“What’s he doing here?” Joe asked her. “Why now?”

“It was that picture with the president. USA Today picked it up and apparently flashed it around the world.”

“Yeah, them,” Joe muttered.

“At least the Grands will be excited if he turns out to be a prince,” she told him. “First you marry the president’s daughter then I…” She glanced at her son. “Then I meet someone famous.”

“Meet, huh? That’s one way to put it.” Joe grabbed Danny’s ankles. “Ready to go downstairs?” he asked.

“Go fast,” Danny yelled. “As fastest as you can!”

Joe obliged by racing down the stairs. Mia followed, wondering how it was possible that her perfectly ordinary life had just taken a turn for the incredible.

Rafael did his best to hide his amusement. Oliver and Umberto were highly trained bodyguards who were used to controlling every situation. Now they were held at bay by a tiny woman with a rolling pin. It wasn’t that the two men couldn’t take Grandma Tessa, as Mia had called her, but that their own sense of family, not to mention his orders to stand down, put them in an uncomfortable situation.

“Tessa, please,” the other grandmother-Grammy M-said with a sigh. “You’ll be frightenin’ our guests.”

“They’re not guests. They have guns.” Tessa’s eyes narrowed as if she wanted to whack them both on the back of the head to teach them a lesson. “There will be no guns in this house.”

“Joe had a gun,” Grammy M pointed out.

“He’s family. That’s different.”

Rafael enjoyed the blend of Tessa’s slight Italian accent and Grammy M’s lilting Irish voice.

“They’re here to protect me,” he said, hoping to smooth over the situation.

“I can see why you’d want protection from two old women,” Tessa chided.

Grammy M sighed. “You’ll have to be forgivin’ her, your highness. Tessa’s not one to deal well with change.”

“I suppose you expect us to feed them, too,” Tessa grumbled as she put the rolling pin on the counter and ignored the other woman’s comment. “You show up without warning, claiming to be…” She shook her head. “I, for one, don’t believe a word of it.”

He’d spent the past couple of days researching Mia’s family. His time working with the Calandrian intelligence department had taught him to know his enemies better than he knew any of his friends. Not that Mia or her relatives were necessarily enemies. Perhaps wild cards would be a better description.

He’d studied the names and faces, along with facts provided by the director of intelligence. But seeing a two-dimensional picture was very different from meeting the person in question.

He liked that Tessa mistrusted him. Her wariness showed a sensibility that would do well for his son. While Grammy M’s soft and accepting heart was slightly less useful when it came to ruling a country, it might serve Daniel well in romantic matters.

“How can I convince you of my true identity?” he asked. “You have already seen my passport. Unfortunately, princes are not issued identification cards at birth.”

“Too bad,” Tessa said with a sniff. “But not to worry. Darcy has put a call in to her father. We’ll soon know everything about you.”

He pretended a confusion he didn’t feel. “Darcy?” he asked, knowing exactly who she and her father were.

“The daughter of the president of the United States,” Tessa said sharply. “She’s married to Joe. My very sensible grandson. Good thing he takes after me and not some flighty people I could name who are won over by a couple of flags on a long black car and a title that may or may not be real.”

Rafael bowed his head slightly and tried not to smile. “I have nothing to hide,” he said. At least nothing they would find out by calling the president.

Grammy M walked to the table and poured him more coffee. “Don’t let her be botherin’ you. She’s always been a bit of a crab.”

Tessa ignored them and retreated to the stove. Rafael decided to use the moment to cement Grammy M’s support.

“When did you leave Ireland?” he asked.

Grammy M glanced at the two bodyguards standing by the back door, then took the seat across from his at the large table.

“When I was a girl. I married young and my husband, God rest his soul, moved us here.”

“A change from the beauty of those green hills,” he said.

“’Tis true, but this is home now. It has been for a long time. My family is here. My husband died here, as did Gabriel, a man I knew. He passed on a couple of years ago. Now Tessa and I are two old women waiting till the end of our days.”

“Speak for yourself,” Tessa snapped. “I’m waiting on Joe to throw that man out. All your smooth talking isn’t going to convince me of anything.”

Rafael knew he would have to charm Tessa into neutrality, if nothing else, but before he could start, Mia walked into the kitchen.

He stood and smiled at her. She acknowledged him with a nod of her head but nothing else. Instantly, both grandmothers were at her side, offering tangible support.

Five years ago Mia had come to his country to help rout out the thieves who were stealing Calandria’s history. Her assignment had been to pose as a foolish but rich American tourist looking for adventure while collecting information on those who plotted against his country.

She’d been smart, irreverent, and determined. She’d also been a beauty, with streaked hair and big brown eyes. While the hair color was now darker, the eyes were the same. She hadn’t lost her curves, but the air of joyous exuberance seemed to be missing.

“You’ll want to meet Danny,” she said.

He nodded, then felt an unexpected quickening of his heart. His son. His heir. Blood from dozens of kings and princes pumped in the boy’s veins. Daniel…Rafael sighed-the boy’s name would have to be changed to something more royal. Daniel was the hope of his country’s future.

Mia retreated into the hallway, then returned leading a small boy by the hand. Although Rafael had seen him sleeping only an hour or two before, he hadn’t taken the time to study the child’s features.

Even without the telltale birthmark, the truth was there in the features, the shape of the body. Danny reminded him of Diego and Quentin when they had been young.

Still holding the boy’s hand, Mia crouched next to the child and smiled. “Danny, do you want to say hello?”

Danny stuck his forefinger in his mouth and regarded Rafael thoughtfully. “Are you really my daddy?” he asked softly.

“Yes, I am. I am Crown Prince Rafael of Calandria and you are my heir.”

Danny frowned. “I’m not air. I’m a little boy.”

Mia smiled. “He means you’re going to be like him when you grow up.”

Danny turned and buried his face in her shoulder. Mia wrapped her arms around him. “Sorry,” she told Rafael over the boy’s head. “He’s not usually shy, but this is a big deal.”

“Of course. Anyone would be confused by the situation.”

“You’d think a boy would know his own father,” Tessa said, glaring at him.

“Rafael is his father,” Mia said. “I don’t have any doubts.”

“We should have breakfast,” Grammy M said. “Come on, Danny. I’ve made hot chocolate.”

The boy let go of his mother and went with Grammy M to the table. He glanced at Rafael several times, as if trying to figure out what having a father meant.

Mia stood. “It’s going to take time for all of us to adjust,” she said.

He was close enough to inhale the scent of her skin. Something floral with the hint of a woman’s heat. Instantly he could remember what it had been like to be with her. They’d come together in a fiery passion that had defied logic and some of the laws of physics.

Did that fire still exist between them? He would not mind if it did. Seducing Mia would not only be pleasurable, it would aid his plan.

“I do not mean to rush anyone,” he said. “We will-what is the phrase?-make it up as we go along.”

She smiled. “I’d like that.”

“Good.”

She had known him as Diego as well as anyone, he thought. But she didn’t know him as Rafael. If she did, she would realize that he never allowed himself to simply go along with circumstances. He always had a goal and he always achieved it.

Danny’s eyes were wide, but he didn’t squirm.

Mia crouched in front of her son and took both his hands in hers. “Remember when you had to get a shot and I told you it would hurt?” she asked.

Danny nodded.

“And when we went to the dentist for a cleaning and I said it wouldn’t hurt and it didn’t?”

He nodded again.

“This won’t hurt at all. Okay?”

He looked from her to Umberto, then opened his mouth and closed his eyes. The tall, burly bodyguard stuck the swab into the boy’s mouth and rubbed it against his cheek.

“I am finished,” he said in thickly accented English.

Danny blinked. “That’s it?”

Mia grinned. “Uh-huh. Did I say it wouldn’t hurt? Did you believe me?”

As she spoke, she tickled Danny’s sides. He laughed and pretended to push her away, while cuddling closer.

“It was okay,” he said between bursts of laughter.

Umberto nodded and left with the swab. Joe stepped out of the corner.

“They’ll rush it through,” he told her. “It should only be a few days.”

Mia pulled Danny onto her lap and glanced at her brother. “Still having doubts?”

“More like false hopes,” he admitted. “I don’t like this.”

“I don’t know how I feel,” she admitted. Too much had happened too quickly. Four hours ago she’d been asleep in her own bed and now a man she thought dead and buried had strolled back into her life. And not just any man.

“Is he really a prince?” she asked.

“Pretty much.”

Impossible, she thought. “I’ve never been very good at reverence.”

“You’d better learn to curtsy.”

She couldn’t imagine that ever happening. “It’s a new century. Royalty isn’t like it was before.”