© 2016 by Dr. Kevin Leman and Jeff Nesbit
Published by Revell
a division of Baker Publishing Group
P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287
www.revellbooks.com
Ebook edition created 2016
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
ISBN 978-1-4934-0168-0
Scripture quotations are from the Holy Bible, New International Version®. NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the authors’ imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
“To those who are given much, much is required” is a paraphrase of Luke 12:48.
“It is when you are weak that true strength comes” is a paraphrase of 2 Corinthians 12:10.
Edited by Ramona Cramer Tucker
To all those curious enough to seek, question, and forge their own path in life.
And to those who choose to do the right thing, no matter the consequences.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Glossary
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
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17
18
19
20
21
22
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27
28
29
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31
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49
50
51
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53
54
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56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
Epilogue
Bonus Feature: Birth Order Secrets
Firstborn
Onlyborn
Middleborn
Lastborn
Acknowledgments
About Dr. Kevin Leman
About Jeff Nesbit
Resources by Dr. Kevin Leman
Back Ads
Back Cover
Glossary
AF: American Frontier
AG: Attorney General
API: American Petroleum Institute
DA: District Attorney
DHS: Department of Homeland Security
DOJ: Department of Justice
DSCC: Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee
EPA: Environmental Protection Agency
FBI: Federal Bureau of Investigation
GJ: Green Justice
GOP: Grand Old Party (Republican Party)
IPO: Initial Public Offering
NGO: Nongovernmental organization
NYPD: New York Police Department
1
NEW YORK CITY
“I don’t get you. I don’t get you at all.”
Sean Thomas Worthington hurled the words at his brother, Will. The two faced off outside the door of Will’s three-bedroom suite on 71st, overlooking Central Park’s west side.
Sean thought he knew his brother. William Jennings Worthington VI always identified his goal with laser-like clarity and then relentlessly pursued it, never letting anything or anyone stand in his way. But that very day, just when Will had been prepared to launch his bid to represent New York in the US Senate, he’d disappeared from their campaign headquarters. He hadn’t answered Sean’s texts either.
Then, with only a minute to spare before the scheduled start of the campaign launch and media briefing, Will had reappeared. He strode briskly past Sean and the other members of their family in attendance and mounted the platform.
The speech he’d given wasn’t the one he and Sean had polished for hours until it was a pristine masterpiece. Instead Will said with little preamble, “I’ve decided not to run for the United States Senate seat in New York.”
Shock skittered down Sean’s spine.
“I’ve made this decision for personal reasons,” Will added with the steely calm that was his trademark. “I don’t intend to discuss those reasons now or in the future.” Then he exited the stage while the media whipped into a feeding frenzy.
For the past several hours, Sean, Will’s campaign manager, had handled the unanswerable questions from reporters with professional but vague responses. He had no answers himself as to why Will had suddenly backed out of the race. Will hadn’t confided in him.
Now Sean was beyond furious. Evidently it showed, for one glimpse of his face at the door of Will’s home, and Laura, his sister-in-law, had held up a hand.
“Look,” she warned, “you two have to work this out. But don’t do it in front of the kids. I’ll tell Will you’re here.”
Then she closed the door firmly and left Sean in the hallway. Laura didn’t care that he was a Worthington. Her first priority, always, was to make sure that their home was a safe and loving place for their children. There would be no war of words in their home.
Two minutes later, with Sean pacing all the while, Will opened the door, slipped out, and closed it carefully behind him. Instead of his impeccable Giorgio Armani suit, he was dressed in his usual running clothes for his daily miles through Central Park.
“You drop out of the race now, after all our work?” Sean’s anger flared even hotter. Their mom’s Irish heritage was showing, but he honestly didn’t care. What had gotten into his brother?
Will didn’t reply. He merely took a step back—away from Sean, away from the fight. An indiscernible emotion flashed into his dark eyes. For a second, it looked like pain . . . pity . . . sadness . . . or fear.
Fear? Sean frowned. His brother had never been afraid of anything. As Worthingtons, they’d learned early to face down bullies and not only hold their own but win. Their father said it was good practice for when they’d assume their roles in the family business, Worthington Shares.
“So, are you going to tell me why?” Sean demanded.
Will raised his chin. “I said publicly that I didn’t intend to discuss the reasons now or in the future.”
Sean crossed his arms. “And that goes for me too? Your brother? Your campaign manager? You just walk away into the sunset and leave me to pick up your mess?”
Will tilted his head. Sean felt his brother’s piercing gaze sweep across him—the one that had intimidated Sean and their sister, Sarah, in childhood, making them acquiesce to whatever Will wanted.
But instead of the fin
al brief words that usually ended any fight in his favor, Will relaxed his stance. “I did what I needed to do,” he said stoically. “For me, for you, for our family. That’s all I can say.”
At that moment Sean knew what he’d hoped for was over—the opportunity to work arm in arm with his older brother on a venture where Will actually needed Sean’s well-honed networking talents. He shook his head. He’d mistakenly thought that this time he could make their father, William Jennings Worthington V, proud. That instead of bypassing Sean to zero in on Will as the one the Worthington name depended on, Bill might give Sean the long-awaited “well done, son” he longed for.
It was not meant to be.
“So that’s it,” Sean huffed.
“That’s it.”
With those few words, Will walked toward the elevator.
More than anything, Sean wanted his brother to do something normal, like force him into a headlock or tell him to shut up, like he used to when they were growing up. Instead Will was strangely calm, distant, like he was in a business meeting.
But what bothered Sean even more than the eerie detachment was that indiscernible emotion in Will’s eyes. That frankly terrified him.
What could invoke that kind of emotion in his brother, who wasn’t afraid of anything?
2
As soon as the elevator doors shut, Will was alone with the clamoring voices in his thoughts. He heard his mother’s plea: “Family first. Promise me.”
He heard his father: “Always do the right thing. But know when it’s time to fight and when it’s time to back away. Listen to that still small voice.”
So Will had listened and done what he knew was right. Eric Sandstrom, the CEO of American Frontier, the most powerful oil company in the world, had played his dark trump card in the sunshine of Washington Square Park and thought he had Will trapped. Will had acquiesced to the demands of Sandstrom’s lawyer lackey, for now.
Will had no explanation for what he’d seen in the photo Jason Carson showed him—Sean sitting with a shady character in a bar. A man now identified as the Polar Bear Bomber. But Will knew what that photo, if released, would mean to the public. Sean Worthington, billionaire trust-fund playboy who usually sported the latest up-and-coming model on his arm at black-tie events, was somehow involved with the bombing of the American Frontier building—the biggest domestic terrorist incident of the past 20 years.
The timing couldn’t be worse—right in the middle of the oil spill fracas, with Sean center stage in chartering a boat that had taken him, Green Justice’s Kirk Baldwin, and New York Times reporter Jon Gillibrand into the icy Arctic waters as firsthand observers. Green Justice had pulled gutsy maneuvers before, but never something colossally stupid and life-threatening, like bombing a building.
Sure, Sean colored outside the lines at times, but Will had never known his younger brother to step outside any moral or ethical boundaries. Still, there was a first time for everything, and maybe Sean’s departure from the norm had been caught on camera. The photo—or, most likely, photos—going viral would not only ruin Sean in the business world, tarnish the reputation of Green Justice, and put Jon in the hot seat with his feisty boss, but it would bring the entire Worthington family under scrutiny. Will couldn’t let that happen. He’d been playing the role of his brother’s and sister’s protector for as long as he could remember. With their father traveling and in meetings as they grew up, his siblings had turned to Will, as much as they hated to admit it. He’d gotten them out of more trouble than he ever wanted their parents to know about. So he’d done what he’d needed to do to keep that photo from going viral. At Carson’s “request,” Will had stepped out of the Senate race to protect his family—most of all Sean.
Drew Simons, the Worthington family’s financial advisor, had been right as usual. He’d reported that Sandstrom was worried Will would use every opportunity to beat up on American Frontier during his Senate campaign. So the hot-under-the-collar Sandstrom had pinpointed the three billionaire sibling heirs as the key to solving his dilemmas, Drew said. After all, Sarah was calling the shots on the Department of Justice’s criminal negligence case and had investigators actively digging for dirt on AF. Add to that her friend Darcy Wiggins, a Department of Homeland Security agent, coming to conclusions that would blow AF sky-high as a company, and Sarah was a formidable opponent. Sean was too. Not only was he an eyewitness to the oil spill, but his ecological biodiversity NGO was talking about billions in damages if they could prove how much oil was gushing from the bottom of the ocean and the toppled AF platform. Then there was Will, former board member, who had crippled AF by selling the Worthington shares and then joining the shareholder lawsuit.
“Knock out the Worthington kids, and he thinks his problems are solved,” Drew had warned. “He told Jason Carson he wanted to tie up loose ends for good . . . kill three birds with one stone.”
Unfortunately, Drew hadn’t been able to uncover any specifics of Sandstrom’s plan before that day in Washington Square Park.
Will now knew about the plan firsthand. But he also wasn’t going down without a fight. He hated bullies, and Carson was a bully. Worse, he was an underhanded slimeball who didn’t care how dirty his hands got. He’d been rewarded for it throughout his career. Will wasn’t about to go on record as one of the good people Carson brought down, nor would he allow his family to be thrust into the harsh limelight Carson was capable of generating.
His wife, Laura, understood his last-minute decision. That he knew from their brief exchange of glances when she and their oldest child, Andrew, had arrived home from the Senate launch event. Approval glimmered in her eyes, as well as a challenge. So what’s next, Will? she seemed to be saying.
Yes, Laura knew him well. She grasped the stakes of why he’d backed down—the secret he was trying to keep under wraps. She understood his love for his family, his fierce protectiveness of his brother, and his steely determination that they not be hurt by what his mother, Ava, had revealed to him on the shores of Lake Chautauqua outside their family summer home. A stunning, devastating truth that only Will, his mother, and Laura now knew.
But Laura doesn’t know the rest of it, Will thought wryly. When she hears what Carson pulled today . . . A chuckle escaped, the first in his intense day, as he pictured the scene. His slender, hazel-eyed wife was a straight shooter and called things as she saw them. She was a force to be reckoned with in her own right when her loved ones were in someone’s sights.
Will sobered, recalling the confusion on his son’s face. No words had been exchanged. Andrew, who had Laura’s dark brown hair, lean frame, and hazel eyes, studied Will a minute, then embraced him a trifle longer than usual before padding up the stairs toward his room. Somehow the solemn Andrew, almost 13, understood a momentous event had played out. He was so like Will—serious, hardworking, hard on himself, and learning too early the high price of wealth and fame—that Will worried at times. Yet someday Andrew would assume the mantle of Worthington firstborn heir, and he needed to be prepared.
As the elevator doors opened, Will adjusted his focus. The Jason Carsons and Eric Sandstroms of the world would not win—not on Will’s watch. He had plans to make, and a run would clear his head.
Will had never walked away from any challenge. But now he was a quitter in the eyes of the world. That was a very difficult pill to swallow. But only his wife and mother could ever know the truth of why he’d walked away from the Senate run and national politics. He needed to protect his younger brother, both to preserve his mother’s secret and to shield Sean from the searing scrutiny of any potential connection to the domestic terrorist action against American Frontier. One secret—Sean’s birth father—could never emerge. And the other—the picture of Sean sharing a drink with the man who would become the AF bomber—must likewise remain in the shadows forever.
But Will couldn’t escape the feeling that with two startling revelations surfacing so recently, more were certain to follow.
3
Sean knew what his brother did to strategize any difficult quandary. He ran. Will’s drive to increase his endurance, to best his own time, was what had made him an undefeatable force in high school in long-distance track. The same competitive edge had earned him captain of the lacrosse team while at Harvard.
Sean had a lifetime of practice in keeping up with his brother, trying to beat him in a race, but this time he didn’t follow. He didn’t even try. Anything he could say would be pointless. Once Will made up his mind, it was a done deal. Sean had learned that, or thought he had, until his brother short-circuited the Senate race and an almost certain first step toward an even bigger prize in national politics.
Sean paused outside Will’s front door to rein in his anger. It was bad enough that he had put his own life on hold, including many of his own NGO travels on behalf of Worthington Shares start-ups, to assist his brother with a fast-track campaign. With Worthington money, power, and connections, Will had been a shoo-in as candidate. So much so that Kiki Estrada, the executive director of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, had clearly focused her first-tier choice on the Worthington family, Will in particular. She’d pestered Will nonstop until he had agreed to run.
Now Kiki was fit to be tied. She’d already called Sean four times, and he knew she wouldn’t give up until she got an answer that made sense.
Sean had nothing to tell her. In addition, he’d used every networking connection he had, tapping into his far-reaching social media circle to ensure Will would get that Senate seat and it would be an easy run. Now Sean was embarrassed. True, Worthington money had financed the campaign up to the launch event, so they hadn’t needed to go after outside donors. Still, Sean had cashed in a lot of long-standing favors with his colleagues. How could he explain Will walking away—with nothing to show for it?
The media circus would be bad for a while, but Sean could deal with that. Hardly a day passed where one of the Worthingtons, particularly Sean and his social butterfly sister, was not emblazoned somewhere. So even though this was the rich and famous Worthington family that all of New York liked to watch, Will’s withdrawal from the race would play in the headlines for only a short while. Then the press would be back to wringing what they could out of the oil spill and the mystery of the Polar Bear Bomber. When that failed to offer public titillation, they’d be on to the next hot story.
A Powerful Secret Page 1