The Rebel King (All the King’s Men #2) Read Online Kennedy Ryan

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Billionaire, Contemporary Tags Authors: Series: All the King's Men Series by Kennedy Ryan
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Total pages in book: 113
Estimated words: 108242 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 541(@200wpm)___ 433(@250wpm)___ 361(@300wpm)
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CHAPTER 39

LENNIX

Maxim announces his candidacy from Colorado, the state he technically lists as his home and where he’s voted the past few years. I think I’m more nervous than he is. In the living room of his home, someone is putting powder on him to reduce shine, and he’s laughing while the cameras and lighting kit are being set up.

“Did we change that last line?” I ask Glenn, who has rejoined the campaign as a speechwriter.

“Yup,” Glenn says. “But he probably changed a lot more than that line after we left.”

“Why do you say that?” I ask, already in mild panic mode.

“He strikes me as a guy who goes off map a lot. It won’t be the first or the last time, I’m sure. He’s not his brother.”

“Um, cardinal rule, Glenn.”

Our team established a cardinal rule not to draw comparisons between Owen and Maxim and to discourage the press from doing so, too. There will be those who say this is an opportunistic move by Maxim when it’s really a huge sacrifice in so many ways. Financially and personally.

The producer counts us in, and when the camera’s red light pops on, it zeroes in on Maxim.

“I’m here to formally announce my candidacy for president of the United States of America,” Maxim says. “No one is more shocked to hear me say this than, well, me.”

“Was this in the speech?” I ask Glenn, flipping through my printed copy of Maxim’s talking points. “I don’t remember this beginning.”

“Told you so,” he says dryly. “I don’t know if he’s even looking at the teleprompter.”

“Many of you first met me when my brother Owen was running for president.”

We said we wouldn’t go straight to Owen. Sigh.

Maxim chuckles. “You think your big brother’s a pain in the butt? Try growing up with the guy who knows from the time he’s like five years old that he’ll be the president one day. Whole other level of bossy.”

Kimba walks up beside me. “I know you’re losing your shit over here, but he’s doing great. Let him be.”

“Why is he not using the speech we spent hours on?”

“Great leaders have a great gut. Trust his, okay?”

I release a long breath and nod reluctantly.

“I never aspired to be president,” Maxim says, his smile fading. “I wanted to change the world, and most of the politicians I saw weren’t doing that. They were taking care of themselves. As most of you know, I’m a wealthy man. I was born into it. I didn’t ask for it, but I have it. That’s privilege. I’ve leveraged it in my personal life to help those who don’t have it. Now I want to do that on behalf of those in this country struggling. I’m an unapologetic capitalist. I believe in choices and hard work. That’s why I’m running not as a Democrat or as a Republican but as an independent.”

He angles a wry look into the camera, a lock of dark hair falling forward and probably winning him some votes. “This is the part where you write me off, right? Because no independent has ever won a presidential election. This is also the part where you’d be wrong. I don’t plan to be a footnote or a novelty in this campaign. I plan to be a force in it, always redirecting to the issues when we get distracted by tabloids, shaping dialogue around the needs of everyday Americans even if you have trouble seeing me as one.”

He leans forward, elbows on his knees, as I’ve seen him do a thousand times when he wants to drive home a point. “Maybe you’re concerned because I’ve never governed. I understand the intricacies of government, and I’ve run a billion-dollar company. I know how to make money, which is something a country like ours, in trillions—yes, with a T—trillions of dollars in debt, could use, but I also don’t believe people should be sacrificed for the dollar.”

I’m holding my breath, no idea how the public will receive this.

“We face bigger problems than we ever have in this country. We need bold solutions. So many things about the future scare many of you, and I get it. According to experts, automation, robots will be taking a huge slice of the jobs humans do. Whole cities could soon be underwater because of climate change. Tensions all over the world have many of our global neighbors on the brink of war. I won’t pretend it’s not scary, but I assure you that I’m not afraid. Genius and innovation live in the DNA of this nation. If we face new problems every day, there are those among us who have the answers, who will find the answers. And where those answers don’t exist, we’ll create them. I’m a guy who knows how to make something from nothing. I’ve done it for myself. Let me do it for you.”


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