Lizzie recalled the Dame describing a ball at the palace in Voltavia, with King Alphonse in full dress military uniform, glittering with gold braid. ‘So splendid, my dear! So magnificent!’ Kings didn’t dress like that any more, which Lizzie thought a pity, but she ceased to regret it when she saw Daniel in white tie and tails, which seemed to emphasise his height and the breadth of his shoulders. On some men, anything was magnificent.
First there were the duty dances. The King took the floor with a succession of titled ladies—a member of the British royal family, the ambassador’s wife, the wife of a prominent international banker. Lizzie guessed there were a lot to go before he reached her.
She wasn’t short of partners, and Frederick, one of the king’s aides, solicited her hand several times. He danced well and asked her many questions about herself. Acting on orders, she thought, and kept her answers light and unrevealing. If Daniel wanted to know about her, he could do his own asking.
Occasionally the dance brought them close, but he never looked in her direction. That might have been courtesy to his partner, but once, when he wasn’t dancing, Lizzie glanced up to where he sat alone on the throne and found him watching her. After that she knew he was conscious of her even when he wasn’t looking.
At last Frederick approached her again, not to dance this time but to give a correct little bow and ask, ‘Would you like the honour of dancing with His Majesty?’
‘Thank you. I would.’
She followed him to Daniel, who watched her approach. She sank into a curtsey, but unlike the other women, who lowered their heads, Lizzie curtseyed with her head up, eyes meeting his in direct challenge. He nodded slightly in her direction, before extending his arm. She took it and he led her onto the floor for the waltz.
He was a good dancer, every step correct, but his body was tense. By contrast, Lizzie danced like liquid, gliding this way and that in his arms.
‘I’m glad you were able to accept at such short notice,’ he said.
Lizzie made the appropriate speech about being honoured before saying, ‘I wonder how Your Majesty knew where to send the invitation.’
‘I had you investigated,’ he informed her calmly, ‘and discovered you to be a historian, as you said. I gather you’ve written many letters to the Information Office in Voltavia.’
‘Yes, and I’ve got nowhere. They just brush me off. But I am serious.’
‘So I understand. The list of your degrees and professorships is impressive—and alarming.’
‘There’s no need for Your Majesty to be alarmed,’ she said demurely. ‘I don’t bite.’
‘But you do pursue. When you contrived to get yourself a place at the press reception—oh, yes, I know that too—you were in pursuit, were you not?’
‘That’s right.’
‘And I was the prey?’
‘Naturally. I only pursue the big bears. They’re the most rewarding.’
He looked down at her with a faint, curious smile. ‘And do you think you’ll find me “rewarding”?’
‘I’m not sure yet. It depends whether you give me what I want.’
‘And is that how you judge men—by whether they give you what you want?’
Lizzie raised delicate eyebrows in well simulated surprise. ‘But of course. What other yardstick is there?’
‘Are you by any chance trying to flirt with me, Miss Boothe?’
‘Certainly not,’ she said, shocked. ‘It would be improper for any woman to flirt with the King.’
‘True.’
‘It’s for the King to flirt with her.’
Her demure tone took him off guard, and he frowned, as though unsure that he’d heard her correctly. Then he smiled, cautiously.
‘And if the King didn’t flirt with her?’ he asked. ‘Might she not show a little enterprise in the matter?’
‘She wouldn’t dare,’ Lizzie informed him, straight-faced. ‘Lest he think her impertinent.’
‘I don’t think you fear the opinion of any man, Miss Boothe.’
‘But Your Majesty is a king, not a man.’
‘Is that what you think?’
She looked straight into his face, saying demurely, ‘I’m waiting for you to tell me what to think.’
‘By heaven, you’re a cool one!’ he exclaimed softly.
‘But of course. A woman would need to stay cool when entering the bear’s cave,’ she pointed out. ‘Unless she’s well protected.’
‘You, I think, are protected by your effrontery.’
‘Oh, dear! I have offended Your Majesty.’
His eyes gleamed. ‘Do not fish for compliments, Miss Boothe.’
‘Is that what I was doing?’ she murmured.
‘Yes. And it was quite unnecessary.’
There were a dozen ways to take that but, raising a questioning eyebrow to him, she sensed exactly what he was telling her and a swift excitement scurried through her veins.
She hadn’t meant this to happen. So far and no further. That had been the idea. Flirt with him, intrigue him until he was putty in her hands. It had worked before.
‘Use your charms to bring them to heel,’ Dame Elizabeth had always advised. ‘What else are charms for?’
But it had never been part of the plan for him to charm her. Now matters were getting out of hand. Beneath his stiff exterior this man had a devil in his eyes. Lizzie had an uneasy feeling that he’d sized her up and decided he could deal with her.
But how? That was the question that made her blood race. Whatever the answer she decided she was going to enjoy it, and if she could gain her professional goals as well, so much the better.
‘The music is ending,’ Daniel observed. ‘But our talk is just beginning. I’ve ordered champagne served on the terrace.’
Two hundred pairs of eyes watched him lead her from the floor and through the French windows that led onto the broad terrace. A footman was just laying down a tray bearing two fluted glasses and a bottle. Daniel waved him away, indicated for Lizzie to sit at the small table, and himself did the pouring.
‘So you’re writing a book about my grandfather?’ he said, putting the glass into her hand and seating himself opposite. Through the tall windows Lizzie could see couples swirling by as the dance resumed, and hear the soft swell of music. But she was intensely conscious of the King, watching her closely, as though she was the only person in the world. ‘Why do you wish to do this?’
‘Because he’s fascinated me all my life,’ she replied. ‘Aunt Lizzie told me so much about him, and about Voltavia. She made it sound like a wonderful country.’
‘It is a wonderful country. And I know she had many admirers there. Among whom, of course, was the King.’