The Hot Brother (Romance Love Story) (Hargrave Brothers - Book #5)

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The Hot Brother (Romance Love Story) (Hargrave Brothers - Book #5) Page 94

by Alexa Davis


  Miles IV had been married four times. His most recent ex-wife had only been 22 years old when he married her. She was 23 when she divorced him. What brains the man had for business was lost when it came to love. At 54 years old, he had given hundreds of millions of dollars of his and his family’s fortune to ex-wives. His attorneys had always urged him to get a prenuptial agreement prior to marrying them, as did his children, both of whom were now grown and rightfully concerned that if their father continued his liaisons with these types of women, there would be no inheritance left for them.

  Miles began to get into politics about five years ago. From what I had read thus far, it seemed to me that his choice was based on a cross between boredom with his everyday activities and needing more places to put his money in order to keep the IRS from taking huge chunks.

  Vick Landon had approached him almost four years prior after meeting at a democratic rally and spoke to him about the benefits of investing in the American president. The President was just a hopeful at the time, but Vick had said that with the right financial backers, he could go all the way and do great things for this country. Alicia wasn’t certain if the country was Miles IV’s main concern or not, but it would seem he decided there was something great enough there for someone that he invested hundreds of millions of dollars into the president’s campaign. Thanks to that support, the presidential hopeful was able to put on a campaign that outdid all of his competition and convince the constituents that he was the right man to restore financial order to America once again.

  Vick shot to the top of political circles quickly after that. If not for him, the President may have never received enough funding to get where he was. Miles Brigham IV was always welcome at the White House, and to the chagrin of some of the President’s close advisers, he was perhaps more involved in policy making than he should have been.

  Adam’s good friend Alex Fritz was a close friend of Vick’s. They ran in the same circles, and it was through Alex that Adam had made the contact with Brigham, and our business relationship was born.

  As I read through the file, I made note that Mr. Brigham had also been implicated in many crimes over the years, none of which amounted to an arrest, much less a conviction. Being accused of things was one thing – proving it was something else entirely. Miles Brigham IV had the money and the connections to pay the best lawyers, and in some cases, evidence and even people just disappeared.

  Brigham’s most controversial problem had taken place almost ten years prior, when his third wife, thirty-two-year-old Kelly Brigham, a former topless dancer and self-proclaimed cosmetic surgery addict “fell” off of a cliff while hiking in the hills with her husband. Police and press were suspicious, due to the facts that for one, Kelly Brigham was not an outdoorsy type of girl, secondly, many people had overheard her and Miles IV arguing loudly earlier in the day, and finally, a busboy in the restaurant at the lodge where the couple had been staying had reportedly overheard Miles IV telling Kelly that she should “watch herself” because people “disappeared off the sides of cliffs in this place all the time.”

  The problem with their case was: Kelly’s family, who consisted only of her crack-addict mother and her drug dealer brother stood in Miles IV’s corner and told all who would listen what an amazing husband he had been to Kelly and how he had “turned her life around.” The police suspected a payoff there, You think?, but again, could prove nothing.

  The people that had said they heard the argument in the lobby of the lodge that day either recanted their stories, saying they “must have been mistaken” or left no forwarding addresses in which the police and district attorney could track them down. The busboy from the restaurant was one of the people who had “left town.” No one at the lodge knew where he may have gone, and the police had been unable to track him down.

  I sat the thick file down, yawned, and stretched out my legs. I poured myself a glass of water from the fresh pitcher the attendant had left me a bit ago and mulled over what I had just read. The biggest question on my mind was the one question I would never ask Mr. Brigham. “Is he a murderer?”

  I pictured Miles Brigham IV. I had met him once and had seen him coming and going many times at the office. He was a tall, distinguished-looking man. His gray hair was stylishly cut to just above the collar of his shirts. He rarely wore a suit. Instead, he wore famous brand shirts and designer jeans. I had not ever really noticed his shoes, but he struck me as a cowboy boot kind of man. I had a hard time picturing this man tossing his wife off of a cliff or bludgeoning a man to death. I knew, though, that looks are very often deceiving and recalled what Adam had said earlier about it not mattering if he was guilty or not. I knew that. My job was to give Miles IV the best defense possible. Innocence or guilt was for a jury to decide, not me.

  My plane landed on that thought, and I filed away my concerns about whether or not Mr. Brigham had killed his wife, tucking them away for later. When I stepped off the plane, I saw that the great man himself was waiting to meet me. He stood at the bottom of the steps of the ramp, his long, black limousine parked alongside him. He smiled a wide, welcoming smile as I descended.

  "Ms. Winston, I presume?" he asked as he offered a hand to help me down the last few steps. I smiled back and took his outstretched hand with my free one.

  "Yes, Mr. Brigham, thank you."

  "We have met before, haven't we?" He motioned to his driver to retrieve the bag I carried. “I recall seeing you several times afterwards. I regret that we never had time to get to know one another."

  "Well, I am looking forward to working with you," I told him as the driver held the door to the car open for us. "And, thank you for the amazing ride here. That had to be the smoothest flight I've ever been on."

  Brigham laughed and said, "I reckon I'm a bit spoiled. I can't even remember the last time I flew commercial."

  We both slid into the roomy backseat of the car. Brigham offered to pour me a drink as the driver began the journey. I wasn't much of a drinker and wanted a clear head for our work this evening so I declined and accepted a sparkling water, instead.

  "So, Mr. Brigham, if you don't mind, tell me what has happened thus far."

  Miles sighed loudly. "This is all so unnecessary. I have done many things, young lady, but I assure you, murder is not one of them."

  I gave him a reassuring smile and nodded, but I couldn't help remembering what I had read about his third wife. I shook that off and said,

  "Our goal here, Mr. Brigham, is to avoid your arrest completely. I need you to tell me anything and everything you know about Vick and whatever you may know about who or why someone would want to murder him. I also need to know why the police would think you would be involved in this."

  "Well, for starters, I hated that little rat bastard. When I feel a certain way about someone, I tell them straight out. I told him more than once. I'm afraid I told him in front of more than one person. I think I even used the words once that the little SOB should be wiped right off the face of the earth."

  I winced. We would have to work on the way he phrased things if this ever went to court.

  "I didn't mean that, literally. I just say things when I get angry, and I don't think about how they sound or even who may be listening. It's given me cause for the services of many a good lawyer over the years."

  He said the last with a small chuckle as he drained the contents of his glass. I was not shocked to see him chugging bourbon so early in the day. His penchant for loose, busty women was no match for his penchant for alcohol, and the press had played them both up in more ways than either of them could count. I continued on with my interview,

  "Do you mind telling me why you loathed Vick so much?"

  As he poured another snifter of scotch, he said, “I met Vick when he was nothing but a snot-faced kid with a lot of big dreams. He was smart, I'll give him that, and I was impressed with the boy's tenacity. He had gotten a job working on the President's campaign right out of college. He worked every angle the
re was to get donors for the campaign, including me. Did you know that I am the reason he got the job as the campaign manager? He finagled a promise from the President's right hand man that if he could get me on board, the job was his."

  Miles laughed again, but there was little humor in it. "He started out trying to work me the way he did everyone else. He gathered as much background on me and my company as he could, and tried to work the 'I'll get him to back every law and proposition that you want passed’ angle. I told him straight out that I had enough money and enough friends in high places that I tended to get what I wanted, either way.

  “Then, the steel-balled little bastard...excuse my language, I'm not used to speaking with ladies that often. Anyways, he did something that surprised me. He just came straight out and told me about the promise he had received to be the President's campaign manager. I was impressed with that, I have to say. Hell, I was gonna give my money to somebody, right? Gotta keep those tax write-offs piling up. So, I agreed, Vick got the job, and the rest as we say, is history."

  I waited a moment for him to go on, and when he didn't, I said, "I'm sorry, Mr. Brigham, but that doesn't really explain why you hated him."

  Brigham cracked the window slightly and then turned to me and said, "We are just about to my place. I have a few meetings this afternoon I just can't get out of, but I've set up the library for you with all the documents you need to go over pertaining to my business dealings with Vick. I would appreciate it, if you don't mind so much, if we continue that conversation over dinner later?"

  "Of course," I agreed. I was disappointed. I had thought I would be able to spend the day gaining what I needed from Miles in order to stave off the police and FBI. I doubted that I would be able to get that from reviewing financial documents. He was the client though, and I was on the clock. That made him the boss for now, and I'd have to do it his way.

  When I stepped out of the car, I felt like I had stepped right into a fantasy. The mansion stood before us, framed by lush green lawns stretching out for what seemed like miles. Trees and flowers were everywhere, and the largest, most breathtaking fountain flowed and bubbled with clear, cool water. The front of the home was supported with huge, white pillars and an oak balcony framed the upper floor. My family was well-off and I grew up in a really nice estate, but our entire home would have fit in his enormous front yard.

  "It's lovely," I told him as he helped me out of the car.

  Brigham looked up at the house and said simply, "It's home."

  The entryway was just as grand. The floors were white and soft gray marble. An elegant chandelier hung from a vaulted ceiling and cascaded prisms of light across the spiral staircase that laid to the right of it. A smartly-dressed lady with her hair held back tightly in a bun greeted us at the door. Brigham introduced her as "Hannah" he told me that she was in charge of the household and that I should let her know if I needed anything.

  He took Hannah off to the side for a moment and gave her instructions that I couldn't quite hear. He then told me again that he "just couldn't get out of" these meetings he had to go to, and to please help myself to any of the documents he had lain out for me in the library.

  With that, he said goodbye and left me alone in the mansion, with Hannah of course. She showed me to the library, and after showing me where everything was that I might need, she left to make me a pot of tea.

  I sighed, took off my jacket, and got to work sorting through all of the documents. At some point, Hannah returned with the tea and some cookies. My cell phone rang a few times, but I chose to ignore it. I surprised myself by becoming engrossed in the task before me. I had been concerned about spending the day trying to stay awake over the boring documents I would have to read. Instead, I had been handed a yellow legal pad by Hannah when I first sat down. She had told me to read it carefully, and then go through the documents as the instructions stated. I was intrigued.

  Vick Landon, thirty-six years old. 1865 W. 15th Ave. New York (555) 565-7874.

  Priscilla Moore, twenty-four years old, Vick's lover.

  Cindy McGuire, twenty-six years old, Vick's girlfriend.

  David Tyler, twenty-two years old, Vick's lover?

  The last statement had a question mark behind it. I raised an eyebrow, David? Was that a man or a woman with a man's name?

  I read on. The list contained dates, times and places where he had been with each of these people. It looked like the girlfriend was the only one he was ever seen in public with. She came from a prominent, wealthy family in Manhattan. They spent a lot of time together at fundraising events and social gatherings for the elite.

  The lover, Priscilla, was a stripper in a club that Vick and his friends frequented. She had eventually moved into a deluxe suite at the Plaza, and Vick visited her at least twice a week, sometimes more often. In between his visits, Priscilla visited spas and elegant boutiques where she spent excessive amounts of cash.

  And then there was David, definitely a man. Vick visited him once a week. They met at David's apartment in SoHo, and according to the document laid out before me, Vick was leading a very active sex life of which David was a part of.

  I leaned back in the chair and rubbed my eyes. Suddenly, a deep red rose on a long stem appeared before my eyes. I looked behind me, and there was Adam, dressed to kill and looking like a million bucks. I pulled my chair back from the table.

  "Adam! What are you doing here?" He smiled that smile that could defrost my heart and all of the blood in my body, had I ever been in a deep freeze for too long.

  "Being the attorney of record for Miles Brigham IV has many benefits."

  I felt light-headed and confused as I stood up and continued to gaze at him. My heart and every other fiber in my body was screaming at me to run into his arms. My head was trying, as usual, to overpower all of my other senses and make me listen to reason.

  "Again," I said, enunciating it for effect, "what are you doing here?"

  "I came to see you. I need you, baby. I can't work; I can't sleep. Marjorie is killing me – literally, I think. I need you. You are truly the only good thing in my life right now. Please, don't send me away."

  "We can't just have a tryst in the country and act like things are all wine and roses, Adam."

  "I know that, I do. But, I told you I have the court date on Monday, right? I think this will finally be the last one, I can feel it. Please…Alicia…I need you..." He held his arms open, and I didn't waste any more time allowing my brain to argue. I followed my heart and drifted like steel to his magnet. I threw my arms around his neck, and after a long, seductive kiss I said,

  "Just for today, since we're both here…"

  Adam smiled again, and any doubt I may have had that I wanted to do this was instantly erased. He picked me up in his arms as he continued to kiss me and pulled the door to the library open with his shoe. He carried me down the long hall, knowing just where he was going. When we reached the last door on the right, he opened it and we were suddenly in a spacious, plushly decorated bedroom.

  As he sat me down on the pillow-soft king-sized bed, I had to ask, "Did you plan this with Miles? Is that why he dumped me here and went off to his meetings?"

  Adam nodded. He lit a scented candle on the bedside as he stripped out of his tie and jacket. Picking up a remote that also lay there, he pushed a button and soft, contemporary music began to float throughout the room from invisible speakers.

  "Hannah was in on it, too. I had to have some time alone with you. Miles really did have meetings to attend today. He'll be back for dinner and we will work, I promise. Right now though, I have to ravage you."

  He leaned in for another kiss and began unbuttoning my blouse. As he sat next to me, he worked the buttons with one hand and slipped the other inside. He ran his fingers along the lace of my bra, gently touching the skin on the tops of my breasts and sending little electric shocks racing through me and goosebumps racing down my spine. When my shirt was fully unbuttoned, he slipped it off my shoulders, kiss
ing each one as he did. The bra was suddenly unfastened, and my breasts spilled out and he let out a little moan before using his lips and tongue to set my nipples on fire. I ran my hands through his hair and pulled down gently on his head, urging him on.

  As he sucked on my breasts, he pushed me back gently until I was lying flat on the bed. He continued to lick and suck and nibble, while he began to unfasten and slide my skirt down over my thighs. His fingers were skimming the edges of my panties, teasing in just the right places. I lifted my hips and allowed him to slip them off of me, as well. My pussy was soaked and aching for him. Each time I thought about leaving him, I had to wonder if I’d ever be okay with any other man’s touch. I doubted it. I’d miss everything about him if this didn’t work out. I might have to remain celibate for the rest of my life and that would suck.

  PART TWO

  CHAPTER ONE

  ADAM

  "You have on too many clothes," Alicia told me in a breathless voice.

  All I could manage was a grunt, but I began to work on removing my own clothing. I kept my tongue busy on her sexy body and when I was finally naked, I rolled on my back and Alicia climbed up and straddled me. She started kissing my neck. Breathing in deeply, she said, “God, I love the way you smell. It’s so…I feel silly saying this, but it’s so masculine.”

 

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