EXCERPT:
Chapter One
A year ago, Carolina Fulton
didn’t think much about fame.
These
days, she could go online, type her name into a search engine and
come up with hundreds of hits. She could even buy a plastic bobble
head of herself. The thought of that usually
made her smile. But not today. That’s because today, after two
straight hours of nodding and smiling, her own, very
real head felt like it was about to pop off her shoulders.
Some
days it sucked to be a daughter of the President of the United
States.
Today
was one of them.
Planted in a circle of
helmet-haired society wives in the East Room of the White House, she
tried to tune out the din of voices and the string quartet in a
corner of the room as she leaned forward, feigning polite attention.
Pain squeezed her temples, and she barely avoided rolling her eyes at
the name dropping old bat to her right. Carolina had a bobble
headache. From being a bobble head. She had to get out of here.
Smoothing
the front of her full-skirted taffeta cocktail dress, she bobbled her
head two more times—ouch—and
extended her right hand into the circle. She didn’t care who shook
it, as long as she could bolt in the next ten seconds.
“Will it be a Rose Garden
wedding, dear?” asked a woman wearing a diamond brooch big enough
to be used as a coaster. Another woman, the loudest of the bunch, let
out an annoying tsk. “Of course it will, Sylvia. Don’t be silly.
Who’s designing your gown, Carolina? I have some names for you if
you haven’t made up your mind.”
Carolina blinked a couple of
times and pasted on a brilliant smile. “Ladies. Roger and I haven’t
set a date yet, but you’ll be the first to know.” She winked and
let the subdued laughter wash over her. Her left eye twitched. “And
I haven’t decided on a veil yet, either. But silk chiffon does
sound lovely. Thanks for the tip.”
As she backed away, she
fluttered a manicured hand and scanned the room for an empty space.
The corner near the grand piano looked promising. She weaved her way
through the glittering crowd toward the drapes behind the piano,
reached beneath the bow on the waist of her conservative dress and
slipped her cell from a side pocket.
Where
the hell was Roger? He knew that diplomatic receptions weren’t her
cup of tea, so this time Mr. Social had volunteered to stay nearby.
Not that she couldn’t take care of herself, but it had been a
relief knowing her fiancé would run interference for her, especially
since she was exhausted—she’d been going full steam since eight
a.m.—a full day of classes sandwiched with a charity luncheon she
didn’t even remember—and now this event. Roger was supposed to be
her prop tonight.
Oh, God.
That sounded bad…not prop. Support.
But an hour had passed since he’d vanished.
With a glance behind her,
Carolina focused her attention on her phone.
Where
r u? she
texted.
She
stared at the small screen. When the bubble popped up, alerting her
that Roger was typing, she exhaled. Good. But then the bubble
vanished. She frowned. How typical. Roger Chapman was known for being
easily distracted. His lack of focus was the main reason that her dad
hadn’t asked him to be Chief of Staff, even though Roger was
capable of the job in many other ways. But Patrick Fulton didn’t
roll the dice on the people who worked for him…making wise choices
was how he’d gotten elected to the highest office in the land.
Secretly, Carolina agreed with
her dad, although she’d never admit it to Roger. She admired her
dad and followed his example most of the time, especially about
making wise decisions.
Agreeing
to marry Roger was a rash decision,
her conscience whispered.
Shut
up,
she told it.
Getting
married made sense. It would certainly be met with approval, because
when her father had been a senator, Roger had been his right hand
man. And even though Carolina’s two sisters were the more overtly
talented daughters, she’d always been the person Roger had a smile
for. The middle child. The agreeable one. The perpetual student. The
hard worker. Roger was like that, too.
So when
he’d asked her out a year ago, soon after her dad had announced his
run for the White House, she’d been thrilled. And when he’d
proposed to her at one of the Inaugural balls, it had seemed like a
fairy tale. Of course she’d said yes. Since that day two months
ago, she’d been caught in the whirlwind of Washington society and
wedding chatter had been on the tips of everyone’s tongues. Except
hers.
That’s
because you don’t love him,
whispered her sneaky conscience.
Leave
me alone,
she shot back.
You
think I’m sneaky, but you know Roger is.
Carolina
sighed. Yes, she knew he was sneaky. The more time she spent with her
fiancé, the less she liked him. He was a chronic workaholic and
resuming Chief of Staff duties for the woman who’d filled her dad’s
Senate seat, Roger had been more and more evasive about…well,
everything. She closed her eyes and swallowed.
“Everything all right,
Miss?”
Carolina turned with a ready
smile for the butler near her shoulder. “Yes, fine. Thanks. But
would you be able to get me an aspirin or something?”
The man nodded. “Of course.
Be back in a minute.”
The phone in her hand came to
life and Carolina looked down at Roger’s return text: Sorry
babe. Be there in a sec.
She
shook her head, her fingers flying. This
party is driving me nuts. Where r u? I’ll come find u.
Tapping
her foot, she waited. A few seconds later, he answered.
No,
don’t. Be back up in sec, like I said.
Back up? He’d probably gone
down to the China Room. When visiting the White House, he tended to
go there when he wanted to make phone calls. Which was often.
Carolina’s eyes scanned the doorway. The butler walked through, a
tray in hand. She met him halfway, took a glass of water and two
aspirin from the tray. “Thanks very much,” she said with a
strained smile.
He nodded. “My pleasure.”
Carolina returned the water
glass, slipped through the doorway and headed for the staircase at
the end of the Grand Hall. She felt like hell and all she wanted was
to go back to her apartment in Georgetown and collapse into bed. But
first, Roger Chapman needed to be set straight. She was more than
sick of him vanishing like the Invisible Man every time she needed
him. Gritting her teeth, she grabbed the handrail and placed a
too-tight satin shoe on the first step.
A polite cough behind her made
her freeze in place. And then give in to the eye roll she’d been
craving most of the evening. She sighed and turned to glance back at
her newest Secret Service agent.
“We’re in the
White House. So I think I’ll be safe walking down the stairs. Could
you just let me alone for ten minutes, please?”
“No, ma’am.”
“Why not?”
“It’s my job.”
Carolina folded her arms and
surveyed the man in black. Jason Baxter…or was it Jake? Either way,
he looked like most of the other agents—tall and chiseled. This
one, though, had amazing green eyes. And a chest harder than Mount
Rushmore. She knew, since she’d bumped into it by accident the
other day. He was perfectly still under her scrutiny—his eyes
betrayed nothing. He was a machine in a pretty package. But that fact
hadn’t stopped her from entertaining fantasies about the man. Ones
in which he actually smiled. And others in which he did a lot more
than just smile.
If
you hadn’t been taking photos of him on the sly, you wouldn’t be
so painfully aware of him right now.
Carolina’s face felt hot
with embarrassment, but almost immediately, she shook it off. Agent
Baxter didn’t know she’d taken those photos. He also didn’t
know that she’d pulled them up on her laptop a couple of
times—well, too many times to count—and indulged in the pure
pleasure of just looking at him. As far as he was aware, she just
enjoyed photography. It was her hobby—everyone knew that. She’d
even talked about it for an interview with Vogue.
Her dad
had only been President for two months and here she was, an engaged
woman, lusting after a Secret Service agent. God.
“Nice bow tie,” she
commented and turned to grab the handrail again.
Jake trotted down the steps,
passing her. Near the bottom, he glanced back. “I need to be in
front,” he muttered, holding out an arm to halt her progress. Even
through his suit sleeve, she could tell that arm was muscular. This
guy had been her shadow for two solid weeks, and before that, she was
pretty sure he’d been glued to a diplomat. When did he have time to
work out?
He’s
hot, her
conscience whispered.
“Thought
I told you to shut up,” she answered. Except this time it was out
loud.
Jake raised an eyebrow.
“Excuse me?”
Carolina closed her eyes
briefly. “Sorry. I’m just really tired. I mean, really.
Exhausted.”
“You want to go home?” he
asked, even as he stepped across the hall and to the doorway of the
China Room, his eagle-eyed gaze darting around.
“Yes. But first I need to
speak with my fiancé,” she answered, smoothing her sleek dark hair
behind her ears. And it was then that she heard the giggles, followed
by familiar annoying chuckles. Roger only chuckled like that when he
was trying to wheedle his way into…oh. Oh
hell, no!
With
narrowed eyes, Carolina crossed the dimly lit hall, intent on murder.
Jake froze in the entry to the
China Room and placed his hands on either side of the door
frame. Shit. He
couldn’t let her in.
“Let me in there,”
Carolina demanded in a terse whisper.
“No, ma’am,” he replied,
his mind shuffling through several lies he could tell her, one of
which she might buy. He came up empty. She was incredibly smart. Not
to mention beautiful, but her beauty was none of his business. The
only thing he should be concerned with was her safety. Behind him, he
heard an exasperated sigh, and then felt her small hands curl around
his left arm.
“Why? Is there an imminent
threat to my security?” She grunted. “Move this tree trunk out of
the way and let me through!”
Another burst of giggles was
quickly followed by a moan and Jake winced. This was going to suck.
But he couldn’t think of a plausible reason why he shouldn’t step
aside. So he did.
“Thank you,” Carolina
whispered. She stepped into the middle of the dimly lit room. “Roger?
I know you’re in here.”
Jake watched as she twisted
her head, looking for her asswipe of a fiancé. Really, for her sake,
he was glad she was about to find Roger in a liplock with some skank.
Then maybe the charade of her engagement would be over. She deserved
better.
Lifting
his arm, he muttered into his microphone, “Care Bear secure in
China Room. ETA East Room twenty-one hundred hours.”
Carolina turned her head. In
the faint backlight spilling from the built in china cabinets on the
wall, she looked delicate and vulnerable. At first. Then he noticed a
crease between her dark brows and her hands jammed onto her hips. She
was anything but vulnerable—especially at this moment. He shifted
in the doorway.
“Flip on the lights, Jason,”
she commanded. “I need to look at my watch. Something tells me
you’ve just given me five minutes down here and I need quite a bit
more time than that.” Her chest rose as she filled her lungs.
“Roger!”
Jake flipped on the lights. A
gasp from the other side of the room was accompanied by more giggles
and then rustling as two people emerged from the drapes covering a
window. The gasp of course, belonged to Roger and the giggles…Jake
raised an eyebrow. Damn. It was a
skank. Or at least a skank in training.
“Babe,
it’s not what you think,” Roger said, holding up his hands in
appeasement. The skank lurched forward and grabbed his arm for
support, but he shook off her hand. “She attacked me.”
Jake
glanced at her but he couldn’t even remember the name of the very
young and very flirty girl who answered phones in the White House
communications office. Most of the other agents just referred to her
as Trouble. She was drunk; her bra straps were hanging loose around
her shoulders and her fake rack sat like a shelf on top of the
neckline of her tight dress. He tried not to stare, but how could he
not? Why would a woman do that to herself? The girl couldn’t weigh
more than a hundred pounds. Why did she need double D boobs?
He tore his gaze away and
focused on Carolina. She stood still as a statue, staring. In fact,
nobody spoke. The only sound in the room was the hum of the lights
and Roger’s pathetic panting. Finally, Carolina stepped forward.
“You’ve got to be kidding
me,” she said in an even tone, devoid of emotion.
Good
girl,
Jake thought. Make that arrogant prick squirm. Carolina was so calm.
Always composed, and very courteous. Even if she forgot his name most
of the time. And even if she took photos of him when she thought he
wasn’t looking. He could feel a smile coming on and he rubbed his
jaw, blocking it.
“I think it goes without
saying that the engagement is off,” Carolina continued in her quiet
voice.
Roger, who had been helping
stuff Trouble’s breasts back into her dress, dropped his hands as
if the well-endowed receptionist was covered in oozing scabs. He
scuttled forward. “Carolina. Listen to me. She followed me down
here and I was trying to get rid of her,” he said.
Quickly, Jake scanned the
hallway behind him and stepped into the room, pulling the door
closed. Carolina glanced back, and he saw the tears forming in her
eyes. Uh oh. On instinct he took a step toward her, but she shook her
head and swiveled back to Roger.
“Frankly, I couldn’t care
less. And I’m not interested in listening while you make up a
story. I’m too tired.”
“Babe…” Roger
straightened his bow tie and stuffed his hands into his tux pockets,
rocking back and forth on the balls of his feet. Jake knew the loser
was trying to hide an erection. But Roger was so stupid he didn’t
realize that all he was doing was mimicking thrusting. Jake noticed,
though. Carolina noticed it too. She rolled her eyes. Jake bit back a
laugh.
“We’re finished here,”
Carolina announced, turning on her heel. Jake nodded at her once and
gestured toward the door. “Just take me home,” she whispered, her
eyes filling completely. A fat tear plopped on the carpet in front of
her and she swiped at her eyes with impatient fingers. At the
doorway, she stopped. “No. I’ve changed my mind. Take me to my
dad’s office, please.” Her voice was thick.
Another trill of giggles
erupted from the corner, followed by a loud ‘Shhhh!’ from Roger.
“But you told me she wouldn’t care,” Trouble whispered.
Carolina froze, an angry blush spreading across her fair complexion.
Uh oh. Before Jake could block her path, she swiveled around and
marched across the room. She didn’t stop until she was eye to eye
with the skank.
“You’re right. I don’t
care. I stopped caring about five minutes ago.” Carolina gave her a
brittle smile. “I hope you enjoy him.” Her gaze flicked over
Roger’s crotch. “But something tells me it’s doubtful.”
Roger’s weak chin descended,
his mouth falling open. “That was a low blow.”
“Literally,” Carolina shot
back. She put a placating hand on Roger’s sleeve. “Oh and you’re
not welcome at the White House anymore. I’ll tell the guards at the
gate on my way out.”
Roger sputtered as he pulled
her hand away. “Wait a minute. I told you
it’s not what you think.” He blinked as if wounded. “You’re
always jumping to conclusions. I’m not sure what to say, Carrie.
Where’s the trust? Aren’t you the least bit sorry?”
As Jake watched, Carolina’s
soft brown eyes turned hard as stone. She stared at Roger. “Are you
seriously hoping that I’ll blame this…this…situation on
myself? Go screw yourself.”
Trouble’s eyes went wide.
“This is getting too weird. Roger, you said that
as long as the ring ends up on her finger, she doesn’t care who you
party with. She’s getting some on the side, too. Isn’t she?”
Trouble’s mouth dropped open. “Ohmygod, Roger. You’re a liar.”
For a moment, Carolina was
still and then to Jake’s horror, she launched herself at Roger, a
war cry ripping from her throat. In the blink of an eye, Roger
crumpled like a paper cup and Carolina was straddling him, her small
hands landing surprisingly accurate slaps on his aristocratic
cheekbones.
“Bastard!” she screeched.
“How dare you?” A sob caught in her throat, and Jake reached out,
caught her around the waist and hauled her upright. Beneath his arm,
her small breasts pillowed as she leaned forward. He shoved the
awareness of their warmth from his mind and pulled her back a couple
of steps.
“Let
me go, Jason! I’m not finished.”
Jake turned her body around
and muttered into his sleeve. “Care Bear on the move. Oval Office
permission requested.” She didn’t resist when he opened the door
and walked through. Footsteps sounded at the end of the hallway, and
Carolina’s tear-streaked face snapped up in alarm. Approaching,
head down, cell phone to ear, was the White House Deputy
Communications Director.
“Get me out of
here,” Carolina whispered, ducking her head into his shoulder.
Shit! Jake’s
jaw clamped tight. How the hell had he let this happen? Two weeks
he’d been in the inner circle and screwing up was not an option.
But he clearly had done just that. He shouldn’t have let her jump
on top of Roger. The asshole might have hit her back.
Visions
of being bumped back to a desk job in a remote corner of rural
Oklahoma ran through his mind. No. The
youngest agent ever to make First Family detail was not going lose
that position right after it had begun. He was only thirty years old
and he did not need
for his career to be cut short. Especially not because of Roger
Chapman. He needed to fix this.
“Good
evening, sir,” Jake began, turning Carolina to the side. Her
shoulders were shaking and he gave them a light squeeze.
“Hardly.” The bald man
stopped walking and held his phone to his chest. “What’s wrong?”
“We have a situation, sir,”
Jake answered. Carolina’s arm snaked around his middle and his
stomach tightened. He cleared his throat. “A member of your staff
and Mr. Chapman were just discovered together and it wasn’t
a…business meeting.”
The Deputy Chief closed his
eyes briefly. “Lord.” He stepped around Jake and poked his head
into the China Room. “Young lady. My office. Ten minutes.” He
pointed a finger at Roger. “And you. Stay here.” Nodding at Jake,
he continued down the hall, muttering into the phone.
After the echo of the
footsteps diminished, Carolina raised her head and swiped at her
cheeks. She let out a deep breath. “Thanks.” Her soft lips
quirked up in a smile. “Is there a bathroom down here? My dad
hasn’t been President long enough for me to have explored the whole
house.”
Jake nodded. He glanced back
into the room once more, noting Roger sitting on the floor like a
baby, cradling his cheeks in his palms. Asswipe. He
deserved a trip to the dentist, courtesy of Jake. Trouble leaned
against the wall, deflated. Except for her chest. He almost felt
sorry for her, but any woman with the smarts to get a job in the
White House should know better. She was a fool, but Roger was worse.
He was a complete idiot.
A wry voice from the command
center spoke into Jake’s earpiece. “Chapman’s presence has been
requested by POTUS.”
“Copy that,” Jake muttered
into his sleeve. Pointing a finger at Roger, he said, “Oval Office.
Try not to shit your pants, sir.” Then he shut the door.
Carolina stood there, her eyes
wide. “That was… remarkable, Jason.”
He gestured down the hall.
“This way.” He couldn’t help but smile, though, and when he
felt her gaze on his face, he glanced down. “It did feel
good. But I shouldn’t have.”
She sighed. “I’ve been
thinking that very thought since the minute you intervened. I hope
you know that you weren’t at fault back there. A mac truck couldn’t
have kept me from launching myself at Roger.”
Jake could have, but he didn’t
say anything. Truthfully, he shouldn’t have let her into the room
in the first place. But how could he have known that flirty little
Trouble would be such an outrageous slut? Or that Carolina would
bitch-slap her fiancé and call him a bastard? Still, according to
his training, he was supposed to be ready for anything. Even that. He
glanced down at Carolina with mixed admiration and concern. She
deserved his complete, professional protection. And unless the job
was yanked away from him, he fully intended to continue guarding her
with his life.
When they reached the
bathroom, she let go of his arm. “Thanks.”
“You’re welcome, Miss
Fulton.” He felt himself smiling again and stilled his face. “It’s
my pleasure.”
“No need to call me Miss
Fulton,” she said, “Please call me Carolina. I mean, I call you
Jason. It’s only fair.”
He coughed. “Thank you, uh,
Carolina. No need to call me Jason, though.” The smile returned to
his lips and this time he let it stay. “Since my name is Jake.”