“I can’t believe,” Princess Kathryn, fourth in line to the Alaskan throne, whispered, “there’s hardly anybody here but the family.”
Prince David, first in line to the throne, grinned. He looked more relaxed than anybody could ever recall; the general consensus was that marriage and fatherhood agreed with him immensely. He was wearing a dark gray suit with a royal blue shirt and a gray tie dotted with tiny rockhopper penguins. His shoes, thanks to a tireless staff, were shined to a high gloss. David, thanks to a royal upbringing, didn’t notice. “Hey, Chris insisted. No press, no big deal, no fuss, no—you know.”
“I know what she insisted on,” his sister replied. Kathryn was six months away from ridding herself of the hated braces, and was the promise of truly breathtaking beauty, with the classical Baranov coloring: sinfully dark hair, enormous, crystal blue eyes. “Like I said, I just can’t believe she pulled it off.”
“Dad’s fond of her.”
“Tell me. It’s like having the sister I never wanted,” she added with a mock sigh.
They were standing in the left foyer of the palace chapel, where Prince Nicholas (sixth in line to the throne) quickly joined them.
“Are we ready? Is everybody here?”
“Well,” David said, “the baby’s not here. And Chris isn’t here. And the Alexes aren’t here. And Dad—”
“Cool your jets, everybody,” the king said, stepping in through a side door, his majordomo, Edmund, right on his heels. “I said I’d be here, didn’t I? Right? Right. So what the hell’s the holdup? Can we get this over with, please? Now? Please?”
“How did you get him into that suit?” David asked, losing his usual smooth manners and gaping at his father.
“A crow bar,” Edmund replied smoothly. “Are we ready to begin?”
“Well, the godparents aren’t here.”
“Ah.” Edmund pretended to consult his program, when everyone in the room (possibly the palace) knew he’d been the one to write it. “Prince Alexander and Princess Alexandria. And where is Her Highness, Princess Dara?”
A shrill whistle burst through the air and they all looked through the foyer door, across the front of the chapel, and into the opposite door, where Christina was holding the baby and waving madly.
“She came in through the wrong door,” Edmund sighed.
“She probably didn’t read the—I mean, she probably didn’t pay attention to—” Princess Kathryn blushed to her eyebrows, then added, “I mean, doesn’t she look gorgeous? Purple is definitely her color.”
“Kid looks like an eggplant with arms,” the king muttered, sticking a finger under his collar and giving it the tenth wrench of the morning. When David swung around, eyebrows raised, he hastily added, “A good-looking eggplant. Jesus! Can we please get the fucking show on the road? I could be in a fishing boat right this minute.”
“Don’t say ‘fucking’ in church, Dad,” Nicholas corrected, running a hand through his cap of blonde curls. He was the only child of the king who looked nothing like his father. It had caused some trouble in the past; the late queen had been known to dally with men not her husband. “We’re just waiting on the Alexes. You’ll be on a boat by three. Suppertime, prob’ly, at the latest.”
The king wriggled in his suit coat. “I hate these things.”
“We all do, Dad.”
“Shush, Your Highness. Your Majesty, stop fidgeting or I shall defect instantly to America.”
“Ha! That’s a bluff I’ll damn well call!”
“Shhhhhhhhhhh, Dad!”
“Don’t shush me, you little creep, you’re not too big to spank.”
“I’m two inches taller than you are, Dad,” Prince David explained patiently.
“Ah, tensions are running high,” Princess Alexandria said, entering the foyer. She was wearing a shin-length, long-sleeved blue silk dress the exact color of her eyes. As it was a “casual” affair, no one was wearing their crowns or any royal insignia. “My timing is perfect. Has Edmund threatened to move to the States yet?”
“Aw, shaddup,” the king told her.
Alex peeked into the chapel, spotting several familiar faces…mostly staff and a few friends of the family. For the Baranovs, a typical low-key affair. Christina had insisted and the king had agreed: Dara had the entire rest of her life to be in the spotlight. Today was for family and friends.
Alex waved to Christina, who wiggled Dara’s hand back, making it look like the baby was waving. Ugh. New parents were so weird. “She came in the wrong door,” she muttered to Edmund.
“Jenny couldn’t get her to pay much attention to the program,” Edmund muttered back. “Your Highness, if I may make so bold, are you feeling all right?”
“I’m fine, Edmund.”
“You look tired.”
Alex guiltily felt the dark circles under her eyes and repeated, “I’m fine.”
“What the hell is the hold-up now?” the king bitched. “The baby’s here, the parents are here, the goddamn family shrink is here”—as one, they all peeked through the foyer and waved to Dr. Pohl, seated proudly in the third row—“the godmother’s here. Can we please get this damned thing started?”
“Please don’t refer to my daughter’s christening as a damned thing,” David said mildly, hands in his pockets.
“Prince Alex is running a bit late,” Edmund admitted. “In fact, I expected him ten minutes ago. Perhaps he—”
“He’s missing? Alex is gone?”
“Your Highness, I’m sure it’s a simple mix-up—”
“Has anyone called him? Have you called his assistant? Did anyone look for him?” Alex could hear her voice rising with hysteria, but it was like she was outside herself, watching. Unable to stop. “When was the last time someone saw him?”
The king was staring at her. Everyone was staring at her. “Whoa, kid, simmer down.”
“Simmer down?” she nearly shrieked. “One of us is gone and I’m supposed to lie back and take it easy? What if he’s been kidnapped? What if the bad guys are taking him away right now? Why isn’t anyone doing something?”
From the other side of the chapel, Christina thrust the baby into her startled assistant’s arms, and darted across, passing the altar and the masses of red and yellow tulips decorating the sanctuary. “What’s the matter? What’s wrong?”
“Alex is gone! Nobody can find him! He’s—”
“He’s right over there with me! He came in the wrong door, too, just about half a minute ago. See?” Christina yanked the princess over to the door and bellowed, “Alex!”
After a second, the princess saw her younger brother, fourth in line to the throne, wave, and hurry across, waving again to the patiently seated onlookers.
“Don’t have a cow, man,
I might have overslept some
But everything’s fine.”
“How long do we have to suffer the haikus,” Kathryn demanded, “because he lost a bet?”
“How many times do I have to tell you to cut…that…shit…out…” Odd. Everyone was tipping away from her, and now she could see Christina’s face, an oval of concern directly above her, but it was receding, pulling back, and why,