âStop thinking that you donât measure up somehow, because youâre wrong.â
Serafia gasped at his bold words. She couldnât hold back any longer. She lunged forward, pressing her lips against his before she lost her nerve. It had been a long time since she had trusted herself in all the various areas of her life, and romance had fallen to the bottom of the stack. What good was she to a man in the state she was in? Especially a prince? Still, she couldnât help herself.
And neither could Gabriel.
He met her kiss with equal enthusiasm. He held her face in his hands, drawing her closer and drinking her in. He groaned against her lips and then let his tongue slip along hers. His touch made her insides turn molten with need and wore away the last of her self-control.
At last, Gabriel pulled away, their rapid breaths hovering between them in the night air. âIs it too early to make our exit?â he asked.
Serafia shook her head and looked into his eyes. âI think the prince can leave whenever he wants to.â
* * *
Seduced by the Spare Heir is part of the series Dynasties: The Montorosâ One royal family must choose between love and destiny!
ANDREA LAURENCE is an award-winning author of contemporary romance for Mills & Boon® Desire⢠and paranormal romance for Mills & Boon® Nocturne. She has been a lover of reading and writing stories since she learned to read at a young age. She always dreamed of seeing her work in print and is thrilled to share her special blend of sensuality and dry, sarcastic humor with the world.
A dedicated West Coast girl transplanted into the Deep South, Andrea is working on her own happily-ever-after with her boyfriend and their collection of animals, including a Siberian husky that sheds like nobodyâs business. If you enjoy Gabriel and Serafiaâs story, tell her by visiting her website, www.andrealaurence.com; like her fan page on Facebook at facebook.com/authorandrealaurence; or follow her on Twitter, twitter.com/andrea_laurence.
To my fellow authors in the Montoros seriesâJanice, Katherine, Kat, Jules and Charlene. It was a joy working with all of you. Thanks for tolerating my eighty million questions on the loop.
And to our editor, CharlesâYouâre awesome, as always. I look forward to working with you again.
One
This party was lame. And it was his party. How could his own party be lame?
Normally parties were Gabriel Montoroâs thing. Much to the chagrin of his family, heâd earned quite the reputation as âGood Time Gabriel.â Music, alcohol, dim lighting, superficial conversation... He was the king of the party domain. But now that Gabriel had been tapped as the new king of Alma, everything had changed.
Gabriel gripped his flute of champagne and looked around the ballroom at his familyâs Coral Gables estate. Their tropical retreat seemed incredibly stuffy tonight. There wasnât a single flip-flop in the room, much less one of the feral parrots that lived on their property and flew in the occasional open door. His family had always had money, but they hadnât been pretentious.
But things had changed for the Montoro family since the tiny European island nation of Alma decided to restore their monarchy. Suddenly he was Prince Gabriel, third in line to the throne. And before he could adjust to the idea of that, his father and his older brother were taken out of the running. His parents had divorced without an annulment, making his father ineligible. Then, his ever-responsible brother abdicated and ran off with a bartender. Suddenly he was on the verge of being King Gabriel, and everyone expected him to change with the title.
This suffocating soiree was just the beginning and he knew it. Next, heâd have to trade in his South Beach penthouse for a foreign palace and his one-night stands for a queen with a pedigree. Everything from his clothes to his speech would be up for public critique by âhis people.â People heâd never seen, living on an island heâd only visited once. But his coronation was only a month or two away. He left for Alma in a week.
That was why they were having this party, if you could even call it that. The music was classical, the drinks were elegant and the women were wearing far too much clothing. He got a sinking feeling in his stomach when he realized this was how it was going to be from now on. Boring parties with boring people he didnât even know kissing his ass.
There were two hundred people in the room, but there were more strangers than anything else. He found that terribly ironic. People had come out of the woodwork since his brother, Rafe, abdicated and Gabriel was thrust into the spotlight. Suddenly he wasnât just the vice president of South American Operations, cast into the Southern Hemisphere where he couldnât embarrass the family; he was the hot ticket in town.