Marrying His Majesty: Claimed: Secret Royal Son. Marion Lennox

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the other side of the island.’ He’d thought of this yesterday when Nikos had asked about honeymoon plans. They had to be seen as doing something—but this was no time to be away from the island.

      He hadn’t wanted to take Lily to his own home but unless they stayed in the palace here there was little choice. And the thought of staying in the palace—obligatory appearance on the balcony—prince kisses bride—left him cold.

      ‘A place?’ she asked.

      ‘A house. We can be private there.’

      ‘What, for a honeymoon?’ It was said wryly. She’d schooled herself to do this, he thought. Maybe if he insisted on his conjugal rights she’d submit as well. To outward appearance she looked beautiful and serene and untroubled. Maybe even submissive?

      Maybe submissive was the wrong word. It was definitely the wrong word if this was the Lily he’d met little more than a year ago.

      But how well did he know her? Not well, but enough to guess that behind the serenity was quiet desperation.

      ‘We’re expected to go away for a bit. I can’t go far, but I have a house on the north end of the island.’

      ‘So… you and me and how many servants?’

      ‘Just you and me.’ Then, as he saw another fear flare, ‘And Michales,’ he added swiftly.

      Her relief was immediate and obvious. ‘I can take him?’

      ‘Of course.’

      She closed her eyes and he thought she was trying desperately to disguise what she was thinking. How fearfully out of control she felt?

      It didn’t make sense. Was she afraid of him? Afraid of the royalty bit? Surely not. She was Mia’s sister.

      ‘We can go now?’ she asked.

      ‘Yes.’

      ‘Then what are we waiting for?’

       CHAPTER SEVEN

      THEY were to depart in a bridal coach. A gold-painted barouche with the Sappheiros coat of arms emblazoned on the panels, with white leather upholstery and white satin cushions—something straight out of Cinderella.

      It took only this, Lily thought in disbelief. Alex handed her up into the coach. Attendants arranged her skirts and her train, tucking her in with care.

      Alex climbed up and sat beside her.

      Eleni handed up Michales.

      This had been a crazy day. She was about as far from her comfort zone as she’d ever want to be. But this… this was just plain fantasy. This was every girl’s dream—being whisked off in a golden coach with Prince Charming.

      In the fairy tales she’d read, babies weren’t included. But Michales definitely was.

      So… Her Prince Charming was sitting beside her. He looked absurdly handsome—regal and tasselled and armed with sword and all the things a Prince Of The Blood should be.

      She probably even looked like a princess, she conceded. All white satin and lace and exquisite beading—and there were diamonds in her tiara, for heaven’s sake.

      There were four white horses in their traces, heads held high, shiny, sleek, gold harnesses, bits and assorted leather stuff. They had gold and white attachments and white-feathered headdresses—did horses wear headdresses? These ones did, she decided. They looked fabulous.

      Even the coachman looked amazing. His uniform was almost as ornate as Alex’s—only he was wearing a top hat.

      There were sixteen more horsemen, eight in front and eight behind. Horseguards?

      Was one of them carrying a diaper bag? She daren’t ask. She hoped someone had thought of it, but the royal princess standing up and asking for diapers… maybe not.

      The desire to giggle grew even stronger.

      Michales jiggled on her knee. She hugged him. He crowed with delight and squirmed and tried to reach her tiara.

      It was too much. She burst out laughing and Alex stared at her as if she’d entirely lost it.

      ‘What the… ?’

      ‘Cinderella and Prince Charming—and Baby,’ she told him, and grinned and lifted the unprotesting Michales across to his father’s knee. ‘Here. You hold him. He’s not very good with travelling.’

      ‘What do you mean?’

      ‘I suspect you might find out for yourself,’ she said and chuckled again at the expression on his face. Then, as it seemed to be expected of her—she’d seen the odd royal wedding on the telly—she turned and smiled broadly at the crowd. She waved!

      If he could be a prince, she could be a princess.

      ‘I might find out what for myself?’ he said cautiously.

      ‘You’ll know it when it happens,’ she said sagely. ‘Aren’t you supposed to be waving?’

      ‘I appear to be needing to hang on.’

      ‘That’s all right,’ she said magnanimously. ‘You hold on and I’ll wave for the two of us.’

      This was dumb but she couldn’t stop grinning. She was so far out of her comfort zone that she ought to be a quivering wreck. But she’d just got through a royal wedding and she hadn’t fallen over once. As far as she knew, she hadn’t said anything stupid.

      She was married.

      This was no real marriage, she told herself. She surely intended staying… well, not married in the true sense of the word. But she was married and she wasn’t afraid of Alex. She didn’t trust him, but then maybe she didn’t have to trust. This was a business arrangement. If she could just keep her cool, keep her independence, maybe she could even enjoy this—just a bit.

      Maybe that was hysteria speaking.

      Just wave to the crowds, pin your smile in place and try not to think of the man sitting beside you with your baby on his lap, she told herself.

      Her baby’s father.

      Her… husband.

      This was crazy. He didn’t belong here.

      Hell, he had to do this. The islanders needed him to be Crown Prince but every nerve in his body was screaming at him to get out of here, get back to Manhattan, go into his office, slam the door on the outside world and design a garden or six.

      For the last ten years garden design had been his life. As a child, his only friends had been the palace servants. An old gardener had taken him under his wing, and the palace garden had become an enormous pleasure.

      When his mother had been permitted to return to the island they’d

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