Authors: Deborah Smith
“There’s a pure wildcat under your pretty pink skin, Madam Mayor,” Rucker taunted in a wicked, throaty voice
.
“Temporary insanity. I’ve never—”
“Acted so un-mayorly … before,” he finished for her. “I know.” His voice dropped to a low murmur against her ear. “But, oh, little lady, you’re gonna surprise yourself a whole lot more than this before I’m through.”
He curved his hands around her waist and abruptly picked her up. Dinah gripped his shoulders as he pulled her close and held her snugly to him. He was a big man, and she trembled at the sensation of being overwhelmed.
“All right?” he asked.
“I’m just feeling particularly female at the moment.” She didn’t tell him that this dignified and pristine female had no idea how to deal with a man who ruffled her reserve … and everything else.
“I’ll take that as a compliment,” he said in an amused tone.
“It is, macho man, it is.”
“You Jane, me Tarzan.”
“You Rambo, me … I don’t know who I am.” She sounded resigned.
“You’re a prim little ol’ beauty queen who’s come to her senses. You need to run wild a little.” She moaned as he pressed his body closer to her. “Come on, Dee. Run wild with me.…”
HOLD ON TIGHT
A Bantam Book / May 1988
LOVESWEPT
®
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All rights reserved
.
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©
1988 by Deborah Smith
.
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v3.1
This is for Myra and Don
—
sophisticated, glamorous, and two of the most loving people I know. They continue to provide me with worlds of romantic inspiration
.
“Boss, I have a baby possum for you.”
“Miss Hunstomper, I distinctly recollect telling you that I wanted fried chicken and cole slaw for lunch, not baby possum.”
“This is no joke, boss. Now look, that Alabama mayor you wrote the column about—the ex-Miss Georgia—has taken revenge. I guess it’s because you called her a ‘possum queen’ and made fun of her town’s Possum Days Festival.”
Rucker McClure finished double-checking his latest column and slowly lowered the Lifestyle section of
The Birmingham Herald/Examiner
. When the top edge of the paper was just beneath the level of his eyes, he arched one auburn brow at his secretary. Nothing about his handsome face indicated that he believed her claim that a baby possum was now residing on the editorial floor of one of the South’s largest daily newspapers.
“A possum, you say, Miss Hunstomper?”
His feet, encased in custom-made eel-skin cowboy boots—a hint that his taxable income had been half a million dollars last year—remained nonchalantly cushioned on top of a golf bag, and the golf bag remained stretched out like a beached whale across one end of his crowded desk.
“Miss Hunstomper,” he drawled in a deep voice as mellow as ripe peaches, “after three years of bein’ overpaid to do whatever it is you do here, you ought to
recognize how important I am and stop tryin’ to drive me crazy.”
She exhaled in disgust. Rucker grinned affectionately as the pretty, businesslike blonde kept her truant stance in his doorway. The sixth-floor newsroom stretched out behind her as a reminder that the rest of the world was a serious place. As usual, Millie Surprise—known to Rucker’s readers as Miss Hunstomper—finally grinned back at him. “I’m not joking, Your Majesty. There’s a live possum out here on my desk, in a wire cage. A courier just left it for you.”
“You’re serious.”
“You bet.”
“Good grief.” An incredulous smile crept across his face. “Bring my gift critter on in here,” he ordered cheerfully.
Millie gingerly set the wire cage in the middle of his desk. Rucker made room by pushing aside a stack of
Sports Illustrated
magazines, his baseball autographed by the Atlanta Braves, and the keys to his Cadillac. Then he opened the cage door.
“It looks like a giant rat! It might bite!” Millie exclaimed. “It might be rabid!”
“Naaah. Millie, where I grew up in south Texas, the only pets we could afford were possums. We’d peel ’em off the road—”
“Oh, please. Save the lurid details for a column.”
Chuckling, Rucker reached inside the cage and tickled the small gray animal under its long snout. At about the size of a half-grown kitten, the possum didn’t look threatening. It peered up at him with beady, timid eyes. He slid one hand under it and lifted it out, then cradled it to his stomach. Its long, hairless tail curled around Rucker’s wrist in a frightened way.
“Poor baby,” Rucker crooned gently. “Millie, gimme that letter from Madam Mayor, the possum queen.”
She handed him a sheet stamped with the official seal of Mount Pleasant, Alabama. “Seat of Twittle County,” Rucker read in a wry tone. “That’s one of the few backwoods places I’ve never heard of, and I thought I’d swilled beer and chased women everywhere south of
the Mason-Dixon line.” He scanned the letter quickly, smiling all the time. “Listen to what Madam Mayor says, Millie. ‘Mr. McClure, if you are ever again so desperate for material that you besmirch the good name and good people of Mount Pleasant, I shall personally supervise the shipment of a second opposum to your office. Along with it, you will receive notice of a libel suit.’ ”
Rucker put the letter down, his eyes gleaming with intrigue. “For an ex-beauty queen, she sounds pretty smart,” he commented.
“One of the reporters’ looked up an old article about her after your column ran. Just for curiosity. She has a Mensa-level IQ, boss,” Millie informed him. “And a master’s degree in political science. She probably would have been Miss America six years ago, if she hadn’t walked out a day before the competition. Her father had died a month earlier in an airplane crash. She said the pageant didn’t matter anymore.”
“Sounds like a gutsy woman.”
“You better leave her alone. She’s not your type—she can read, write, and think. You swore you’d never have anything to do with that kind of woman again, remember?”
“That was personal, m’ dear. This is professional.” Rucker leaned back in his chair. The possum crawled up his shirt and buried its dark little nose in the soft chest hair above his unbuttoned collar. Rucker stroked its back and nodded to himself, thinking. “Call Mount Pleasant and find out when the next city-council meetin’ is. I’m goin’ to visit Madam Mayor.”
After a stunned second, Millie said with glee, “Trouble. We got trouble my friends, right here in Possum City.”
Dinah Sheridan hummed a little—a section from the Mozart piece she’d practiced on her piano before breakfast that morning—as she studied paperwork and made notes for the September city-council meeting. As usual she was efficient. Also as usual she was dressed tastefully,
and her long, chocolate-colored hair was bundled in a perfect twist at the base of her neck. Her businesslike demeanor belied the fact that the body under her outfit had stolen many a judge’s breath in swimsuit competitions. She sighed with contentment and smoothed a hand over the blue unstructured jacket she wore with a colorful sweater and neat gray skirt.
Outside the small windows that lined one wall of the council room, a cool Monday night had already closed in on the mountains around tiny Mount Pleasant, population 4,231. Inside, harsh fluorescent light-bulbs cast white streaks on the cheap-paneled walls.
“Dinah, you shame the rest of us to death by gettin’ here so early,” Walter Higgins joked as he ambled into the room. He sat down beside her at the long council platform, a wide V built of darkly stained plywood.
“We’ve got a big agenda tonight,” Dinah told the white-haired building contractor, a former mayor himself.
“Did you ever hear from Rucker McClure?”
“No. He got the oppossum—the possum—and the letter last Thursday. I suppose I terrified him.”
“That old boy doesn’t terrify easy. He’s an important sonuvagun, you know. That column of his goes to newspapers all over the country. And he was on that dirty cable show, you know. Talkin’ to that Dr. Ruth woman.” Walter chuckled. “He told her his favorite sex toy is white bread and mayonnaise.”
“I’ve never seen him, and I don’t ever care to. He’s an overgrown adolescent. I don’t care if his last book did make
The New York Times
’s bestseller list.
True Grits
. What a precocious little title.” Dinah made an elegantly derisive sound that dismissed Rucker McClure and his redneck schtick. “He’s trying to compete with Lewis Grizzard.”
“It was a real funny book,” Walter countered. “People are sayin’ Rucker McClure is the modern-day Mark Twain.”
“Bite your tongue,” Dinah said wryly. “That’s sacrilege.”
The other council members strolled in: Fred Dawson, Jasper Mac Seagram, and Glory Akens. They were respected, local business people and amiable friends of
Dinah’s. Following them, rocking along on short, plump legs, was placid Lula Belle Mitchum, a graying brunette who had been city clerk of Mount Pleasant for the past twenty years. Politicians come and go, Dinah thought, but Lula Belle endures.
Within thirty minutes half the council chamber’s fifty audience chairs had been filled by townsfolk. The police chief sat in a corner yawning, waiting to make his monthly report. The fire chief and the city attorney were finishing a game of checkers on a table by the water fountain in the hall.
Dinah cleared her throat, rapped her gavel, and smiled at the audience. People smiled back as she called the meeting to order, and Dinah’s chest swelled with satisfaction. She’d left a lot of trouble and sorrow behind when she arrived here four years ago. Her smile widened. “First on our agenda tonight is a zoning variance for Pop’s Seed and Feed …”