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King and Kingdom: The Royals Book 2 by Danielle Bourdon (15)

Chapter Fifteen

Thanks to the time difference, Chey got out of bed at three a.m. the next morning, not that she'd been asleep, and wandered into the kitchen to make coffee. Hair a mess around her head from tossing and turning, she yawned and dumped water into the reservoir before adding two scoops of coffee grounds into the filter.

Research yesterday afternoon led to the discovery that the Ahtissari wedding would begin at three p.m. Latvala time, which meant Chey and Wynn needed to be parked in front of the laptop by five.

Dressed in her favorite candy cane pajamas, she got the coffee brewing and went out to the living room. She'd left her laptop on the coffee table the night before; it glowed to life when she woke it out of sleep mode and pulled up the link to the site hosting the nuptials.

The whole thing felt like a bad nightmare. She'd cried for hours after Wynn went back to work, had cried half the night while she laid in bed and stared at the ceiling. All the information she'd pulled up had proven to be recent and authentic. There were even photos of Sander and Valentina—not together, but separate—on the loading page. His face stared out at the world, jaw tight, blue eyes keen. Valentina, in her regal pose, looked almost smug. The sight antagonized Chey to the point that she'd positioned a sticky note over the woman's face so she didn't have to see it. It was still there, a big pink square, blocking out part of the screen.

In anticipation of the event, the site was already showing pre-video shots of snowy Kalev, people in bars ready to watch the wedding and celebrate. There were several links available for different videos, though Chey wasn't prepared to press any. One in particular was all about Sander. A glowing montage, she was sure, from boyhood to manhood with sentimental music that would probably make her want to scream or stab things.

Getting up, leaving the laptop on, she scraped back her hair into a messy knot and brought two mugs down out of the cupboard. She sniffed, then rubbed her stinging eyelid with a knuckle. Crying had rendered her lids puffy and itchy.

Pulling the pot out before it was half full, she poured herself a half cup and set the pot back. Wynn would want some the second she got there.

Walking the coffee back out to the living room, she curled down on the couch and drew the laptop onto her knees. She clicked onto a link against her better judgment, and choked on the first sip of her coffee when one of the photos she'd taken of the entire family popped up.

Those bastards, using her pictures after all this!

It was the one taken the day she'd discovered Sander was actually a Royal, with the men in their uniforms. Two more clicks proved the family was using several of her shots, not just of the King and Queen, but of the castle and the grounds.

Snorting, she took another sip of coffee and tried not to let the images upset her more than she already was. She wondered, too, if they'd used the photos on purpose, because they knew she'd be watching. Bastards.

She refused to check and see if they gave her credit anywhere on the site. It would be a boon for any photographer to have their name associated with a project this big. At this point, she really didn't care about credit. She had no desire to photograph any other elite group of people, ever. Small weddings, birthdays, graduation ceremonies, that was her ticket.

Several short videos showed Valentina's family arriving in grand flair at the airport, with snippets of Valentina smiling for the camera. Personable shots that she knew were supposed to help warm the Latvala people to her.

Chey felt sick all over again.

This was really happening.

The video cut away to a zooming shot of a stunning cathedral. Gray stone, with a peaked roof and heavy carved doors that the camera swerved down into. It was a great special effect, Chey had to admit, never mind that she was getting a bird's eye view of the route Valentina would walk to marry Sander. Up the aisle it went, where pews on both sides were decorated with all white bouquets of calla lilies and sheer white ribbon. At the altar stood a podium flanked by enormous sprays of more calla lilies tucked into waist high, fluted vases. In that exact spot, not long from now, Sander would promise himself to another, effectively severing any chance of a future for himself and Chey. The picture had a dreamy quality, fitting for a Prince and Princess's romance.

Chey looked away from the screen down into her mug. The whole ordeal was making her bipolar. Half of her wanted to sob her sorrow into the pillows; the other half had an epic rant sitting right on the end of her tongue, ready for a blistering delivery. The scorching diatribe would only fall on the deaf ears of her apartment instead of pertinent Royal members of the family, making it useless and pointless.

She felt the inevitable sting of tears and refused to let any more fall. If she didn't need to see with her own eyes that Sander was really taking a wife, she would turn the whole thing off now and save herself hours of torture.

Forty-five minutes later, Wynn let herself in the front door.

Chey was on her third cup of coffee, the laptop perched once more on the coffee table instead of her thighs. The screen was dark.

“Hey. Have you been watching?” Wynn asked. Dressed in yoga pants of black and two layers of long sleeve shirts in gray and white, she dropped her purse near the door and went straight to the kitchen to help herself to coffee.

“I was,” Chey said. She heard the listlessness in her own voice and didn't care enough to correct it.

“I know it's hard. I caught glimpses while I was getting dressed. Have you heard anything from him? A call, text, another delivery?” Wynn walked her mug out to the couch and curled down next to Chey.

“Nothing, no.” Which made it worse, in Chey's mind. “He could have at least sent a note via his messenger that it was over. That he was sorry he'd lied, or whatever, and that he was getting married.”

Wynn rubbed Chey's shoulders, then reached over to wake the laptop. “I know. Let's see where things are. We've got...what, an hour left? They should be doing more of the pre-stuff. Letting people into the church even, maybe.”

The screen glowed to life, refreshed to the front page of the wedding site. As Wynn guessed, more things were happening now. While Chey had clicked links to get to pre-recorded videos, a live streaming one was now rolling on the main page. The camera angle, pointed so it took in a view of the curving driveway leading to the door, picked up several official looking people hovering in front of the church. Security members, Chey decided, from their clothing.

A foot of snow lined the drive, which had been shoveled clear for cars that dropped off dignitaries and other prominent guests as the event wore on. More and more people were arriving now, everyone smiling, dressed to the nines. Closer to three o'clock Latvala time, limousines pulled to the curb and out stepped the Royals. Natalia first, with some man or another on her arm, dressed appropriately with a knowing, smug look on her face. The King and Queen came last. They paused to wave to the crowd gathered out on the other side of the street from the church before entering and following the procession of people down the aisle toward their prominent seat in the front pew.

Once seated, the groomsmen filed out a side door toward the front of the church. Mattias, Paavo and Gunnar took their positions, dressed in immaculate military uniforms, gloved hands caught behind their back.

Music made of pretty, lilting strings filled the background.

Blowing her nose, Chey watched it all like she was having an out of body experience. Nothing felt real, or it felt too real, she couldn't be sure which.

When Sander stepped out of the same side door moments later, Chey sobbed into a tissue. Resplendent in his uniform, he had his hair pulled back into a tail, face clean shaven, shoulders square and broad. He wasn't smiling when he took his place at the head of the groomsmen and faced down the aisle toward the now closed doors.

Chey wanted to turn it off. There was no stopping it now. Whatever she'd hoped to see, it wouldn't happen. No last minute intervention or change of plans. The church was full, cameras on, the Priest in place.

All they needed now, was the bride.


. . .


To a flare of dramatic but soft music, the church doors opened. The camera, looking down the aisle in one shot, then cutting over toward Sander's face in another, faded in and out from one scene to another.

Valentina stood there, finally, with her father on her arm, ready to walk down the aisle. Poised and perfect, she paced him toward the front of the church, the close ups of her face behind the veil giving glimpses of her obvious pleasure at the event. She almost gloated, it seemed to Chey, before the image faded for one of a softer Valentina at a different angle, lashes batting coyly as they arrived in front of Sander.

Wynn groaned and wrapped her arm tight around Chey. “I'm so sorry,” she whispered.

Chey had nothing to say. Couldn't speak. This was nothing but torture. Her mind, busy for hours coming up with every excuse in the book for Sander, turned to anger at the end. No note, no call, no other forewarning than a cryptic note in the middle of the night that could in no way prepare her for this.

What the hell was she supposed to think?

Sander Ahtissari was getting married.

It meant the absolute end to everything she thought of having with Sander. No more nights in his arms, no more strolls through the flea market. There would be no immersion into each other's lives.

As Sander accepted Valentina's hand onto his arm, his expression remained stoic, unreadable. He was unbelievably handsome, which was no doubt why Valentina looked so smitten and so smug.

She'd caught him, just as she'd wanted.

In front of hundreds of guests—and an untold number of thousands watching from their homes in Latvala, Sander Ahtissari took a wife. He said his vows, placed a ring on her finger. When the Priest announced he could kiss the bride, he lifted Valentina's veil and covered her mouth with his.

The church exploded into applause.

Chey had never been so miserable in her life. Tucked into Wynn's arms, she closed the laptop lid and cried. For the better part of an hour, as twilight broke over Seattle and dusk claimed Latvala, Chey Sinclair sobbed her heartbreak onto her best friend's shoulder.

The love of her life was now married to another.

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