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The Prince's Chambermaid(2)

By:Sharon Kendrick


She was so lost in her troubled thoughts that at first she didn't notice  that anybody had walked into Reception. Not until a faint movement  alerted her to the presence of someone moving towards the desk. A man.  Cathy sat up straight, automatically pinning a professional smile of  welcome to her lips.                       
       
           



       

And froze.

It was one of those rare moments which chanced along once in a lifetime  if you were lucky. The sensation of being sucked in by a gaze so  mesmerising that you felt as if you were being devoured by it.

Dazed, she stared up into the most startling pair of eyes she had ever  seen. Eyes as golden as a late-afternoon sun-all richness and lustre-but  underpinned by a cold and metallic gleam.

Unseen beneath the reception desk, Cathy's fingers bunched themselves  into two little fists. She was unable to stop herself from staring at  the rest of his face-at arrogant, haughty features which looked as if  they had been carved from some rare and gleaming piece of metal. At lips  which were curved and full-the corners mocking and sensual. But they  were hard, obdurate lips, too, she realised as an instinctive shiver  iced her skin.

His hair was dark and ruffled, and his olive skin was faintly flushed,  glowing with health and vitality as if he'd been engaged in some kind of  violent exercise. Tall and broad-shouldered, his physique was powerful  yet lean-a fact which was emphasised by the T-shirt he wore, which clung  lovingly to every hard sinew. The muscular torso tapered down into  narrow hips and the longest legs she had ever seen. Legs which were  encased in mud-spattered denim so faded and old that it seemed to caress  his flesh like a second skin. Cathy swallowed. Her heart was racing and  her throat had constricted, as if someone were pressing their fingers  against it.

'I'm … I'm afraid you can't come in here looking like that, sir,' she said, forcing the words out.

Xaviero studied her-though without quite the same awestruck intensity  with which she had been studying him. He had noticed the way her pupils  had darkened and the way her lips had parted with unconscious longing.  But he was used to having that effect on women-even when he'd just come  from a long, hard session of riding, as now. Her stuttering response was  not unusual either-though it usually happened when he was on official  duty, when people were so caught up with the occasion and the protocol  which surrounded him that they couldn't think straight.

The most important thing was that she hadn't recognised him-of that he  was certain. After a lifetime of being subjected to idolatry and fawning  he was an expert in anonymity and in people pretending not to recognise  him.

His eyes flicked over her in brief assessment, registering that she was  tiny and fair. And that she possessed the most magnificent pair of  breasts he had seen in a long while-their thrusting pertness noticeable  despite the unflattering white overall she wore. Too big, surely-for  such a petite frame? His eyes narrowed in expert appraisal. And yet  completely natural, by the look of them.

'Looking like what?' he questioned softly.

Cathy's mouth dried. Even his voice was drop-dead gorgeous. Rich, like  dark sweet molasses and with a strange and captivating lilt to it. An  accent she'd never heard before and one she couldn't place at all. But  who cared when somehow he managed to turn each syllable into a poem?

Oh, for heaven's sake, she thought. Pull yourself together. Just because  you've been dumped by your fiancé, there's no need to behave like some  old spinster-eyeing up the kind of man who wouldn't look twice at you.

And yet she could do nothing to prevent the powerful thundering of her  heart. 'Looking like … like … ' Like what? He looked like danger, that was  what. With the faintly disreputable look of a womaniser who had probably  left his motorbike outside-and she knew Rupert's opinion about bikers  staying in the hotel. So get rid of him. Direct him to the B&B down  in the village. And do it quickly, before you make even more of a fool  of yourself.

'I'm afraid that all our guests must be properly attired in smart-casual  clothing,' she said quickly, echoing one of Rupert's stuffy directives  and embarrassingly aware of the mocking twist of the man's lips.  'It's … it's one of the rules.'

Xaviero almost laughed aloud at the pompous restriction-but why knock  something which had the power to amuse him? 'One of the rules?' he  repeated mockingly. 'A very old-fashioned rule, I must say.'

Cathy risked moving her hands from beneath the desk and she held her  palms up in a silent gesture of helplessness. She totally agreed with  him-but what could she do? Rupert was still mired in the past. He wanted  formality and ostentatious symbols of wealth-he certainly didn't want  people walking into his hotel wearing mud-spattered clothing. Yet Cathy  thought of the dwindling guest numbers and thought that her boss could  do with all the help he could get.                       
       
           



       

'I'm very sorry,' she repeated softly. 'But there's nothing I can do. Our policy is very strict.'

'Is it now?' he murmured as he stared down into a pair of wide aquamarine eyes. 'And you don't make any … exceptions?'

How could he make such a simple query sound as if … as if … ? Her mouth  drying like sand, Cathy shook her head, trying to quell the haywire  nature of her thoughts, thinking that most people would be happy to make  an exception for him. 'I'm afraid we don't. Not … not even for guests.'

As she shrugged her shoulders apologetically the movement drew his  attention to the sway of her magnificent breasts and, unexpectedly,  Xaviero felt the sharp stirring of lust at his groin. For there was no  sweeter temptation than a woman who responded to him as a man, rather  than as a prince.

Placing one lazy denimed elbow on the counter which separated them, he  leaned forward and gave a conspiratorial smile. 'And what would you do,'  he queried softly, 'if I told you that I was not here as a guest?'

Cathy's heart gave a lurch. Up close, he seemed to exude an air of raw  masculinity which had short-circuited her brain and was making her  breath come in short, shallow bursts. What was the matter with her?  Struggling out of the befuddled haze of her thoughts, she realised that  his answer hadn't really surprised her. After all, he didn't really look  like a guest, did he? 'You're … you're not?'

'No.' He paused while he thought about who he would like to be. Whose  skin he would like to step inside for a brief moment of complete  freedom. It was a game he had always liked to play when he was  younger-when he had gone away to mainland Europe to college-and it had  always driven his security people mad.

For Xaviero-or, rather, Prince Xaviero Vincente Caius di Cesere of  Zaffirinthos, to give him his full title-liked to remain incognito  wherever and whenever possible. Anonymity was his rarest and most  precious possession. He liked to play at a life that could never be his  for more than a few minutes at a time. A world in which he was judged as  other men were-by appearance and demeanour, and by what he said. Where  chemistry counted more than privilege.

Didn't matter that outside in a bullet-proofed car sat two bodyguards  with guns bulging at their breast pockets-or that a further two were  lurking somewhere in the grounds. For as long as this woman remained  ignorant of his true identity, he could pretend he was just like any  other man. 'No, I'm not a guest,' he added truthfully.

Suddenly it all made sense and Cathy wondered how she could have been so  dense. 'Of course! You're the painter and decorator,' she said slowly,  her lips parting in a wide smile. 'And you've come to measure up the  washrooms.'

Xaviero's eyes narrowed at her outrageous assumption-but he could hardly  berate her for insubordination when she had no idea who he was! He had  been about to deny her laughable assertion, but now she was rising to  her feet and instead he found himself utterly captivated by her lush  little body-and by the sheer sunny quality of her smile. When had anyone  last smiled at him that sweetly? Or treated him as just a man, instead  of a privileged member of one of Europe's richest royal houses?

En route from the polo club to the airfield which housed his private  plane, he had called in here on a whim. The sweat from a hot, hard ride  still drying on his skin, he had been curious as to how the place looked  before it was made ready for his official visit. But now he wondered  whether the hand of fate might have stepped in. Had he been guided here  by some unseen and benevolent hand, to have sexual hunger awoken in him  once more by a lowly woman who was completely unaware of his true  identity?

'That's right,' he said slowly, doing his best to hide another sudden stir of lust. 'I've come to measure up the washrooms.'