Billionaires: The Royal: The Queen's New Year Secret / Awakened by Her Desert Captor / Twin Heirs to His Throne. Maisey Yates

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Billionaires: The Royal: The Queen's New Year Secret / Awakened by Her Desert Captor / Twin Heirs to His Throne - Maisey Yates

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“We have some things to discuss.”

      “I don’t want to discuss this right now. I’ve only just found out I’m pregnant. I believe you had to know before I did.”

      “You at least had a suspicion.”

      “You think that makes it easier? Do you think that makes any of this...?” Her voice broke, her entire body shaking. “I should not be devastated in this moment. I hate you for this too. I was supposed to be happy when I finally conceived. You’ve stolen that for me.”

      “Who stole it, Tabitha? I was not the one who asked for a divorce.”

      “Maybe not. But you made your feelings for me perfectly clear. It’s poison now, already working its way through my system. You can’t fix it.”

      He said nothing as they walked out of the exam room and continued down the long vacant hallway toward a back entrance. His car was waiting there, not one driven by a chauffeur. One of his sports cars that he got great enjoyment out of driving.

      He was a low-key man, her husband. Responsible, levelheaded. Serious.

      But he liked cars. And he very much enjoyed driving them. Much too fast for her taste. But he never asked her opinion.

      “I’m not especially in the mood to deal with your Formula 1 fantasies,” she said, crossing her arms and tapping her foot, giving him her best withering expression.

      “Funny. I’m not particularly in the mood to put up with your attitude, and yet, here we are.”

      “You have earned every bit of my attitude, Your Highness.”

      “So angry with me, Tabitha, when you spent so many years with so little to say.”

      “What have I said, my lord?”

      He made a scoffing sound in the back of his throat. “My lord. As if you are ever so deferential.”

      She arched her brow. “As if you ever deserved it.” She breezed past him and got inside the car, slamming the door shut behind her and setting about to buckling her seat belt while he got in and started the engine.

      “What happened, Tabitha? What happened?”

      “There was nothing. Like you said. Nothing. And I can’t live that way anymore.”

      “You’re having my baby. I don’t see you have an option now. Clearly the divorce is off.”

      He revved the engine, pressing the gas and pulling the car away from the curb.

      “The divorce is no such thing,” she said, panic clawing at her insides. “The divorce is absolutely on. You might be royalty, but you can’t pull endless weight with me. I am not simply another subject in your country. I have rights.”

      “Oh, really? And with what money will you hire a lawyer to defend those rights? Everything you have is mine, Tabitha, and we both know it.”

      “I will find a way.” She didn’t know if she would. He wasn’t wrong. She was nothing. Nothing from nowhere. She had climbed her way up from the bottom. From a poor household on the wrong side of the tracks with parents who would spend every night screaming at each other, throwing things. Her mother hurling heavy objects at her stepfather’s head whenever the mood struck her.

      And that was before everything had gone horribly wrong.

      There had been no money in her household. Not enough food. All there had been was anger. And that was an endless well. One that her parents drew from at every possible opportunity. That was her legacy. It was all she had. It was why she had vowed to find something different for herself. Something better.

      What she had found was that sometimes everything that filled the quiet spaces, everything that went unsaid, was more cutting, more painful than a dinner plate being hurled at your head.

      Kairos said nothing but simply kept driving. It took a while for her to realize they weren’t heading back to the palace, but when she did, a cold sense of dread filled her. She realized then that she honestly couldn’t predict what he might be doing. Because she didn’t know him. Five years she had been married to this man and she knew even less about him today than she had on the day they had married. Impossible, seemingly.

      She’d spent three years as his PA prior to them getting engaged and married. Three years where she had cultivated a silly, childish crush on him. He had smiled easier then, laughed with her sometimes.

      But that was before his father had died. Before the weight of the nation had fallen on his shoulders. Before his arranged engagement was destroyed by his impetuous younger brother. Before he had been forced to take on a replacement wife that he had never wanted, much less loved.

      Those years spent as his PA had been like standing on the outside of a forest. She had looked on him and thought, I recognize him. He’s a forest. Being his wife was like walking through it. Discovering new dangers, discovering that it was so dark, she could barely see in front of her. Discovering she had no idea where the trees might end, and where she might find her freedom. Yes, the deeper she walked, the less she knew.

      “You aren’t planning on driving your car into a river or something dramatic, are you?” she asked, only half joking.

      “Don’t be silly. We spent years trying for an heir, I’m not going to compromise anything now that we have one on the way.”

      “Oh, but otherwise you would be aiming for a cliff. Good to know.”

      “And leave Andres to rule? Don’t be ridiculous.”

      It occurred to her suddenly, exactly where they were heading. Unease stole over her, her scalp prickling. “What are you planning?”

      “Me? Perhaps I’m not planning anything. Perhaps I’m being spontaneous.”

      “I don’t believe that.”

      “You’re so convinced that I don’t know you, and yet, you think you know me, agape? How fair is that?”

      She didn’t think she knew him. But she wasn’t about to admit that now. “You’re a man, Kairos. Moreover, you’re a distinctly predictable one.”

      “If I cared about your opinion at all I would be tempted to feel wounded. Alas, I don’t.”

      He turned onto the private airfield used by the royal family and her heart sank. Her suspicions were very much confirmed. “What is it you think you’re doing?”

      “Oh, I don’t think I’m doing anything. This is the situation, my darling bride, either you come with me now or we do this here in Petras.”

      “Do what, exactly?”

      “Come to an agreement on exactly what we will do now that we are to be parents. And by come to an agreement, I mean what I will decide. Do not forget that I am the king. Whatever laws might govern the rest of the people do not apply to me.”

      Rage filled her, flooded her. “Since when? You’ve never been the most flexible of men, but you’ve never been a dictator.”

      “I’ve

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