The Prince I Love to Hate: A Steamy Romantic Comedy (The Heir Affair Book 1) Iris Morland (essential reading .txt) đ
- Author: Iris Morland
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âHoly shit.â
âI couldnât even blame her for cheating on me. She was miserable. Although I wasnât the one who wrote those things, it was being with me that caused it.â
âThat still doesnât give anyone the right to cheat. She couldâve just ended things instead of sneaking behind your back.â I wasnât much for dissing somebodyâs ex, but I had to admit, if AimĂ©e were in front of me right then, I wouldnât have offered her one of our pastries.
âPerhaps.â Olivier shrugged.
âYou sound way too calm about the whole thing. Any guy who cheated on me would have a death wish. If not from me, from my brother.â I shuddered at the thought of Liam finding out Iâd been cheated on. Heâd go on a murderous rampage.
Olivier raised an eyebrow. âYet you havenât told your brother about us?â
âWhatâs there to tell?â I shot back.
âNow youâre being defensive.â
I growled, crossing my arms over my chest. âHe just gets way too overprotective. He still treats me like Iâm a little kid. Iâm not six years old anymore, but itâs like he still sees me like that. Itâs frustrating.â
âHe cares about you.â
âOf course he does. That doesnât mean he can try to control my life, either.â I gave Olivier a pointed look. âYou canât tell me you enjoy your parents controlling your life.â
âThey donât control my life,â he said dryly. âItâs more our way of life that does.â
âHave you ever had a say? In where you went to school, what you wore, what you said to the press?â
âAs a child, no. As an adult, to some degree. But itâs important to present a united front to the public. One member of the royal family going rogue hurts everyone. It tarnishes the reputation we must uphold. As sovereigns, we donât get to make choices like private individuals. It goes hand in hand with the job description.â
âWhat are your parents like? I donât think you ever told me. You already know about my brother, whoâs basically been a father to me.â I then told Olivier about being raised by my aunt Siobhan and uncle Henry, including the day that Liam left me with them. It had only been when Iâd been much older that Iâd understood why heâd done that. As a child, it had seemed like heâd not wanted me anymore.
âDo you remember your mother?â said Olivier.
I shook my head. âI was only two when she died. Liam has told me stories about her, though.â I pulled out my phone to show Olivier a photo of me, my mom, and Liam. It was taken a few months before Mam died, and despite her smile, you could see the dark circles under her eyes along with the scarf around her head that showed how sick she was.
âSheâs beautiful,â said Olivier. He then said, âAnd you look exactly the same.â
âMinus the baby mullet, you mean.â My hair had grown in slowly after Iâd been born. As a toddler, it had eventually grown into a cute little mullet that had stuck around until I was almost four.
âLiam always told me how happy Mam was when she discovered she was pregnant with me. Sheâd had cancer and had gone into remission, but her physicians had told her that most likely she wouldnât be able to conceive again. She said that I was her miracle baby.â I smiled. âWhen I was born, she decided to name me Niamh because it means âradiant.â I was her radiant one.â
I felt my throat clog with tears. Even though I hadnât known her, I missed her. What would she say about Olivier and this adventure we were on? Would she have wanted me to find Da? Sheâd loved him, even after heâd abandoned his family, at least according to Liam.
Olivier took my hand, not saying anything. But I could feel that he cared through that simple touch. It was strange, I thought, how I was now able to be vulnerable with him when not too long ago, I wouldâve rather swallowed my tongue than say these things in his presence.
âWhat about your parents?â I wrapped my arms around my knees.
Olivierâs gaze turned far away. âMy parents were a love match, or at least my father has always claimed it was. My father says that the day he met my mother, he fell in love.
âHe called her and left a voicemail to go on a date with him, neglecting to mention he was the next in line to the throne. It took three more phone calls before she agreed to a date. It was a month later that they were engaged.â
âGoodness, your father moves fast.â
âI donât know if my mother reciprocated his feelings. She was much younger than him, only nineteen when they married.â He looked at me. âNot much younger than you, I think.â
âIs your mom Salasian?â
âYes, from the lesser aristocracy. Sheâs the granddaughter of a marquis. My grandfather, Prince Louis, didnât approve of the match, however. My mother brought little money or influence with her, and thereâd been some kind of scandal surrounding the family a few years before she met my father. But they married anyway.â
âSounds romantic. Like out of a fairy tale.â
âIf it started out as a fairy tale, it didnât last long. My parents stopped sharing a bed by the time I was five years old. The only reason they never divorced is because it would be a stain on the royal family. My mother is also deeply religious.â Olivierâs lips twisted. âOnly a dispensation by the Pope himself would compel her to divorce. Even then, I donât think itâd be enough.â
Olivier then told me that his parents had never fought. It was more that theyâd transformed into platonic friends who happened to share a son and were married. They werenât physically affectionate with one another,
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