To Love A Prince - Rachel Hauck Page 0,4

live abroad.”

“You never.” Ella paused beside Daffy as she tied her rich dark hair into a floppy topknot.

“You wanted to marry the prince and rule Lauchtenland. Besides, you joined the Royal Trust to work for Mum. She’d be put out if you left.”

“Dream killer.” Nevertheless, Ella was right. Well, partially right. Daffy couldn’t leave the Royal Trust after Mum went out on a limb to secure her position. Not very far out on the limb, but far enough. “But I do love my job.”

With her master’s degree in restorative arts, she wanted nothing more than to knock around historic artifacts, furniture, clothing, paintings, photographs and literature. The House of Blue had acquired such things for the last, oh, five hundred years. Longer, if the Hadsby Castle fire in 1595 hadn’t destroyed nearly everything the royal family owned.

But the chair had been saved. The King Titus. Constructed by Lauchtenland’s first king after the Norman conquest. It had been the royal throne for almost a century before King Louis II replaced it in 1881.

“What are we talking about?” Leslie Ann Parker, stunning, talented—and the latest sensation of Lauchtenland’s national Morning Show, reporting on all things royal—arrived at the waves.

“Daffy wants to immigrate to America,” Ella said.

“Surely not.” Leslie Ann dismissed the idea with a flick of her hand.

“That’s what I said.” Ella slapped Leslie Ann a high five then bent to inspect a rather large conch shell.

“Thanks, you two. Your vote of confidence in me is touching.”

Why couldn’t she move to America? She was educated and confident—well, most of the time. Surely American museums and historic societies needed curators. Lately corporations had been hiring curators to acquire fine art. Others to build a museum of the company’s history. Daffy would love such an opportunity.

“When did you ever want to live in America?” Leslie Ann repeated Ella’s question. “I’ve known you since A-levels and never once did you express a desire to live abroad. Darling, don’t you remember the time it took a month of talking to get you off on a London weekend?”

“Maybe I said it more to myself than out loud. Look, we’re standing on a Florida beach, aren’t we? This whole holiday was my idea. And the weekend to London was during final exams. Of course I didn’t want to go.” Daffy kicked at a small foaming wave as if to make her point.

“She also never said out loud that she wants to marry a prince. But she does.” Ella was simply on a wild, fantastical roll this morning.

“Wanted to marry a prince,” Daffy said. “Past tense. Present tense makes me sound like a silly little girl.” Which was the purpose of sisters, no? “And if I never said it out loud, how do you know?”

“Fine. Not wants but wanted.” Ella ran the shell up to their beach chairs and returned with more on the prince topic. “I suppose I can tell you now. When I was little, I used to sneak into your room and read your diary.”

“You read my diary?” Daffy laughed, then sobered. “Please say you’re joking.”

“Yeah, the one titled My Life with the Prince by Daffodil Caron. I thought it was fiction at first. You went on and on about this beautiful, sweet girl who married a prince. It couldn’t have been you.” Daffy splashed her laughing sister. “But in the end, you started writing your names. Daffy and Gus. You wanted to marry Prince Gus.”

“And you never did?” Daffy said. Both sisters grew up in the halls of the palace. For a while anyway. Before the great departure.

“Marry Prince Gus?” Leslie Ann moved away from a seagull that touched down a little too close. “Where is this tome? I want to read it.”

“Don’t tell me you never had visions of marrying one of the Blue princes?” Daffy faced her friend. “Half the girls in my class wanted to be my friend so I’d invite them to the palace after school.” Where she went every afternoon while Mum worked. She’d been the queen’s private secretary before taking on the direction of the Royal Trust.

“You’d get a jolly laugh, I tell you.” Ella pressed her hands to her cheeks and batted her eyelashes. “‘I just love him so much. He’s sooooo cute.’”

“Now I have to read it,” Leslie Ann said. “What a great feature idea. An exposé on all the girls who grew up with Prince John or Prince Gus as their dream date. I’d use your diary as a starting point.”

“I’ve never been so glad in

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