Mikel sat back in his chair. “You don’t need to look so nervous. If I thought there would be a problem, I would postpone the trip.”
She’d started to relax when Mikel said, “I’ve decided to present your case against Odette to the king this afternoon. We’re meeting him at four o’clock at the palace.”
“We?” Quinn squeaked out.
“I will lay out the facts and suppositions, but I want you there to fill in any details the king might need clarification on.” Mikel gave her a faint smile. “You did a good job of convincing me there’s enough smoke to look for a fire. Now we will need to persuade el rey of the same.”
Shit. She’d rather face Dupont than the king. She swallowed hard. “Do you want me to polish up the report I gave you?”
“I’ve already taken care of that.” Her boss touched the knot of his tie. “It’s going to require some delicate maneuvering, but I will try to get Luis to tell us more about his relationship with Mademoiselle Fontaine. We need to know what set her off. He might give us some insight into that.”
“I assume you’ll do all the talking, and I’ll just take mental notes?” Interrogating a king was way outside her comfort zone.
“If you have a question or need more information, you should not hesitate to speak up. The king wants this investigation closed successfully.”
It would need to be a very important question for her to open her mouth without prompting.
There was one other thing she didn’t want to talk about but needed to. Her boss had done her the courtesy of keeping her secret from everyone but the king. “Last night, I told Gabriel about my criminal record.”
The hard lines of Mikel’s face softened a fraction. “When your father showed up here, I expected you would have to.”
“I didn’t tell him about my father’s part in it.”
“I see,” Mikel said. “How did it go?”
“He’s much too forgiving. And naïve. He thinks that my past won’t matter to his family.”
“Perhaps, because it is your history and you lived through it, you exaggerate its importance.”
Mikel thought it wasn’t a big deal? Was he crazy? “Maybe if Gabriel was just a regular person, his family could get past it. But he’s a royal duke. His parents and the king don’t want a criminal besmirching their noble name. And then there’s my father. Not a limb you want on your family tree.”
“You’re taking the sins of your father onto yourself again?” His eyebrows were raised.
“I’m not, but the media would.”
Mikel shrugged. “If it’s too much for you to face, I understand. You came here to get away from all that.”
“I can face it and then some.” She couldn’t let Mikel think she was worried about herself. “But Gabriel would try to protect me, and it would torment him when he couldn’t. The last thing I want is to add to his stress.”
“Perhaps you should allow Gabriel to make that decision. He has extensive experience with the media, you know.”
“He is a hero. I’m a criminal.” She could blame her fear on media exposure and the disapproval of Gabriel’s family, but deep down, she knew herself to be unworthy of such a man. That was the real problem.
“Don’t you believe in absolution?” Mikel asked.
Not when she was still lying to the man she loved.
Quinn sat in the maroon armchair beside Mikel’s, trying to make herself invisible. King Luis sat in a huge leather chair behind a massive desk over which frilled dragons frolicked among Calevan lilies, all carved in some exotic, highly grained wood.
She’d seen the king being a concerned father and uncle on the jet. He had been a benevolent host during her dinner in the palace. Today, Luis was definitely being a king.
His navy suit fit him without a wrinkle, and his yellow tie glowed against a snow-white shirt. He wasn’t wearing a crown, but he held his head high as though a jeweled diadem encircled his brow.
He had greeted Mikel and her with a businesslike dip of his chin and plunged right into the meeting. Mikel had warned her on the way to the palace that Luis was squeezing their meeting into his schedule, so there would be no small talk.
She tried not to cringe as Mikel laid out her skimpy case against Odette. Her boss did a masterful job of highlighting the pattern of the connections, but Quinn could see skepticism tightening the king’s jaw.
When Mikel finished his summary, the king raised his eyebrows. “That’s it?”