His campaign for a vacated U. S. congressional seat certainly wasn’t sexy enough to warrant the seven-minute segment on the affiliate’s weekly political show. Especially since he was running unopposed in a district located in the county where he’d grown up and where his family was still very much a presence. Tanya was here for a bigger sound bite. She wanted revenge with all the trimmings. And that meant discussing the sins of Miles’s deceased father.
“How can you expect voters to trust you?” Tanya went right for the testicles. “You’ve repeatedly stated that you weren’t aware of your father’s efforts to defraud the bank that financed the two-million-dollar loan for this very inn where we are sitting. Even if you didn’t know firsthand of your father’s thievery, why shouldn’t voters assume that the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, so to speak?”
The ice inside the pitcher of lemonade popped, startling the dog at his feet. Brushing a reassuring hand over its silky head, Miles drew in his own calming breath before launching into the speech he’d been rehearsing in front of the mirror since the mess with his father had been made public the week before.
“Thievery is a bit misleading, Tanya.” He held up a hand when she began to speak, shushing her before looking directly into the camera lens. “McAlister Construction and Engineering is a privately owned company. If my father moved funds from one account to another, he was misappropriating his own money. I don’t know what dictionary you use, Tanya, but that’s not thievery in my book.”
Tanya bristled, uncrossing her thighs and sitting up a little straighter. “There’s no if about it, Miles. The bank examiner had an airtight case against your father.”
And the stress from staying one step ahead of the bank examiner most likely brought on the heart attack that killed Dad. Miles had to work to unclench his hands and appear relaxed. Donald McAlister had been a larger-than-life role model—a dedicated family man who was also a semi-pro athlete, an engineer, a small business owner, and a fixture in the community. Apparently, he’d been so devoted to his wife that he’d bought and refurbished the inn for her while playing fast and loose with the books. Miles had no doubt his father would have made good on the loan if the economy hadn’t taken a nosedive right when the balloon payment was due. The enormous weight of the financial burden, along with his attempts to conceal it from his wife and children, certainly put Donald McAlister into an early grave.
The emptiness Miles felt in his chest was still raw. All those years ago when he had carefully crafted his life’s roadmap, Miles had never taken into account achieving the goals without his father by his side. It was yet another indication of the short-sightedness of a ten-year-old.
“The fact of the matter is this, Tanya: My father isn’t campaigning for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. I am. He died tragically before any of this could get resolved. But I do know this . . .” Miles looked into the camera lens again. “Whatever my father did, it was out of love for his family. Times have been tough financially for many of us these past several years. Washington has forgotten about small business and the middle class who are living paycheck to paycheck. When I take my seat in Congress, I plan to be the voice for those people. The same people who would do whatever it takes to ensure their family is provided for and that their dreams can become reality. Just as my father did for his own family.”
Tanya covered up an indelicate snort before it could be picked up by the microphone. “And the governor? He obviously wasn’t too comfortable with having the stigma that now surrounds you tainting his own reelection bid. Isn’t it true that rather than keep you as his chief counsel, he put you on leave without pay?”
It was a chore for Miles to appear unfazed by Tanya’s goading question despite the anger that was fueling up inside of him, but he miraculously kept his composure. “Governor Rossi’s statement was pretty clear on the matter, Tanya. I requested the leave of absence. Not the other way around. The leave is so that I can deal with a family emergency here in Chances Inlet. The issue involving my father had nothing to do with it.”
At least not in the way she was implying.
She made a show of rustling her notes on her lap. “Of course. Your mother.” Tanya brilliantly modulated her voice to sound softer, more serene. Too bad the viewers couldn’t see the hard lines still bracketing her mouth. “How is she doing?”
Patricia McAlister had been struck by a hit-and-run driver while riding her bicycle through town ten days earlier. She’d fractured her hip and sustained a concussion along with other minor injuries. But the larger trauma was to her psyche after the secret of Donald McAlister’s creative accounting had been revealed on national television.
“She’s wonderful.” Miles chose to categorize his statement not as a lie, exactly, but more as maintaining his mother’s privacy. It was partially the truth, anyway. Her hip would fully heal. “But it’s the summer tourist season, the busiest time of the year in Chances Inlet, and until she’s back on her feet, she’ll need help running the inn. Since my campaign headquarters is located here in town, it made sense to my family that I be the one to help her out.”
Again, a partial truth. His younger brother Ryan was a professional baseball player whose contract barely allowed for him to visit their injured mother, much less take three months off during the season. Their youngest sibling, Elle, had two months left in her Peace Corps service. The oldest of the five McAlister children, Kate, was also spending the summer in Chances Inlet. But she and her husband, Alton, were both physicians who operated the beach town’s seasonal urgent care clinic. The clinic’s hours left them little time to help nurse his mother, much less help with the day-to-day operations of the inn. And then there was Gavin.
His brother had single-handedly carried his father’s secret for the two years since Donald’s death, mollifying the bank examiner with the charm that had everyone in Chances Inlet eating out of the palm of Gavin’s hand. The middle of the McAlister children, Gavin was a natural peacemaker. He’d devised a plan to pay off the debt and preserve their late father’s name with no one in the community—or the family—being the wiser. Miles had to concede that it was a pretty damn good plan given the situation. Too bad Gavin had failed to grasp that people always stab you in the back. Always. The past eight years working in politics had taught Miles that.
What peeved Miles the most was that his brother had never thought to confide in him. Born sixteen months apart, they’d grown up in the small town practically in each other’s pocket, playing on the same teams, sharing the same bedroom, the same circle of friends. Yet, when push came to shove, Gavin hadn’t trusted his older brother to help shoulder the burden their father left behind. To help guard the family name and its legacy. He’d made some lame excuse that he’d kept Miles in the dark to protect his political future, but it felt to Miles as though his brother—and the rest of the McAlisters, for that matter—believed he was so blinded by ambition that he couldn’t pull his own weight during a family crisis. And that stung. A lot. So, while his mother had still been in the hospital, he’d taken control of the situation and appointed himself in charge of operating the inn until she was fully recovered. He’d been living at the B and B nearly two weeks now.
“While I’m in town,” Miles continued, “I’ll have ample time to meet with constituents and take their pulse about which issues are most important to them.”
Considering the circumstances that brought him back to Chances Inlet, the situation really had worked to his benefit—even if it meant he had to live alongside the mousey, secretive woman his mother was obviously sheltering within the walls of the B and B. Lori—if that was even her name—worked as the inn’s maid and cook. While Miles couldn’t find fault with her efforts, she was hiding something; he was sure of it. Especially if the smoking hot body she was concealing under her baggy clothes and her shield of artificially dark hair was any indication.
Shifting slightly in the glider, Miles tr
ied to block out the image of a very wet, very naked Lori all soaped up in one of the inn’s luxurious two-person showers. Her body was built for a magazine centerfold, full and curvy in all the right places and very definitely X-rated. It was no wonder she kept it under wraps with castoffs from the Goodwill store. He bit back a groan before his microphone could pick it up. Embarrassment, lust, and anger swirled in his gut.
The awkwardness was due to the fact that he’d lingered a moment—okay, maybe two—longer than he should have while he surreptitiously admired the view that day. He’d been checking the air filters in his mother’s B and B. It was a job his father always took care of when he was alive and Miles worried was now being overlooked. That day, Miles had unwittingly walked in upon a strange woman showering in a supposedly unoccupied room. Not that anyone would blame him for remaining. He was a red-blooded guy and the shower show was one that would have brought a dead man back to life.
The anger was fueled by the lust that burned through him then and every freaking time he’d laid his eyes on Lori in the four months since. Miles hated the way his body lit up around a woman who was a mystery—a stranger who was very clearly hiding out under his mother’s roof. He had no business being turned on by a woman like that. And yet, she mesmerized him with the things he wanted to do with her. She was a distraction he couldn’t afford right now. Miles hadn’t felt such an intense attraction to a woman since—
“Miles?” Tanya was eyeing him curiously.
He blinked to refocus. Damn, damn, damn. Once again Lori had totally derailed his concentration. And she wasn’t even within his sight line. In fact, she was probably hiding upstairs just as she did every time someone from the media visited the inn.
Glancing past the television camera Miles’s eyes landed on the anxious face of Bernice Reed. The elderly woman had managed McAlister C&E for decades and now worked as the office manager of his campaign headquarters. As usual, she was outfitted like a neon sign, today dressed head to toe in bright pink with an oversized necklace to match. She was staring at him through rhinestone-studded glasses, wide-eyed with her hand to her chest and, knowing her, a “bless his heart” on her tongue. Beside her was Cassidy Burroughs, the teenager who operated the Patty Wagon, his mother’s seasonal ice cream truck. Cassidy was holding her cell phone aloft, shooting video of the scene while wearing an expression on her face that clearly said “What the heck?”
“I’m sorry, Tanya.” Miles quickly returned his gaze to his other tormentor. “I was distracted thinking of my mother there for a moment.” Jesus, next I’ll be invoking apple pie and baseball. His answer sounded evasive even to his own ears. Miles was tanking the interview all because of a woman who hovered in the shadows of every room but the kitchen. He needed to get her out of his head. Better yet, out of his mother’s inn if he could somehow manage that. But for now he just needed to wrap up the sparring match with Tanya.
He looked up to find that Tanya’s wide smile had a nasty edge to it. Miles resisted the urge to cross his legs and shield the family jewels. Instead he forced himself to remain relaxed. He was a professional and as such had prepared for anything she could throw at him.
“I asked you whether you and your opponent will be debating one another this summer.”
Miles could hear the Atlantic Ocean slamming against the sand across the street, the whirring of the ceiling fans above their heads, and even the gentle hum of the LED lights shining on either side of his face, so he knew he wasn’t dreaming. Or dead. He glanced over Tanya’s right shoulder at Coy Scofield III, the young flunkie the party had dumped on him as a campaign manager. Coy was twenty-five with the political expertise of a gnat, but that hadn’t mattered.
Until now.
The kid was talking a mile a minute into the cell phone glued to his ear, his cheeks flushed with what Miles could only assume was excitement. Coy had been very vocal that he wasn’t thrilled to be stuck in a campaign where there wouldn’t actually be a contest. He wanted the thrill of the chase. The kid was frustrated because Miles was running uncontested. The opposing party’s candidate had withdrawn after being arrested for alleged racketeering violations just days after this spring’s primary. Miles carefully pushed the words past his lips so that the audio wouldn’t capture the anxiety in his voice.
“From what I understand, Brian Kilpatrick is having a tougher battle with the Treasury Department to worry about debating me. That’s why he’s no longer running.”
“Oh, you haven’t heard?” Tanya was practically bouncing in her seat. “Well, I guess that’s understandable with your family crisis and all. But the opposing party is putting forth another candidate.”
“They can’t.” Miles mentally reviewed the campaign laws. There wasn’t a provision. He’d checked. So had the governor and everyone else in the party. The only way they could replace a candidate who’d been put on the ballot via a primary election was if the candidate was ill and could no longer serve the term of the office. The only illness Kilpatrick had was that of a terminal dumbass and the opposing party was out of luck on that loophole.
Tanya leaned back, seductively crossing her legs again as if to say checkmate. There was no mistaking the malice in her grin now. She was obviously enjoying the reaction her bombshell had gotten out of Miles. “Technically the party can’t add a name to the November ballot. But the voters can.”
Son. Of. A. Bitch.
A write-in campaign. There’d been talk of one during the initial days after Kilpatrick’s arrest, but the pollsters had assured the governor and the national party bigwigs that Miles’s reputation was sterling enough that the opposition wouldn’t risk funding another candidate. Instead, they’d spend their time and money on a race that wasn’t a shoo-in. Apparently, with all the talk surrounding his late father these past few weeks, some of the shine had worn off Miles’s reputation.
“It’s funny how these things work, isn’t it?” Tanya was the only one on the verandah who was seeing the humor in the situation.
Determined not to let her—or any of her viewers—see him sweat, Miles leaned back in the stupid glider and smiled back at her. “Well, it’s a lot better for the constituents to have more than one candidate. A two-party race offers voters greater opportunities to weigh the issues and make sure their interests will be best represented.” Miles was pretty sure he’d read that in a political science textbook somewhere, but at this point he just didn’t care. He needed to regurgitate enough bullshit to get him through this train wreck of an interview with his shirt still on his back. “Since you have the inside scoop today, Tanya, do you mind telling me who my opponent will be?”
“Of course. We’re headed to Shallotte from here for the big announcement. You’ll be facing off against Faye Rich.”
“Faye Rich as in the GTO Grandma?” Cassidy blurted out from behind the camera and Miles hoped her words and his wince hadn’t been caught on video.
Faye Rich was exactly what her name implied: rich as Croesus. She’d inherited a string of car dealerships from her father and married into more. Her commercials were legendary for their low-budget, smaltzy, down-home humor. Not to mention Faye had appeared in all of them since she was three years old. Now somewhere in her mid-sixties, she was still the voice behind Rich Automotive, occasionally even dressed as the Easter Bunny, the Tobacco Queen, or Uncle Sam. She made it a point to appear at events in her souped-up GTO. Her voter recognition would be off the charts. And then there was the fact her name would be easy to write in.
And just like that, Miles took another curveball right to the chest.
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