The Prince's Housekeeper Bride

BOOK: The Prince's Housekeeper Bride
10.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
The Princes Housekeeper Bride
By Carol Marinelli

Chapter One

“You need to smarten up, Alisa!” Arranging the tray, Alisa did her best not to get upset by Maria the cook's pertinent observations. “Prince Benito likes his staff to look immaculate—you won't keep this job if you don't make more of an effort.”

“I will,” Alisa attempted an assured nod. “It was just such a rush to get here. I only just found out I'd been offered the job. I had to race home to sort out care for Marietta—”

“Don't use your child as an excuse, Alisa,” Maria scolded, “A woman in your
unfortunate
position is lucky to have been offered the position of Prince Benito's housekeeper here in the villa. There are plenty of other palace maids who would only be too happy to take your place! You should present with your hair neatly tied back and maybe a little makeup—you're not scrubbing the fireplaces now! You have to look the part. “

“I will, Maria…” Picking up the tray, Alisa headed down the long corridor, her new, shapeless white uniform swishing as she did so, the bulky, rubber-soled white shoes she had been issued not making a sound on the highly polished marble floors. Alisa added
smarten up
to her endless list of urgent things she had to do.

Had to do.

She needed this job. Even if the hours were impossible, even if keeping up with Prince Benito's exhausting, glittering schedule meant she would hardly see Marietta while he was here in Niroli, surely it would be worth it.

Alisa saw her hand was shaking slightly as she put it up to knock on the bedroom door.

As a palace maid, Alisa was used to glimpsing royals and their lavish existence, but it was always from a distance—laundering their sheets, washing their plates, scrubbing their floors. Unnoticed and utterly dispensable.

Until now!

Prince Benito had made his spectacular entrance to Niroli just three nights ago. A guest of his cousin, the very adored, if rather reprobate, Prince Luca Fierezza of Niroli, Benito had sailed his hundred-and-seventy-five-foot yacht from the neighboring island Contarini, and in the short time he'd been on the island he'd more than made his presence known, as was usually the case during his frequent visits. Whispers had been echoing down the palace corridors about wild nights of gambling and partying, and the first casualty of his reckless ways had been the villa's loyal and hardworking housekeeper Bianca, sacked for supposedly rolling her eyes at the excessive requests of his latest girlfriend, Victoria. The second casualty had been Victoria herself—dumped by the prince, it was gleefully rumored, for rolling her eyes at one of
his
more excessive requests.

Hopefully the third victim wouldn't be Alisa.

Two gentle knocks on the door, a pause for modesty's sake, and Alisa entered, holding her breath as tightly as she held the tray and taking a moment for her eyes to adjust to the darkness.

“Your coffee, Your Highness.”

Apparently
he
didn't like needless chatter. A brief greeting had been her instructions—his coffee to be poured while he awoke and placed on the table beside him, then the curtains opened and his bath drawn.

Then
she could breathe normally again.

Only, it wasn't his royal status that daunted Alisa as she made her way over. It wasn't that she desperately needed this job to work out. No, it was actually something rather more basic that had the twenty-one-year-old trembling with nerves as she hesitantly stood over him. It was that she'd never been in a man's bedroom before—at least not while the owner was present.

Had never stood watching as a man slept.

Benito was lying prone on the vast bed, pillows tossed on the floor, his hand over the side as if he were on a lilo and trailing the water below. Even in semidarkness he was beautiful, more beautiful than the pictures she had seen. Broad shoulders, jet hair, the sculpted and chiseled perfection of his cheekbones and straight Roman nose and full, slightly parted lips. His beautifully arched eyebrows frowned slightly at the intrusion as Alisa quietly set about pouring his morning coffee—an apparent must before he even
considered
surfacing.

 

Where the hell was he?

He stretched out his long legs and encountered nothing; he was unused to an empty space in his bed. Still hungover, he opened one eye, but instead of orienting himself, Benito fought wakefulness, enjoying the sweet, soapy, feminine fragrance filling his nostrils, the soft voice lulling him from sleep, watching long, slender fingers shaking slightly as they poured his morning coffee.

“What time is it?”

“Eleven a.m.” Her voice was coming from the other side of the room now. Benito turned toward the sound and sat up, observing as she pulled open the heavy drapes. Dark curls, loosely tied back, trailed down the back of her dress, the shapeless, voluminous cut of the material serving to accentuate her slender arms and legs and, not so idly, Benito wondered what she'd look like from the front.

“Would you like me to run your bath now?”

When she turned around, the sun behind made her face almost unreadable, but as she walked toward him, slowly she came into delicious focus. A riot of curls framed her pretty face, dark eyes shyly averted, her full rosebud mouth moved awkwardly as she addressed him and, he noted, the yards of material that swamped her frame couldn't quite stifle the splendid curve of her breasts.

Wishing he was still on his stomach, Benito pulled his knees up as she leaned over and handed him his coffee. He saw that those dark eyes weren't actually black but the deepest green, and that soapy fragrance was momentarily overriding the strong scent of coffee and having the most disturbing effect on him.

“Would you like a bath?” she asked again. Taking the cup from her hand, Benito promptly decided that he needed to get out more—three nights of sleeping alone and he was attracted to the maid.

“Please.” His nod should have dismissed her—had it been Bianca, his old housekeeper, it would have—but clearly unsure of her role, she stood there uncertainly, her straight white teeth nibbling nervously on her bottom lip as she plucked up the nerve to address him again.

“Is there anything else I can do for you?”

A
very
wry smile dusted his lips as a terribly inappropriate thought occurred—she was seriously gorgeous! Benito was tempted almost to pull back the sheets and tell her
exactly
what she could do for him, and for the first time in probably a quarter of a century, he actually blushed at the depravity of his thoughts.

“Sort out the bathroom.” He flicked his hand now to dismiss her. “There is a lot of clutter, women's stuff. I want it all cleared out. I am tired of looking at her trash. Bin it, please.”

“Of course.”

Running his bath, adding oils and placing his towels, Alisa caught a sight of herself in the vast bathroom mirror, cringing at her untamed curls and flushed complexion, wondering
how
she could smarten up without a single tool of the trade. Everything she earned was more than accounted for, what with rent, Marietta's medicine, books for night school, oh, and on a good week, food!

What if she
didn't
“bin it”?

Taking the lid off a lipstick, Alisa, lost in thought like a child rummaging through her mother's makeup, wound it up and held it beside her mouth, oh so tempted to try it on.

“What are you doing?”

Guilt made her jump. Alisa didn't know how long he'd been standing there watching her, just a towel slung around his hips. He walked behind her and stared at her reflection, staring at every flicker of her reaction as she burned with mortification, not just at being caught, but at what must surely follow.

Her time as his housemaid was no doubt over before it had even started.

Chapter Two

“I'm sorry!” Alisa's guilty eyes met his. “I wasn't going to…” She knew how bad it looked, knew that she'd been caught just
thinking
about stealing. “I would never…“ Her voice trailed off helplessly as he stood silently, watching her flounder. “It seemed such a shame to waste it when I've been told I have to smarten up—”

“Who said you needed to smarten up?”

“Maria the cook—all of them. They say that if I am to work for you I must make more of an effort.” Tears were filling her eyes, and she lowered them in shame and misery. “I don't have any makeup, I don't have anything…”

“Try it then” Dark blue eyes met hers in the mirror, just a glimmer of a smile on his cruel mouth. “Who knows? Maybe if you do smarten up, I will keep you.”

Bastard
.

She wanted to turn and run, but since that would find her facing his naked chest, Alisa had little choice but to comply. She'd never put on lipstick; the cool waxy pad felt strange against her lips as her unskilled fingers tried to press it on.

“Like this.” He turned her rigid body around, took the golden pen from her clasped hand and painted the color slowly on using tiny featherlight strokes on her lips. She closed her eyes in shame, sure he was laughing at her, playing with her, like a cat taunting a bird before the kill.

What the hell was he doing?

Christ, he didn't care if she took the makeup. After all, he had no need for it! Benito knew he should have directed her out and firmly closed the bathroom door, but she was so adorable…. Those startled, fearful eyes enthralled him, the rapid rise and fall of that glorious bosom had hardened him again, and now here she was, the soft skin of her cheek in his palm, damp lashes fanning her cheeks as she closed her eyes against tears. And that mouth! That full, sultry mouth all dark pink and shiny, and here
 
he was, naked, except for a precariously placed towel, with this beauty in his hands.

When she opened her eyes and stared fearfully into his, never had he so badly wanted to undo his own handiwork, so tempted to kiss it all off.

“There.” He turned her around to face the mirror, observed silently as she viewed the transformation. He felt kneed in the groin with longing as she pouted slightly, then ran her lucky tongue along unfamiliar lips. “What do you think?”

“It is what you think that matters.” He watched her swallow, watched as a salty tear spilled from the corner of her eye.

“I'm sorry. I can assure you nothing like that will happen again.”

“Good.” His voice was suddenly gruff. “What is your name?”

“Alisa.”

“Well, Alisa, you do not need lipstick to—” He didn't finish what he was saying, his whole line of thinking completely inappropriate. “That will be all.”

He stood stock-still as she gave a hurried nod, then turned her flaming face from him and hurried from the bathroom. In her haste, she forgot to close the door.

Only, he didn't call her back; far easier instead to do it himself, to drag out a long-held breath and lean his weight against the jamb for a moment.

She was truly beautiful.

Lowering himself into the soapy water, Benito tried to block out her features from his mind, but even with his eyes closed, her face was all he could see, those full lips a mere few inches away from his as he'd caressed her cheek.


Cristo
!”

Unwashed, unsatisfied and spun out on lust, Benito hauled himself out of the bath, dried and dressed himself in rapid time, then punched some numbers into the phone.


Pronto
, Luca…” he greeted his cousin warmly.

“What are you doing calling so early?” Luca laughed. “It is not even lunchtime.”

“Shame to waste the day in bed.” Benito shrugged.

“Do you want to take out the boat?” Luca suggested. “I can have it arranged—”

“No,” Benito quickly interrupted. “I think I might go and look at the casino, see how my investment is doing.” Luca Fierezza was the major owner of the Niroli Casino, but as a silent partner, Benito had a keen interest in the place.

“Of course,” Luca agreed. “I will have the accountant set up the books for you to see. Do you want to meet there in, say, half an hour?”

“That is not what I am interested in—I should have made myself clearer. It is a shame to waste a day
alone
in bed.”

“So the rumors are true—things are definitely over with you and Victoria!” Luca let out a low growl of laugher. “You know there will be many women only too pleased to help you get over this tough patch.”

“Good,” Benito responded, replacing the phone, glad that Luca understood him. Luca was more like a brother than a cousin. Or more like a brother
should
be, Benito thought as he stuffed his wallet with cash and credit cards. His own brother, the much-older King Alessandro of Contarini, was more a disapproving father figure than the friend and confidant Luca was. Not that Alessandro approved of the friendship—their wild youth had more than kept the two palaces' spin doctors dancing on their toes.

But what was new? Benito thought, heading to the bathroom to douse himself in his own signature fragrance, catching sight of the discarded lipstick. His very birth had been turned into PR exercise—he was the “sticking plaster” baby of Contarini, conceived many years after his siblings in an attempt by his parents to salvage their marriage. His father and Alessandro had been too busy running the struggling country to bother with a bored and curious child. Only his sister Francesca had really given a damn, inviting him to stay on the richer Island of Niroli over the years, giving him a teasing glimpse of how a prince should really live.

And live he did!

He picked up the internal phone to summon his transport, and stalked out the bedroom, only pausing momentarily when he saw the lavish brunch Alisa and some other servants were setting up on balcony overlooking the beach. “I'm eating out today. I shan't be back till late—if at all…”

He could see that her eyes were swollen from crying, and knew that, no doubt, she was awaiting the axe to fall. Something twisted inside him. “I have left some mending for you in a basket on my bed. See that
you
properly take care of it.”

“Certainly, Your Royal Highness.”

“Benito,” he corrected curtly. “When I am at home, I like to be called Benito.”

“Since when?” Alberto the butler huffed the second the front door slammed closed. Then, picking up a pastry from the table, he took a bite.

“You should go home and see how your wife is doing,” Maria suggested. “Spend some time with Anna while…” Her voice trailed off helplessly, time the one thing Alberto's wife had little of left. “The rest of us can take it easy for the rest of the day! Not you.” Maria frowned at Alisa as various staff appeared from the shadows, all delighted to feast on the cold meats and pastries that Benito had left untouched. “You heard His Royal Highness—you've got his room to attend to, and then you've got some mending to be getting on with.”

Picking up the endless damp towels Benito had thoughtlessly tossed aside, Alisa set to work making the crumpled bed. But as she plumped the pillows, her hands lingered, lifted the heavy cool fabric to her face and inhaled his scent, replaying details in her mind, not the fear and humiliation this time, but the feel of him.

The feel of such a stunning man, holding her, his breath on her cheeks, his naked skin that had forced her eyes closed, that trill, low, low in her stomach as he had stood so close. Shameful, wanton, unfamiliar thoughts stirred in her troubled mind as she pictured him lying in that bed.

Don't be daft, Alisa scolded. She had no right to even
entertain
such thoughts. He was a royal prince. He could have—
did
have—any woman he wanted.

With a sigh she picked up the basket, frowning at its heavy weight, and headed back to her own spartan room, but as she lifted a shirt her eyes widened in shocked wonder at the contents beneath—every perfume, every cream, every piece of makeup her greedy eyes had devoured was there…was now hers.

“See that
you
properly take care of it.”

Benito's husky words rang in her ears as Alisa set about her tasks, as she dragged herself through the day and anticipated tonight.

Anticipated his face when he came home, wondering, wanting to see just a glimmer of masculine approval in those decadent eyes when he saw the change in her.

BOOK: The Prince's Housekeeper Bride
10.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Secrets of Ghosts by Sarah Painter
Shields Lady by Jayne Castle
The Closed Harbour by James Hanley
The Murder of Mary Russell by Laurie R. King
Fortune Is a Woman by Francine Saint Marie