RHYS/BRIDGET
RHYS
Bridget and I arrived in Athenberg, Eldorra’s capital, four
days after my no-more-walking decree opened a second
front in our ongoing cold war. The plane ride had been
chillier than a winter dip in a Russian river, but I didn’t care.
I didn’t need her to like me to do my job.
I scanned the city’s near-empty National Cemetery,
listening to the eerie howl of the wind whistle through the
bare trees. A deep chill swept through the cemetery,
burrowing past my layers of clothing and sinking deep into
my bones.
Today was the first semi-free day on Bridget’s schedule
since we landed, and she’d shocked the hell out of me when
she insisted on spending it at the cemetery.
When I saw why, though, I understood.
I maintained a respectful distance from where she
kneeled before two tombstones, but I was still close enough
to see the names engraved on them.
Josefine von Ascheberg. Frederik von Ascheberg.
Her parents.
I’d been ten when Crown Princess Josefine died during
childbirth. I remembered seeing photos of the late princess
splashed across magazines and TV screens for weeks. Prince
Frederik had died a few years later in a car crash.
Bridget and I weren’t friends. Hell, we weren’t even
friendly most of the time. That didn’t stop the strange tug at
my heart when I saw the sadness on her face as she
murmured something to her parents’ graves.
Bridget brushed a strand of hair out of her face, her sad
expression melting into a small smile as she said something
else. I rarely gave a damn what people did and said in their
personal lives, but I almost wished I were close enough to
hear what made her smile.
My phone pinged, and I welcomed the distraction from
my unsettling thoughts until I saw the message.
Christian: I can get you the name in less than ten minutes.
Me: No. Drop it.
Another message popped up, but I pocketed my phone
without reading it.
Irritation spiked through me.
Christian was a persistent bastard who reveled in digging
into the skeletons of other people’s pasts. He’d been bugging
me since he found out I was spending the holidays in Eldorra
—he knew my hang-ups about the country—and if he
weren’t my boss and the closest thing I had to a friend, his
face would’ve met my fist by now.
I told him I didn’t want the name, and I meant it. I’d
survived thirty-one years without knowing. I could survive
thirty-one more, or however long it took before I kicked the
bucket.
I returned my attention to Bridget just as a twig snapped
nearby, followed by the soft click of a camera shutter.
My head jerked up, and a low growl rumbled from my
throat when I spotted a telltale pouf of blond hair peeking
from the top of a nearby tombstone.
Fucking paparazzi.
The asshole squeaked and tried to flee when he realized
he’d been caught, but I stormed over and grabbed the back of
his jacket before he could take more than a few steps.
I saw Bridget stand up out of the corner of my eye, her
expression concerned.
“Give me your camera,
” I said, my calm voice belying my
anger. Paparazzi were an inescapable evil when guarding
high-profile people, but there was a difference between
snapping photos of someone eating and shopping versus
snapping photos of them in a private moment.
Bridget was visiting her parents’ graves, for fuck’s sake,
and this piece of shit had the nerve to intrude.
“No way,
” the paparazzo blustered. “This is a free
country, and Princess Bridget is a public figure. I can—”
I didn’t wait for him to finish his sentence before I
yanked the camera from his hand, dropped it on the ground,
and smashed it into smithereens with my boot.
I didn’t like asking twice.
He howled in protest. “That was a five-thousand-dollar
camera!”
“Consider yourself lucky that’s all that got broken.” I
released his jacket and straightened it for him, the
movement more a threat than a courtesy. “You have five
seconds to get out of my sight before that changes.”
The paparazzo was indignant, but he wasn’t stupid. Two
seconds later, he’d disappeared through the trees, leaving
the pieces of his now useless camera behind. A minute after
that, I heard an engine turn over and a car peel out of the
parking lot.
“I recognize him. He’s from the National Express.” Bridget
came up beside me, looking not at all surprised by the turn
of events. “The trashiest of the tabloids. They’ll probably run
a story about me joining a Satanic ring or something after
what you did to his camera.”
I snorted. “He deserved it. I can’t stand people who don’t
respect others’ privacy.”
A small smile flitted across her face, the first she’d given
me in days, and the earlier chill abated. “He’s paparazzi. It’s
his job to invade others’ privacy.”
“Not when people are at the fucking cemetery.”
“I’m used to it. Unless I’m in the palace, there’s always a
chance what I do will end up in the papers.” Bridget sounded
resigned. “Thank you for taking care of that, even if your
method was more…aggressive than I would’ve advised.” A
hint of sadness remained in her eyes, and I felt that strange
tug in my chest again. Maybe it was because I related to the
source of her sadness—the feeling I was all alone in the
world, without the two people who were supposed to love me
most by my side.
I’d never had that parental love, so despite the hole it left,
I didn’t understand what I was missing. Bridget had
experienced it, at least on her father’s side, so I imagined the
loss was even greater for her.
You’re not here to relate to her, asshole. You’re here to guard
her. That’s it. No matter how beautiful or sad she looked, or
how much I wanted to erase the melancholy cloaking her.
It wasn’t my job to make her feel better.
I stepped back. “You ready? We can stay longer if you
want, but you have an event in an hour.”
“No, I’m ready. I just wanted to wish my parents a Merry
Christmas and catch them up on my life.” Bridget tucked a
strand of hair behind her ear, looking self-conscious. “It
sounds silly, but it’s tradition, and I feel like they’re
listening…” She trailed off. “Like I said, it’s silly.”
“It’s not silly.” A tightness formed in my chest and
spread until it choked me with memories best left forgotten.
“I do the same with my old military buddies.” The ones
buried in the D.C. area, anyway, though I tried to make it out
to the other places when I could.
I was the reason they were dead. The least I could do was
pay my respects.
“Do you stay in touch with your friends from the Navy?”
Bridget asked as we walked toward the exit.
I kept an eye out for any more paparazzi or ne'er-dowells, but there was no one else around except for us and
ghosts from the past.
“A couple. Not as often as I’d like.”
My unit had been my family, but after what happened, it
became too hard for the survivors to keep in touch. We
reminded each other too much of what we’d lost.
The only person I kept in regular touch with was my old
commander from my early days in the Navy.
“What made you leave?” Bridget tucked her hands deeper
into her coat pockets, and I resisted the urge to draw her
closer so I could share some of my body heat. It was damn
cold, and her coat didn’t look thick enough to protect her
from the wind.
“It got too much. The deployments, the uncertainty, the
funerals. Watching the men I served with die right in front of
me.” The tightness squeezed, and I forced myself to breathe
through it before continuing. “It fucked me up, and if I
hadn’t left when I did...” I would’ve lost what was left of myself.
I shook my head. “It’s the same story as a lot of vets. I’m no
one special.”
We reached the car, but when I opened the door for
Bridget to get in, she rested her hand on my arm instead.
I stiffened, her touch burning through my clothes more
effectively than any chill or flame.
“I’m sorry,
” she said. “Both for what happened and for
prying.”
“I got out years ago. If I didn’t want to talk about it, I
wouldn’t. It’s not a big deal.” I pulled my arm away and
opened the car door wider, but the imprint of her touch
lingered. “I don’t regret my time in the Navy. The guys in my
unit were like brothers to me, the closest I ever had to a real
family, and I wouldn’t give that up for the world. But the
frontline stuff? Yeah, I was over that shit.”
I’d never shared that with anyone before. Then again, I’d
had no one to share it with except my old therapist, and I’d
had enough issues to work through with her without delving
into why I left the military.
“Yet you chose to be a bodyguard after,
” Bridget noted.
“Not exactly a danger-free occupation.”
“I have the skills to be a good bodyguard.” A lot of former
SEALs went the private security route, and Christian may
have been a bastard, but he was a persuasive bastard. He’d
convinced me to sign on the dotted line less than a day after
I returned to U.S. soil. “Don’t think I’ve ever been in as much
danger as since you became my client, though.”
Her brow scrunched in confusion, and I almost smiled.
Almost.
“My risk of rupturing an artery increased tenfold.”
Bridget’s confusion cleared, replaced with an odd
combination of delight and exasperation. “Glad to see you
found your sense of humor, Mr. Larsen. It’s a Christmas
miracle.”
A chuckle escaped my throat, the sound so foreign I
barely recognized it as my own, and something in my soul
stirred, nudged awake by the reminder other things existed
besides the darkness that had haunted me for so long.
Surprise flared in Bridget’s eyes before she offered a
tentative smile in return, and the something lifted its head at
the further encouragement.
I shoved it back down.
A laugh was fine. Anything else was not.
“Let’s go.” I wiped the smile off my face. “Or we’ll be
late.”
BRIDGET
If I could sum up my relationship with Rhys with one
song, it would be Katy Perry’s “Hot N Cold.” One minute, we
were fighting and giving each other the cold shoulder. The
next, we were laughing and bonding over jokes.
Okay, bonding was too strong a word for what had
happened in the cemetery parking lot. Acting like normal
human beings toward each other was more accurate. And
Rhys hadn’t so much laughed as slipped up with a half
chuckle, but maybe that constituted a laugh in his world. I
couldn’t picture him throwing his head back with mirth any
more than I could picture The Rock dancing ballet.
But if there was one thing I’d learned over the past
month, it was I needed to take advantage of the ups in our
relationship when I could. So, after my planned “surprise”
visit to a local high school, where I gave a speech on the
importance of kindness and mental health, I brought up a
topic I’d been avoiding for the past week.
“I usually stay in Eldorra longer for the holidays, but I’m
glad we’re heading back to campus earlier this year,
” I said
casually as we settled into our seats at a restaurant by the
school.
No answer.
Just when I thought Rhys would ignore the bait, he said,
“Spit it out, princess. What do you want?”
There goes the grumpiness again.
A small frown touched my face. I felt like a kid asking
permission from a parent when I talked to him, which was
ridiculous, but he radiated such authority I sometimes forgot
he was my employee and not the other way around.
Well, technically, he was a contractor with the palace, but
that was a minor distinction.
“My favorite band is coming to D.C. in January. Ava and I
already bought tickets to see them,
” I said.
“Band name and location.”
I told him.
“I’ll check it out and let you know.” Rhys snapped his
menu closed when our server approached. “Burger, medium
rare, please. Thank you.”
I placed my order and waited for the server to leave before
repeating in a tight voice,
“I already bought the tickets.”
Translation: I’m going whether or not you like it.
“Refundable ones, I hope.” His sharp gaze glided through
the restaurant, not missing a single detail about the patrons
or room layout.
Aaaand there went the down in our relationship, just like
clockwork.
“Your job isn’t to run my life. Stop acting like an
overprotective parent.” My frustration mounted. I would
rather hate him all the time than have my emotions swing
back and forth like a broken gauge. It was exhausting. “How
are you still employed? I’m surprised your previous clients
haven’t complained to your company about your…your…”
Rhys arched an eyebrow while I fumbled for the right
words.
“Your overbearing tendencies,
” I finished lamely.
Dammit. I needed a bigger arsenal of better insults.
“Because I’m the best. They know it, and so do you,
” he
said arrogantly. He leaned forward, his eyes darkening. “You
think I want to parent you? I don’t. If I wanted kids, I’d get
myself an office job and shack up in some cookie-cutter
suburban home with a picket fence and a dog. I’m in this
field of work to save lives, princess. I’ve taken plenty of ‘em,
and now—” He stopped abruptly, but his words lingered in
the air.
I flashed back to his words from the parking lot. It got too
much. The deployments, the uncertainty, the funerals. Watching
men I considered brothers die right in front of me.
Rhys hadn’t gone into detail about what happened when
he was in the military, but he didn’t need to. I could only
imagine.
Guilt and sympathy blossomed in my stomach and curled
around my heart.
That was why I vacillated so much in my feelings toward
him. I disliked Rhys’s attitude and actions, but I didn’t
dislike him, because I understood why he did what he did.
It was a conundrum, and unfortunately, I didn’t see a way
out of it.
“It only takes one slipup,
” Rhys finished. “One second of
distraction, and you could walk into a minefield and get
blown to hell. One lapse of judgment, and you could end up
with a bullet in your head.” He leaned back, shutters falling
over those gunmetal eyes. “So no, I don’t give a fuck if you
already bought tickets. I’m still gonna check the place out,
and if anything looks off, you’re not going. End of story.”
My mind swirled with a dozen different responses, but
the one that came out wasn’t the one I’d intended to say at
all.
“We’re not in a war zone,
” I said gently. “We don’t have
to be on guard twenty-four-seven.”
Rhys’s jaw hardened, and even though he’d gotten out of
the Navy years ago, I wondered how long he’d been fighting
his own inner battles.
“Life is a war zone, princess. The sooner you understand
that, the safer you’ll be.”
While my life wasn’t perfect, it was far better than most
people’s. I knew that. I’d grown up in a bubble, protected
from the worst of humanity, and I was incredibly privileged
for that reason. But the idea of living life like I was at war
with it every day made me indescribably sad.
“There’s more to life than trying not to die.” I kept my
gaze on Rhys as our server brought out our orders and set
them on the table. “It’s just a concert. I promise I’ll be fine.”
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