a habit of lurking in the darkness like a phantom to frighten women, Mademoiselle Sabrina.”

“Of course not, Your Highness.” She used his title as protocol demanded. But refusing to give him the upper hand, she dispensed with the accompanying curtsy that Dixie’s ubiquitous tour book had stated was appropriate behavior. “But, you did surprise me. I didn’t know you were in the theater.”

“I finished a qualifying run and decided to come listen to your rehearsal.”

He’d found her performance spellbinding.

Sabrina waited for Burke to say something about their rehearsal. When he didn’t, she forced down her disappointment and said, “How did you finish?”

Her lips were a natural dusty rose. Once again he found himself fantasizing about their taste. “Finish?”

“You said you’d just finished a qualifying run. So how did you do?”

“Oh, that.” He shrugged, his mind not at all on the race. Instead he pictured making love with this woman on the teak deck of the royal yacht while the craft bobbed gently on the sparkling waters of Lake Losange. “I finished first.”

His tone was matter-of-fact, but his eyes were unnervingly intimate, making Sabrina feel off balance. It was not a feeling she cared for.

“Congratulations.”

“Thank you.”

The formally polite conversation came to another lingering halt as they stood there, inches apart, studying each other.

Finally Sabrina couldn’t take Burke’s silent scrutiny another moment. She folded her arms over the front of her striped shirt and said, “Well?”

“Well?” Burke repeated.

Her palms were damp with nerves. Such weakness irritated Sabrina. Pushing an impatient hand through her thick fall of wheat blond hair, she said, “Well, will we do?”

Lord, she had beautiful hands, Burke considered.

A vision of her slim fingers with those daring red fingernails slowly unfastening the buttons of his shirt, then pressing provocatively against his bare chest flashed seductively through his mind.

Burke slid his hands into the pockets of his jeans and frowned.

Protocol and impeccable manners befitting royalty had been drilled into him by first his father, then a series of strict German nuns, and, finally, the harsh headmaster of the British boys’ military academy he’d attended before reading law and banking at Oxford. His mind never wandered, even during the most excruciatingly dull conversations and never, in all his thirty-six years, had his body responded so mutinously to the mere proximity of any woman. In truth, when a man was wealthy, unattached and reasonably good-looking, women were in steady supply. That being the case, Burke had always taken members of the opposite sex somewhat for granted.

But dammit, he wanted Sabrina. He had wanted her from that first blinding moment their eyes had met across the palace dining room, and although he’d steadfastly avoided the impossibly sexy woman for three entire days, all he’d managed to do was increase his craving for her.

“You will more than do, mademoiselle. You and your equally lovely sisters will set the standard.”

“That’s very kind of you to say.”

Her warm, throaty voice curled around Burke like smoke.

The absolute truth was that he was having more and more trouble remembering what they were talking about. “I am extremely grateful that you have agreed to perform for my coronation ceremonies.”

Once again Sabrina felt herself succumbing to dual feelings of both discomfort and curiosity. For the first time in her life, she finally understood why that proverbial moth was drawn to the deadly flame of the funeral pyre.

“Well, we’re certainly grateful for the opportunity.” She brushed her hair behind her shoulder with a quick, absent flick. “And we’re definitely looking forward to performing for you.”

Her words amused him, although he managed to keep the humor from showing on his face. She was a liar. But such a lovely one, he couldn’t resist baiting her. Just a little.

“That’s not exactly what I heard.” His eyebrows rose only a fraction, but enough to register his disbelief.

Sabrina felt the warm color rise in her cheeks and was grateful for the subdued lighting. “If I was at all hesitant, when Princess Chantal first requested we perform, it was because I didn’t believe that our music was in keeping with the solemnity of the occasion.”

Good. Her voice was cool and calm and belied her embarrassment that the prince had been told of her initial reluctance.

She had, of course, been outvoted. Both Ariel and Raven, not to mention Dixie, had jumped at what they considered a golden opportunity. Which it had turned out to be, Sabrina was forced to admit.

As soon as Mary Hart had announced the news of their upcoming Montacroix concert on Entertainment Tonight, the remaining three months of their nine-month tour immediately sold out. In fact, the promoter was considering adding second shows in Dallas, Los Angeles, and a third in Las Vegas.

He arched a dark brow. “You expected me to prefer Mozart? Or Bach?”

“Something along those lines.” Sabrina remembered what Chantal had said about Prince Eduard’s preference for chamber music.

“Mozart will be performed at the actual coronation. But the family wanted something contemporary for the public celebration.”

“Chantal assured us that we were exactly what the coronation committee was looking for.”

Actually, she’d said something about shaking up a few old fogies, but Sabrina decided, for the sake of discretion, not to reveal that little bit of information.

“Chantal can be quite persuasive when she puts her mind to something.”

“So I’ve heard.”

Sabrina recalled reading an interview in Vanity Fair where Montacroix’s quintessential princess stated that she’d known right away that the dashing secret service man was destined to be her life mate. It had, Chantal had admitted blithely, taken a bit longer for Caine to accept that idea.

The door behind them opened with a blinding flash of summer sunlight that turned Sabrina’s hair to molten gold. The electrician Noel had summoned entered the theater with a self-confident swagger, tool belt swung low on his hips like a gunfighter.

“Well, glory be, if it isn’t the answer to all our prayers,” Ariel called out on that same husky Southern voice daytime television viewers had come to know so well. It was, Sabrina thought with an inner smile, the voice of a woman interested in a man.

Since Sonny’s death, Dixie had become even more vocal in her desire for a grandchild. Perhaps, Sabrina considered, Ariel might be the one to get their mother off their collective backs.

After collapsing onstage during the second act of Private Performances, Sabrina had undergone an emergency operation that had left her unable to ever have children. At the time, Arthur had assured her that it didn’t matter. They had, after all, agreed that they didn’t want children.

Afterward, when she had escaped her husband’s controlling attitude and had begun to think for herself, Sabrina had realized that it had been Arthur who had never wanted a child. And, like everything else in their marriage, Sabrina, eager to please, desperate to be loved and accepted, had simply gone along.

Faced with the knowledge that she would never be a mother, Sabrina had experienced a deep sense of loss. But then she’d gotten the plum role of Maggie and was too busy with work to dwell on her loss. But there was still not a day that went by that Sabrina didn’t feel a fleeting pang of regret.

“The lights will probably be back on soon,” she said, thinking that the electrician would undoubtedly work at triple speed to impress her sister. Then again, he might be reluctant to rush the job, which would require him to leave. Sabrina had seen it happen before—grown men practically falling all over themselves to earn so much as a glance from Ariel Darling. Having been absolutely faithful and sheltered during her ill-fated marriage, what Sabrina had failed to see—and what her controlling husband had known too well—was that most males behaved in much the same manner around her.

“I think Bernard wants very much to impress your sister,” Burke agreed, dragging his gaze from Sabrina to watch the man practically preening like a cock out to impress a hen.

“It happens all the time. Ariel’s the beauty of the family,” Sabrina said without rancor. “She takes after Dixie.”

Burke sensed that Sabrina was genuinely unaware of being the true beauty in the Darling family. He found himself wishing that the coronation ball was tonight. It would give him an excuse to dance with her. Burke had the feeling that Sabrina Darling was the type of woman who’d fit superbly into a man’s arms. And his bed.

The look he was giving her made her blood hum, her heart beat faster and her knees turn weak and rubbery. Sabrina felt as if she’d just run a marathon.

She let out a shaky breath. “Well, as much as I’ve enjoyed our little chat, I wanted to get some exercise in before we resume rehearsing. Your chef is so wonderful, if I don’t watch out, I’ll end up looking like the Pillsbury Doughboy.”

“I find that highly unlikely.”

“Well, since I can’t afford to outgrow all those costumes Dixie bought for the next few months, I thought I’d take a walk along the lakefront.”

“An excellent idea.” Burke backed away, allowing her to pass. “Enjoy your stroll.”

She could feel his gaze as she made her way up the aisle. She swore not to look back, but of course she did. Her eyes met his and although the sky outside the theater was a clear, alpine blue, Sabrina could have sworn she heard the clap of thunder.

Furious at herself for allowing him to get under her skin this way, she tossed her head with a flare of annoyance.

Burke nodded, accepting her unspoken challenge.

Unsure whether she was running from him or her own dangerous fantasies, Sabrina spun around and marched quickly out of the theater, slamming the enormous door behind her.

Immersed in her own nervousness, she failed to notice that the moment she left the building, she acquired a silent, shadowy escort.

Up on the stage, Ariel and Raven, who’d been watching the encounter with unabashed interest, exchanged a look. And then a smile.

“Is it me, or did the temperature in here take a sudden rise?” Ariel murmured, fanning herself dramatically with her sheet music.

Dixie, who’d been sitting in the front row, had also not missed the exchange between her stepdaughter and the prince.

“Sabrina deserves a fantasy romance,” she declared. “After all that low-down snake of a husband put her through.”

“Sabrina and a prince,” Ariel said on a long, drawn-out sigh. “It would be like a fairy tale.”

Raven, the sole pragmatist in the colorfully theatrical Darling family, looked worried. “It could also be a disaster,” she warned. “Sabrina’s been through a rough time, which makes her extremely vulnerable right now. And everyone knows the prince’s reputation with women.”

As he approached the stage, Burke couldn’t help overhearing snippets of their conversation.

Having been born into the royal family, he’d lived his entire life in the glare of the international spotlight. Exaggerated reports of his exploits with the opposite sex had never disturbed him. He had, with his innately pragmatic view of life, merely considered the source.

He’d also noticed, with some amusement, that whenever he appeared on the cover of one of those gossip magazines, tourism—his country’s lifeblood—increased. It was a private Giraudeau joke; there had been many times when he’d complained that although escorting the world’s beauties was difficult work, he would make the sacrifice, for family and country.

He had an urge to reassure Sabrina’s family that he was not the rogue Raven, at least, perceived him to be. With a self-discipline that had always served him well, Burke resisted that urge.

As he gave his compliments to Sabrina’s talented sisters, Burke kept thinking about that heated challenge he’d seen in Sabrina’s silver eyes.

There had been nothing subtle about that look. Indeed, she might as well have taken a gauntlet and slapped him across the cheek.

An expert fencer, Burke had never been one to back away from a challenge. This was going to be, he decided with a slow, inward smile, a most enjoyable duel.