The Kingmaker (All the King’s Men #1) Read Online Kennedy Ryan

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Billionaire, Contemporary, New Adult Tags Authors: Series: All the King's Men Series by Kennedy Ryan
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Total pages in book: 114
Estimated words: 108483 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 542(@200wpm)___ 434(@250wpm)___ 362(@300wpm)
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“Yeah, it all sucks, but what are you gonna do, right?”

“What are you going to do?” he asks. “What have you been doing?”

We grin at each other like we’ve won the lottery and are splitting the ticket right down the middle. What fortune. What luck to have found each other again. This time, there’s no cell full of protestors. No watchful Mr. Paul. No prostitute.

“Oh my God, remember the lady who offered to blow you with Pop Rocks?” I ask, suddenly transported back to that strange night. Every second burned itself in my memory.

“Jesus.” His low-rumbled laughter coats my shoulders and arms with goose bumps. “That was awkward. I was hoping you’d forgotten that part.”

“I never forgot any part,” I say before I can stop myself.

Like we’re tied together, our smiles dissolve simultaneously, and something intense swallows the humor in his eyes. The air turns humid, heavy with possibility. There was energy between us years ago, but it was all potential energy. My age, the circumstances—things could only go so far. This energy, though—it’s kinetic. Already in motion. Now things between us can go as far as we want.

“What are you two crazy kids up to in a corner by yourselves?” Vivienne asks.

“We’re just catching up,” I offer with a small smile.

“Now how did you say you know each other?” Oliver asks.

“I was part of a protest Lennix’s tribe organized when a company planned to lay a gas pipeline,” Maxim answers.

“What?” Kimba interjects, tearing her attention away from David, who is obviously into her. “When was this?”

“My senior year in high school.”

Maxim and I share a loaded look at my words. I’m not in high school anymore. The knowledge sits between us unspoken, but I know for sure he feels it, too. The tight space brims with it.

“Lennix was incredible,” Maxim says for everyone to hear, but his eyes are for only me. “I couldn’t believe she was just seventeen. She had that crowd eating from her hand.”

“You spoke?” Aya asks, her voice laced with disbelief. “I hate public speaking.”

“She was brilliant.” Maxim chuckles and takes a quick sip of the whiskey he ordered. “And then we got arrested.”

“Arrested?” Hans asks, delighted incredulity all over his distinctly Dutch features.

“Yup.” I nod and laugh. “We got tossed in the slammer, and you got bitten by a dog.”

“You got sprayed with tear gas.”

“You got propositioned.”

“By the wrong girl,” Maxim says softly, his eyes resting on me like a flame set to low. “But you were too young for me anyway. Then.”

All the banked heat and want that we couldn’t acknowledge before is unabashed in the look he gives me now. A silence falls on the table, punctuated with a few cleared throats and a giggle or two. We don’t care. We don’t look away. I have no frame of reference for the fluttering in my belly. For the tightening of my nipples. For the way I’m wet between my legs just because his thigh keeps brushing mine under the table. Just because he smells clean and masculine and fresh. Just because this close, I see the dark starburst at the center of his clear green eyes.

“Yes, well,” Vivienne says, tossing back her drink and gulping it all down at once, “it’s getting late, and we’re all tuckered out from jet lag. What do you say we call it a night, ladies?”

David and Kimba exchange numbers while everyone settles their tab and prepares to leave.

“Are you tired?” Maxim asks.

“No,” I answer quickly. “Not at all.”

“Where are you staying?”

I give him the name of the hostel, and he nods.

“I know where that is. I could walk you back if you want to stay and talk some more?”

“Hey, I’m gonna stay for a bit,” I tell my friends.

“What?” Vivienne and Kimba ask in unison, the same cautious look on both their faces.

“We just want to catch up some more,” Maxim offers, his voice pitched to I promise I’m harmless and won’t hurt your friend. “I’ll walk her home as soon as we’re done.”

“Sounds good,” Kimba says, eyeing him closely like she’s memorizing his face, which she probably is. “Okay.”

She bends to kiss my cheek and whispers in my ear, “Girl, get you some. If you say this one isn’t right, your ass is mine. That V-card? You better play it!”

We chuckle, and I glance over her shoulder to find Maxim watching me with single-minded intent.

“I’ll see you when I get home,” I whisper back, not confirming, but I acknowledge at least to myself that meeting Maxim again feels like destiny; like fate set us up. I’d be a fool to ignore it, and for the first time, I think the V-card might actually come into play.

CHAPTER 9

MAXIM

God, I thought they’d never leave. Our friends spill into the street, leaving the faintest echo of their laughter and conversation behind. I can tell David’s into Kimba. I wish him luck, but I’m too preoccupied with a second chance I never thought I’d get. Can it be called a second chance when there was never a chance before?


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