Something changed the night of my graduation. Perhaps it was the shared trauma, or the fact Rhys had voluntarily opened up to me about his past, but the longstanding antagonism between us transformed into something elseâsomething that kept me awake late at night and drove the butterflies in my stomach nuts.
It wasnât a exactly. More like attraction paired withâ¦curiosity? Fascination? Whatever it was, it put me on edge, because on the list of the worst ideas I could have, sneaking out and getting kidnapped was number two. Developing non-platonic feelings for my bodyguard was number one.
Luckily, my schedule in New York kept me so busy I barely had time to breathe, much less indulge in inappropriate fantasies.
Rhys and I moved to Manhattan three days after graduation, and the following summer was a whirlwind of charity board meetings, social functions, and house hunting.
By the time August rolled around, Iâd signed the lease on a beautiful Greenwich Village townhouse, worn down two pairs of heels from trekking through the city, and met everyone on the social circuit, some of whom I wished I met.
âItâs slipping.â Rhys scanned the surrounding crowd.
We were at the opening for a new Upper East Side exhibit celebrating Eldorran artists, which normally wouldnât be a big deal, but the guest list included action movie star Nate Reynolds and the paparazzi were out in full force.
âWhat?â I said through my smile as I posed for the cameras. The appearances got tiresome after a while. There was only so much smiling, waving, and small talk a girl could stand before she keeled over from boredom, but they were part of my job, so I grinned and bore it. Literally.
âYour smile. Itâs slipping.â
He was right. I hadnât even noticed.
I re-upped the wattage of my smile and tried not to yawn.
I still had a luncheon, two interviews, a board meeting for the New York Animal Rescue Foundation, and a couple of errands to run, but after thatâ¦PJs and sweet sleep.
I didnât my job, but I wished I could do something more meaningful than be a walking, talking mannequin.
And so it went. Day after day, month after month of the same thing. Fall turned into winter, then into spring and summer, then fall again.
Rhys stood next to me through it all, stern and grumpy as always, but heâd dialed down the overbearing attitude. For him, anyway. Compared to a normal person, he was still overprotective to the point of neuroticism.
I loved and hated the shift in equal measure. Loved it because I had more freedom, hated it because I could no longer use my irritation as a shield against whatever was crackling between us.
And there a thing. I just wasnât sure whether I was the only one who saw it, or if he did too.
I didnât ask. It was safer that way.
âDo you ever think about doing anything except bodyguarding?â I asked on a rare night in. For once, I had no plans other than a date with the TV and ice cream, and I loved it.
It was September, almost two years since Rhys and I first met and over a year since I moved to New York. Iâd gone full out with the seasonal decorations, including a fall wreath over the fireplace, earth-toned cushions and blankets, and a mini pumpkin centerpiece for the coffee table.
Rhys and I were watching a screwball comedy thatâd popped up in my Netflix recommendations. He sat ramrod straight, fully dressed in his work outfit while I was curled up with my feet on the sofa and a pint of ice cream in my hand.
âBodyguarding?â
âItâs a word,â I said. âIf itâs not, Iâm declaring it one by royal decree.â
He smirked. âYou would. And to answer your question, no, I donât. The day I do is the day I stop âbodyguarding.ââ
I rolled my eyes. âIt must be nice to see everything in black and white.â
Rhysâs gaze lingered on me for a second before he looked away. âTrust me,â he said. âNot everything is black and white.â
Inexplicably, my heart skipped a beat, but I forced myself not to demand he tell me what he meant. It probably meant nothing. It was a throwaway line.
Instead, I refocused on the movie and concentrated on looking at the man sitting next to me.
It worked. Sort of.
I laughed at something a character said, and I noticed Rhys looking at me out of the corner of my eye.
âItâs nice,â he said.
âWhat?â
âYour real smile.â
Forget a skipped beat. My heart skipped a whole song.
This time, however, I covered it up by pointing my spoon at him. âThat was a compliment.â
âIf you say so.â
âDonât try to play it off.â I was proud of how normal I sounded when my insides were doing things that were anything normal. Fluttering, skipping, twisting. My doctor would have a field day. âWeâve passed a milestone. Rhys Larsenâs first compliment to Bridget von Ascheberg, and it only took two years. Mark it down.â
Rhys snorted, but humor filled his eyes. âOne year and ten months,â he said. âIf weâre counting.â
Which he was.
If my heart skipped any more songs, itâd have no playlist left.
Whatever I felt toward Rhys, it couldnât develop past what it was now. So, in an effort to rid myself of my increasingly disturbing reactions to my bodyguard, I agreed to go on a date with Louis, the son of the French ambassador to the United Nations, when I ran into him at an event a month after my movie night with Rhys.
Louis showed up for our date at seven oâclock sharp with a bouquet of red flowers and a charming smile, which wilted when he saw the scowling bodyguard standing so close behind me I could feel the heat from his body.
âThese are for you.â Louis handed me the flowers while keeping a wary eye on Rhys. âYou look beautiful.â
A low growl rumbled behind me, and Louis noticeably gulped.
âThank you, theyâre lovely,â I said with a gracious smile. âLet me put them in water and Iâll be right back.â
My smile dropped when I turned my back to Louis and faced Rhys. âMr. Larsen, please follow me.â Once we entered the kitchen, I hissed, â
threatening my dates with your gun.â
I hadnât needed to see him to know heâd probably pushed his jacket aside just enough to flash his weapon.
Louis wasnât the first guy Iâd dated in New York, though the last time Iâd gone on a date had been months ago. Rhys kept scaring off my romantic prospects, and half the men in the city were afraid to ask me out for fear he would shoot them.
It hadnât bothered me until now because I hadnât cared for my previous dates, but it was annoying when I was actively trying to move on from whatever weird hold Rhys had on me.
Rhysâs glare intensified. âHeâs wearing shoe lifts. He deserves to be threatened.â
I pressed my lips together, but a quick glance at Louisâ feet through the kitchen doorway confirmed Rhysâs observation. I he seemed taller. I had nothing against shoe lifts per se, but three inches seemed excessive.
Unfortunately, while I could overlook the shoe lifts, I couldnât overlook the utter lack of chemistry between us.
Louis and I dined at a lovely French restaurant, where I struggled not to fall asleep while he rambled on about his summers in St. Tropez. Rhys sat at the next table with a glower so dark the diners on his other side requested to move tables.
By the time dinner ended, Louis was so flustered by the menacing presence less than three feet away he knocked over his wineglass and nearly caused a server to drop his tray of food.
âItâs all right,â I said, helping a mortified Louis clean up the mess while the server fussed over the stained linen tablecloth. âIt was an accident.â
I glared at Rhys, who stared back at me without a hint of remorse.
âOf course.â Louis smiled, but the mortification in his eyes remained.
When we finished cleaning up, he left a generous tip for the server and bid me a polite good night. He didnât ask me on a second date.
I wasnât sad about it. I was, however, pissed at a certain gray-eyed pain in my butt.
âYou scared Louis half to death,â I said when Rhys and I returned home. I couldnât control the anger from seeping into my voice. âNext time, try not to unnerve my date so much he spills his drink all over himself.â
âIf he scares that easily, heâs not worthy of being your date.â Rhys had dressed up to adhere to the restaurantâs dress code, but the tie and dinner jacket couldnât mask the raw, untamed masculinity rolling off him in potent waves.
âYou were armed and glaring at him like he killed your dog. Itâs hard to be nervous under those conditions.â I tossed my keys on the side table and slipped off my heels.
âI donât have a dog.â
âIt was a metaphor.â I unpinned my hair and ran my hand through the waves. âKeep it up and Iâll end up like one of those spinsters from historical romance novels. Youâve scared off every date Iâve had in the past year.â
One thing that hadnât changed after all this time? My refusal to call him anything except Mr. Larsen, and his refusal to call me anything except Rhysâs scowl deepened. âIâll stop scaring them off once you get better taste in men. No wonder your love life is in the dumps. Look at the twerps you insist on going out with.â
I bristled. My love life was in the dumps. It was close, but it wasnât there yet. âYouâre one to talk.â
He crossed his arms over his chest. âMeaning?â
âMeaning I havenât seen you date anyone since you started working for me.â I shrugged off my jacket, and his gaze slid to my bared shoulders for a fraction of a second before returning to my face. âYouâre hardly qualified to give me dating advice.â
âI donât date. Doesnât mean I canât spot worthless idiots when I see âem.â
I paused, startled by his admission. While Rhys was always by my side during the day, he was off duty after I turned in for the night. Sometimes he stayed in, sometimes he didnât. Iâd always assumed he wasâ¦busy on the nights he didnât.
A strange mixture of relief and disbelief coursed through me. Disbelief, because while Rhys wasnât the most charming guy on the planet, he gorgeous enough for most women to overlook his surly attitude. Relief, becauseâ¦well, Iâd rather not examine that reason too closely.
âYouâve been celibate for two years?â The question slipped out before I could think it through, and I regretted it instantly.
Rhys arched an eyebrow, his scowl morphing into a smirk. âYou asking about my sex life, princess?â
Embarrassment scorched my cheeks, both at my inappropriate question and at hearing the word âsexâ leave his mouth. âI did no such thing.â
âI may not have attended a fancy college like you, but I can read subtext.â Amusement flashed in those gunmetal eyes. âFor the record, dating and sex arenât the same thing.â
Something unpleasant replaced my earlier relief. The idea of him ânot datingâ someone irked me more than it shouldâve.
âI know that,â I said. âI donât date everyone I have sex with, either.â
I hadnât had sex in so long I was surprised my vagina hadnât sued me for neglect, but I wanted toâ¦what, prove Rhys wasnât the only one who could have casual sex? Get a rise out of him?
If so, it worked, because his smirk disappeared and his drawl hardened. âAnd when was the last time you had non-dating sex?â
I lifted my chin, refusing to back down beneath the weight of his steely stare. âThat is a highly inappropriate question.â
âYou asked first,â he ground out. âAnswer the question, princess.â
I heard the palace communications secretary Elinâs voice in my head, coaching me on how to handle the press.
Elin was scary, but she was good, and I took her advice to heart as I struggled not to rise to Rhysâs bait.
I exhaled and squared my shoulders, looking down my nose at him even though he towered over me by a good seven inches.
I will not. This is where we end the conversation,â I said, my voice cold.
âGood night, Mr. Larsen.â
His eyes called me a coward. Mine told him to mind his business.
The air pulsed with heavy silence during our staredown. It was late, and I was tired, but Iâd be damned if I backed down first.
Judging by Rhysâs bullish stance, he had the same thought.
We mightâve stood there forever, glaring at each other, had it not been for the sharp trill of an incoming call. Even then, I waited for my phone to ring three times before I tore my eyes away from Rhys and checked the caller ID.
My annoyance quickly gave way to confusion, then worry, when I saw who was calling.
My brother and I rarely spoke on the phone, and it was five a.m. in Eldorra. He was a morning person, but he wasnât much of a morning person.
I picked up, aware of Rhysâs gaze burning into me.
âNik, is everything all right?â
Nikolai wouldnât call out of the blue at this hour unless it was an emergency.
âIâm afraid not.â Exhaustion weighed down his words. âItâs Grandfather.â
Panic exploded in my stomach, and I had to hold on to the side table for support as Nikolai explained the situation.
He was the only living parental figure I had left, and if I lost himâ¦
Rhys moved toward me, his face now dark with concern, but he halted when I shook my head. The more Nikolai spoke, the more I wanted to throw up.
Fifteen minutes later, I ended the call, numb with shock.
âWhat happened?â Rhys remained a few feet away, but there was a certain tenseness to his posture, like he was ready to murder whoever had been on the other end of the line for causing me distress.
All thoughts of our stupid argument fled, and the sudden urge to throw myself into his arms and let his strength carry me away gripped me.
But of course, I couldnât do that.
âIâitâs my grandfather.â I swallowed the tears threatening to spill down my cheeks. Crying would be a horrible breach of etiquette. Royals didnât cry in front of other people. But at that moment, I wasnât a princess. I was just a granddaughter scared to death about losing the man whoâd raised her. âHe collapsed and was rushed to the hospital, and Iâ¦â I raised my eyes to Rhysâs, my chest so tight I couldnât breathe. âI donât know if heâs going to make it.â