Until last night, Jade had barely left her home. As she was the only heir her father had acknowledged in recent years, there could be no risk of them both being in an accident. So they’d never travelled together. Jade had been strictly limited in where she could go, what she could do. Her entire life had been spent preparing for the role she was destined to fulfil. She’d studied several languages, history, geography, absorbed political and diplomatic theory, mastered manners and etiquette and, most of all, emotional control. She’d learned never to let fear or hurt or anger show—for, according to her father, a monarch must remain impassive in public. That was absolute.
Pretty ironic given that, behind that pretty palace facade, her parents’ separation had been so acrimonious and bitter that they’d forced Jade and Juno apart when they were only eight. Jade, as firstborn, had remained with her father to be groomed as future Queen, while Juno had been sent to the United States with her mother. It was a decision Jade still struggled to forgive, even all these years later. She’d been forbidden to see her mo
ther again. And their authoritarian father had disapproved of their mother’s more permissive parenting style and the defiance that an independent Juno wasn’t afraid to display when she was allowed to visit for holidays that were too brief. Finally, in the summer in which they’d turned sixteen, Juno had stormed from their father’s autocratic displeasure in Monrova, never to return.
‘I expect my employees to be team players and to value their colleagues.’
Alvaro Byrne’s stinging rebuke had stopped Jade in her tracks. Juno had suffered enough thanks to one unforgiving man, Jade wasn’t letting it happen again. Especially not for something so minor. No one was as loyal as Juno, and this jerk hadn’t even given her the chance to explain.
In the past Jade’s only act of defiance had been to stay in touch with Juno after that last fight, despite her father’s ever-looming disapproval. A month before they’d turned eighteen their mother had passed, leaving Juno alone and isolated miles away. Jade had been prevented from going to the funeral and unable to offer any real comfort and Juno had made it clear she had no desire to return to Monrova. Jade had learned to bypass the Internet security wall that had previously stopped her from seeing her sister’s social media postings and they’d video conferenced when they could. Juno had regaled her with tales of her life as the media-dubbed ‘Rebel Princess’ in New York...
But Juno still hadn’t come back when their father had died just a year ago. And while her choice had saddened Jade, she’d understood that some things were so painful they were impossible to overcome...or at least, took a long, long time. So Juno’s surprise visit to Monrova at the weekend had been the best thing ever. And her suggestion of a three-week twin-switch?
Yes, it absolutely was crazy. But Juno needed time in her own country—she needed time to understand the heritage and the life that had been denied her.
And yes, there was a selfish element to Jade’s ready agreement. For Jade to have just a little time to herself and live like a ‘normal’ person with relative anonymity? To experience a few of those freedoms that only a city like New York could offer? To have time to herself before fulfilling her late father’s last wish? And Christmas—an actual special, even if alone, Christmas. She’d barely been able to admit it even to herself, but the chance to experience life a little more ‘normal’ had been irresistible.
‘How could you just ignore their calls?’
There was that emotive edge in Alvaro Byrne’s tone that had scalded Jade. It seemed her ‘little more normal’ now included dealing with Juno’s irate boss at work. She was determined to defuse this situation. Duty—responsibility—was everything and right now she was responsible for Juno’s reputation.
Jade had her own challenging choice ahead. She would do anything for her country—even marry the man her father had decided would be the best match for her politically. Since his death, her advisors had unanimously insisted that the marriage was still the best course of action for both Monrova and for Queen Jade herself. If it was, then of course she would do it. But Juno had been horrified that Jade was even considering marriage to King Leonardo of Severene—the neighbouring nation—and she’d wanted to give Jade space to consider everything. Juno had handed over her phone, passport, passwords...and Jade had been swept along by her twin’s insistence and enthusiastic assurance that they could pull this off.
Because she’d not just wanted it, she’d needed it too.
But Juno had said there was no need for Jade to go into her work as she could work from home in this last week before the office closed early for the Christmas break, lessening the chances of someone suspecting their switch. Only when Jade had landed at the airport in New York and turned on Juno’s phone, it had pinged incessantly, signalling an insane amount of messages and voicemails. And this last—from the CEO himself—was the one that spurred Jade’s action now.
‘This is Alvaro Byrne.’
He was CEO of a conglomerate that had started with an eclectic suite of popular apps and mushroomed since to include both property and financial investments. Juno had been recruited to work in the social media marketing arm for the suite of apps, including that original fitness tracking one—Byrne IT. Juno had mentioned a minor issue at work in passing, but when Jade had looked online after hearing those messages, she saw the fuss was more major than Juno had realised and it was only escalating.
On her journey in from the airport, Jade had searched online for any information she could find about the office and her co-workers but there’d been little about the structure. So she’d listened again to the catalogue of increasingly concerned voice messages and memorised the names of the callers—grateful for the disciplined memory techniques drilled into her from a young age. Then she’d coiled her hair into a bun to hide the fact that hers was longer and straighter than Juno’s and hoped that her plain black trousers and white shirt were suitably ‘Juno office wear’. She figured her black coat covered much anyway, and if she could somehow fix this quickly, she could be out of there before the others arrived for the day.
Finally, at Byrne HQ, in Tribeca, she stared through the gleaming glass to the brightly lit, funky atrium of the repurposed brick-fronted industrial building. She shuffled through Juno’s battered wallet to find the office security card. To her relief the door lock clicked when she swiped it through the security pad. So Juno hadn’t been banned from the building, despite the unreasonable rancour in that man’s tone.
She quickly read the signs and ventured deeper into the quiet building. She shivered again, nerves biting. But she had no choice but to ignore their agreement for her to stay away from Juno’s work. She had to fix it so everything would be well when Juno returned. She knew this job mattered to her sister—she’d shut down the social media sites she’d been running for years because she’d wanted to pull back from that public ‘Rebel Princess’ persona. She’d wanted a normal marketing job for a company and to get some anonymity back. So, more than anything, Jade wanted to help her sister keep it.
Those two minutes that separated them as ‘heir’ and ‘spare’ were merely fate, but Jade hated that Juno had effectively been ejected from the kingdom. She knew her father’s hard-line stance stemmed from a deep, devastated hurt, but that didn’t make it okay. And Jade had been too scared to challenge her father on it. Too scared that if she too hurt him, or let him down in some way as her mother had, then she too would be rejected. She’d tried for years to be the perfect princess daughter. Now she had the chance to be a decent sister.
She took the elevator to the sixth floor, grateful for the clear signs. There was a large open-plan area with several desks in groups, separated by a couple of sofas, and a number of glass-walled offices ran along the side. How was she meant to know which was Juno’s desk? She paused, taking in the personal items on each one in the hope she might find a clue. Then she spotted an enormous hot pink coffee mug with Princess emblazoned on the side. Jade smiled the second she saw it, her amusement bubbling up. That ‘own it’ attitude was pure Juno. She wheeled her cabin bag up to the desk, shrugged out of her coat, hung it on the back of the swivel chair and eyed up the computer. All she needed to do now was get online, get a few messages and emails sent and she’d be out of here.
‘What do you think you’re doing?’
Jade wasn’t listening to that icy but irate phone message now, but there was no mistaking that voice. She instantly swung round, drawing in a breath to reply—but then she choked.
‘Oh.’ She gulped, staggered by the sight before her.
First impression? Skin. Second impression? Muscles. Third? Fury—in the heated tension in his tight stance. All of it up close and personal and towering over her.
Jade suddenly felt as if she were being incinerated from the inside out. Awareness—purely, mortifyingly, sexual—swamped her, frying her brain. He was huge. Like really, really tall and muscular in a way she wasn’t used to.
Of course, she wasn?
?t used to it.
The man was gleaming and hot—literally. She could almost see the steam rising from his body. Why—why—was his chest bare? Finally—far too late—she dragged her gaze up from his abs and pecs, past his wide shoulders to the tanned column of his neck, his sharp-edged jaw, grim-set mouth and then there, to the blazing anger in his amber eyes.
‘Juno, right?’ he said tightly. ‘You need to leave.’