Seduced (Royal Expat Series Book #1) (5 page)

BOOK: Seduced (Royal Expat Series Book #1)
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As Damian and Matilda walked away from the bar together, their hands intertwined and their bodies close as they talked and laughed, a shadow pulled away from a building. It crept stealthily forwards as the couple turned a corner, making sure to stay in the shadows as much as possible to prevent being noticed.

The figure was of a man, tall and lean, but with wiry, powerful muscles under his dark clothing. Although his face was shrouded and a dark cap pulled low over his eyes, the man’s close-set eyes could still be seen, dark pools of black with a faint glitter reflected from the fading evening sun. His thin lips pulled into a bitter, satisfied smile as he raised a digital camera, snapping a picture of the oblivious couple as they walked down the street, without a care in the world.

-

Matilda was both nervous and excited as they wound their way through the streets of Georgetown
and down towards the river. She wondered where they were going—whether he was really leading her somewhere exciting or whether he was making it up as he went along. When she questioned him about it, he merely smiled mysteriously, telling her to wait and see.

“I’ve been to DC dozens of times,” he explained finally, as they left the roads of the city for a small, beautiful trail which wound its way through the trees and along the river. “I’ve found all the secret spots where you can be at peace, away from e
veryone else. I love the city—its bustle, its people and its history—but sometimes the places where nobody ever goes are the best of all.”

“Where does it lead? This trail?” she asked, looking on ahead at the endless green, the river flowing gently to their left.

“Oh, it goes on for miles and miles—all the way to the ocean if you follow it far enough. But what I wanted to show you is just a little bit further up…”

Matilda followed him, unable to help admiring his confidence and mysterious air as he led her further and further up the river. Nobody had ever done anything as
spontaneous with her before. Every date she had been on was tame, carefully planned and uninspired. Every holiday she had experienced had been littered with public engagements and marred by bodyguards and crowds of staring people. Making her way into the countryside, following a rushing river, was almost like a dream for her. She felt more like a real princess than ever, being singled out by the handsomest of princes. Why couldn’t being a princess always be like this?

Finally, Damian led her from the path and into a thicket of trees next to the river,
pulling her towards a tiny, run-down gatehouse hidden from the view of the path or the river.

“Here,” he said with pride. “I discovered this many years ago, when I was hiking
around this trail. Even though it’s only a few miles from the city, it’s a part of the Chesapeake National Park which nobody ever really goes to. Hang on a sec.”

Matilda watched as Damian strode towards the little hut, then looked back at her, grinning.

“It’s not locked

come and see!”

Matilda followed him towards the small shack and he opened the door, showing her the interior. Inside was a small rowing boat, unchained and seemingly waiting for them.

“Surprise,” Damian grinned at her. “I found this ages ago. There’s nothing more incredible than taking a rowing boat out on the quiet water in the moonlight, all by ourselves. Are you game?”

Mati
lda could only nod. She was delighted that he would share this secret with her, of all people. She felt like she was being invited into his own private world, and it was like magic.

As she watched Damian rowing them out into the still, clear water of the small lake separated by a thin stretch of land from the river, she felt as if her heart had always been missing a piece, and now it was complete.
How was it possible for him to make her feel that way in such a short space of time?

“I always think more clearly out here,” Damian told her. “Somehow I feel more at peace with myself.”

“I know what you mean,” Matilda agreed. “Everything seems so clear.”

“You’re the only one I would want to share it with,” Damian said. “Something about you makes me want to be near you. I couldn’t get you out of my head at all. That’s not usual for me.”

“I couldn’t get you out of my head either,” Matilda confessed, feeling self-conscious as she said it. A tiny part of her half expected to laugh in her face and say “Just kidding!”, but he looked down at her with an expression on his face which made her truly believe that he was sincere.

“That’s good,” Damian gave her a warm smile which made her toes curl up with happiness. “I’ve been thinking about your smile, and the way you look down and blush whe
never I give you a compliment

it’s adorable. And I can’t forget how fucking beautiful you are when I’m inside you.”

Dropping the oars, Damian leant over and kissed her, pouring all his desire into the one kiss, so that Matilda felt that all the breath had suddenly been sucked out of her lungs. She let his body guide hers, let it wash over her, and surrendered herself to the passion of the night. After all, why not? It was just the two of them, under the soft silvery light of the moon.

-

“Damian…,” Sylvie said thoughtfully into Matilda’s ear as she sat compiling data in the archives.

“What?” Matilda sat up, alarmed, wondering if her thoughts had somehow been projected onto the screen in front of her. She looked around at Sylvie grinning like a fat spider who has just discovered a treasure trove of juicy flies.

“So that’s his name, h
mm? You doodled it in the corner of the notes you left on your desk.”

“Oh, did I?” Matilda blushed at her blunder.
She was still such a schoolgirl!

“Not
to worry, I won’t tell a soul

who is he?” Sylvie asked, her face full of lively curiosity.

“He’s… just some guy I have a crush on,” Matilda lied.
Although she liked Sylvie, a lifetime of experience had taught her never to fully trust someone with her secrets. The less people knew about her, the less information could leak out to the media.

“Oh really? You’re glowing like that just over a little, unrequited crush?” Sylvie teased.

“I’m not glowing, am I?” Matilda wondered. When she looked in the mirror, she saw the same pale face and dark hair, the same wide, innocent green eyes, despairing over how boring she looked compared to some of the golden, glamorous girls Damian must have met in his travels. She looked young and plain.

“Like a beacon,” Sylvie confirmed. “I’ve honestly never seen anyone so happy in this archive in my life. It’s usually full of dry old men and women who haven’t so much as thought about sex in a decade
, let alone had any.”

Matilda reflected over the last week, during which she had seen Damian every night. They had talked, laughed, made love over and over, and she still couldn’t seem to get enough of him. He was under her skin, filling her mind and overflowing into every aspect of her life. There was barely a second where she wasn’t picturing his face or lingering over a conversation they had been having the night before. Even when she slept, all she dreamt of was Damian, his gentle, warm voice, his never-ending resources for new and exciting places to show her around the city, and his strong arms encircling her.

“Hello? Earth to Matilda?” Sylvie tried, waving her hand in front of Matilda’s face.

“Hmm? Oh, I’m sorry.” Matilda realized she had sunk into a daydream. Discreetly checking for drool (she had been pondering Damian’s razor sharp abs) she tried to look composed and professional.

“Well, damn,” Sylvie said, looking faintly envious. “If that’s not love, I’ve never seen it. I remember the first time I met my husband

fat and balding now, I’ll grant you, but back in the day he had a butt I could have eaten my dinner off and licked clean after…”

Matilda stopped listening as she thought about the envy on Sylvie’s face. She knew the expression all too well. She ha
d worn it herself many times as she had looked at couples holding hands in public, looking into each other’s eyes, and smiling. Even people who were hanging out with friends and laughing together, without a care in the world, caused her to feel a tiny twinge of jealousy. Now, somehow, she was the lucky person. How had it happened?

She thought back to the conversation she’d had with her sister the night before.

“You’re being careful, aren’t you?” Caroline had asked her as they chatted via Skype. “You haven’t got into any scrapes?”

“No, of course not,” Matilda has said. “I’ve been doing great at work and been taking in a lot of the sights around the city, but that’s it, I swear.”

“How are you getting on with Colin?” Caroline queried. “You are making sure not to go out without him, aren’t you? You never know in America

it might be dangerous.”

“Caroline, it’s the
safest city I’ve ever been to

much safer than London,” Matilda assured her. “I couldn’t get in trouble if I tried.”

“I wouldn’t put it past you,” Caro
line said. “There’s something…you seem, I don’t know, different. I can’t put my finger on it.”

“I’m happy, Caroline,” Matilda translated for her. “Could that possibly be it?”

“I guess,” Caroline said slowly. “I’ve never seen you in this mood before. It’s like you’re looking at everything optimistically, I guess. It’s so different for you. You always seemed so restless at home. Nothing any of us did could make you happy.”

“I finally have some freedom,” Matilda said. “It’s refreshing.
Was it so surprising that I wasn’t happy whenever we did anything at home? A restaurant always meant other people gawping at us, and a trip to any public place was always more of a photo opportunity than a nice day out. Now I can be myself and go where I like without so much as a second glance.”

“It just seems like it’s more than that. There’s not a guy, is there?” Caroline asked shrewdly.

“Please,” Matilda scoffed, putting on a masterful expression of scorn. “I work in an archive full of people three times my age. The only person anywhere near my age is Sylvie, and she’s at least in her thirties, probably her forties.”

“If you say so,” Caroline said, not entirely convinced. “Oh, by the way, I thought you’d want to know that daddy’s arranged three interviews for me this week.”

“Jobs?” Matilda asked blankly. She didn’t think that Caroline wanted to do any work outside of the charity events she organized for the family.

“No, idiot

marriage interviews,” Caroline said. “I’m 22 already. Daddy thinks it’s high time I found a suitable husband.”

“So you’re letting him arrange your marriage? Caroline, this is the modern
day,” Matilda said, astounded. “Even our cousins got to pick their own spouses.”

“I know, but I agree with him that it’s the best way to find someone suitable,” Caroline said primly.

“Oh, Caroline,” Matilda sighed. “You don’t know what you’re missing out on.”

Since that conversation, Matilda had been wondering whether, but for her decision to move to America, her father would be trying to do the same thing for her.
She could envision the type of marriage interview Caroline would be sitting through. Men in their late thirties, dried-up and dull, chosen for their political importance, their business connections or simply their money and reputation. They’d do their duty by her and breed little heirs to the throne, but behind her back, they’d be having dirty little affairs with their secretaries whilst Caroline sat at home, lonely, never even knowing what love felt like.

Matilda wouldn’t trade in what she had with Damian for that lifeless political world. How could anyone be contented with an arranged marriage? She pitied her sister now, rather than envying her for her practical outlook on life. Where her sister was marrying herself off through a sense of duty, she was living the romance of a lifetime with a sexy American who had come to sweep her off her feet. It was better than any romance novel she had ever read.
The only black mark on her horizon was that her relationship with Damian couldn’t remain a secret forever.

She thought back to each lie she had
told Colin over the past week

early nights, going out for a breath of fresh air and meeting some friends from work. Every time he seemed to swallow the excuse without complaint, and he had been making only a small effort to keep on top of her movements.

She was getting good at telling lies to her family, and part of it scared her. The other part of her, however, was proud, and excited to have such a big secret all to herself. She loved the secret rendezvous,
the intimacy of knowing that Damian was entirely hers, and the excitement of getting away with it. It was something a girl could get addicted to.

She realized that Sylvie was still talking, and politely tried to pick up the thread of the conversation.

“…used to be so spontaneous, and now he thinks it’s a romantic gesture if he picks his socks up off the floor. I’d give anything to be your age again.”

Matilda smiled sympathetically at Sylvie, and internally danced with excitement at the thought that, in five hours, she would get to see Damian again.
Against that, everything else paled in comparison

-

BOOK: Seduced (Royal Expat Series Book #1)
12.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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