“Sure. Mama kept complaining about how much trouble you were. I got tired of hearing it and told her to take you there. I knew, ah, you’d be cared for real well. So how’d you get here?”
“I took a teaching job at the convent school here. I’m a teacher.”
Darlene looked amused. “Seriously? You teach children? Interesting.”
Kayleen watched her move around the room. “Your last name is Dubois?”
Darlene nodded without looking at her. She lifted up a small Waterford clock, as if checking the weight and the value.
“Is that my last name?”
Darlene glanced at her. “What are you talking about?”
“I never knew. When my grandmother dropped me off at the orphanage, I didn’t know my last name. Everyone in the house had a different one. Grandmother wouldn’t say which was mine. I had to make one up.”
Darlene grinned. “I made mine up, too. What did you pick?”
“James. From the King James Bible.”
“I prefer Tennessee Williams myself.” Darlene started opening cabinets. “Can you drink in this place?”
“Yes. Right there.” Kayleen pointed to the carved doors hiding the fully stocked wet bar.
Darlene found the ice and fixed herself a vodka tonic, then took a long drink. “Better,” she said with a sigh. She walked to the sofa and sat down, then patted the seat next to her. “You’re going to start at the beginning and tell me everything.”
Kayleen stayed where she was. “About what?”
“The story here. You’re really engaged to that prince?”
“Yes. There will be a formal announcement in a few weeks and a wedding in the spring.”
Darlene took another drink. “So you’re not pregnant. I’d wondered if you were.”
Kayleen tried not to be insulted. “I didn’t have to trick As’ad into marrying me.”
“Of course not. I didn’t mean to imply you would. Still, you have to be sensible. Do you have a prenuptial agreement? How many millions is he offering? Do you have an attorney? I wonder if you could get one to fly out and help.”
Kayleen took a step back. “I don’t need an attorney. As’ad has promised the girls and I will be taken care of.”
“And you believe him? You’re lucky I’m here.”
Kayleen doubted that. “Why are you here?”
“Because I finally found my long-lost daughter.”
“You knew I was in the convent all those years. That’s hardly lost.”
Darlene shrugged. “You’re much more interesting now, honey.”
“Because of As’ad.” It wasn’t a question.
“Partly. Oh, Kayleen, life was hard for me when you were young. I couldn’t take care of a baby, I was just a baby myself. You’re grown-up. You can see that. Then I lost track of you. But now we’re together.”
Kayleen found it difficult to believe she would have been so hard to find.
Darlene stood. “I’m your mother. I want what’s best for you. If you really expect this prince to marry you, you’re going to have to keep him interested. I can help you with that. Otherwise, some rich socialite will steal him away. We don’t want that, do we?”
“I find it hard to believe you care anything about me,” Kayleen said, feeling both anger and guilt. What was she supposed to believe? “You never did before.”
“Don’t say that. Of course I cared. But I had a career. You were better off with those nuns. They took real good care of you.”
“How would you know?”
“It’s the kind of people they are. Am I wrong?”
“No,” Kayleen told her. “They’re exactly who you’d think they would be.”
“Then you should thank me.” She walked to the bar and fixed a second drink. “I’m not leaving, Kayleen. The king thinks he’s done you a big favor, finding me and bringing me here. I, for one, agree with him. You’re my baby girl and that means something to me. We’re going to get to know each other, you and I. Now run along. I need to rest. We’ll talk about this more later.”
Kayleen left. Not because she’d been told to, but because she couldn’t stand to be there anymore.
She didn’t know what to think about Darlene. She’d never really allowed herself to imagine what her mother was like—it hurt too much to think about all she’d lost. But this woman wasn’t anyone’s fantasy.
Then Kayleen thought about what the Mother Superior would say about judging someone so quickly. Maybe Darlene was sorry about their lost relationship. Maybe they could at least learn to be friends. Didn’t Kayleen owe her to give her a chance to prove herself?
Chapter Twelve
K ayleen returned to her suite, but she couldn’t seem to settle down. Not with her mother so close. Just a wall away.
It was her own fault for lying, she reminded herself. If she’d told King Mukhtar the truth, none of this would have happened. But she hated talking about how her mother didn’t want her and her grandmother abandoned her. It sounded sad and pathetic. So she’d made up a more comfortable version and now she was stuck with it.
She walked to the French doors and started to open them, then remembered her mother was right next door. She didn’t want another run-in with her. She turned back to pace the room when someone knocked.
Kayleen froze, afraid of who would be there. The door opened and As’ad stepped inside.