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The Princess and the Player (Royal House of Leone Book 5)
The Princess and the Player (Royal House of Leone Book 5) Read online
Table of Contents
Title Page
Royal House of Leone
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
EPILOGUE
Copyright © 2017
Royal House of Leone
THE PRINCESS AND THE PLAYER
By Jennifer Lewis
Royal House of Leone
The Leone family has ruled the remote and picturesque nation of Altaleone since the days of Charlemagne. When the elderly queen and her son are found dead in mysterious circumstances, the royal family is thrown into crisis.
The Princess and the Player: A Second Chance Romance
Carolina Leone has devoted her life to being the perfect royal wife and mother. When her husband is killed, she plans to spend her days quietly in the background—until an old flame is rekindled and forces her to question all her values and beliefs.
Former street musician Amadou Khadem may be an international star now, but he’s never forgotten—or forgiven—the cool beauty who broke his heart when she left him to become a royal bride. She’s more beautiful than ever, and he can’t resist the urge to seduce her.
His attempt at revenge goes badly wrong when he finds himself falling for her all over again. He knows she’ll never leave her privileged royal existence for him—or will she?
The Royal House of Leone series:
The King’s Bought Bride (Darias and Emma)
A Prince for Christmas (Free short story with Sandro and Serena’s first encounter)
The Prince’s Secret Baby (Sandro and Serena)
The Princess and the Player (Lina and Amadou)
The Princess’s Scandalous Affair (Beatriz and Lorenzo)
Taming the Royal Beast (Rigo and Bella)
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CHAPTER ONE
“You may be a widow, but you’re not dead.”
“I’m well aware of that.” Carolina Leone didn’t want to show her daughter how much her words stung. “I have a very full life.” They walked along the Rue Faubourg Saint-Honoré in Paris, ostensibly looking for a birthday gift for her. Her scientist daughter, Callista, had been too busy to shop for one before now. “Running the palace is a full-time job, especially since your brother has moved into the castle in the village.”
“Mom, you’re not a building caretaker. And Dad’s been gone for nearly a year now. You should go on a date.” She winked one of her pretty green eyes.
“Lord, no.” Lina almost shuddered. The prospect of dating again seemed as laughable as climbing Mt. Everest.
“I’m serious, you’re still young, you’re gorgeous, you have a lot to give. I’ll be very ticked off if you wall yourself up in that palace and say goodbye to life.”
“I have all of you to keep up with. Just traveling to visit my children all over the world could take most of the year.”
Callista cocked her head, sending her auburn curls cascading over her shoulder. “Mom, you can’t live through your children. And we’re all busy.”
Lina flinched. Was her daughter bored and annoyed by her presence here? She didn’t think so, but still…. “I don’t need a gift, darling. I have everything I want. Let me buy you lunch instead.” She knew her daughter needed to get back to her lab.
“We could go to Carlo’s,” Callista turned down a side street. “I am hungry. We’ll find you something awesome later.” The sidewalk narrowed as they walked past a construction site. They had to pick their way past a pile of broken concrete, and at one point Lina put her hand out to steady herself on the temporary plywood wall.
The wall was covered in pasted posters for various events around the city, but when she saw the one her fingers rested on, she stopped and stared.
Amadou Khadem at The Olympia, May 10! His face stared right at her, dark eyes as intense and piercing as ever. Tickets almost sold out!
“Mom, are you okay?”
“Oh, yes, I’m fine.” She dragged herself away from the poster with some effort. May tenth was tomorrow. But she’d never go see it. She didn’t even remember the last time she’d been to a concert that wasn’t a classical concerto.
But she couldn’t resist sneaking one last look at the poster.
“Mom, what are you…? Hey, isn’t it that guy you met once?”
“What?” Had she told Callista about him? She couldn’t have—could she? Callista had a frighteningly good memory. She came out with stuff that no one else remembered.
“Yes, you said you met him long ago, before you had us. Before you met Dad, even. And look, the concert’s tomorrow. Let’s go see him.”
“Oh, no. I don’t think so.” Panic surged through her. She couldn’t even imagine being in the same space with him. Just seeing his face again was a shock. “It’ll be too noisy.”
“It’s music, Mom, not noise. And I love his sound. It’ll be fun.”
“I’d really rather not.” Thankfully Carlo’s was only a few steps away, and soon she was able to fuss over whether to sit inside or out and whether to get an appetizer, and could drag her attention away from the man she’d had to work very—very—hard to forget all those years ago.
But that evening, alone in her hotel room—her daughter shared an apartment with two other female scientists and there was no spare bed—she pulled out her laptop and opened a browser.
It couldn’t hurt just to look up his name and see what he’d been up to. Could it?
It had been years—decades—since she’d seen him. She was curious to see what Amadou looked like now, and the poster had been an extreme close-up of his face so it was hard to get an overall impression.
She Googled his name. She’d always liked his name and the way it rolled off his tongue, in that deep, French-accented voice of his. He was probably here in Paris right now, with the concert so soon.
She glanced over her shoulder, as if suddenly afraid she was being watched. Which was silly, since there was absolutely nothing whatsoever wrong with what she was doing. He was an old friend. Not even a friend.
She clicked on the Wikipedia page at the top of her search, and her eyes darted to the right of the screen to see his personal details, wife, children, etc. And there were none, just his birthdate—he was a year older than her—and “years active” up to the present. Had he never been married? Never had children? It seemed impossible.
There was a recent picture of him performing live, standing at a mic, his face taut with emotion. A weird frisson of—something—swept through her as she studied it. He always had so much passion. Too much passion for normal life.
He did look different from the boy she remembered. In the picture he wore a sweat-dampened white T-shirt that outlined muscled shoulders and a hard chest. He’d been skinny and insubstantial when she knew him, barely eating and staying up all night. Now he had a muscled solidity that gave him an air of authority and confidence.
Of course, he’d always been confident. Infuriatingly so.
He didn’t look like a man of fifty-four. If she’d had to guess, she’d have said maybe mid to late thirties. His hair was still dark, his brown skin was smooth and unlined, and his eyes sparkled with the same bold mischief she remembered.
Or maybe she just imagined that. The picture was too small
to tell.
She let out a sigh. Goodness, he was handsome. Always had been. As a sheltered girl from the German countryside, she’d found him overwhelming and impossible to resist.
Of course she eventually came to her senses after her family arranged her meeting with Prince Emil and she’d got swept up in the majesty of Altaleone.
Amadou would have become bored with her and broken her heart, she knew it even then. And the fact that he’d never married confirmed it. He’d probably spent his whole life skipping from flower to flower, drinking their nectar like a gorgeous, confident bee they had no chance of refusing.
Her phone buzzed, and she quickly closed the web page before answering, as if she’d been caught doing something naughty.
“Mom, I got us tickets!”
“Tickets to what?” Her heart started pounding.
“Amadou Khadem, of course! Did you think I bought opera tickets? I got two right up front—the ones they save for industry bigwigs and VIPs. I think the guy in the box office recognized my name or something. Sometimes it’s great being royal.”
“That’s wonderful, sweetheart.” Her voice sounded flat. Her thoughts spun and a sudden surge of adrenaline propelled her to her feet. “You really didn’t have to.”
“Of course I didn’t, but I need a night out as much as you do. I’ve barely been anywhere except to the lab for over a month. I have to attend an all-day conference tomorrow, but I’ll pick you up at six.”
“Great.” Did her apprehension show in her voice? Usually the spotlights threw the crowd into darkness, but if the seats were right up front Amadou might be able to see her. Though even if he did see her he probably wouldn’t recognize her after all these years. She was more than thirty years older and wore her hair differently. Maybe he’d wonder who that sweet old lady in the front row was.
“Mom, I need to finish up my Powerpoint for tomorrow, so I’ll see you at six, okay?”
“Yes, dear, good luck tomorrow.” Her children were so capable and confident that it often amazed her. How had they developed such a strong sense of self? Certainly not from her.
She’d always been somewhere in the background, smiling and supporting her husband. Maybe she should be embarrassed about it, but she’d really never wanted anything else.
She paced around the room, unable to settle. Seeing Amadou—even on the poster—had opened up a window to a part of her she’d almost forgotten. Was it her heart? Maybe somewhere more primal. The part of her that could see a man and say, wow.
She hadn’t felt the rush of attraction in…forever. She didn’t even remember feeling it for Emil, and maybe she hadn’t since their marriage was actually the brainchild of her well-connected relatives rather than a typical flirtation.
She had loved him, though, despite everything. She missed Emil’s sense of humor, and the way he used to kiss her good night no matter what. Even after all these months it was still hard to believe he was gone forever. And there was no way she could embark on any kind of relationship with the eyes of European society and the world press on her every moment.
So any stray sparks of desire she felt would best be quickly extinguished.
“I’m so sorry I was late! The last speaker rambled on forever.” Callista had grabbed a taxi from home and picked Lina up on the way so as not to deal with parking, and they’d jumped out, paid and were running into the theater a full hour after the concert was supposed to begin. “Do you think they’ll let us in?”
“I don’t know.” Lina wasn’t sure if she’d be relieved or crushed after all the time she’d spent trying to find an outfit that looked both hip and respectable at the same time. They’d probably missed him completely. “I suppose we can always play the royal card.”
“I don’t know if that works at gigs.” Callista shot her a grin. “Might have the opposite effect.”
They checked in at the box office, and the clerk told them to hurry. They’d missed the warm-up band and Amadou Khadem was about to play.
“Sweet!” Callista clapped her hands. “C’mon, Mom. We have to get all the way down to the front.”
People frowned and peered at them as they walked past the cheap seats, then the medium-priced seats and then past the expensive seats and the very expensive seats, until they got to the front row, right in the middle. One rather rude man even demanded to see their tickets, refusing to believe that they could just waltz up to the front like this.
Callista ignored him, and they’d just managed to settle into their seats and remove their jackets when the band took their places, and an emcee walked toward the mic.
“Tonight, ladies and gentlemen”— Lina was almost fluent in French, so she understood him—“we welcome one of the most celebrated stars of the international music scene. He just finished a six-week tour of the U.S. and we’re very lucky to have him here in Paris tonight. Here he is, the reigning king of desert soul—”
He turned to one of the wings and the drummer played a roll. Lina held her breath as a man emerged—not a myth or a legend and no larger than any other tall man—and walked toward the mic. She couldn’t even see him, really, without the spotlight on his face. He wore a black jacket and pants and his hair was cropped short.
See? She could look right at him and barely react at all. This was going to be absolutely fine.
The emcee threw up his hands. “Amadou Khadem!”
The spotlight hit his face, throwing his bold features into high relief. Hard cheekbones, that proud nose and those eyes that seemed to see right through you.
He walked up to the mic. “I’m always glad to be back in Paris, my favorite city and spiritual homeland. I’ve missed you.”
“We’ve missed you, too,” intoned the woman next to her. Lina turned to look at her, then turned back to him, wondering why he wasn’t speaking.
And as she turned their gaze locked, and she found herself staring right into the intense, dark eyes of the man she’d coolly left more than thirty years ago.
CHAPTER TWO
Is he looking at me? Lina wasn’t sure if he could even see her past the harsh glare of the spotlight. As he launched into the first song, looking deep into the back of the audience, she wondered if she’d imagined the whole thing.
Soon the power of the music took hold of her, and she got swept along, enjoying his strong, melodic voice and paying as little attention as possible to the movements of his muscled body as he paced back and forth on the stage, pouring his heart into each song.
Such passion. He’d always had a lot of passion. Way too much for a quiet girl educated in a German boarding school.
He didn’t look at her again either. No doubt she had imagined that moment of intense connection. She was just another face in a sea of them, and soon she would leave the concert with the crowd and not lay eyes on him again for another thirty years or so.
If even then. During the intermission she distracted herself with a glass of wine at the bar and annoyed Callista with questions about her own love life—which was apparently nonexistent.
She’d probably have said the same thing to her mother when she was that age.
The second half of the concert began with a fast-paced number that had much of the audience on their feet dancing. She stayed seated. She was in the front row and didn’t want to block anyone’s view.
Callista prodded her in midsong. “Mom, this guy’s trying to give you something.”
“What?” She turned to see a short, rotund man holding out a folded piece of paper.
“No, thank you.” She tried to be polite. Whatever it was, she didn’t want it.
“It’s from Mr. Khadem,” said the man, leaning in. He was blocking the view of the person next to her in the front row, and he was starting to look annoyed.
“Just take it, Mom,” hissed Callista.
Amadou was still singing, and she didn’t dare look up at him. But she took the note, totally forgetting to offer a polite acknowledgement.
She didn’t want to open it
and read it, either. The person next to her would be sure to wonder what it was that had been worth obscuring his view at an expensive concert. And if it really was from Amadou—which seemed unlikely—what would it say?
“Read it, Mom!” Callista looked ready to grab the note from her. “Or I will.”
Her threat sent a jolt of panic through Lina. She might have mentioned an acquaintance with Amadou in passing at some point, but she’d definitely never told her about all the steamy summer nights she’d spent in his attic bedroom, or the long walks they’d shared in the mountains outside Zurich.
Even Emil never knew about her long affair with him. No one did, except her closest friends from school.
She cracked the note open and peered at it. Scrawled writing that she couldn’t read. For one thing, it was dark. For another she needed reading glasses. She had some in her bag. Was she really going to reach into her bag for some old-lady reading glasses in front of the celebrated Amadou Khadem and his audience of devoted fans?
Apparently, yes. At this point she was committed. And what did she care if he thought she looked like a middle-aged woman? She was, wasn’t she?
She fished out her glasses and put them on, then pulled the note to the right distance, and read it as fast as she could.
Please come up to my dressing room after the show.
She froze. Her eyes darted to him before she could stop them. Once again he stared straight at her—still singing—and held her gaze for a solid five seconds before she managed to tear it away.
He’d recognized her. Still, she didn’t have to go. Really, it would be better not to. He’d only be disappointed anyway.
And heck, maybe he was still mad at her for the way she’d ended things. Back then she’d thought that everything she did during that strange in-between period of her life was temporary, disposable, soon to be forgotten, but it was funny how everything stuck with you over the years, whether you wanted it to or not.