unsafe!” Roxanne yelled, struggling a little but not too much because she just wanted someone to tell her that it would be okay.
Behind her, Gen turned to her husband, Arthur. “Is that true?”
Casimir took Rox’s hand in his large, warm one and told her, “I promise that it’s perfectly maintained and will not crash. It’s a ten-minute flight, and we’ll be right there at the heliport, minutes from the casino, and we can start asking people what’s going on with Max.”
From behind her, Roxanne heard Arthur tell Gen, “If it were unsafe, I wouldn’t let you near it. It’s perfectly fine as long as Maxence himself isn’t flying it. He’s terrible at piloting anything.”
Gen asked him, “You’ll make sure he isn’t flying the helicopter, then?”
Gen’s little bit of native Texas accent soothed Rox. Just anybody Southern or Western did, these days. Sometimes, she felt like a tiny Georgia peach tossed into the ocean and floating around from shore to shore.
“We’re here to find Max,” Arthur said to Gen. “If Max is flying that helicopter, then we’ve found him, and we’ll go right back to Paris. I do need to get back to Paris. I didn’t get what I went there for.”
“What’s that?” Roxanne turned and asked them.
“Art,” Arthur said, as Gen called back, “Cheese.”
They looked at each other.
When Roxanne turned back, the helicopter was right there.
It lurked.
It loomed.
It hulked in the predawn sky, its blades chopping the darkness. “Caz, no.”
Near her ear, Casimir whispered, “It’s a ten-minute flight, and we need to find Maxence. Please get on this helicopter.” He backed off, and his emerald green eyes, just visible in the cabin light from inside, implored her.
Fine. Just fine.
“If we die,” Roxanne said as she clambered over the rail and toward the seats, “I swear on Baby Jesus’s tiny, holy toes that I will haunt you in this life and the next and you will never have any peace throughout all eternity.”
“Deal,” Casimir said as he handed her into the helicopter.
Roxanne buckled her seat belt and yanked the strap until she couldn’t breathe and probably wasn’t digesting last night’s supper, either.
The whirring of the helicopter blades above them took on more intensity, and the engine howled.
She grabbed both a handle on the ceiling and Casimir’s hand and clung to them for dear life. She wasn’t so much praying as wordlessly screaming for God to get her out of this insanity alive.
Chapter Four
Monaco
Gen
Rescuing people while pregnant is not recommended.
Genevieve Finch-Hatten—Countess Severn if you wanted to get technical about it—was about six months pregnant, and her bump was becoming unwieldy. She was carrying the still-unnamed heir to the Earldom of Severn who would someday, with a little luck, inherit the estate and fortune from her husband, Arthur-Finch Hatten, Lord Severn.
She had just used the bathroom in the airport terminal in Nice fifteen minutes ago, and she already needed to pee again.
That midnight call from Maxence’s security people to Arthur—begging him to come and find the guy who was their responsibility because they were not skilled enough to track one exceedingly tall man in a crowd—did not amuse her in the slightest. People needed to do their dang jobs and not call in unpaid and unofficial cavalry because they were incompetent.
Especially when Arthur was needed in Paris.
And she was needed back in London at her law firm the next day.
And dang it, she needed to be in a house or an office with a bathroom right there, not traipsing around Europe in planes and helicopters and cars that were too far from proper facilities.
This was their third trip to mainland Europe in the last month. She was going to need to start staying home soon.
Gen and Arthur never discussed why he was needed where he went, just that he was needed. Whether or not Arthur had a particular set of skills, as the cliché goes, was never a topic of conversation. It was obvious that his longstanding connections to the elite world of the very wealthy and royal made him an obvious asset for an intelligence service.
Not just any intelligence service, of course.
Arthur was first and foremost an Englishman. His noble family had placed several monarchs on the English and British thrones and toppled several others off of them, and he joked that he could dethrone the current family any time he wished.
Gen was relatively sure he was joking.
He was probably joking that he would ever try to dethrone the current occupants, the House of Windsor. That, she was sure of.
Pretty sure.
But it