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The Crown. Кира КассЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Crown - Кира Касс


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Leger sighed. “We’ll call it eating.”

      Dad shot him a look that would have been threatening to some but only made the general smile. “I’ll see if I can sneak some food in so you won’t have to leave.”

      Dad nodded. “Look out for my girl.”

      “Of course.” General Leger winked at me, and I stood up and followed him from the room, looking back at Mom just to check.

      Still asleep.

      In the hallway, he held out an arm for me. “You ready, my not-quite queen?”

      I took it and smiled. “No. Let’s go.”

      As we made our way to the boardroom, I nearly asked General Leger if he would take me for another lap around the floor. The day felt so overwhelming already that I wasn’t sure I could do this.

      Nonsense, I told myself. You’ve sat in on these meetings dozens of times. You’ve almost always thought the same things Dad has said. Yes, this is your first time leading it, but this was always waiting for you. And no one is going to be hard on you today, for goodness’ sake; your mother just had a heart attack.

      I pulled the door open with purpose, General Leger trailing behind me. I made sure to nod at the gentlemen as I passed. Sir Andrews, Sir Coddly, Mr. Rasmus, and a handful of other men I’d known for years sat arranging their pens and paper. Lady Brice looked proud as she watched me sweep around to my father’s spot, as did the general when he settled into the place beside her.

      “Good morning.” I took my seat at the head of the table, gazing down at the thin folder in front of me. Thank goodness the agenda looked light today.

      “How is your mother?” Lady Brice asked solemnly.

      I should have written this answer on a sign so I could stop repeating it. “She’s asleep still. I’m not sure how serious her condition is at the moment, but Dad is staying by her side, and we’ll be sure to update everyone if there’s any change.”

      Lady Brice smiled sadly. “I’m sure she’ll be fine. She always was a tough one.”

      I tried to hide my surprise, but I didn’t realize Lady Brice knew my mother that well. In truth, I didn’t know that much about Lady Brice myself, but her tone was so sincere, I was happy to have her beside me at the moment.

      I nodded. “Let’s get through this so I can tell her my first day on the job was at least slightly productive.”

      There were gentle chuckles around the room at that, but my smile quickly faded as I read the first page presented to me.

      “I hope this is a joke,” I said dryly.

      “No, Your Highness.”

      I turned my eyes to Sir Coddly.

      “We feel this was a deliberate move to debilitate Illéa, and seeing as neither the king nor queen gave their consent, France has essentially stolen your brother. This marriage is treasonous, so we have no choice but to go to war.”

      “Sir, I assure you, this was not treasonous. Camille is a sensible girl.” I rolled my eyes, hating to admit it. “It’s Ahren who’s the romantic one, and I feel certain he urged her into this, not the other way around.”

      I balled up the declaration of war, unwilling to consider it for another moment.

      “My lady, you cannot do that,” Sir Andrew insisted. “The relations between Illéa and France have been tense for years.”

      “That is more on a personal level than a political one,” Lady Brice offered.

      Sir Coddly waved his hand in the air. “Which makes this all much worse. Queen Daphne is brandishing more emotional suffering on the royal family under the assumption that we will not respond. This time we must. Tell her, general!”

      Lady Brice shook her head in frustration as General Leger spoke. “All I will say, Your Highness, is that we can have troops in the sky and on the ground within twenty-four hours if you command it. Though I certainly wouldn’t advise you to make that command.”

      Andrews huffed. “Leger, tell her the dangers she’s facing.”

      He shrugged. “I see no danger here. Her brother got married.”

      “If anything,” I questioned, “shouldn’t a wedding bring our two countries closer? Isn’t that why princesses were married off for years?”

      “But those were planned,” Coddly stated in a tone that implied I was a little too naive for the conversation at hand.

      “As was this,” I countered. “We all knew Ahren and Camille would wed one day. It simply happened sooner than expected.”

      “She doesn’t get it,” he muttered to Andrews.

      Sir Andrews shook his head at me. “Your Highness, this is treason.”

      “Sir, this is love.”

      Coddly slammed a fist on the table. “No one will take you seriously if you do not act decisively.”

      There was a beat of silence after his voice stopped echoing around the room, and the entire table sat motionless.

      “Fine,” I responded calmly. “You’re fired.”

      Coddly laughed, looking at the other gentlemen at the table. “You can’t fire me, Your Highness.”

      I tilted my head, staring at him. “I assure you, I can. There’s no one here who outranks me at the moment, and you are easily replaceable.”

      Though she tried to be discreet, I saw Lady Brice purse her lips together, clearly determined not to laugh. Yes, I definitely had an ally in her.

      “You need to fight!” he insisted.

      “No,” I answered firmly. “A war would add unnecessary strain to an already stressful moment and would cause an upheaval between us and the country we are now bound to by marriage. We will not fight.”

      Coddly lowered his chin and squinted. “Don’t you think you’re being too emotional about this?”

      I stood, my chair screeching behind me as I moved. “I’m going to assume that you aren’t implying by that statement that I’m actually being too female about this. Because, yes, I am emotional.”

      I strode around the opposite side of the table, my eyes trained on Coddly. “My mother is in a bed with tubes down her throat, my twin is now on a different continent, and my father is holding himself together by a thread.”

      Stopping across from him, I continued. “I have two younger brothers to keep calm in the wake of all this, a country to run, and six boys downstairs waiting for me to offer one of them my hand.” Coddly swallowed, and I felt only the tiniest bit of guilt for the satisfaction it brought me. “So, yes, I am emotional right now. Anyone in my position with a soul would be. And you, sir, are an idiot. How dare you try to force my hand on something so monumental on the grounds of something so small? For all intents and purposes, I am queen, and you will not coerce me into anything.”

      I walked back to the head of the table. “Officer Leger?”

      “Yes, Your Highness?”

      “Is there anything on this agenda that can’t wait until tomorrow?”

      “No, Your Highness.”

      “Good. You’re all dismissed. And I suggest you all remember who’s in charge here before we meet again.”

      As soon as I finished speaking, everyone other than Lady Brice and General Leger rose and bowed—rather deeply, I noted.

      “You were wonderful, Your Highness,” Lady Brice insisted once the three of us were alone.

      “I was? Look at my hand.” I held it up.

      “You’re


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