White Girl Problems (24 page)

Read White Girl Problems Online

Authors: Tara Brown

BOOK: White Girl Problems
2.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He tilted my chin. “Your parents never belonged together, but that doesn’t mean you and your mom didn’t.”

Tears leaked from my eyes. I sniffled and nodded. “You’re right.”

He held me in his arms, where we both zoned out and just hung out, like two kids in love.

The only reason I know anything about history and the world is the smart people who cast the historical romances with yummy dudes!

#TrueStory

Chapter Nineteen

Cat and Mouse

June

I could smell summer in the air as I hung my head out of the car window, the damp yet warm air caressing me. I suddenly understood why dogs did it. One week of school left and I was skipping my last classes to meet my boyfriend in Ireland. I almost wished I lived in Europe so I didn't constantly have jet lag.

The driver gave me a look as we pulled up to the cathedral. “Will ya look at that? The parking lot is empty.”

He saw a church, and I saw a man.

A man with satisfaction spread across his face in a smile. He held out his hands. “Do you remember it?”

I started laughing. “How do you do it?”

Aiden tapped his head. “You are on my brain at all times.”

It was the church from the show
Tudors
, the church I had said I loved. I ran to him, letting him wrap himself around me. “It must be exhausting.”

He shook his head. “Contrary to popular belief, having someone run through your head is actually quite refreshing and invigorating. You inspire great things in me. You make me more than an ordinary man.”

I gave him a look. He rolled his eyes. “Obviously, beyond the whole prince thing.”

I sighed. “I missed your Shakespeare.”

He leaned in, taking a deep inhale of my hair. “And I missed the scent of you in my air.”

I lifted my face as he lowered his. Our lips met in the polite kiss we were permitted. I could feel his hands shaking with the want of a passionate kiss, but we saved those for closed doors. He smiled. “Let’s go. The cousin of the queen can’t very well be making out with girls outside of not only a religious, but also a historical landmark.”

“Girls?”

He winked. “Don't tell anyone, but I bring all the pretty girls here.”

“Oh my God.” I sighed as he took my hand in his and dragged me up the stairs. The image of us in the glass window was so strange. It was a crucial moment, a defining one. I stopped him and looked. I was in a cream lace dress with short sleeves and my wide-brimmed sunhat Hattie had gotten for me. I looked like a lady. It made me smile. It also suited the Christchurch Cathedral I was standing outside of in Dublin. He suited me perfectly in his khakis, baby-blue dress shirt, and black jacket, no tie.

“What are you doing?”

I smiled at him in the window. “We look different.”

His brow furrowed. “No, I look exactly the same as I did when I was here last.” He looked down. “Lord, I think these trousers are even the same ones.”

I gave him a slight shove. “You’re an idiot. That's not what I meant. I mean we look like a couple. We match.”

His smile grew. “I agree. But I feel as though we’ve always matched. You were beautiful and I was handsome.”

“Oh my God, you
are
such a cheesy wanker.”

“Well, we match on the outside. On the inside, I think you might be evil. Cheesy wanker?”

I flashed him a smile as I took his arm and let him lead me to the cathedral. “It’s Mary’s pet name for you. The cheesy wanker.”

He stopped to tie his dress shoe, looking up at me through his inky lashes. “She says that? When I’m king, I might have to reinstate hangings or some kind of torture.” He laughed. “Did you know my brother and your sister are having sex?”

My jaw dropped. “Johan?”

He nodded. “Caught them FaceTiming. Needless to say, I may never be the same again. He was doing a striptease in front of his laptop.”

I looked up at the church. “You know you have totes ruined this for me, right? I was excited when you said we would visit a place that was on
The Tudors
, and now it will forever be tainted with the image of your brother doing a striptease for my sister. Sweet Jesus.”

“Then we’re even for the cheesy wanker comment.” He lifted my hand and kissed the back. “Let’s see this place before the Archbishop sees us out here and locks the doors.”

When we got inside, I was stilled by the beauty and intensity. The grandeur was overwhelming. I just stood there staring as he softly spoke. “The construction started in the 1100s. It’s got to be the only church I can say I know of that was a night club.”

I smiled. “What?”

“It’s true. A crypt keeper ran the crypt as a place to drink after hours. Apparently he accidently locked a soldier in the crypt when he closed up shop for the winter. The soldier died of starvation. They found his remains the following spring.”

“People drank in the crypt?”

He leaned in, whispering into my ear. “I swear it on my cheesy wanker soul. Apparently, the poor bloke still haunts the grounds. Very intense situation.”

“That can’t be true.”

“Come on, I want to show you the cat and rat display.” He pulled me along.

I laughed. “You’re kidding right?”

“No, the cat chased the rat into the organ pipe and they both got stuck and died.” He pulled me to a case that proved he was not, in fact, lying. I snuggled into him and looked at the most disturbing thing I had ever seen.

After the tour, we walked out hand in hand. I smiled at Isaac and Tracy. They both waved. Aiden gave me a look. I laughed. “Say it all you want. They like it when I say hi.”

He linked my arm in his. “Finley, we have to talk about something.”

My lips tightened. “Not yet. You have that bad juju look.”

He laughed. “No. Not about us. It’s about university.”

“I’m still scheduled to attend the university of your liking, right?”

He sighed. “Why do you have to be so difficult?”

“I’m not.”

“You said that like you were angry I got you into that school.”

I shrugged. “I guess it annoys me that your life has influenced my life again. But Mary said she’s going to Saint Andrews too. I just don't understand why we have to go to Scotland for college.”

“It’s a good school. Maybe you’ll be one of the lucky few who has an ear for accents and you could pick one up.”

I shook my head. “My French is trash. Mary called me a useless tit at least once.”

He scoffed. “She calls me that weekly. Come on.” He pulled me to the car. When we got inside, he grabbed my face, kissing me fiercely. My hands slid up into his hair, pulling his face down to me. He cupped my cheeks the way he always did, like I was the most delicate thing he had ever held. He whispered against my lips, “I love you.”

We rode back over to Farmleigh House, which was apparently the place visiting dignitaries stayed in while in Dublin. It was a beautiful estate house next door to the president of Dublin. When we got there, the security detail was all set up. I tried really hard to not see them.

Inside the mansion, I stopped short when I heard Jess’s voice and then Johan’s. No wonder she hadn’t wanted to tag along and see whatever Aiden was taking me to! I stormed into the library, the nicest library I had ever seen, and pointed at her and Johan. “Seriously?”

Johan gave me a smirk. “Dare I assume the cat is out of the bag?”

I looked at Jess. “Dude, come on. Not Don Johan? He’s whoring his way across Europe already. Why are you letting him whore in the US?”

She laughed and Johan snarled. “She isn’t letting me do anything.” Jess looked proud but said nothing.

Aiden lifted his eyebrows. “I’m pretty certain I saw some things on that computer that would suggest otherwise.”

Jess’s face went red. “That's not the same thing.”

I grimaced. “What the shit?”

Mary walked in with a cup of tea. “That's not on the approved list of things you’re allowed to say.” I almost smiled, but Aiden’s mother walked into the library just behind Mary.

She smiled at me like a snobby person would smile at a dirty homeless person before flicking change at them. “Finley, how nice to see you again.”

I curtseyed. “Good afternoon, Your Majesty.”

She gave me a half-assed bow and looked at Aiden. “Have you spoken to Finley about school?”

I hated her. I hated the way she said my name and the way she spoke about me, but not to me. It was like Sheila, but the queen was royal so it was cool that she treated me like a second-class citizen, ‘cause to her I actually was.

Wait, school? I turned and looked at Aiden. He swallowed hard. “Can I speak to you…?”

“Oh, just say it, for God’s sake.”

He laughed at my fiery temper. “Someone is spicy.”

I looked at his mom. “Yeah, well, I think you know how I feel about ambushes.”

Mary pointed at me calmly. “She hates them.”

Aiden shot her a look. She smiled and sat next to Jess.

“I won’t be attending university with you. I have to be closer to home, in case of emergency. I’d just finished my second year at Saint Andrews when I met you. I took the year I met you off because I needed to be with you. But this year I won’t be returning.”

I could feel the savagery building inside of me. I smiled at him, softly. “That's cool. I actually find the Scottish accent to be the most attractive, so I won’t have you there as a distraction from the football team. I hear Prince William played for them when he went there.”

Aiden looked at his mother. “Excuse us.” He grabbed my arm and escorted me out of the library. He led me up the stairs, not speaking. When he got to a room that took my breath away, he closed the door and leaned his back against it.

“She is a bitch. You have to let it wash off your back. She will always be the queen mother. Even if I am king, she will be my mother. She is threatened by you. She can see that I love you, but you have to let her evil ways slide. It’s you I love. It's you I plan for. She knows I will walk away from my obligation and family fortune for you. That message has been conveyed.” He gave me that look through his inky lashes. “I tried to talk about it at the cathedral. You said no and changed the subject. I can’t finish my degree there. It has nothing to do with you or me.”

I watched as the playful look on his face vanished.

“My father is sick. I didn't know. Geoffrey knew he would be taking over the crown the day we went skiing. Our skiing trip was not approved. I didn't know. If he hadn’t died, I might have killed him myself. Geoff was not allowed to heli-ski because he was the heir and father has cancer. It’s terminal. I have to go home and start the process for taking over the crown. The university is sending a tutor, a fulltime tutor, to the house. I will finish using distance ed.”

I bit my lip, hating myself. “Why is it whenever you get bad news, I act like a dick?”

He laughed, “Because deep down you really are actually a spoilt brat, regardless of the numerous changes you have made for me.” He walked to me. “If I could be in university with you, I would. If he manages to make a recovery or go into remission, I will be there in a heartbeat. I can think of no place better than by your side.”

I looked down and sighed before saying the craziest thing I could think of. “Mary doesn't go for a year. I’ll come and live with you in Andorra, if you’ll have me. We can do university for two.”

I could see the joy in his eyes, but he shook his head. “I can’t ask you to give up going to a proper college. You need a year of chaos and beer and, of course, turning down the polite advances from the young men you will meet.”

I took his hands in mine. “You don't have to ask. Because it’s you I plan for too.”

“You’ve changed so many things already.”

I nodded. “I know. But it’s like what you said to me when I met you. Most people are afraid of change. We spend our lives watching everyone around us fail and it makes us scared. But if we indulge in those fears, we risk never becoming the person we were meant to be. Everyone is afraid. Conquering that fear is where personal growth comes from. Remember, you asked me if I could change or if I was afraid.” I lifted my hands and cupped his face the way he did mine. “I changed and I like myself now. The changes have been a good thing for me. Do you know where I was a year ago today?”

He nodded. “Stealing my heart with a look.” I glanced at the faded line of the scar on my wrist. He turned my wrist and kissed it. “I thank God you fell into that rose bush every day.”

“Me too.”

He kissed it again. “I want you to live in Scotland. I want you to have this experience because when my life changes, I’m going to need us to change. I want you to be ready for that.”

I lifted to my tiptoes and pressed my lips against his. I didn't know what was coming in the world, his world, but I knew no matter what happened, we would find a way to be with each other.

“I’m sorry about your dad.”

He kissed my cheek. “Me too. He’s smoked cigars his entire life. He’s still smoking them, in fact. He’s only fifty-eight. It’s devastating, but he’s made his bed.”

He seemed cold about it. I didn’t know how to respond to that. I muttered, “Wow, fifty-eight. I thought he was like forty.”

“Mary said you think he’s hot. It's the beard, isn’t it? The man can grow an amazing beard.”

My cheeks were on fire. “No. What?” He laughed, but I growled. “She is worse than Hattie. She just doesn't keep secrets at all.”

“No. Not a chance. She shares everything. Like the fact you were worried I was going to have an affair with Alex. She was so mad at me because you were so worried.”

“She is a filthy liar. I might kill her later, for a completely unrelated reason.”

He kissed me again. “You have my heart on your finger. How on earth am I ever going to fall in love with anyone but you?”

I smiled against his mouth. “I am still going to throttle her.”

He nodded. “I won’t try to defend her, but you have to be warned. She’s skinny, but that means nothing. She’s mean and she bites and pulls hair.”

“Duh, it’s called a cat fight for a reason. We all do.”

He walked over and turned the lock on the door. “I believe you owe me for the cathedral. I will take all tokens of gratitude in the form of physical acts of debauchery.”

Other books

As Time Goes By by Annie Groves
Moonspawn by Bruce McLachlan
Murder in Halruaa by Meyers, Richard
Sinister Paradise by Carolyn Keene
Tales From the Clarke by John Scalzi
Ariel Custer by Grace Livingston Hill
The Memory Game by Sant, Sharon