The Runaway Princess (33 page)

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Authors: Hester Browne

Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Humorous, #General

BOOK: The Runaway Princess
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*

L
eo, Rolf, and I were taken to an anteroom behind the main hall where Liza and Boris were being tidied by assistants while Pavlos and his family looked on. Pavlos seemed happy not to have the fuss, but his wife, Mathilde, was wearing a lemon-sucking expression and what I assumed was the number-four tiara. The boys, I noted, looked very hungover.

If Liza had been incredible before, now she was like a queen multiplied by the power of international supermodel. Her angular face was flawless, and her spun-gold hair was held in place by a dazzling tiara that put anything I’d seen on the British royals to shame. Next to her, Sofia was also having her eyeliner retouched by two artists, while her clinging black gown was spot-checked for dust. The photographer I’d seen before was snapping away, getting “behind-the-scenes” shots, but Liza had left nothing to chance: they were already perfect.

Boris, meanwhile, wasn’t wearing his plastic crown, but his jacket was covered with a rainbow of medals, and another assistant was pressing powder onto his forehead. When he saw us, he grinned amiably.

“Ah, there you are,” he said. “All set?”

I nodded dumbly and tightened my grip on my evening bag.

“Your Highness, if you’re ready …” murmured a chamberlain, and suddenly everything began to move very fast.

I heard a muted trumpet sound in the hall; then Liza and Boris disappeared through a doorway, triggering a distant wave of applause in the hall.

Leo, Rolf, and I glanced at each other. I wondered if I looked as sick as I felt. Sofia dismissed her makeup artist with a wave, and I cast a thinly veiled glare in her direction, but she didn’t respond; and then we were being lined up and marched in a line through the opposite door.

It was like stepping onto a West End stage. The lights were focused on the top table, and I blinked as the sea of faces turned toward us, watching, whispering, assessing. We sat, and the toasts began in Italian, more trumpeting, a speech from Boris in three languages, and then, far too soon, my name was announced and an expectant silence fell in the hall.

I pushed back my chair and stood up, sure that the microphone would pick up the thudding in my chest. My heart was beating so hard I was surprised my pushed-up cleavage wasn’t wobbling like a jelly.

My hand shook, and the Latin words on the paper in my hand blurred.

I made myself think of Leo. And of my mum and dad.

But I couldn’t read them. The letters jumbled up before my eyes, and I felt light-headed.

“Benedic
 


I started from memory, but my voice croaked.

I could feel Leo beside me, willing me to get it right. I knew he’d stand up and read it too, if I asked him, but I didn’t want to. I really didn’t want him to.

The silence stretched out, and I heard some nervous coughing and rattling of china below.

From the depths of my memory, Mum’s voice popped up in my head, saying grace before our Sunday roast round at Gran’s. Roast beef, Yorkshire puddings, cabbage, the grace she said the nuns had taught her at school. …

“Without thy presence, naught, O Lord, is sweet,” said a voice somewhere miles above me. It was my voice, but it sounded very Yorkshire in the hall. It also sounded very loud. “No pleasure to our lips can aught supply, whether this wine we drink or food we eat, till Grace divine and Faith shall sanctify.”

And then I sat down, only just making my chair, which a steward had pulled out for me.

There was a brief pause, and then Leo on one side and Rolf on the other began their pistol-shot clapping, and soon everyone in the hall followed suit, until a trumpet blew again, and everyone dived into their starters.

I grabbed the glass of water with a trembling hand and tried to quell the rising sickness in my stomach. I’d done it. But I felt as if I’d just walked a tightrope.

“Well done.” Rolf leaned over. “What language was that? Did you learn it on your gap year or something?”

Under the table, Leo squeezed my knee, and as I glanced at him with a mixture of crossness and relief, I saw the photographer capture our private moment.

I hoped he hadn’t caught Leo’s almost imperceptible flinch backward at my unexpectedly fierce response.

*

I
barely ate any of the exquisite food placed in front of me, but at least being between Leo and Rolf meant that the conversation flowed without much effort required on my part.

Plate after crested plate was swept away and replaced, and then the silver pots of coffee had been and gone; another steward arrived to lead us from the table and out to the ballroom where the dancing would commence in about fifteen minutes.

I took advantage of the chaos to slip away to a quiet corner to retouch my makeup, but I lost sight of Leo in the crowd and panicked, because I wasn’t sure where I was supposed to be for the shoe ceremony. I’d assumed that such a formal ceremony would be rigidly organized, but everyone else seemed to know what they were doing, as if they’d done it so many times before.

Time slithered past alarmingly as I struggled through the crowds of identical jackets and tanned skin, looking for a familiar face, but I seemed to be going round the corridors in circles. Panic began to creep over my chest, tightening my lungs, and I was sure people stopped talking as I approached. Were they discussing me? The tiara was pinching my head now, but I didn’t dare take it off in case I lost it too.

I needed some space, I told myself. If I could just stop for a minute, I could recover.

To my immense relief, I suddenly saw Leo and Liza up ahead of me; they were talking to some dignitaries, nodding and smiling as if this evening were just a normal gathering. As I watched, Leo tapped his Rolex and they moved away, presumably to get into position for the opening ceremony.

I hurried after them; they were heading toward the anteroom between the ballroom and the main corridor, where I’d changed into my jeans for the engagement photo. They seemed to be deep in conversation, so I hung back, waiting for a natural break so I could butt in without looking rude. The surging crowds pushed me nearer; I lost them, and when I looked again they’d disappeared.

They must have gone into the anteroom. I reached the door and slipped discreetly inside, and waited for the right moment to announce myself and ask if Liza’s shoe was ready for collection.

*

I
wasn’t eavesdropping. I couldn’t help hearing. Liza wasn’t exactly keeping her voice down.

“Leo,” she was saying, “you’ve got to speak to Amy about how she’s coming across. She’s very aloof. Infanta Elena of Spain told me she didn’t ask her a single question, not even who she was.”

Who?

“Amy’s shy, Mom. She’s not used to big events like this, but she’ll get used to it.”

“Will she, though? I thought you were going to talk to her after my charity ball in London—did she even know she’d blanked Carla Bruni? You did talk to her about that, didn’t you, Leo?”

I felt chilly. Carla Bruni? She’d been at the Make Up for Therapy Ball? I’d
thought
it was her, but hadn’t liked to say in case it wasn’t. And what were you supposed to say to Carla Bruni—“Do you mind wearing flats?”

More to the point, what was Leo supposed to have said to me? Because he hadn’t said a
thing
.

Then Liza spoke again, and she sounded exasperated. “This is the life she’s going to have to lead with you, Leo. She doesn’t seem to get any of it. Like tonight—that was supposed to be damage limitation, not more cannon fodder. All she had to do was read a simple grace. If Amy can’t handle public events, if she can’t give you the support you need, you’re going to have a rough time. Both of you.”

I knew Leo would be pushing his hand into his thick hair. I knew he would be frowning, hunting for tactful words. “She’s great at talking to people individually, Mom. Just not at big events. Amy’s natural, she’s down-to-earth, I mean, I thought doing the grace in English was a clever—”

Liza snapped, “So you’re going to abandon state dinners in favor of individual kitchen suppers? Don’t be ridiculous. Options, Leo. There are always options. You don’t have to dump her in front of the whole world. There are ways of managing this so both of you can have a good exit.”

There was an even longer pause, and I felt sick.

Say something, Leo!
I thought fiercely.
Say something!

I wasn’t prepared for the resignation in Leo’s voice. “I don’t want to make her do something she doesn’t want to do. …”

I didn’t catch any more because the door behind me opened and Boris appeared, rearranging the medals on his dinner jacket. When he saw me, a cheerful grin spread across his pink face.

“Amy!” he said, doing his boxy-pointy thing. “Are you running away or hiding?”

I swallowed my distress as best I could and tried to look
normal
.

“I’m preparing for the shoe ceremony,” I said with as much dignity as I could muster. “I’m not running away, I’m early.”

Boris’s smile intensified, and I realized he was, (a) a bit drunk, and (b) having the best night ever.

Willi had known exactly how this whole princely deal worked, I realized. Boris’s charming bonhomie was precisely the sort of secret ingredient a really popular monarch needed. You either had it, or you didn’t. Pavlos didn’t, and neither did I. And look what had happened to Pavlos.

I pulled on a bright smile despite the leaden sensation in my chest, and said, “I think Liza and Leo are through here. Shall we?”

I offered my hand, and Boris gallantly offered his arm for me to take.

And when Leo and Liza saw us appear from the other room, only the faintest flicker of unease crossed Leo’s handsome face. Liza’s showed no sign of flickering at all.

Thirty

W
hat can I say about the shoe ceremony? I was on autopilot for the whole thing.

I managed to bring the right (Louboutin stiletto) shoe to Liza at the right time, and I smiled in the right direction for the cameras as she pretended to try it on, and I waited the right length of time while Liza and Boris sailed around the dance floor to tumultuous applause, and then I shuffled through the right steps with Leo, who seemed more focused than I’d ever seen him as he whirled me around beneath the spectacular glittering chandeliers, to the orchestra playing in the gallery above us.

It was over quickly, and I had one dance with Rolf, which he spent telling me what a “game-changing girl” Jo was. The photographer got some nice photos of that too, although I don’t know whether I managed to keep my face in a suitable arrangement the whole time.

But it all felt too late. If I hadn’t heard that conversation between Liza and Leo, I might have convinced myself that I’d pulled it back—but I hadn’t. When Leo told me how charming everyone had found my English grace, it sounded as if he was convincing himself as much as me; but I couldn’t let my face drop in case someone snapped me looking miserable.

I went through the rest of the ball in a sort of trance, my cheeks aching from smiling, asking inane questions so no one could accuse me of being aloof. It was a relief when Leo found me at half one, and murmured that Boris and Liza had left, and so now we could too.

Jo and Rolf were still dancing a wild quickstep on the slowly emptying floor, their feet flashing in split-second unison as their flirty glances burned up the air around them. Again, I thought, you could either do that or you couldn’t. Jo was so much more fitted to this sort of life than me. Performance and sociability ran somewhere in her blood, whereas my blood ran with tea and fertilizer. And that was fine. That was just the way it was. Frankly, I didn’t think any amount of diamonds could compensate for a lifetime of evenings like that, especially with the additional delights of Sofia for Christmas, for the foreseeable future.

Leo was quiet as he escorted me up the sweeping staircase to the family apartments. He didn’t make any reference to the conversation he’d had with his mother, and I didn’t have the energy to fight about it. Instead he asked me if I’d enjoyed the evening, and seemed to take my wooden responses for tiredness. I couldn’t believe any of the compliments he passed on, even though I knew I was being churlish; and when he carefully removed the gorgeous diamond necklace, and unclipped the diamond cuff, and pulled the heavy tiara out of my hair, instead of falling into his arms and making love on the huge bed, I pretended to slump with weariness as soon as my head touched the pillow.

Leo curled himself round behind me, tucking the throw around my blistered feet, and soon I heard him breathing drowsily, and I knew he was asleep.

I didn’t sleep. I lay there replaying the events of the night over and over, but my mind wouldn’t let me edit and improve the version the way it usually did—it made me face up to the blunt reality. It wasn’t my fault. It wasn’t Leo’s fault. It wasn’t anyone’s fault.

I loved Leo, but was I really going to be able to do this?

*

I
often felt better after a shower, but not even a cloudburst showerhead the size of a serving plate could wash away the ashy grayness of the previous night.

It was just six thirty, so I pulled on jeans and a cashmere sweater and went through to the sitting room of our suite. The long arched windows looked out over the pool and the gardens, which were dappled with early-morning sunlight, and the organic confusion of the flowers was strangely comforting to my raw soul.

As I passed, I glanced at my mobile, charging on the desk, and noted that I had four missed calls, all from home. I frowned and picked up my messages.

First, Dad. That was unusual—he never rang unless Mum was unable to hold a telephone (i.e., never).

“Amy, love, I expect you’ll be in Nirona now, at your ball. Hope you’re having a nice time. Could you give us a ring, when you’ve a moment? Thanks. It’s Dad, by the way.”
That was at four yesterday.

“Amy, it’s Dad again. Can you ring? Thanks.”

My throat tightened. He sounded anxious.

The seven o’clock call was downright worried.
“Amy, it’s Dad. I don’t know if you’ve seen, but there’s been something in the newspaper that’s upset your mum, and I was wondering if there was anything you could do about it. Maybe you could call me?”

The eight o’clock call was only three seconds long, but I caught the distinct sound of crying in the background. Mum crying.

Awful thoughts dive-bombed my mind. What had the paper got hold of? Kelly? The court case? An old boyfriend of mine with some cringy story?

I grabbed Leo’s iPad from the desk and turned it on, flicking through the newspaper websites. Dad hadn’t said what it was, or where …

“Shedding for the Wedding?” ran the headline.

Last night’s champagne burned the back of my throat like acid.

There, in all our glory, were me, Jo, and Mum outside Wedding Warehouse, lining up to get into the Range Rover with our bags. I looked bad enough, but the angle they’d got of Mum was very cruel. It made her seem twice the size she really was, and the strain on her face—caused by that awful dress—looked like peevishness, not self-loathing.

To make matters worse, they’d put a photo of Liza and the First Lady next to it, ostensibly to illustrate the other mother-
in-law
but really so everyone could have a good gawp at the chasm between Leo’s skinny, chic mother and my lovely normal mum.

The headline referred to more paparazzi shots they’d got of me and the psycho personal trainer as I puffed my way round Hyde Park like a walrus in a tracksuit, but I didn’t even care. The comments beneath were so horrible I could barely bring myself to read them, but I did, because I knew Mum would have winced over each stupid one.

“Like mother, like daughter, watch out, Leo!”

“OMG, it’s the new Princess of Whales LOL!”

And on and on.

I closed my eyes, but the images were burned on my brain. I’d done this to Mum. She’d be distraught right now, and Dad twice as distressed, and it was my fault.

I couldn’t think there, surrounded by the discarded clothes of the previous night, so I slipped out, down to the gardens to call Dad out of earshot. It was early, but Mum never slept when she was upset and Dad would be sitting there with her.

*

T
he morning air had an autumnal nip, and the gardens were empty, apart from a few seagulls. I just stared at the phone, paralyzed.

What could I say? “Sorry”? “I’ll make it up to you”? “Just ignore it—they’ll get bored after a couple of years”? I was signing them up to this sort of invasion of privacy for life.

Even Liza’s so-called media strategy hadn’t protected me—this was presumably revenge from the other papers for not getting
access
to the ball.

I stared blindly at the stone wall, and listened to the distant hush of the sea and the swish of the automatic water sprays. I don’t know how long I sat there, but eventually I heard footsteps on the stone path.

“What are you doing down here?”

Jo was standing on the grass in front of me, wearing a pair of shades that hid her face. She was dressed in the sort of weekend casual look I’d spent five thousand pounds acquiring in Harvey Nichols, except the cashmere draped over her shoulders was vintage and authentically moth-eaten.

“Why are you up?” I demanded. “Not even the gardeners are out!”

She sat down on the bench next to me with a wince. “My flight’s at midday and I’ve got to get back to the mainland to catch it. Callie’s off on holiday, and I said I’d drop in this afternoon to make sure everything was on track with the wet room.”

“You’re leaving me here? For Callie?” I pretended to sound wounded, but actually I was wounded. The thought of Jo leaving felt like my last ally melting away.

“Listen, her bonus paid for last night’s dress, don’t knock it.”

“She’s in love with you,” I said glumly. “The boyfriend’s just a cover. She’ll get you to move in next, and Ted and Rolf will have to throw themselves off the London Eye.”

Jo dug an elbow in my ribs. “What’s with you? I thought you’d still be tucked up with Prince Gorgeous. Especially after your big triumph last night.”

I turned to her with pleading eyes. “Do you have to go home? Can’t you stay for the coronation? Surely Rolf can get you in.”

“Darling, I need to get back.” I couldn’t see Jo’s face properly behind her shades, but her smile was touched with a sort of resignation. “And if I stay, it’ll just give Rolf the wrong idea, so—”

“The wrong idea? Was that the wrong idea you were giving him last night? He seemed to think it was a very right idea, from where I was standing.”

She sighed and stretched out her legs. Jo had the perfect legs for cropped trousers; her ankles were finely chiseled. “I had a wonderful time last night. But that’s as far as it goes with me and Rolf. It was a grand finale.”

“Does he know that?”

“I think so.”

“Can you take your shades off, please? You’re not the only one with a hangover.”

Jo pushed the sunglasses onto her head with a sigh, and I saw her eyes were purple-ringed, like mine, and red. I wondered if she’d been crying, or if she hadn’t actually been to bed at all. Her own bed, I mean.

She patted my knee. “Don’t worry, I’ve told Rolf exactly the sort of girlfriend he needs to find. And I’ll find her for him, if he wants, but it’s not me, darling.”

“Why?” I couldn’t believe I was hearing this. Well, I could. But after what I’d seen last night …

“Oh, so many reasons! Because my family is just one PR disaster after another? There’s so much dirt on them Liza would have to hire another Giselle to fight the fires. And I couldn’t carry on acting. What if I got a great part, or what if I were only given parts because of who I was with? I mean, Rolf’s fun, underneath the big act, but … it’s not the life for me.”

“But I’ve got a job,” I said, my brain starting to race. Leo had been a bit cagey about how much time I’d have to spend doing charity work; he’d been less enthusiastic about the English Heritage wildflower consultancy than I’d expected. “And my family isn’t—”

I stopped myself. Jo didn’t know the whole story about my family.

“Your family is delightful!” she protested, nudging me playfully. “Okay, the marrow photo was a bit embarrassing but—”

“Jo, it’s got much worse than that,” I said, and told her about the pictures of Mum, and Dad’s calls. Her face tightened with sympathy.

“You need to get Leo’s lawyers right on that,” she said, grabbing my hand. “Right this morning. How vile!”

I didn’t say anything, but as my brain slowly woke up, a terrible sense of foreboding was settling on me. How long would the celeb press take to start digging around properly? News fed news in the shallow pools of celebrity stories; I wasn’t famous, not really, but it would only take a few more photos before a strange Kardashian-like fascination would stick. And there was much worse out there about us. Much worse. And worst of all, when would Kelly decide the time—or, more likely, the
price
—was right to reappear, salacious story ready to go?

Jo squeezed my hand, and I considered throwing myself at her feet and begging her not to go.

“Come on, let’s get Leo onto this right away,” she said. “He’d do anything for you, you know that.” She hugged me. “Be brave and ride this out, Amy. It’s just a nine-day wonder. You and Leo—you’re a match made in heaven.”

I managed a smile, but I didn’t feel like smiling. I had another five days of this, five days of intensive preparation for the coronation, which would no doubt involve Liza giving me spot checks on every head of state in the known world, and demanding three conversational openers for each.

*

W
e went in for breakfast, and as we picked at the fruits and pastries on the buffet table, Leo arrived, hair damp from the shower. His face was shocked and drawn, and he took me to one side, away from the curious gazes of Rolf and Sofia.

“I’ve just looked on my iPad,” he muttered. “I’m absolutely livid. I’m going to get the lawyers onto this at once. What can we do for your mother? Would she like us to take legal action?”

“I don’t think that’s going to be much help in the post office,” I said.

Leo’s eyes were full of apology. “I wish I could say you get used to it, but—” He broke off as Sofia approached, her hair wet from her morning swim. “Good morning,” he said stiffly.

“Did I hear the words
legal action
?” She cupped a hand to her ear.

“Yes,” said Leo at the same time that I said, “No.”

Oh, what was the point? They’d all know soon enough; what else was Giselle for?

Leo filled Sofia in while my appetite dwindled from nothing to whatever negative appetite was. Her eyes widened in disgust, then her nose flared, and to my surprise, she took my arm.

“Amy, I’m
appalled
,” she said. “It’s so sexist—when Rolf went through his blubber phase, no one even mentioned it. If we don’t come down hard on these repellent people, this’ll just be the
start.”

I blinked in surprise. This wasn’t the reaction I’d expected. I’d anticipated a brisk “get with the program” and a note for Mum from Dr. Johnsson.

“Let’s go and talk to Giselle,” said Sofia. “I’ll take you. I need to check a few things with her myself.”

Leo made to come with us, but Sofia waved him away. “No need. We don’t always have to have the big man around. We girls are perfectly capable of dealing with problems.”

“It’s fine,” I said hurriedly. “I wanted to talk to Giselle about the dogs’ home.” I’d agreed to take on that patronage, as well as the therapy garden, “to make sure the kids and dogs angle is
covered.
” (Giselle’s words, not mine.) “She wanted to know if Badger and I would do a photo shoot in London when we get back. I don’t mind.”

Leo’s face brightened at that, and he touched my arm. “Tell me exactly what’s happening,” he said. “I’ll either be here or in the cathedral with the event organizers, okay?”

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