
Off-Limits to the Crown Prince
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Kali Anthony
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CHAPTER ONE
HANNAH STOOD IN a shaft of bright sunlight at the rear of her studio. A sickening pulse beat in her chest. The dizzying smell of paint and solvent, usually a reminder of everything she loved, threatened to overpower her. She hurried to the window and threw it wide open onto the rambling tangle of a cottage garden. Gulped in the warm, summerâs air.
The hollyhocks were in bloom.
Her mother had loved the hollyhocks best of all the flowers growing here.
âMiss Barrington?â A bodyguard. One of three mountains of men whoâd arrived minutes before. Two of whom were now stalking through the place, assessing her home for any risk. The one staying with her frowned, no doubt concerned she might be letting in an assailant to harm their employer, whose arrival was imminent. As if she could organise anything like that with the half-hourâs warning of his impending visit her agent had given.
âThe smell of paint.â She waved her hand about like she was shooing away any offending scents. âIt might irritate His Highness.â
The man nodded, likely satisfied she was thinking of his employerâs comfort. They probably wouldnât care about hers, or that in this moment it was like a hand had grabbed round her throat and squeezed. She took another deep breath. The bodyguard stationed himself at the doorway separating her studio from the rest of the house and crossed his arms as though he were guarding her. Did she look as if she were about to run?
Tempting, but there was nowhere else to go.
Her country cottage, the family home. Her safe place and haven was all she had left of her parents. She looked around the bright room sheâd made her studio when sheâd been old enough to move out on her own. People said she was crazy to come back here, away from the city, to a place tired from nine years of tenants. But people didnât understand. Even though thereâd been a fresh lick of paint, no one had covered over the marks on the wall in the laundry where her parents had notched her height over the years. The low-ceilinged kitchen remained unrenovated, a place where theyâd sat to eat their meals and laughed. The whole place sang with those memories. The happy and the devastating.
The burn of tears pricked her eyes. Now all this was at risk. Her aunt and uncle had been her guardians. Looked after her inheritance when her parents had died. Taken in the broken teenager sheâd become. Sure, theyâd been distant rather than cruel, never having wanted children of their own and not knowing how to deal with her. But sheâd trusted them, and her uncleâs betrayal still cut deep and jagged. An investment she hadnât wanted gone terribly wrong. Almost everything, lost. Her father would be trying to claw his way out of the grave over the way his brother had behaved towards his only niece.
Everything seemed tenuous in this moment. Nothing else had broken her. Not her parentsâ death in the accident, not the loss of her horse and everything she loved. Sheâd clambered out of the well of grief on her own. Sure, her fingertips might have been bloody, nails torn, the scars carved into the soul of her waiting to open at any given moment. But to have to sell this, the little farm where sheâd lived some of the best days of her life? That would crack her open and no kingâs horses or men would ever be able to put those pieces back together again.
Perspiration pricked at the back of her head, a droplet sliding beyond the neck of her shirt, itching her skin. She moved closer to the window. Fished a hair tie from her jeans pocket, scraped her hair back and tied it up in a rough topknot.
The bodyguard looked down at her. Crossed his arms. âYou seem nervous.â
How could she tell him that his employerâs past and her own were inextricably bound? That his employer was the last person she wanted to see, because he was a reminder of the worst day of her life? Of teenage dreams destroyed?
âIâve never met a prince before.â It wasnât exactly a lie. âAnd I havenât had time to tidy up.â
The bodyguardâs gaze roved over her in a disapproving kind of way. She looked down at her hands. Nails short and blunt. Cuticles ingrained with paint. She grabbed an old rag and wet it with solvent, rubbing at her fingers in a vain effort to clean them. Perfect princes probably wouldnât admire commoners with filthy hands. Not that she was seeking admiration, but still. She supposed she had to keep up some kind of an appearance. After a short effort she dropped the now dirty rag on the tabletop and sniffed at her fingers, which smelled like pine.
She held them up. âBetter?â
The bodyguard grunted.
Hannah checked her phone. Still some time. She picked out a slender paintbrush and stood back from her easel. Her art usually calmed her, a way to lose herself in colour and light. Nothing could touch her when she was in the flow of a portrait. She tried to loosen the death grip of her fingers. Dipped her brush into some paint. A swipe of Tasman blue, a touch of titanium white. She frowned. The eyes in this portrait gave her trouble. Too much sadness, not enough twinkle. She reached out her brush to add a dash of colour near the pupil, trying to ignore the tremor in her hand.
The cheery tinkle of a doorbell rang through the room. Hannahâs paintbrush slipped from her fingers and clattered to the floor, leaving smudges of blue paint on the old boards.
The burn of bile rose to her throat. He was early. She left the portrait and wiped her damp palms on her jeans.
âRemember to curtsey,â the bodyguard said.
The teeth of anger bit her then, at this manâs disdain when she was the one being imposed upon today. Sheâd said no to this commission when it had first been proposed months ago, before she had had any idea how bad her finances were. His employer had ignored her refusal. It was just like saying no to her uncle when presented with a speculative investment. Heâd ignored her too. She gritted her teeth, hating that these people hadnât listened to her, as if her opinion were meaningless. But even though things were bad it didnât mean she had to grin and bear it.
Hannah stalked up to the man guarding the doorway and glared. He towered over her but she didnât care. She wasnât going to be pushed around, by anyone. Looming bodyguard or prince.
âI do have a concept of manners. And I understand how to behave around royalty.â
The man didnât move, but his eyes widened a fraction as if in surprise. Good.
A murmur of voices drifted down the hall. The tap of fine leather on floorboards grew louder. She backed further into the room, tried to swallow the knot rising in her throat but her mouth was dry.
A shadow appeared in the hall behind more security. Grew and grew till it took human shape, striding through the doorway.
âHis Royal Highness, Crown Prince of Lasserno,â the bodyguard announced.
Alessio Arcuri.
More beautiful than sheâd remembered, though the recollection was coloured by her youth at the time. Then, sheâd only caught thrilling glimpses of the handsome, fairy-tale prince, a rider on the showjumping circuit. The young man her teenage heart had crushed over with a terrifying ferocity. Now, she could fully appreciate the height and breadth of him. His severe yet tantalising and lush mouth. The perfection of his aquiline nose. The caramel of his sun-bronzed skin. The shock of his thick, dark hair. She could pretend her admiration was one of an artist surveying his commanding masculine shape. But who was she kidding? This was a distinctly female attraction to a male in his absolute prime.
After nine years, she still felt like that giddy teenager.
It made her prickly all over. Too big for her skin. She wanted to shed parts of herself like a husk, and come out more sparkling, more polished. Just more. Because she didnât need a mirror to realise she looked like some ruffian and he looked as if heâd walked straight from a red carpet.
She resented his perfection, when his snap visit with little warning meant sheâd had no time to tidy her own appearance. His exquisitely cut suit in the deepest of navy, a pristine white shirt. Red and blue tie in the finest of glowing silk. She was sure she stared before remembering her manners, dipping into a curtsey. âYour Highness.â
âSignorina Barrington.â He canted his head in a way that suggested she was adequate, then motioned to the man standing behind him. âThis is my private secretary, Stefano Moretti. Heâs been communicating with your agent.â
The other man was almost as perfectly attired and presented as his employer. Attractive, but without the indefinable presence of the Prince. She nodded to him. He smiled back.
âWelcome to my home and studio. Itâs a surprise and Iâm underprepared. I didnât expect royalty to drop by today. Would you like a tea?â She motioned to a battered table in the corner of her studio, the ancient electric kettle, some chipped cups.
Alessio looked to where sheâd indicated, gaze sliding over the table as though viewing a sad still life. No one came hereâthis was her private spaceâso there was no one to bother about damaged crockery. Personal sittings took place in her public studio on the outskirts of London. The one sheâd only recently given up, her uncleâs actions meaning it was an extravagance she couldnât afford. Yet seeing the room with Alessio in it reminded her how tattered and worn it seemed. Sheâd never worried before. This was her home. But all it took was a perfectly pressed prince to bring into screamingly sharp relief how threadbare her life had become.
âTea? No. I was in the area purchasing some horses, and, since youâve been ignoring my secretaryâs requests...â His voice had the musical lilt of Italian spoken in a glorious baritone. Honeyed tones she could listen to for hours. The voice of a leader that would echo on castle walls. One whose dictates would invariably be followed by most.
Not by her. She wasnât this princeâs subject.
âI havenât been ignoring them. My answer was clear.â
He hesitated for a second, cocked his head as if he were thinking. She had the curious sensation of being a specimen under glass.
âHave we met before?â
The high slash of his cheekbones, the strong brows. The sharply etched curve of his tempting lips. Eyes of burnt umber framed by the elegant curl of lamp black lashes. Hannah had never formally met him, but sheâd never forgotten him from the showjumping circuit. Alessio Arcuri was the kind of man to leave you breathless. The fearlessness as he rode. The sheer arrogance that he would make every jump successfully. And he did. Horse and rider the embodiment of perfection.
It was why she and her friend had been chattering away in the back of the car on that terrible day. Gossiping about why heâd retired from competition at the age of twenty-two, much to their teenage devastation. Now, it seemed so young. Back then, heâd been the epitome of an adult and everything a clueless sixteen-year-old craved to be. How he appeared to know, in a way that was absolute, his place in the world. The utter confidence of him, when Hannah was still trying to find her bearings. Then she dropped out of riding too, the deaths of her parents and her horse too much to bear. And sheâd tried not to think about Prince Alessio Arcuri since.
At least, until her agentâs call a little over half an hour ago, when all the memories sheâd bottled up had come flooding back.
âNo. We havenât met.â Not exactly. Heâd been handing out the first prize at a showjumping event sheâd competed in after his retirement had been announced. Her friend had won that day, Hannah a close second. Unusual for her but Beau had been off, as if her horse were foreshadowing the devastating events of only hours later. Sheâd been so envious of that first-prize ribbon. How sheâd coveted the handshake Alessio had given to her friend. Craved for him to acknowledge her. Then their eyes had met. Held. And for one perfect, blinding second her world had stopped turning.
After what had come later in the afternoon, those desires seemed childish. It had taken another terrible moment on that day for the world to stop turning a second time. It hadnât restarted.
His being here brought back too many memories of a split second when all her innocence and faith in the good of the world had ended. Riding passenger in the car driven by her friendâs parents. Rounding a corner, littered debris...the...carnage. Car and horsebox destroyed. Everything sheâd loved, gone. A freak accident. A tractor in the wrong place on a narrow country road. Hannah flinched. Shut her eyes tight against the horrible vision running like a stuttering film reel in her head.
âAre you all right, Signorina Barrington?â
She opened her eyes again. Nodded. Breathed. Stitched up the pain in her heart where it would stay for ever. Hannah didnât want to go back to that time, and if Alessio truly remembered he might start asking questions. She couldnât deal with them, not now.
Alessio looked at his bodyguards, standing as a brooding presence in the corner. Said something in rapid Italian and they bowed and left the room. The atmosphere relaxed a fraction.
âIâm here to discuss you painting my portrait.â
Hannah clasped her hands behind her back. âAs my agent would have told you, I have a number of commissions...â
Alessio stepped towards her and she was forced to look up because, whilst she wasnât tiny, he dwarfed her. He was even more astonishing up close. Nothing marred his features. It was as if no part of the man would deign to be anything less than polished and perfect. He held her transfixed with those velvety brown eyes of his. Till looking at him any more left her head spinning.
He must have taken her silence as reticence.
âYour fee. Iâll double it. And Iâm a prince, so...â
She stepped back. It was either that or lean into him and all his solidity in a moment when she felt a little broken. âI know what you are.â
What was she doing? Crucifying herself, that was what. She needed this commission, but she couldnât help herself. Sheâd made a promise when she first started painting, that sheâd only take the jobs she wanted. Trying to establish a connection with your subject could prove taxing some days. In the early stages after her parents died sheâd drawn them incessantly, terrified that the memory of how they looked would fade. Day and night she sketched, to perfect them so she could never forget. It had exhausted her, the obsession. Made her ill. Sometimes it still did when she became engrossed with a commission. It was why she chose so carefully.
Alessio Arcuri would never be a careful choice. Any connection with him could break her.
âThen I promise if you paint my portrait Iâll ensure everyone knows who you are. So far those youâve painted have been...inconsequential.â
Portraiture had never been about accolades, but about preserving memories. The minutiae, the nuance of a person. Sure, she was paid well for what she did, but it was never about simply being paid. It was about ensuring people werenât forgotten.
She looked at the portrait of the older woman currently on her easel. A believer in justice, lover of barley sugar and Yorkshire tea. âI wouldnât say a judge is nobody. The lawâs important, as is doing the right thing. But I mostly like painting pictures of people the world overlooks. They deserve their moment to be seen, to be remembered. Youâre seen all the time.â
Alessio shrugged. That movement seemed out of place on a man who appeared only to move when absolutely necessary. âIs anyone truly seen? The press often tries to paint pictures of me and theyâre rarely right.â
âWhat picture do they try to paint?â The cool command? The lack of emotion? She could imagine theyâd claim he was more automaton than real and relish finding the tiniest chink in his gleaming armour to take him down.
Alessio raised an eyebrow. âYou havenât looked me up on the internet? I thought you were renowned for knowing your subjects.â
âYouâre not my subject so I havenât needed to know you.â
âThe judge.â He inspected the painting, eyes narrowing as he stared at the woman on the canvas. âThat portrait tells stories. I want you to tell mine. Youâre the best. No one could see me like you could.â
Part of her wanted to mine the essence of him, because people fascinated her. But doing so had a cost and she wasnât sure she was prepared to pay it when Alessio reminded her of everything sheâd lost.
ââThe bestâ is subjective. I have terms for everyone I paint. My agent tells me you refused mine.â
Sue had been clear. You didnât say no to a prince. Hannah had to keep her options open... She knew what those ominous words meant. Once her uncleâs duplicity had been discovered, this meeting with the Prince had become necessary. Resented, but necessary none the less.
âIâm here now,â Alessio said. The hard, uncompromising set of his jaw told her he might register what she said but he wasnât really listening.
She turned her back on him and walked to a paint-splattered desk on which her palette and scattered half-used tubes of oil paint were strewn in the haphazard way of this whole room. She opened a drawer and pulled out a few papers, then walked back to where he stood and thrust them in his direction. He took them from her paint-ingrained fingers. Flicked through.
âAm I a cat or dog person?â His eyebrows rose in disbelief. âWhat is this?â
She took time with her subjects. The questionnaire was one small part. There were personal sittings, the live sketching. Sheâd been comfortable with each person sheâd painted so far. Had liked them and their quirks in their own way. But Alessio Arcuri? She wasnât sure she could. A personâs eccentricities, no matter how small, gave them personality. How could she do justice to this man, who didnât seem to have a quirk about him? He dazzled like a flawless gemstone.
âThose questions are the reason Iâm so good at what I do. I get to know my subjects. Intimately.â
At the last word his eyes widened a fraction. Surely he wouldnât think... Heat rushed to her cheeks. The corner of his mouth kicked up a minute fraction. The moment counted in milliseconds and then it was gone, before his attention returned to the paper in his hands. But even those seconds had her heart racing in an attempted getaway.
ââWhat is your best childhood memory?â âYour worst?ââ A frown marred his forehead. He thrust the pages back at her. âNo. If the press got hold of thisââ
âThey wonât.â She ignored his outstretched arm. âI read it, then destroy it. I also sign non-disclosure agreements for those who want them. No information has ever reached any press outlet from me. You could take some time and fill out my questions right here.â
He seemed to stand even taller now, imposing like the prince he was. She could even imagine the gleaming crown on his head.
âAll these people you paint. The press has no interest in them. Me? Iâm royalty. You know how tabloids clamour for stories. I give them none. But this?â He waved his hands over the offending document as if he were trying to bat away some pestilential bug set on biting him. âI donât answer twenty questions, for anyone.â
âThere are eighteen questions. But the number isnât important. You can tell me the answers.â
He dropped the papers on the table next to him. âYouâre a stranger.â
And that was the way it would stay for ever, even though there was something about this tussle Hannah began to enjoy. A tiny thrill that his interest still held, no matter how she pushed. It told her he really wanted her to paint him, stroking an ego she didnât realise needed attention. What would her sixteen-year-old self think now?
That young girl would think all her dreams had come true.
âHereâs the thing. Doing this allows me to paint at my best. The type of picture you seem to desire, seeing as youâre still standing in my studio. You want me to paint your portrait, then...double my fee and answer my questions.â She rose up, stiffening her spine to match him. If he was playing the prince card then sheâd pull a queen on him, because this studio was her domain and she ruled here exclusively. âYou can take it or leave it.â
Alessio hadnât expected a warm welcome, but heâd expected something more polite than this. Certainly, sheâd curtseyed as expected. A seemingly respectful bow of the head when he was sure none was meant, because her eyes had flashed a kind of warning, the whole of her bristling like some disapproving hedgehog. Cute, but all spike and prickle. Right now, she stood framed by the light from the windows behind her. Dark hair mussed in an unruly topknot. Dressed in a blue and white striped menâs shirt with a frayed collar, cuffs pushed back on her forearms, smeared and smudged with paint. Loose, ripped jeans. Trainers as paint-spattered as the rest of her.
Dishevelled and all the more enticing for it.
âI tend not to accede to ultimatums,â he said. Though he admired hers more than heâd admit. Sheâd hold her own with some of the best of his courtiers, this woman.
She glared at him, no respect meant there at all, and their eyes truly met. Hers were green, perhaps. Arresting. Their depth and swirls of colour transfixed him. She carried the world in that luminous gaze and something drove him to discover what lay behind it, when discovering anything about her other than whether she was prepared to paint his portrait was impossible. He pushed the interest aside.
Ruthlessly.
âI tend not to give ultimatums.â Her voice was deeper than heâd expected. Almost...aristocratic in its tone. It feathered his spine the way a stroke of her paint-ingrained fingers might. And in these moments he couldnât avoid the pressing sense of dĂ©jĂ vu, as if he was missing something. Everything about her seemed...strangely familiar.
She claimed not to know him but was as skittish as a colt in spring when heâd first mentioned it. Perhaps it had something to do with his security detail. They tended to suck the air out of the place with their professional brand of malevolence, which was why heâd asked them to leave. Stefano stayed, of course. Alessio didnât spend time alone with women he didnât know, not any more. There would be no ugly rumours. Everyone who surrounded him was carefully vetted and explicitly trusted. Heâd learned lessons about putting faith in the wrong person. His father might have courted the press with his outrageous behaviour but Alessio gave them nothing.
âWe seem to be at a stalemate,â he said.
She cocked her head. Raised her eyebrows. âYet youâre still here.â
Perhaps there was an answer which could accommodate everybody. His life had been spent trying to find solutions to every problem, mostly regarding his father. Heâd become an expert at it, spending his hours working to silence hints at his fatherâs worst excesses, the rumours about the missing gems from the crown jewels. As for Hannah Barringtonâwhen heâd asked Stefano to find the best portrait artist in the world he hadnât expected it to be a reclusive young woman of twenty-five, whose paintings looked as if they contained the experience and insight of a life long-lived. On viewing her portfolio of work, he knew heâd found the person for his portrait.
He turned to his secretary. As he did so, Hannah seemed to start towards him, then checked herself. Interesting. Did she think he was about to leave? Perhaps she wanted this commission more than she was prepared to admit? If so, everyone had their price. And he was prepared to pay a high price for her. Hannah Barrington was the best, and heâd have nothing less. âStart as you mean to finish,â his English nanny had used to say, teaching him her language as a young boy and what it meant to be leader of his principality. Better a foreigner who knew the value of royalty and duty, than his father, who valued none of those things. The lessons Alessio had learned at his knee were all about excess, indulgence and infidelity. Not the qualities of the leader Alessio wished to aspire to be.
Stefano raised an eyebrow as Alessio approached looking far too entertained at developments. His friend, partner in crime in the years gone by and now private secretary remained his most trusted confidant.
âIt gives me great satisfaction that thereâs one woman in the world whoâs immune to your charms,â Stefano said in their native Italian, presumably so Signorina Barrington couldnât understand. âAlthough youâre not being charming today.â
Whilst he knew it was rude, Alessio didnât switch to English, and wouldnât until he had his solution. âI need to know the state of my diary. Iâve no need to charm anyone.â
Heâd set aside that reputation years ago. Alessio would admit in his youth he had relished in the position his birth gave him. He wasnât proud of those things now, especially the string of women who had cemented his playboy reputation. Like father, like son, the press used to say. A creep of disgust curled inside him. Not now. An advantageous marriage to a perfect princess was next on his agenda. To give Lasserno the stability it had lacked since his motherâs death. Some heirs to continue his line. The royalty in Lasserno would soon be feted in its perfection, not mocked for its all too human failings. That was his mission, and he would succeed.
Stefano pulled up Alessioâs diary, showed it to him. Busy, but not impossible.
âYour problem is that you donât like people saying ânoâ to you,â Stefano murmured. In English this time.
How many times had he tried to stop his father? Curb his behaviour? It was what heâd ostensibly been brought home to do, ripped out of his life showjumping and studying in the UK when his mother had fallen ill, because at least when she was well sheâd formed some sort of brake on his fatherâs worst excesses. And yet when heâd brought up ideas to reinvigorate the economy and tourism in a country whose beauty and natural riches were equal to anywhere in their close neighbour, Italy, heâd been met with disparaging refusal. No answers as to why his ideas wouldnât work. Nothing at all.
Stefano was correct. Alessio didnât like being told no on things he was right about. Not without a sensible reason. Since his fatherâs abdication heâd not heard that cursed word from one of his government or advisors. It was...gratifying in a way he could never have imagined. A vindication of all heâd been trying to achieve over the years.
Alessio turned his attention to Hannah. Checked his watch. âI will not write answers to your questionnaire, but I do have some limited time in my schedule.â
Time he could control. Leaking of information he couldnât.
A slight frown creased her brow and he wasnât sure whether the disapproval was back, or whether something else was at play.
âThen I canâtââ
âMy calendar is free of more onerous engagements. You wish to know me to paint my portrait? Youâll travel to Lasserno. Become my official artist for two weeks. Follow me and learn about me. It should be enough.â
He could almost sense the weight of Stefanoâs incredulous stare but he didnât much care what his best friend thought at this moment. The woman in front of him had his complete focus. The plump, perfect peach colour of her mouth. The rockpool-green of her eyes. Eyes which stared deep inside as if they saw the heart of him. Eyes a man could drown in and die happy if he allowed himself, which Alessio could never do. It was no matter. He was used to compartmentalising that side of himself. There would be no rumours of improper behaviour on his part. His life was one of supreme control, Lasserno his only mistress.
She planted her paint-stained hands on her hips. âNow, look. Thatâsââ
âNot your process. Iâm aware. This will be better.â
He could get anyone else to paint him. Most people would climb over themselves to take the commission and the accolades it would afford. In coming to his decision heâd been shown the work of many artists who were all superb and could acquit themselves admirably. The minute he saw Hannah Barringtonâs work, he knew. It was her he must have. No one else would do. And yet here she stood, utterly uncompromising. As if she were still intent on refusing him. The challenge of it set his pulse beating hard. Heâd not felt anything like it since the last time heâd taken his stallion, Apollo, over the high fence behind the vineyards on the castle grounds.
âI have other clients.â Whilst her hands were still firmly on her hips, her teeth worried furiously at her bottom lip.
âYou have an agent. She can tell clients youâre painting a portrait of a prince. Theyâll understand, because my patronage will increase the value of their own pictures. I promise, this commission will be the making of you.â
âItâs two weeks away from my home. Youâre not the only busy person in the room.â All the glorious fire in her, such a contrast to the cool mint of her eyes. For a moment he wished he were an ordinary man who could explore these ordinary desires, but that was a folly he would not indulge in.
This portrait, the perfect portrait, would show the world exactly how he meant to carry on his role as a leader. It would be the best. He would be the best prince Lasserno had seen in its long and proud history. He would write over his fatherâs legacy, scratching it out in a neat and perfect script till it disappeared and was forgotten.
Hannah was the first piece in a larger puzzle. Time to sweeten the deal. To make it irresistible.
âIâll offer you five times your normal fee for the inconvenience.â
Her nostrils flared, and her eyes sparked at the mention of increasing her fee. Avarice was something he understood, a common currency, and he was happy to fuel it so long as it was legal and he got his way in the end. His former girlfriend, Allegra, was a perfect study in how money won over loyalty. Luckily he had more than the reporter had offered for a story on how his father had been picking gems from the crown jewels and giving them away as favours. Replacing them with paste. Heâd never forgotten the lessons learned in that episode about unburdening yourself to the wrong person.
Hannah opened her mouth to speak. Alessio held up his hand, because there was more.
âBut you accompany me as official palace artist in residence. You wonât receive a better offer from any other client,â he said with a smile which felt like victory. âTake it...or leave it.â




