Buying him, p.1

Buying Him, page 1

 

Buying Him
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Buying Him


  Buying Him

  The Royals of Avalone - Inheritance: Victoria Part 1

  E.V. Darcy

  Copyright © 2021 E. V. Darcy

  Cover Design © 2020 Victoria Smith

  All rights reserved.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  * * *

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other non-commercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed “Attention: Permissions Coordinator,” at the address below.

  Info@evdarcy.com

  For all the Ladies looking for their Prince Charming

  Contents

  Introduction

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Taking Him - Sample

  Also by E.V. Darcy

  About the Author

  Introduction

  Before immersing yourself into the world of The Royals of Avalone, please allow me to give you some information that will help your experience a little.

  The island nation of Avalone resides within the middle of the Atlantic Ocean and is tied loosely to Europe after it broke from English rule in the 1500s. However, it prefers to be self-sufficient, only forming trade deals where it absolutely must, and forgoing any involvement in other nation’s military matters. While they are a very insular nation, they hold a particular dislike for their British cousins.

  Due to their desire not to be reliant on other nations, Avalone uses the Gold Standard for their economy. Therefore, their money is valued differently to those who use the Dollar Standard.

  In Avalone they use bits, slivers, and crowns, with 100 bits making 1 sliver, and 100 slivers making 1 crown.

  A crown is worth 1 gram of gold, so the wealthy citizens of Avalone will often refer to having gold over having money. This is important to note, as at the time of writing the series 1 gram of gold is currently worth approx. £45.00 GB or $60.00 US. This means that having a million crowns is not the same as having a million pounds or dollars! This is something to keep in mind when reading… This is a very wealthy nation, and these are very, very wealthy people!

  For more information and history of Avalone, please visit www.evdarcy.com.

  Enjoy!

  Chapter One

  ‘I’m sorry, can you repeat that, please?’ Lady Victoria Snape asked, trying to process what the old coot in front of her had just said. The solicitor, the supposed best in all of Avalone, peered over her late father’s will at her and her equally flabbergasted sisters, as if his words had been perfectly understandable.

  But they couldn’t have heard him correctly; their father would never-

  The lawyer cleared his throat before he repeated, slowly, ‘The remaining two-thirds of your father’s estate will only be handed down to you and your sisters when—and if—you marry before the age of thirty-five.’

  Yes, she had heard him right, and yes, her father had indeed screwed them over. What in God’s name? Why would he put in such a barbaric clause? They weren’t living in Victorian Britain! As had always been the case in Avalone—since they had split from English rule in the sixteenth century—women were treated as equals to men; for as long as men had the right to work and receive an education, women had it too. So why the hell had their father done this?

  ‘Should you do so,’ the solicitor continued. ‘You will then be granted access to your share of the money-’

  ‘Access? What does that mean access?’ Lady Henrietta enquired, her eyes narrowed.

  Victoria, glad her younger sister had picked up on that point, was quickly brought back to there and then, to the finer details of the disgusting clauses their late father had tied to their inheritance.

  The lawyer sighed heavily, as if he were dealing with stupid little girls rather than fully grown, well-educated—well perhaps not Victoria—women, and it was starting to get on Victoria’s nerves.

  ‘Your Highnesses—’

  ‘Ladies,’ Lady Philippa corrected the man. ‘We are not Royal Highnesses. Never have been, never will be.’

  ‘Speak for yourself,’ Lady Alexandra sniffed impetuously. Victoria glared out of the corner of her eye towards her youngest sister. Being rich wasn’t the be-all and end-all of their lives, and they were very, very, blessed in that department—or had been until their father died—but their youngest sibling wasn’t on the same page as her three elder sisters. Alexandra wasn’t merely happy with holding the title of Lady, or being the daughter of the richest man in Avalone; no, she wanted a crown, and everything their mother hadn’t been able to give them.

  ‘Ladies,’ Victoria said with a sigh, calling her sisters back to the matter at hand. She rubbed her temples to try to stave off a headache. ‘Please, go on, Mr Daven.’ She managed a smile of contempt to the self-important twerp who, she was sure, fully supported her father’s conditions. Perhaps the bastard had even encouraged them. Maybe he’d put the idea in their father’s head.

  The lawyer nodded, removed his glasses, and began to fiddle with them as he recollected his thoughts. ‘Once you marry, the balance of your inheritance—allowing for any interest gains—will be held in a trust under your name. You’ll have a yearly stipend from it to ensure that your new family is taken care of-’

  ‘I can look after myself,’ Philippa muttered, but quickly bit her tongue when Victoria turned the glare her way. They had no idea how much influence the man had over the trust, but Victoria was certain he had some say in it.

  ‘Yes,’ Mr Daven nodded. ‘Of course you can.’ It was clear he didn’t really think she could. ‘But the stipend will be there should you need it. After the birth of your first child, then you’ll—’

  ‘What!’ Henrietta shrieked, practically jumping from her chair at the final nail in the coffin. ‘We’re being made to breed? Like bloody horse stock? I won’t have it,’ she shouted, smacking her hand on the solicitor’s large wooden desk. ‘I am thirty years old. I have attended two of the highest universities the world has to offer. I have a bloody PhD! I have no plans to have children, ever. And I will not be turned into some man’s chattel to get a bit of money and property.’

  ‘Hear, hear!’ Philippa stood and joined her sister’s side. ‘And if you must know, I run 2+2, one of the largest accountancy firms in the country… Actually, don’t we do your books?’

  ‘If they don’t marry, do I get the lot?’ Alexandra asked, peering around her older siblings who made noises of disbelief at her question. Victoria merely rolled her eyes, knowing full well of what Alexandra was capable.

  The man shifted in his chair, his shoulders straightening, an almost cat’s-got-the-cream gleam in his eye as his dry, shrivelled lips twitched in the corner.

  ‘Girls.’ Victoria said the single word her sisters knew meant business. Her voice was low, measured, as she eyed the unmoved lawyer; she had a sinking feeling the baby clause wasn’t going to be the worst thing they’d hear that day.

  ‘Mr Daven,’ Victoria said, feigning politeness. ‘Let me get this completely straight, so that none of us have the slightest misunderstanding. Father left a third of his fortune to charities’—the solicitor’s eye twitched at that—‘and left each of us an equal share of the remaining half a billion crowns, but we’re cut off from it and all its assets—the houses, cars, etcetera—until we marry. And we must marry before we turn thirty-five or we’ll never see a bit of it. Am I right so far?’

  ‘Quite.’

  ‘And should we marry before the deadline, we’ll have some access to our inheritance, but we’ll only receive control of our own fortunes once we bear a child?’ Again, the man nodded. Victoria sighed as she rubbed her tired eyes. The unexpected death of their father, the organisation of his funeral, and now… this, was starting to take its toll on her. ‘So, as Alexi said, what happens to the money should we not marry, or produce a child? Is there a time limit on the’—Victoria took a deep breath—‘the baby clause?’

  Mr Daven met the eyes of each one of them before answering, clearly expecting the fall-out that was about to take place. Victoria wanted to wrap her hands around his scrawny little neck for taking such glee from their predicament.

  ‘Should you marry, you’ll have five years to naturally produce a child—no adoptions, no fostering, no… medical treatments. Should any sister fail to meet any of the stipulations set in the will, their part of the inheritance will be given to the King for—’

  All four sisters exploded in a tirade of shock and horror, each declaring their outrage and disbelief that their father would do such a thing. There was no way, Victoria’s mind screamed, that their father would give his money to his wife’s family. A family that had all but disowned her for marrying him in the first place.

  ‘Over my dead body!’ Victoria declared, launching herself out of her chair. Mr Daven was unmoved. In fact, it seemed to give him more pleasure, as if he wanted her to react in

such a manner. ‘Those cretins will never get my father’s money. They treated Mother and Father like dirt and turned us all into outcasts, unworthy of their time or attention. Hell will freeze over before my grandfather, my aunts and uncles, or my cousins get their grubby hands on a single sliver of our father’s empire.’

  ‘Then you’ll have to get married.’ Mr Daven said the statement so matter-of-factly Victoria knew there was nothing else they could do. ‘And you, Lady Victoria, have barely six months. May I ask, are you currently engaged?’

  She narrowed her eyes and lifted her chin at the audacity of the man. ‘No, I am not.’ Even four years after her ex-fiancé had dumped her, it still stung, and she was sure that love was not in her future. It wasn’t that she hadn’t tried to find someone since. It was just that in comparison to her sisters, her cousins, and even her friends, Victoria wasn’t exactly noteworthy for her looks. Or her brains. Not even her career ambitions.

  No, there were only two things that endeared Lady Victoria Georgina Snape to men’s hearts: her royal connections and her father’s money. Maybe it was time to use those assets to her advantage.

  She stared at the lawyer who seemed to smirk at her as he slid his spectacles back onto his bony nose.

  ‘I’ll have my secretary send you all copies of the stipulations and conditions,’ Mr Daven said, peering up at them over the thin, golden frames. ‘And the rules for each that must be followed.’

  ‘Girls.’ Victoria addressed her sisters, but she kept her eyes firmly on the man in front of her. She would get married, she vowed as she stood and glared at the solicitor, even if she had to pay someone to take her. ‘We’ve got a wedding to plan.’

  Victoria lost herself as she watched the milk mix into her tea, slowly turning the almost black liquid into a rich, caramel colour. The rattle of a teaspoon against a saucer made her blink as the quiet of the room was disturbed, but her gaze remained on the tiny swirl in the centre of her fine china cup.

  She’d always loved watching the spinning twists of the tiny whirlpools, something Mummy had pointed out to her many years ago when she was a child learning the proper etiquette of afternoon tea. Her mother had told her that any problem could be solved with a good cup of tea, that all your troubles and worries disappeared into the vortex when you took your first sip.

  Oh, how Victoria wished that were the truth. How everything they’d had dropped on their shoulders that morning could disappear with her first sip of the flavoursome brew, but many years ago she’d learnt Mummy’s words were sadly not the truth. She sighed as she lifted the cup from its saucer to take a much-needed sip.

  ‘Relax, Victoria,’ Pippa said before taking a drink of her own preferred blend. The heat from the cup steamed her sister’s thick glasses, but Pippa paid it no heed. Victoria assumed she was probably used to it after all these years but frowned as she wondered if the glasses were thicker than a few months ago when she’d seen her last. An occupational hazard, Pippa had once told her, a downside to looking at numbers on computer screens all day.

  ‘You’ll find someone,’ Pippa continued after savouring that first taste of her brew. ‘Between the four of us, we’ve hundreds of eligible men at our disposal. In fact, just the other day, Zach was extolling your virtues after he bumped into you in that little coffee house.’

  ‘Pippa, I’m quite sure he’s interested in someone else.’ Victoria threw her sister a wink, knowing how in love Zach, Pippa’s assistant, was with his boss. How her sister hadn’t realised it, Victoria had no idea.

  Pippa frowned. ‘No, he definitely said how beautiful you looked. Was going on about the dress you were wearing.’ Victoria returned the frown; when she’d bumped into Zach, she’d been wearing her jeans and boots, which she was about to say when Hattie joined the conversation.

  ‘What the hell was Daddy thinking when he wrote that monstrosity of a will?’ Victoria and Pippa shook their heads, both just as baffled by their father’s actions. ‘And to offer it to Grandfather should we not meet the stipulations!’ Now it was her turn to frown. ‘Do you think he merely did that to ensure we’d go through with the barbaric thing? Because I don’t need a man in my life and I certainly don’t want kids, but I equally don’t want Ol’ Dick to get any of Daddy’s money.’

  ‘Don’t know, don’t care. It is what it is,’ Alexi said, finally putting her phone down and reaching for her own cup. ‘But what I don’t get is that you’re almost thirty-five, Victoria, what if he’d died after your birthday? Would he have cut you off?’

  Victoria opened her mouth to tell her sister not to be stupid, but promptly closed it again as she considered Alexi’s words. Would their father have done that? She wanted to say no, that his unexpected death had merely stopped him from updating his will, from removing something he’d put in years ago, but perhaps he wouldn’t have…

  Her scowl deepened. It was just so unlike her father to put in such a clause in the first place, yet he had; he may well have called her into his office on her birthday and told her she was out of the will.

  ‘Don’t be stupid, Alexi,’ Hattie snapped, shaking her head at their baby sister. ‘Daddy would have ensured that Victoria was taken care of.’

  Victoria looked at her sister, aghast at the comment. ‘And what the hell does that mean?’ she asked. ‘Taken care of?’

  It was Pippa who sighed as she put her cup down and looked at Victoria, her face all business. ‘Come on, Victoria, don’t act like you don’t know what Hattie’s talking about. You don’t have a job—’

  ‘I’m a working royal!’

  ‘—you don’t have any qualifications—’

  ‘I have my SEC!’ Victoria protested, but even as she said the words, she knew it was a weak argument. The Secondary Education Certificate wasn’t difficult to get from any Avalonian academy, never mind the awfully expensive private one she’d gone to. Her father had been disappointed she’d not managed to get the Diploma, but at least she’d come away with something. School had never been her strong point but put her in a room full of toffs and what-nots as Hattie called them, and she knew how to work it.

  No, there was no way her father would have cut her off. She’d been his way into half the deals he’d made over the last decade and a half.

  From the age of sixteen, when their mother had sadly passed, Victoria had been the Lady of the family. At eighteen, it had fallen upon her slender shoulders to attend all the functions she'd been required to as part of their connection to the Avalonian Royal Family—no matter how unwanted she might be. The parties, galas, boring state dinners, the over-the-top weddings and long-drawn-out funerals, and everything and anything else they deemed she was required to attend to represent their mother's legacy.

  Victoria had made sure she had never caused a fuss, never raised her head above the parapet, had ensured she never gave her grandfather any reason to dislike her, but it never mattered. It seemed just being her father's daughter, a reminder she wasn't the product of a match the King had deemed worthy, was enough to earn his derision and scorn. He'd sneer at her every time she was presented, his nose wrinkling like a bad smell had suddenly invaded his hairy nostrils.

  So, while Victoria had not been the brightest of the Snape sisters, the forced attendance at the royal events gave her access to connections her father had needed. She’d heard things, seen things; she knew who was doing what, where they were doing it, and when it was happening, all because no one thought that dim little she could possibly be a problem. She was merely an ornament, another socialite who lived off her daddy's money, and added a sparkle of beauty to the room.

  Well, perhaps not the last part. The papers, glossy magazines, and news shows, not even her father had ever described her as a beauty. Marcus had always said she was pretty, cute, adorable even, but never beautiful. But that wasn't the point.

 

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