âDo you want to be my fiancée?â
âAlexâ¦â Allegra said. âWhy, when I didnât even want to have a drink with you, do you think Iâd even entertainâ¦?â
âA million pounds.â
She laughed, because these things didnât happen, and he had to be joking and when he pulled out a cheque book, she laughed even more, because it was crazy. Except when he handed it to her, his hand was completely steady and he wasnât laughing.
âSo what are you paying me for?â
âI canât just invent someoneâyou might have to join me in Santina at some point. All you would have to do is smile and hang onto my every word.â
âUntil?â
âUntil the people dictate otherwiseâ¦â He gave a shrug. âIt might be days, it might be weeks.â He looked to the cheque and so too did Allegra, and she thought about it, hell, she really thought about it. He wasnât asking for her to sleep with him, just to smile and hold his hand. And what she could do with the moneyâshe could get a flat, a job, actually she could do what she really wantedâ¦
THE
SANTINA CROWN
Royalty has never been so scandalous!
STOP PRESSâCrown Prince in shock marriage
The tabloid headlinesâ¦
When HRH Crown Prince Alessandro of Santina
proposes to paparazzi favourite Allegra Jackson it promises to be the social event of the decade âoutrageous headlines guaranteed!
The salacious gossipâ¦
Mills & Boon invites you to rub shoulders with
royalty, sheikhs and glamorous socialites. Step into the decadent playground of the worldâs rich and famousâ¦
THE SANTINA CROWN
THE PRICE OF ROYAL DUTY â Penny Jordan
THE SHEIKHâS HEIR â Sharon Kendrick THE SCANDALOUS PRINCESS â Kate Hewitt THE MAN BEHIND THE SCARS â Caitlin Crews DEFYING THE PRINCE â Sarah Morgan PRINCESS FROM THE SHADOWS â Maisey Yates THE GIRL NOBODY WANTED â Lynn Raye Harris PLAYING THE ROYAL GAME â Carol Marinelli
CAROL MARINELLI recently filled in a form where she was asked for her job title and was thrilled, after all these years, to be able to put down her answer as âwriterâ.
Then it asked what Carol did for relaxation and, after chewing her pen for a moment, Carol put down the truthââwritingâ. The third question asked, âWhat are your hobbies?â Well, not wanting to look obsessed or, worse still, boring, she crossed the fingers on her free hand and answered âswimming and tennisâ. But, given that the chlorine in the pool does terrible things to her highlights, and the closest sheâs got to a tennis racket in the last couple of years is watching the Australian Open, Iâm sure you can guess the real answer!
SHE was better off without the job, Allegra told herself.
No one should have to put up with that.
Except that walking in the rain along grey London streets, taking the underground to various employment agencies, the anger that her boss could make such a blatant a pass at her and then fire her for not succumbing started to be replaced with something that felt close to fear.
She needed that job.
Needed it.
Her savings had been obliterated by the bottomless pit that was her familyâs excess spending. At times it felt as if her lowly publishing wage supported half the Jackson family. Yes, she was the boring reliable one, but they didnât mind her dependability when their erratic ways found them in trouble. Just last week she had lent her stepmother, Chantelle, close to five thousand pounds in cash for credit card debts that her father didnât know about. It was laughable to think that she might now have to have her family support her.
It was a miserable day, with no sign that it was spring; instead it was cold and wet, and Allegra dug her hands deeper into her trench coat pockets, her fingers curling around a fifty-pound note she had pulled out of the ATM. If her boss refused to put her pay in tomorrow it was all she had before being completely broke.
No!
Sheâd been through worse than this, Allegra decided. As Bobby Jacksonâs daughter she was all too used to the bailiffs but her father always managed to pick himself up; he never let it get him down. She was not going to sink, but hell, if she did, then sheâd sink in style!
Pushing open a bar door, she walked in with her head held high, the heat hitting her as she entered, and Allegra slipped off her coat and hung it, her hair dripping wet and cold down her back. Normally she wouldnât entertain entering some random bar, but still, at least it was warm and she could sit down and finally gather her thoughts.
There had been a confidence to her as sheâd stalked out of her office with dignity. With her track record and her job history, a lot of the agencies had called over the years offering her freelance work.
It had been sobering indeed to find out that they were hiring no one, that the financial crisis and changes to the industry meant that there were no causal jobs waiting for her to step into.
None.
Well, a chance for a couple, but they added up to about three hoursâ work per month. Per month!