 
There’s nothing like having
your Senior Editor ask you to write “a male driven series
with scintillating scandal” to get your creative juices
flowing. Coupled with a brainstorming session--over a round
of cocktails with some brilliant friends--to get those juices
flowing in the right direction and you’ve got yourself
a winner.
That’s exactly how my newest
series, THE
LOST MILLIONAIRES, came to be. And there was no
doubt at all which of these men would have his story told first.
What is it about bad boys that makes us normally sensible women
rub our hands together in glee? Cooper
Anders certainly did that to me. Maybe it was because
I knew why he was so bad and couldn’t wait to heal him.
Yeah, that was it.
I’m sure it had nothing
to do with his deep blue eyes, thick black hair, and wicked,
wicked grin…
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Helen
Slifer from Writers
Unlimited (posted July 1, 2004)
"Leah Vale
writes a story that kept me turning the pages
to the very end. As Cooper tries to wreak havoc
on McCoy’s Enterprises, Sara was trying
her best to make sure that Cooper can’t
do any damage. Will Sara be able to persuade
Cooper that his grandfather and half-brothers
were really his family now? Will Cooper
be able to become part of the McCoy family? Pickup
a copy of The Bad Boy and
enjoy it as much as I did." |
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from
Romantic Times BOOKclub (posted
June 1, 2004)
FOUR
STARS!
"When Sara Barnes arrives at the jailhouse
to tell Cooper Anders that he's just inherited the
family estate, it isn't the bailout he'd been expecting.
Resentment and the truth about his paternity haven't
exactly endeared the family to him, even if he is
a real McCoy. Cooper wants revenge, but Sara's intent
on helping him come to terms with the past. Fun and
jaunty, The Bad Boy (4)
will amuse and entertain readers. Leah
Vale does a winning job..." |
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CHAPTER
ONE
Dear
Mr. Anders;
It is our duty at
this time to inform you of the death of Marcus McCoy
due to an unfortunate, unforeseen encounter with
a wild grizzly bear while fly-fishing in Alaska on
June 8 of this year, and per the stipulations set
forth in his last will and testament, to make formal
his acknowledgement of one Cooper Anders, age 30,
of 785 Westmark Street, Dependable, Missouri, as
being his son and heir to an equal portion of his
estate.
It is the wish of
Joseph McCoy, father to Marcus McCoy, grandfather
to Cooper Anders, and founder of McCoy Enterprises,
that you immediately assume your rightful place in
the family home and business with all due haste and
utmost discretion to preserve the family’s
privacy.
Regards,
David Weidman, Esq.
Weidman, Biddermier, Stark |
Cooper rocked back on the heels
of his black work boots, the air stalled in his lungs. Shock
nearly made him plop right down on the concrete county jail
steps. Instead, he looked up from the letter to the cloudless,
late morning sky, then thought better of it and dropped his
gaze to the space between his feet. Marcus McCoy, you son of
a--
“Mr. Anders?” The
gorgeous, petite brunette who’d handed him the letter
drew his gaze, concern sharp in her bright green eyes. “Are
you all right? You weren’t hurt during the, er, altercation
last night, were you?”
He waived off her concern. “No.
No one laid a hand on me.”
“But I thought you’d
been arrested for involvement in a bar fight?”
Cooper snorted. “I mostly
just sat on the biggest guy so it’d be a fair fight.” He
raised the letter and his brows. “So this is why you
bailed me out of the klink? You were sent by them?”
She smiled as if they were a good
thing, showing pretty white teeth to match the rest of the
pretty package. “Yes. I work for McCoy Enterprises.”
Eyeing the curves beneath her
brown sweater and beige slacks, he snorted again. Seemed it
was a snorting kind of morning. “So much for a favorite
male fantasy coming true.”
She wrinkled her previously smooth
forehead beneath just a wisp of bangs. “Excuse me?”
“You know, the one about
being sprung from jail to become some babe’s cabana boy?”
She blinked, then her eyes widened
and twin splotches of red spread beneath her high cheekbones.
On any other day he would have tried for a full-body blush.
On any other day he would have
sworn this day would never come.
He looked back down at the inarguably
official letter. Adrenaline surged and his heart started to
pound. He hadn’t had a clue how to deal with the news
of Marcus’s death when he’d first heard of it on
the news a few days ago. Now he did. “Though I think
an altogether different fantasy is about to come true.”
“I can imagine.”
Something in her tone, a wistfulness,
made him look back up, but her smile implied he’d simply
reassured her. She probably wasn’t the only person in
town who’d think suddenly becoming a part of the McCoy
family would be a dream come true. But for a very different
reason than his. Appearances could be so deceiving.
He eyed her glossy brown hair,
cut so the ends flipped up just as it reached her slender shoulders,
her subtle make-up, her lack of jewelry other than a tiny gold
anchor on a necklace, and business-casual outfit. Her appearance,
though extremely attractive, screamed corporate drone. He seriously
doubted anything deceptive was going on with her appearance.
He nodded at the letter. “So
you are aware of what this says?”
She cleared her throat. “Yes,
actually, I am.” She folded her hands in front of her,
all professional-like, but her discomfort sneaked through in
the way she held her neck stiff and her gaze darted from his
to the letter and back.
A strong sense of kinship stirred
in him. He knew all too well what it felt like to be caught
after doing something he shouldn’t have. “I admire
your honesty.” But since he’d yet to completely
shake the habit of acting how he was expected to in this town,
he once again let his interest roam over the conservative sweater
and slacks that failed to hide the curves underneath. “Among
other things.”
She made a soft, strangled sound
that brought his attention to her wide eyes. She must not get
out much.
He kicked up a corner of his mouth
and shrugged. “I suppose you can’t be blamed for
taking a peek, since they didn’t bother to seal the envelope.
And I doubt the vaunted McCoys bail people out of the slammer
on a regular basis. That would get anyone’s curiosity
up.”
Her sculpted dark eyebrows came
down and she shook her head, her nicely formed lips, accented
with a subtle brownish lipstick, opened to protest.
He
raised his hand to stop her. “No big deal. Really.” Though
a very big part of him would have just as soon kissed her.
She was so his type. Great eyes, hair, shapely, and roughly
his age. A woman who’d know how and still consider it
fun. ‘Cause fun was all he was ever after, thanks to
what his mother had experienced.
“But you don’t understand--”
“Unfortunately, I understand
perfectly.” He stopped her once more and gestured at
her with the letter. “The McCoys send a pretty piece
of fluff--a secretary with an eye on moving up, I bet--to be
sure I’d realize just how lucky I am, on the off chance
being told out of the blue that I’m suddenly a member
of one of the richest families in the country wasn’t
enough.” He winked and smiled tightly. “No offense,
of course.”
Obviously offended, anyway, she
pulled her chin back and her frown deepened into a scowl. “First
of all, please don’t interrupt me. Secondly, I beg
your pardon.” Her tone confirmed it.
While he’d never purposefully
ticked off a woman before, finding many more benefits to having
them like him, the bitterness that had festered far
too long deep inside him gurgled to life and kept him from
apologizing.
But since she had saved him the
embarrassment of having to call his business partner, Ted,
to bail him out of jail, the least he could do was explain.
He lifted the letter held in his tightening grip. “The
thing is, I already knew about my paternity.”
Her jaw went slack.
He leaned toward her, and despite
his surging resentment, the sweet, floral scent of her perfume
went straight to his head after the bleach-laced stink of the
jail and the bar-scum he’d tangled with the night before.
“You see, when I was thirteen
years old my mother told me--on her deathbed, mind you--that
I was a Real McCoy, that Marcus McCoy, the only man
she’d ever love, was my father.” Cooper straightened
and grappled for control over emotions that had always been
at least an inch beyond his reach. Emotions that had led him
to test any and all boundaries placed on him by those who didn’t
understand his torment. “And all that time I’d
thought I was just another kid whose dad hadn’t cared
enough to give him his name. But mine had paid to keep it a
secret.” He pasted on a stiff smile. “Funny how
no one would believe me.”
Shock, empathy--no make that pity--flared
in her eyes and she opened her mouth as if to say something,
but snapped it shut.
He clenched his back teeth against
the old, cankered hurt. Only years of practice allowed him
to loosen his jaw enough to continue. “And oh, how they
tried to talk me out of it.”
He puffed up his chest beneath
his light blue denim shirt, mimicking Grandpa Ned’s gravely
voice. “‘You don’t know what you’re
talking about, boy. This town wouldn’t be what it is
without the McCoys.’”
Cooper gestured to the large brick
building he’d just exited, built to match the colonial
sensibilities they supposedly represented and emblazoned with
the words Joseph McCoy Municipal Building. Pretty
much all the public buildings in the modest town of ten thousand
souls had that name attached to them somewhere. “‘We’d
have nuthin’ if’n it weren’t for the McCoys,
so you’d best shut your yap and keep it shut.’” Joseph
McCoy had taken a Podunk town with very little going for it
but a symbolic name and built it into a heartland postcard.
She blinked several times, obviously
unsure of what to make of his outburst. Finally, she asked, “Who
said that to you?”
“Ned Anders, my mom’s
dad. Had the joy of spending five years under his roof.” Cooper
looked back at the jail, a place he’d finally grown smart
enough to avoid once he’d squeaked his way past high
school. Mostly. “That is when he wasn’t rightly
kicking me out for acting up. Something hurt, angry teenagers
tend to do.”
Pushing memories of the cause
of his hurt and anger aside, he slapped the letter against
jeans, met her stunned gaze and smiled mirthlessly. “I
have a sneaking suspicion Marcus didn’t plan on the truth
coming out so soon. Though why it did at all is beyond me.
To think I owe it all to a hungry grizzly bear. That’s
the sort of cosmic justice I really like.”
At the thought of justice, determination
surged through him. Cooper turned and started down the steps.
The tap of low-heeled pumps on
concrete chased him as she hurried to catch up. “Mr.
Anders, please. I’m sure everyone was simply acting for
your own benefit.” Her tone was so lacking in conviction
Cooper didn’t bother to argue the point. Apparently,
she was one of the rare few who “got” where he
was coming from. A real pity she was from the enemy camp.
She jumped down a step ahead of
him and faced him, blocking his descent. The late morning sun
caught in her hair and set the deep, chestnut brown strands
aglow. Damn, she was a pretty piece of fluff. But
nothing was going to distract him from making the most of this
little revelation she’d delivered to him.
Regret seared his lungs. His mom
hadn’t been lying after all. She hadn’t illegally
earned the money they’d lived on as they’d bounced
from place to place throughout Missouri, then used to pay for
her medical treatment--something he’d secretly feared,
thanks to Ned’s implications.
Pointing to the letter in his
grip, she said, “Marcus did acknowledge you
in his will. There’s no disputing that. You now have
the chance to take your rightful place in the family, a family
more than worth the admiration they receive.”
“No, what I have is the
chance for payback.”
She stilled. “What do you
mean?”
Cooper bent toward her, taking
the opportunity to run his gaze over her perfectly suited features.
The extra color he’d put in her cheeks made her even
prettier. The fear in her eyes, though, grabbed at his guts.
He really shouldn’t have shot the messenger. He knew
what it was like when something didn’t go as you’d
hoped.
That kinship he felt with her
had him explaining gruffly, “Honey, they say revenge
is sweet. Well, guess what? It turns out I have a monster sweet
tooth.”
With her earnest face turned up
to him, Cooper was struck with the strongest urge to kiss her.
He brought his face closer still, until he could feel her quick,
warm breaths on his lips.
As much as he’d love to
stay true to his nature and succumb to the urge, instead he
pulled away. “Sorry, honey, but I have to go. I’ve
a company to ruin.”
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