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Authors: Merline Lovelace

One of the Boys (9 page)

BOOK: One of the Boys
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“General Palladino, you're one hell of a pilot and a fine commander. I'd fly as your wingman anytime. But when it comes to my personal life, you're way off base. I'm telling you up front I intend to keep seeing Maura Phillips. If that makes my professional or personal judgment questionable in your eyes, then pull me off this project.”

After a tense moment, a wry grin spread across Palladino's face. “I guess I'd be disappointed if you responded any differently. Get the hell out of my office, McAllister.”

Chapter 8

J
ake cursed under his breath as he struggled to slip tiny silver studs into the minuscule openings of a white dress shirt. There were five of the blasted things, each one about the size of a small thumbtack. When the last stud stubbornly refused to fit into the hole right under his chin, Jake's oath was more vocal and more audible. A giggle from the bedroom door brought his head whipping around.

“You didn't hear that, Lisa.”

“No, sir!”

She gave a very creditable rendition of a military salute and wandered into the bedroom.

“Here, let me do it.”

Relieved, Jake leaned back against a long, brass-
trimmed Korean chest and let his daughter's nimble fingers slip the recalcitrant stud into place. When she smoothed down the crisp, pleated front of his shift and grinned up at him in triumph, Jake felt his heart turn over. God, she was beautiful. So fresh and open and loving.

“Thanks, honey.”

Lisa plunked herself down in the middle of Jake's bed. “I'd better stay, in case you need me again. I remember how Mom used to have to help you into your monkey suit.”

Jake grinned at his daughter's reflection in the wide mirror above the chest. “As many times as I've worn this dress uniform over the years, you'd think I'd have learned how to manage it by now.”

His fingers fumbled with a length of dark blue satin, trying to achieve a roughly symmetrical bow tie. Lisa giggled again when he tugged his first and second attempts loose and tried a third time.

“Maura says she always wears comfortable clothes that express her personality. I bet she won't be buttoned up to the neck and choking in a tight tie tonight.”

“No, I bet she won't.”

Jake felt the first flicker of anticipation for this evening's formal function lick at his veins. Up to this point, he sure as hell hadn't been looking forward to getting all gussied up and spending the evening socializing. In fact, he'd considered canceling out completely. The investigation had all but demoralized his
team, and he'd had to exert every leadership skill he possessed to recharge them. His interview with General Palladino a few days ago hadn't exactly contributed to his own festive spirit, either. But his sense of duty wouldn't let him cancel. A dining-out was one of the air force's few formal traditions. It was a time when officers and senior civilians suited up in fancy dress and gathered to celebrate their common fellowship.

Most of his subordinates and their spouses would be there tonight. So would Maura, although she'd been less than enthusiastic about going to a party in the midst of their frantic preparations for the next test shot. Until Lisa's casua1 reference to her dress, though, Jake had considered the function more a duty to perform than an adventure. Now delicious visions of what his free-spirited Maura might consider appropriate formal attire danced through his mind.

His mood considerably lighter, Jake began to look forward to the evening. He pulled up decidedly unregulation red suspenders and handed Lisa a dark blue satin cummerbund to hook for him.

“Are you sure you don't want to go over to the Camerons' tonight? I don't like you staying here by yourself. We'll probably be pretty late.”

“No kidding!” Lisa teased. “Every time you're with Maura, you get home pretty late.”

“Is that so?”

“Yes, and you know it.”

Jake paused with one arm in his tailored mess
jacket. Although he would never consider discussing his relationship with Maura with anyone, let alone his teenage daughter, it suddenly struck him he didn't have to. Obviously, she had a pretty good idea how things stood between them.

Sometime during this long summer, his daughter had slipped past that invisible demarcation between child and woman. She still had qualities of both, but now the scale seemed to tip, ever so slightly, toward womanhood instead of childhood.

Jake felt a sharp, fleeting pain at losing the little girl who was Lisa, even as he forced himself to recognize the beauty of the emerging woman. Taking a deep breath, he sat on the edge of the bed.

“I haven't been here much for you this summer. I guess Maura and this special project both overwhelmed me about the same time. I'm sorry, honey.”

“It's okay, Dad. Really.” She scooted forward to give him a quick hug. “I'm glad you've found Maura. I didn't like you being alone. Everyone needs to have someone to do things with and laugh with.”

Thunderstruck, Jake took her hand in his. “You're amazing. You've been growing up right before my eyes and I never really noticed it.”

“Well, I'm glad you've finally acknowledged it.” Lisa gave him a speculative look, then grinned mischievously. “Now that you've noticed my maturity, I can go out with Tony, right? This weekend, right?”

Jake gave her a dry look. “I trust you. Tony's another story.”

“Daaaad!”

Swallowing a sigh, he gave his little girl a last, silent farewell. “Okay, okay, I cave. Against my better judgment, but I cave. Now help me get these medals straight on this jacket. If I don't kick it into afterburner, I'm going to be late.”

 

To Jake's surprise, Maura was almost ready when he arrived at her cottage. She was missing only her shoes when she opened the door. Of course, he reminded himself as he stepped inside, there was no guarantee she intended to wear shoes. She could be planning on going barefoot or maybe donning sequined sneakers.

Whatever footwear she picked, Jake decided, it could only enhance the most seductively simple, elegantly contrived scraps of material he'd ever seen on any female. A halter of shimmering green sequins draped around her neck and fell in simple folds over her breasts. Below the halter was what Rodeo Drive probably labeled a skirt. If there was a yard of dark green satin wrapped around Maura's luscious hips and thighs, Jake would eat his best flight cap.

She'd piled her hair in a cluster of curls high on her head, leaving the long, pure line of her throat bare. Huge, star-shaped earrings trimmed with green sequins danced in each ear and deepened her hazel eyes to shimmering gold.

Or maybe it was the welcome Jake saw shining in her eyes that riveted him in the open doorway.
Whatever it was, she presented a picture of such vibrant color and femininity that he felt a slow heat begin to simmer in his veins. Reaching out with both hands, he drew her gently into his embrace.

“You look wonderful.”

Maura smiled up at him. “You do, too. Now I know why so many women are suckers for a man in uniform.”

He was a symphony in shadow and silver, she thought, as her gaze roamed from his eyes to the embroidered eagles on his shoulder boards.

She noted appreciatively how his massive shoulders tapered to a narrow waist and displayed to perfection the dark blue jacket with its shining buttons. Long, lean legs were encased in knife-creased trousers with a satin stripe down the side.

Almost shyly, she ran her fingers over the polished wings on his chest, then touched the double row of bright-colored medals hanging below the wings. She'd never seen so many medals and had no idea what they represented, but she suspected each one had a story.

“Are you ready?” he asked. “We'd better hustle or we'll be late. It wouldn't do for senior officers to set a bad example for the troops by sneaking in after the mess is called to order.”

With a quick shake of her head, Maura broke her dreamy contemplation and dashed back to her bedroom. A shivery anticipation for the evening ahead filled her. The sight of Jake in his stark magnificence
wiped away the last of her doubts about joining the festivities.

Even the dark, hovering shadow of the investigation faded from her consciousness. Tonight, she decided, they'd laugh and dance and forget the damn project for a while.

She strapped on a pair of high-heeled sandals dyed to match her green satin skirt, then rummaged through a box to find her evening bag. With a little cry of triumph, she pulled out the cat-shaped gold metallic bag and stuffed a lipstick, compact and a couple of tissues inside.

“All set,” she called, dashing down the hall.

A smile tugged at Jake's lips when he saw the bag, but he refrained from comment as he ushered her out the door and into the car.

He used the short drive to the Officers Club to brief her on some of the traditions of the mess. Maura listened with mounting skepticism.

“Let me be sure I understand this. One, don't ever clap, just bang your spoon on the table, or you get sent to the grog bowl. Two, don't leave the mess to go to the potty, no matter how long-winded the speaker is, or you get sent to the grog bowl. Three, give the correct responses to the toasts, or you get sent to the grog bowl. And if, heaven forbid, you get sent to the grog bowl, down the whole glassful of the noxious brew in one swig, then tilt the glass upside down on top of your head to show it's empty.”

“Or you get sent to the grog bowl,” Jake finished
with a laugh. “Are you sure you wouldn't rather just grab a hamburger at the Sonic instead?”

“And miss all that grog? No way!”

 

The Officers Club was mobbed when she and Jake arrived and threaded their way through the crowd. Maura waved to several members of the test-program office, including her boss, Ed Harrington and his wife. Jake's buddy, Colonel Mac MacRae was accompanied by his bride, Maggie Wescott. The leggy environmental engineer greeted Maura warmly.

“I'm so glad we finally get to meet on something other than official business. How are your sharding expeditions with Lisa going?”

“I haven't had as much time for them as I'd like in the past few weeks, but we've had fun.”

“Why don't you call me? We'll do lunch and you can tell me about your finds.”

“I'd like that.”

With Jake guiding her, they found their assigned table. Maura smiled at Pete and Carol Hansen, seated at the far end of the table. She got a wave from Pete and a distinctly cool nod from Carol in return. Refusing to let Carol's habitual cattiness spoil the fun, she filled her eyes and her mind with the rich pageantry all around her.

The military men and women looked incredibly elegant in their dark mess dress and crisp white shirts. The civilian men were in tuxes, but the non
military women wore a rainbow of color. In the flickering light of hurricane lamps spaced along the long tables, the women's dresses glittered like jewels. Maura feasted on the bright gowns the way a starving man would on an unexpected banquet.

The room itself provided a colorful setting for the evening's events. A massive white parachute hung suspended from the ceiling and formed an exotic tent that billowed and swayed over the main dining area. Squadron flags on tall stanchions identified the occupants of the tables that radiated from the dais, where the VIPs and their spouses were seated.

Prominently displayed on a small table in front of the dais was the grog bowl—a bomb casing sawed in half and standing upright on its sleek, deadly fins. It was filled with a bubbling liquid that had caused more than one hearty soul to grimace in disgust when sent to sample it. Luckily, Maura wasn't among them.

The noisy after-dinner din and hilarity died down when the general rose to introduce the guest speaker. Somewhat surprised that the guest of honor at such an august gathering was a young captain, Maura leaned forward to listen intently. In short, precise sentences, the young officer began to relate the story of his last mission in Iraq. Quietly, with understated drama, he told of the ground crews working twenty hours a day in simmering desert heat to turn hot jets. Intelligence briefings by haggard, bleary-eyed officers. Last-minute target changes to coordinate with
another attack force. He spoke of seeing his wingman hit by a surface-to-air missile and explode in midair. And of feeling his own aircraft disintegrate around him when another SAM slammed through the tail.

Maura felt her heart catch when the young captain described parachuting through the dark night to an uncertain fate, then burying himself in scorching sand for two days until a rescue crew fought its way through to pick him up. Over and over, he praised the teamwork and the dedication of the men and women who fought and struggled with him during those turbulent days.

Maura glanced around the ballroom as the young man spoke. An intense stillness hung over the vast room as more than four hundred people focused on the speaker. With a shock, she realized that his story wasn't just the tale of one man's adventures. It affected every man and woman in the room. Many of these officers had served in both Gulf Wars. The fighter wing at Eglin had deployed, as well as hundreds of the base support forces. And those who didn't deploy worked long, tense months to provide special armaments needed for that conflict.

Never had Maura felt the impact of her chosen line of work as dramatically as she did at that moment. Her expertise, her small contribution to advancing weapons technology, could mean the difference between life or death to some other young captain in some other conflict.

She slanted a quiet glance at Jake. His face showed no emotion, but she could see a glittering intensity in the gray eyes focused on the speaker. The young captain concluded his speech with a round of thanks to the team he served with in Saudi, the crew who pulled him out, and the SOB who taught him to eat sand in desert-survival school. Maura joined in the burst of laughter that rocked the room, but didn't understand its significance until a grinning Jake stood to take the young man's salute.

“What was all that about?” she asked him as the crowd moved onto the dance floor and he gathered her close against his chest. “That stuff about eating sand?”

“I helped restructure the air force's survival-training program a few years ago. Captain Anderson was one of the lieutenants we tested the new curriculum on. Believe me, his comments then weren't nearly as restrained as they were tonight.”

Before Maura could ask any more questions, the slow, dreamy song they were dancing to ended and a faster, much louder beat began. The lively tune made further conversation impossible, but Jake continued to hold her tight in his arms and move to his own sensuous rhythm while younger couples gyrated all around them.

BOOK: One of the Boys
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