Authors: Catherine Mann
Tags: #General, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Romance, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Contemporary, #Murder, #cookie429, #Extratorrents, #Kat
into Carson last week while waiting for Gary...
"Hey, babe," Gary's greeting jolted through Nikki a second before he leaned an elbow on the bar
and kissed her neck.
She ducked to the side with the help of the spinning bar stool. "I was starting to wonder if you'd
stood me up."
"Never." He tapped her nearly empty amaretto sour. "Could I get you another drink?"
The press of bodies stifled her. She wanted space. She wanted to go home.
But first she had to tell him what little relationship they'd had was over. "Two's my limit since I'm
driving. I'll take some plain orange juice."
"You've got it." He angled over her shoulder to place the order, his chest sealing against her back
until she could feel the imprint of his favorite belt buckle against her spine
—
a cold metal buckle
shaped like an overlarge casino coin.
And the imprint of more steel, lower down.
Nikki hopped off the bar stool. "Let's find somewhere quiet to talk."
In public, but not right beside a table full of her father's fly buddies
—
Picasso, Mako and the new
guy in the squadron, Avery, who she'd also dated a couple of times.
"Sure, just what I was thinking." Gary fell in step alongside her, then stopped, skimming a touch
along her arm.
"Wait. You almost forgot your orange juice. Hold on and I'll go back and get your drink for
you..."
"Nikki?" Carson's voice sliced through her memories like the hull slicing the waves.
"Yeah, uh right. Just daydreaming." Nikki clutched the side of the sailboat as if she could hold on to the
memories already slipping away faster than the dispersing wake.
"Go right ahead." He shoved away from the side with muscle-rippling ease and a smile, closer. "This
day's all about relaxing."
Even with the warmth of the sun on her face and her thick windbreaker protecting her from the misty
spray, she rubbed her hands along her chilled arms, a deeper cold settling inside her at even the whisper
of memory that helped her with nothing, except to hint further that Gary may have drugged her. He'd
certainly had the opportunity. But hadn't she forgotten things from before he brought her drink? The
effects of Rohypnol varied from person to person, with so many other variables factored in.
She searched her mind to recapture the faces that had been in the bar around her, all people she knew
and simply accepted as part of her world. Why hadn't she paid more attention to details?
Okay, think. In addition to the crew sitting down for an after-flight meal, she'd seen Claire McDermott
subbing for the bartender with her co-owner two sisters on hand waitressing. Hadn't one of them even
dated Gary briefly? Which one?
She would call David Reis the minute she got home and tell him what little she could recall. Although he'd
most certainly already interviewed everyone there that night, which made her feel exposed all over again,
thinking of so many of her military friends knowing the details.
Damn it, she hadn't done anything wrong—that she knew of. She gave up recapturing the moment in the
churning water and shifted her focus back to Carson, his face tipped upward to... Gauge the sail? The
sun? Simply feel the wind?
She couldn't ignore the appeal of his strong features, the way his broad shoulders and lean hips turned
her on and inside out all at once. What was it about him that called to her at a time when she shouldn't
have been able to think about anything but the blind panic of clearing her name? He was good-looking,
sure, in a preppy privileged kind of way that had never snagged her interest before she'd seen him for the
first time and suddenly that had become her type for forever after, even if everyone else fell short.
As if sensing her stare, Carson looked down and over at her. His eyes narrowed. "What's with the
frown, lady? Quit thinking so hard. Get back to your daydreaming."
She pulled a breezy salute. "Aye-aye, Major. Or would that be Captain since we're on your ship?"
"Either's fine as long as you smile."
Good advice, she knew. And wouldn't it be nice to settle into the circle of his arms, her back against his
chest as they sailed the day away? Just the wind and sun and feel of his muscled chest.
Unbidden and unwelcome, a snippet from the memory flashed, of Gary's chest, that favored belt buckle
of his biting into her spine....
Her mind hitched on the notion of Gary's belt, the one he'd been wearing the night he'd died. Or had he?
She could swear there hadn't been a belt in his pants down around his ankles and she couldn't recall the
security police having found one when they looked around the room while questioning her.
Blinking out of the fractured memory and into the streaming sunlight, she couldn't remember any more
from that night. But she had one important question to answer.
Where was Gary's belt?
Where was his head?
Sure as hell not in the job.
After a boring commander's lunch, Carson tossed his leather jacket over the brass anchor peg in his
office on his last Monday as commander. The rest of the squadron was due back Friday and he could
resume his regular job as the number two dude. He would be flying more again, but Nikki would have
her dad back in town to check on her until Reis got his head out of his butt and figured out what
happened to Owens.
And what would J.T. have to say about the time Carson had been spending with Nikki?
Their day sailing together had been good. Damn good, but he wanted to make sure he was a better man
now so he didn't screw up his life again, or more importantly, didn't do anything to harm hers.
Tucking around his desk, he hooked a boot in the chair to roll it back while snagging a stack of
performance reports off the top of his file cabinet. At least her memory was starting to trickle back. A
missing belt wasn't much, yet remembering anything was a hopeful sign she might recall more. But if those
memories revealed she'd killed Owens? Carson was certain she would have only done so in self-defense,
which would put her in the clear legally.
All of which still didn't help him decide how to handle the next five days with Nikki.
He reached for the phone to check in with Reis about the security camera footage of the high school
parking lot, only to be stopped short by a tap on the open office door. He glanced over to find Captain
Nola Seabrook standing in the entryway. "What can I do for you?"
"Sir, I need to schedule a tactics class." The crisp blond officer stood at attention, even though Carson
ran a more relaxed squadron than other commanders. "Is Wednesday at fourteen-hundred okay?"
"Wednesday?" He flipped though his day planner. "Uh... no. I've already scheduled confession for that
time."
"Confession?"
"Flight safety meeting." He lapsed into his best Irish accent. "It's always better for the flyers to confess
than have their sins pointed out by the bishop."
Laughing, she lost the starch in her spine. "Fair enough. How about we schedule the tactics meeting to
follow when they're all softened up?"
"Roger." He nodded. "Spread the word."
Pivoting away, she ran smack into another person already waiting. Seabrook laughed. "Guess we need to
take a number to talk with the major today."
"Apparently so," answered his surprise visitor—Vic Jansen.
What was he doing here? Was it family business since his sister was married to one of the deployed
flyers? Or personal, since Vic belonged to A.A., too.
Carson nodded to Seabrook. "That'll be all, Captain. And could you let my secretary know to hold calls
for the next twenty minutes? Thanks."
Vic ducked into the room, a blond lumberjack-looking fella in flannel. The somber guy had lost his
daughter in a drowning accident years ago, but recently started with the program because he feared he
was reaching for a bottle too often.
"What brings you here?"
"Just dropping my sister off at the commissary. Since I had time to kill while she shops, I thought I would
stop by, shoot the breeze if you have a free minute."
Carson rolled his office chair back an inch from the desk. "Sure," he said, even though he really didn't
have twenty seconds to spare, much less twenty minutes. But something was obviously on Vic's mind and
part of the program involved helping each other out. "What can I do for you?"
"Actually, I was wondering if everything's okay with you?" Jansen dropped into a seat across from the
desk, blue eyes piercing.
The guy had seen him with Nikki yesterday, but that wouldn't be cause to ask if he was all right. Although
pursuing this friendship with Nikki could well be termed insanity. "Why do you ask?"
"It's been a rough couple of months around the squadron with the extra duties overseas and now
Owens's death," Jansen answered, his Dakota roots filling his rolling accent. "It's a tough time to be the
king."
Ah, now the visit made sense. And damn, but the guy had a point. There weren't many people around
this place Carson could talk to—none for that matter. But the A. A. bond of trust and confidentiality was
a cornerstone. Solid.
"I could use some advice." The words fell out of his mouth.
"Hell, Carson, are you sure you want
my
advice? My track record sucks, don'tcha know." It was no
secret that Jansen's wife had divorced him after the death of their daughter. But from what Carson could
gather it sounded as if the woman's defection had been heartless, occurring before Jansen started
drinking.
"I'll take any help I can get."
"Ah, so you want to romance Nikki Price."
"Who said we're talking about Nikki?"
"Last time I checked, they don't let morons graduate from veterinary school." The rugged large animal vet
smirked.
Searching for the right words for thoughts he didn't even understand, he scooped up a miniature porthole
clock from his desk and checked the battery, which of course was working just fine.
"Nikki and I have this—" tenacious attraction? "—bizarre friendship that seems to defy the whole twelve
year age difference. I want to understand her."
"Good-freaking luck." Snorting, Vic hooked an ankle over his knee, work boot twitching. "If you figure
women out, make sure you copyright the knowledge so you can retire a millionaire."
"I'm serious here." He thunked the tiny clock back on top of the stack of performance reports. "God,
how do I explain this?"
"You like a woman as more than a friend, and she likes you back."
Might as well quit lying to everyone including himself. "So it seems."
"But the problem is...?"
"Problems. Plural. We tried things once before and I screwed it up." He ticked reasons off a finger at a
time. "Her family would disapprove. I'm not sure I'm husband material and she definitely deserves it all."
"Whoa." Vic held up his work-scarred hands. "You're already using the M word. I thought you were
talking about liking a woman and asking her out on a date. Don't you think you're jumping ahead of
yourself?"
Didn't people date to see if something more would develop? And when a woman was obviously the
happily-ever-after sort, wasn't it leading her on to date when he knew full well it wouldn't lead anywhere
beyond a bed? Okay, so he was old-fashioned. He couldn't help it, probably went along with his tapioca
pudding mentality.
"Did you apologize for what you did before, the time you screwed it up?"
He nodded.
"Have you done something to make up for it?"
Amends. A critical part of the twelve-step program, but also keeping in mind not to press for forgiveness
if the action hurt that person worse. "I'm not sure I could make this one right."
"Did you try? Even if something can't be fixed, there's comfort in knowing the other person tried."
"I've been looking out for her, checking her security. Nikki's in a helluva vulnerable state."
"It must be tough for her to be so helpless."
"Nikki's a tough lady," Carson answered without even thinking—then stopped, the words and their truth
kicking around in his head for a second before settling.
Why hadn't he realized it before? Sure Nikki had been dealt a raw deal right now, but he needed to stop
viewing her as a victim. Had he done so as a convenient excuse to keep his distance?
He needed to quit thinking he was protecting her by ignoring the attraction, the connection. Not that he'd
been all that successful. Relationships were a lot tougher to achieve than any Ivy League diploma on his
wall.
Was he really considering asking her out on dates? Forget the age difference? Her father's objections.
His own concerns about his ability to be an equal partner. A hefty dose of cons.
And only one reason in the pro column, a reason he couldn't even quite define. Something as nebulous as
the way the wind in sails and the clouds against a windscreen soothed his soul. "You're right."
"Of course. No morons around here, remember?"
"We can only hope." He rocked back in his office chair. "Any suggestions for how I should make things