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I give Ari a look and he stealthily leaves the room, hopefully to chase the man, who I watch run out of another door.

Both Lorenzo and I are quickly surrounded by his bodyguards.

Juan, his personal guard, asks me, "Why shouldn't he drink it? What do you know?"

I realize I must act dumb. My being able to stay close to the Prince depends on them believing what I say next.

"Uh, I don't know anything. I just thought it was weird."

"What was weird?"

"The waiter came out of the kitchen with only one glass of champagne instead of a tray full, and he had on black gloves instead of white ones." I look straight at the Prince. "I mean, I don't know how things go here in Montrovia, but I'd hate to see you end up as a plaything in a frat house getting taken advantage of." I purposefully giggle. "Oh, wait. That doesn't make sense. Maybe I've had too much champagne." What I'm about to say next is a total conflict, but I have to say it. I ready my hand to knock the drink away in case they call my bluff. I'll blow the mission if I have to, to keep him safe. "You're right, I'm being dumb. Who'd bother to roofie the future King? Everyone already knows he's easy. I just reacted, it's probably fine to drink."

The Prince chuckles and considers this by looking at his glass.

"Don't," his bodyguard says sternly. "Give me the glass." He speaks into his cuff, alerting the police, then takes the glass carefully. "Miss Von Allister had a good gut reaction. Better safe than sorry. We'll take care of this. You enjoy the rest of the party."

X X X

Ari takes off on a run after the black-gloved waiter, but the man has a large lead.

By the time he gets outside, the man has taken off his waiter's jacket and is hopping onto a motorcycle. Ari presses a button on his phone and communicates with Ellis.

Ellis is moving the limo toward the street when the motorcycle screams its way around the corner. The man is riding a black Ducati with no identification tags. Ellis throws the car into park, jumps out, and taps his cane hard on the ground causing a steel baton to emerge from its core. He sticks the baton out just as the assailant drives by and knocks the man off the bike.

The assailant rolls to the ground with a grunt, but quickly pops up, pulling a slim gun out of his coat and aiming it at Ellis.

Ellis leaps toward him with surprising grace for someone of his age and clips the man with the baton, knocking the gun free. Ari who has been sprinting to catch up, grabs the gun off the pavement and levels it at the man, telling him not to move.

The man doesn't listen. He kicks the gun out of Ari's hand and punches at his face. Ari avoids the contact and throws a series of punches of his own, all connecting and leaving the man dazed. Ari gives the man another blow, knocking him down to the ground.

"Who do you work for?" Ari questions, sitting on top of the man, his hands wrapped around the man's neck, almost cutting off his oxygen.

The man gives Ari a defiant look, then head butts him, causing Ari to go crashing backwards. The man gets up, only to be shot in the arm by Ellis. The man grabs his bicep and attempts to run back to his bike. Ari stops him with another blow to the head just as the authorities arrive. They quickly take the man into custody, thank Ari and Ellis for their service to Montrovia, and leave.

What they don't know is that before they left, Ari managed to place a small tracking and recording device on the man.

Ari and Ellis calmly go back to the limo and follow the police to the detention center.

They record and listen to the authorities' first--and very useless--round of questioning. The assailant refuses to answer anything.

When they take a break, Ari slips unnoticed into the center and into the questioning room, only to find the man dead.

Foam leaks out of his mouth.

Ari takes a vial from his jacket pocket, scoops up some of the foam, and leaves the facility as stealthily as he came.

X X X

The Prince leads me to the bar and orders a stiff drink. After his earlier uneasy conversation combined with a possible attempted poisoning, I can see why he needs one.

"Would you like to go home now?" I ask him. "It's been a long day."

He gently brushes my hair from my face and kisses me, avoiding telling me what's troubling him and saying instead, "I've enjoyed your company immensely."

"As I have yours."

"I'm looking forward to our bath tomorrow."

"Me too."

He glances at his watch. "I guess it already is tomorrow. How would you feel about coming home with me now?"

I know what he's asking.

I bite the corner of my lip nervously and lower my head slightly. "Um . . ."

He takes his finger and raises my chin. "It's okay. We should move slowly. This. Us."

He leans in to kiss me again, but we are separated by guards. "Come this way, quickly."

We're escorted to a waiting limo and taken to the castle.

I lean toward him and whisper. "Is this really how you get a girl to come home with you?"

He laughs heartily then rolls the partition down and asks Juan what's going on.

"We'll discuss it when we are in the safety of the castle, Your Highness," he replies formally. Usually, he calls him Lorenzo.

When we get to the castle, we're whisked down a hall to the War Room, and I'm introduced to Admiral Philipe Lamonte, the Joint Chief of the Montrovian armed forces.

Admiral Lamonte gets in my face. "Why did you suspect the Prince's drink to be tainted? And I'd like you to be very specific. Tell me everything you can remember."

His attitude tells me that I was right about the champagne. But I have to keep playing dumb.

I can't blow my cover.

"Uh, well, like I told Juan, the waiter came out of the door and headed straight toward us. He only had one glass on his tray, which I thought was both odd and kinda rude, because I would have taken another glass. Mine wasn't actually empty, but it had gotten warm. When he presented it to the Prince, I thought maybe it was something special for him, but I didn't remember him ordering anything. It's like the first thing they teach us in college, never drink something you didn't pour or order yourself. Which, obviously, only really relates to frat parties and club drinks because I have been drinking champagne off silver platters since I got here. It's just that the platters always come out full, and the waiters always wear white gloves, not black ones like this guy had. Really, it was the black gloves that gave me pause. And then when he walked straight out the other door. I'm sorry if I caused a scene. I didn't mean to. I highly doubt anyone would want to roofie the Prince." I laugh. "Well, except maybe for a few enthusiastic females who might want to bear a royal heir."

"Describe the man."

I try to make my description sound normal. Wordy. Not like a rap sheet. "Uh, he was shorter than me in heels, so like five-ten, maybe. He had short blond hair, light skin. There was a tattoo peeking out of his collar, but I couldn't see the design. He looked like he could have been of Slavic descent, maybe."

"Your brother, Ari, chased a man of that description. He and your driver fought and managed to subdue the man until the authorities came and took him into custody."

"So what did you find out?" Lorenzo asks.

"Nothing, other than that he is Russian," the admiral replies.

"Russian? First a German and a Moroccan, now a Russian? What, is the whole world out to get me?" the Prince asks. "Did you question him? Find out who he is working for?"

"We did not. He killed himself with the same poison found in your glass, a cyanide salt compound. You would have been dead within minutes." He turns to me. "You have done a great service to our country, Miss Von Allister. We cannot thank you enough."

Both the Prince's and my eyes widen as the Admiral and Juan leave the room.

The Prince gives my hand a squeeze. "It seems I owe you my life again. If you keep this up, I'm going to have to hire you as a bodyguard."

I press my free hand against his chest. "You d

o have a nice body, from what I've heard."

He leans in and gives me a steamy kiss, but we are interrupted by his mother, who bursts through the door.

"Lorenzo, darling, I just heard." She sees us kissing. "Oh, excuse me."

"It's okay, mother," he says, pulling his lips away from mine. "I was just thanking Huntley for saving me yet again."

"I've made a decision. I'm cancelling the Queen's Ball."

"You can't. We cannot allow our nation's activities to be dictated by fear."

"I know you are right, but there have been two attempts on your life in as many days. I don't want you attending any more parties. We'll say you are ill."

"I appreciate your concern, Mother, but I'll be fine." He gives her a hug.

"What about the charity race tomorrow?" she asks.

"I must," Lorenzo firmly states.

"You have nearly been gunned down and poisoned," she argues.

"This is my country. If I can't feel safe and free to go about my business, neither will our countrymen. They will lose faith in the monarchy."

"So you'd rather they lose the future of their country? Lose you?"

"This country is bigger than one man."

Although technically I agree with Lorenzo, I have to side with his mom on this one. "Um," I interrupt. "I know nothing about security stuff, but I can think of a million ways a charity race could go wrong."

"Like what?" He smiles, patronizing me.

"Another driver crashing into you, someone tampering with your car, tacks on the track to blow out your tires resulting in a fiery crash. The list could go on and on."

He hasn't rolled his eyes yet, but I'm getting the feeling neither his mother nor I are going to be able to talk any sense into him. And since I can't go in the car with him, I need to make sure he doesn't compete, so I go with the only option I have left and pull out the emotional card.

He's still holding my hand, so I give it a squeeze then turn to face him. "I don't want your mother, your country, or your father to watch you die."

"My father?"

"A television is being brought in," his mother confirms. It was a wild guess on my part, but I may have gotten lucky. "He wants to watch all the live footage. If he watched you die, it would kill him."

"He's already close to death," Lorenzo states sadly.

"Fine," I sputter out. "I don't want to watch you die."