If the Slipper Fits. Elizabeth Harbison

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If the Slipper Fits - Elizabeth  Harbison


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exactly, is your job anyway?”

      She was thrown by his question. “I’m the concierge.”

      “Yes, you said.” He nodded. “But I’m not used to the workings of such a small hotel. Does it mean, as at larger hotels, that you are charged with doing whatever is in your power to make sure your guests are comfortable and happy?”

      “Within reason,” she said cautiously, lifting an eyebrow in question. Something told her he was headed toward something she wasn’t going to be entirely comfortable with.

      “I believe, miss—” He raised a questioning brow.

      “Tilden. Lily.”

      He looked genuinely puzzled. “Tildenlily?”

      “No.” She smiled. His English was flawless, but hers, she was often told, was too fast. “Lily Tilden.”

      “Miss Tilden,” he said, as if rolling fine wine over his tongue. His voice, the low timbre, the faint accent, was magnetic. It was the voice of a hypnotist. “I’m afraid you may be in for some trouble, Miss Tilden.”

      She swallowed hard. She was embarrassed to admit, even to herself, that this man made her feel nervous. Lily never got nervous. “Oh? How so?”

      “My father’s wife can be—how do I say it?—demanding. You will get little rest while she’s here, I’m afraid. I’d like to offer you my apologies up front.”

      “Well,” Lily wasn’t sure how to respond, “thanks for the warning. I guess. But I can handle it.”

      “Indeed.” He gave a shrug, as if to say I warned you. “Good luck, Ms. Tilden.”

      She smiled. “Sounds as if you think I’ll need it.”

      He smiled back, a dazzling movie-star smile. “Where my father’s wife is concerned, we all need some luck.”

      Lily started to go, then stopped and turned back. “I don’t mean to be impertinent—”

      He raised an eyebrow and looked so amused that she nearly lost her train of thought. “Please do.”

      She went on, a little disconcerted, “Well, Princess Drucille spoke with great authority when she said you were expecting me to bring your dinner to you, but apparently she was…incorrect.”

      He nodded, and continued to look amused as Lily ran the risk of hanging herself.

      “My question is this—if, in the future, she should give any of the staff instructions where you’re concerned, should we assume…” She paused, unable to come up with a nice way of saying “She’s not to be taken seriously” or “She’s full of it.”

      “If I require something, I’ll ask for it directly,” Conrad supplied, finally letting Lily off the hook. “Otherwise…” He shook his head. “Don’t take another’s word for it.”

      Her shoulders sagged in relief at his comprehension. “Good. I’ll let the staff know.”

      He nodded solemnly. “I’d appreciate it. If someone arrives at my door every time Drucille wants to use my name, I’ll never get any peace.”

      Chapter Three

      To the surprise of no one, especially Lily, all of the late edition papers carried a mention of Brittany Oliver and Prince Conrad the next afternoon. There were photos as well, but none clear enough to identify the hotel. Lily had decided not to point it out to Gerard, but it didn’t matter, he saw it himself.

      “It would have been nice,” he said, closing the paper and setting it aside. He sighed and raked a hand through his thick gray hair. “I don’t know how much longer we’re going to be in business if things don’t get better soon.”

      Lily’s heart ached to see this man she cared for feeling so down. Gerard Von Mises had worked hard all his life. In all the years Lily had known him, he had never missed a day at work. Yet now it was beginning to feel as if it was all for nothing, and she hated to see how despondent he looked.

      “Things will pick up,” she said, as she’d said hundreds of times before. But she, like Gerard, was losing faith.

      It wasn’t for herself that she was concerned. She could get a job almost anywhere, and had often toyed with the idea of living overseas, in Europe or Japan.

      But this was Gerard’s life, and he’d put his whole heart into it. Every detail of the hotel had his fingerprint on it, and Lily couldn’t bear the idea of that disappearing.

      “I’m sure they will,” Gerard said, effectively closing the book on the conversation. “It will be all right. It always has in the past.”

      Lily glanced at the register, and at the number of empty rooms, and simply said, “Yes.”

      The phone at the concierge desk rang and Lily said, “Excuse me. Duty calls.”

      “That’s what I like to hear,” Gerard said.

      She smiled and picked up the receiver. It was Stephan, Prince Conrad’s bodyguard, calling to inquire about security on the perimeters of the property. Lily detailed property boundaries for him, and explained the law as far as trespassing on private property versus standing on public property. With a little prodding, Lily learned that it was not Prince Conrad who was concerned so much as Stephan himself, as he was head of the prince’s security.

      The prince, it turned out, did not like to have any security at all, but it was in deference to his late father’s wishes that he brought the token team of two along with him. But Stephan had worked for Prince Frederick as well, and agreed with the late prince that there should be much stronger security around a royal.

      After trying to reassure him that the hotel itself was quite secure, Lily ended up giving him the name of a local security company, where he could hire additional guards if he saw fit. Personally, she didn’t like the idea of a whole lot of security personnel stationed about the hotel, but it was not her place to tell a guest that their security wasn’t important enough to mar the environment.

      When she’d finished with that call, there were three more in rapid succession; Lady Ann, who had a list of snack foods she wanted picked up from the local market; Kiki Von Elsborn, who needed the name of the general manager of Melborn’s department store because a salesman there had “unfairly” accused her of shoplifting when she “accidentally” wore two pashmina shawls out of the store; and Portia Miletto, a wealthy young Italian who had left her PDA—and all of her private information—in a cab and needed Lily to track it down.

      That took most of the afternoon.

      When Lily finally got back from the tailor shop of the man who had found the PDA, she was fifty reward dollars lighter and several hours more exhausted.

      Yet when the call came from Prince Conrad’s suite that he wanted to have a moment with her, her adrenaline surged and reanimated her.

      She went upstairs and knocked on his door.

      He opened it after a few moments and said, “Lily. Thank you for coming.”

      “It’s not a problem. What can I do for you?”

      He looked at her for a moment, his handsome face still. Then he frowned slightly and said, “Could you come in for a moment and join me for a drink?”

      Lily was taken aback. She was used to delicately avoiding the advances of male guests at the hotel…but then again, she was used to those male guests being a lot older and a lot less attractive than Prince Conrad.

      He must have sensed her hesitation because he added, “I require your help with something.”

      “All right,” she said. “Anything I can do to help.”

      “Please. Come in.” He led her into the sitting room, which of course she knew


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