Apache Dawn by - (dark books to read .txt) đ
- Author: -
- Performer: -
Book online «Apache Dawn by - (dark books to read .txt) đ». Author -
His breath came faster as he leaned forward onto his polished desk and remembered that distant morning. He could still picture it like it had happened just hours ago. The way sheâd smiled at him with those half-closed brilliant blue eyes. He remembered those full, pouting lips as sheâd slowly, seductively crawled to him across their rumpled bed. The gentle sway of her bare, snow-white breasts as she crawled to him had taken his breath away. The smell of her flowery perfume wafting on the air currents from the bed to his nose mixed with the tangy smell of their lovemaking the night before, nearly driving him wild with renewed lust.
He shuddered, eyes closed. She had been perfect. Perfect in every way. The perfect, pliable, willing sex slave, and sheâd loved every second of it and begged for more. She was there whenever he needed her: for release, just for fun, or to relieve the boredom of office. Onceâhe grinned at the memoryâhe had just wanted to look at her naked body by firelight while he drank himself into oblivion.
She hadâand he was sure the mysterious Reginald had been involvedâsomehow found a way to get a job in his very house, on his personal staff. Right under the nose of his wife and the Secret Service who were always underfoot. And no one was the wiser.
Jayne Renolds. Her name was seared in his soul. His greatest passion, his greatest disgrace.
The Vice Presidentâs fingers slowly inched toward the phone to call her into his office. Something stopped him. A blurry thought, a warning from deep inside the increasingly small part of his mind that was still revolted by her touch.
She was the one who'd started this whole mess that now threatened to swallow his family and his career, his legacy, and even the country in an atrocious scandal. Sheâd somehow managed, through her shadowy âemployer,â to overcome a 27-point deficit at the polls, several costly gaffes by both himself and his running mate at the last minute, and still get them into the White House. He was sure something underhanded had taken place for everything to have worked out the way it did, but there was never even a whiff of it from the media. The Democratsâ victory had been declared a model for future underdogs. âNever believe the pollsâ became the mantra of the President-elect.
True to his word, Vice President Barron had voted in favor of Jayneâs employerâs wishes on a few minor issues when certain funding bills were deadlocked in the Senate. He had laughed his way to the podium on those votes.
At the time, heâd thought that Jayne had attempted to blackmail him over some useless appropriation bills for farm subsidies. The opposition in the House had been stiffâboth Democrats and Republicans had balked at signing off on the bills because of some claims of illegal funneling of money to black-ops programs involved with the NSA, CIA, or some other alphabet-soup agency. Harold Barron could not have cared less. The bills were harmless as far as he knew, and voting the way Jayne told him kept her between his sheets and his secret safe. It was a win-win situation.
And his sweet Jayne had kept her word the last few years; sheâd never told a soul of his dalliance with her, never threatened again, and was always ready to wrap her legs around him and purr like a kitten.
Now he smiled, thinking of her swaying hips as sheâd walked away from him earlier that morning, adjusting her blouse with a sly smile after his hand went free-range roaming. He'd been on a routine arms-reduction call with his counterpart in Russia, mostly listening to scientists read numbers over the line.
He suddenly frowned. Sheâd put him in contact with âReginald,â the voice on the odd phone calls heâd been receiving over the past few years. His head felt thick, like he was in a dense fog. He tried to remember. At first, the calls had been rather innocuous. The well-mannered young man on the other end had explained that he represented Jayneâs employers, and he was merely checking up on their âinvestment.â Over time, it became obvious that her employers really wanted him helping them from within the Oval Office someday. They wanted a pet president.
Reginald had called every few months, checking up on the newly elected Vice President, asking after his needs or wants, ensuring that Jayne had been keeping him well satisfied, always asking after his wife and children. It had been very cloak-and-dagger in the beginning, but then after the two farm bills had been passedâthanks to the tie-breaking vote by the President of the Senate, namely, Harold Barronâthe phone calls had became more of an annoyance. Reginald had been satisfied and had not asked for any other favors. Heâd just wanted to talk, it seemed, about nothing and then again, everything. Endless, time-consuming, random conversations that Harold had felt compelled somehow to sit through. Of course, Jayneâs persuasion hadnât hurtâŠ
Apparently, as far as the debt owed for getting elected was concerned, Harold was free and clear. He got to âkeepâ Jayne as a perk of office. And what a perk she was. Harold sighed contentedly. The woman was insatiable.
That had all changed this past year, though. He frowned again, his mind coming up for air in a fog of images and memories of Jayne. He found it increasingly hard to concentrate on anything else anymore. Reginald constantly floated ideas to him. Numerous âwhat-ifâ scenarios were presented to him during their phone conversations, many of which seemed strange at the time, only to be forgotten. Weeks later, when he was doing something completely unrelated, those ideas would flash through his mind unbidden, like shooting stars. It was as if Reginald had planted them in his mind and sat back to wait for the seeds of thought to germinate.
Lately, heâd been thinking more and more about those innocent little conversations he'd been having with Reginald. What if, indeedâŠ
Something in his core told him to be careful, that he was treading a dangerous line. He just couldnât put his finger on what was so dangerous.
Then, finally, the full-court press. Jayne had seduced him every single chance she could get him alone during the past month. Heâd been so physically drained lately that he could hardly think straight. That was when Reginaldâs ideas finally started to make sense. That was when Harold started to get scared.
And now, he realized, he was in checkmate. To renounce Jayne and sever his ties to Reginald would beâŠunthinkable. Leaving aside the fact that she would expose all their dirty laundry to the press, ruin his career and family, she would take her sweet, sweet body away from him forever.
He could lose power, he could almost bring himself to believe he could lose his family, for he felt confident they would forgive him in time. But he could not, would not, deprive himself of the joy Jayne brought to his physical being.
But to agree to Reginaldâs plan, to follow throughâŠwouldâŠwould beâŠwhat? Treason was too light a word. He would replace Benedict Arnold as the most infamous American turncoat. The people would see him hang, or they would tear apart D.C. looking for him.
Although, a little voice nagged within him, if it workedâŠand if things happened as Reginald predictedâŠthen I would only be a temporary traitor. When the people realized what his swift, courageous actions meant, how he'd almost single-handedly saved the country from ruinâŠHe would be hailed as the next George Washington. The people would clamor for him to lead them to a brighter, more prosperous future, he was sure of it. The allure that ambitious future held was almost palpable.
And wasnât he grooming himself to be president anyway? Thatâs what the party bosses had been pumping in his ear the past four years. Just help the President get re-elected and play it safe in the second term, they said. Weâll make you the next president, they said. Trust us, they said.
He got up and walked over to the side table, under a portrait of a frowning John C. Breckenridge, youngest man ever to be elected to the Vice Presidency. A dour-looking 36 year old, if ever there was one. Harold poured a scotch on the rocks and sipped the single-malt slowly, while he considered the sour-faced 19th-century politician.
President Barron. He rather liked the sound of that. Yes indeed, he liked the sound of that a great deal. Feeling a familiar warmth in the pit of his stomach, he smiled and walked over to the phone on his desk, typed in a certain code and sat on the edge of the desk to wait. He sipped his drink and thought of the future and what promise it held. There would be a lot of suffering at first, but in the end, the future would beâŠglorious. Heâd made his decision. He toasted the portrait of frowning Breckenridge.
âAlea jacta est, brother,â he said, glass held high.
As he finished his drink, the door to his office opened and Jayne Renolds flowed into the room like a force of nature. âI got your call, sir,â she announced formally with a wry smile. She turned and locked the door behind her, casting a coy glance over her shoulder. His eyes drank in her body. Her eyes locked on his as she removed her glasses and unfastened the bun on the back of her head, letting the sunshine she held back there tumble down to her shoulders and beyond.
âYou look like youâve come to a decision, Mr. Vice President.â
Harold grinned at her sultry voice. âWhy yes, yes I have.â He cleared his throat and tried to strike a regal pose on the corner of his desk. He adjusted his tie rakishly. He was young, athletic, in the best shape of his life. He puffed his chest out. âDoes that please you?â
âVery much so,â she purred as she unbuttoned her tight blouse and revealed her own majestic chest to him. She paused to let him admire and then took two graceful, hip-swaying, heart-racing steps closer. He could smell her familiar perfume and felt that intoxicated feeling thunder over him again. Being around her was such a rush. He couldnât explain it and didnât care at the moment why he always felt this way around her. She let herself be swooped up in his arms with a tiny squeal and
Comments (0)