Название: Under Fire
Автор: Lindsay McKenna
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
isbn: 9781474012713
isbn:
“It’s an apartment,” Maggie said finally, and then added when he probed her with those blue eyes, “In a large complex.”
“Large? Small?”
Petulantly, she shot him a glance. “I live over in Poway near my two friends, Molly and Dana. They’re officers stationed here at Miramar with me. My apartment has two bedrooms and I transit from there, using it to sleep after flying.”
“Any pets?”
“Of course not. How could I? I get over to Miramar at 0600 and usually don’t leave until 2100.”
“Whew! Those are long hours.”
“When you’re a woman, you’ve got to put that kind of time into your career.”
“Why?”
“Because a woman can’t make it in the military just being good. I have to stand out.”
Wes couldn’t disagree. “Bingo. So, you don’t really have any life except flying.”
“That’s right. How about yourself?” Maggie jerked in a breath. What was she doing? Now she was getting personal and treading on thin ice. Still, he interested her as no other man ever had.
“I live over in Poway, too. Right now I’m renting an apartment at Flamingo Corners.”
“Yeah, that’s about two miles away from our apartment facility. I’m at Casa de la Madre Tierra.”
“I’ve driven by it. Nice place.”
“So, does your life revolve around flying?”
“Yes and no. When I’m home, I like it. When I’m stationed on a carrier or an air station, I like to fly. I don’t know whether Commander Parkinson told you or not, but I’m recently divorced. My wife’s remarried to a guy in Ohio. We have a little girl, Annie. She’s five years old and the cutest thing you’ve ever seen.” His voice grew soft with feeling. “I love Annie with my life.” And then he looked over at her. “What about you?” He wanted to know if she was married or not. “Any family?”
A huge part of Maggie sagged in relief to find out Wes wasn’t married. “I’m single, but my family lives in Sacramento, and we’re close. I’m a first-generation American. My father and mother came over from Dublin, Ireland, forty-five years ago with very little money and a desire to live in America. Dad got a job as an Amtrak engineer, and he’s still doing it to this day. My mom raised four Irish-hellion girls.”
“You the oldest?”
“No, the youngest.”
“Ah, the baby of the family.”
She laughed. “It doesn’t mean a thing, Bishop, so forget the psychological ramifications.”
“I was firstborn and look at me: a natural leader, goal oriented and highly successful at what I do.”
“Are you happy, though?”
Wes gave her a strange look. There was more than just flash to Maggie. “I like a balance to my life between job and home. No apologies that I like to sit down with a beer and watch a football game on TV while my wife makes me a great meal.”
She rolled her eyes. “Sooner or later I knew that was coming.”
“There is life after flying, you know.”
“Not in my book. Not ever. This is it for me, Bishop, and you’ve got to appreciate where I’m coming from if you’re going to work with me.”
He drained the last of the coffee from the bottom of his cup and sat back. “Babies of the family are supposed to be sheltered and protected from life. They seek the easiest route and aren’t goal oriented at all.”
“Shoots down your theory, doesn’t it?”
With a shrug, Wes said, “Maybe. Maybe not.” Although Maggie was a stridently confident woman, and one of the few he’d ever met of that stripe, there was something that nagged at him. Beneath all her bravado, chutzpah and strength, he sensed there was a hidden source of softness that she kept well protected from him. Could he blame her? No. In the male military environment, a woman would get eaten alive if she didn’t have proper defenses in place to survive the hardness of its demanding life-style. And from all appearances, Maggie was surviving and thriving beautifully in the environment. But at what cost to herself? he wondered.
“Look, I want to take this cross-examination of each other a step further. I want to take you up on a FAM flight and see how you do.” She held his amused gaze. “And you can check me out, too. Let’s see if we can get our act together up there and work as a team. My wingwoman, Lieutenant Dana Turcotte, will be the aggressor and try to jump us. I’ve got permission from Commander Parkinson to set up this flight and dogfight. Are you game?”
Wes got to his feet and put enough money on the table for both meals. “Let’s boogie.”
Maggie nodded, liking his style. “I’ll pay for my own meal, Bishop. Thanks, anyway.”
“No, it’s mine this time.”
“I pay my own way.”
He gave her a dazzling smile while reaching out and capturing her by the upper arm and gently guiding her through the dining room. “I know you do. Next time, you can pay for my meal. Fair enough?”
That smile melted all her insistence. How could any woman ever resist his charm? Maggie wondered. She scowled. “If there is a next time.”
Laughing, Wes dropped his hand from her arm as they reached the foyer. When cornered, Maggie blustered and tried to bluff her way out of a situation. “There will be.” He settled his garrison cap on his head at a rakish angle. “Well, as they say, let’s get this show on the road. I want to go Mach 3 with my hair on fire, Donovan.”
Chapter Three
During the ride over to the hangar area, Maggie said little because she was on a seesaw of emotion. They stopped at Ops and retrieved their flight gear, and she loosened up a little. Just getting to fly eased the tension that was always coiled tightly inside her. She’d been born that way. Flying was the only thing that erased her restlessness. Maggie always had to be moving, whether it was physically or mentally. Insomnia, upon occasion, was her best friend.
The truck delivered them to the hangar and Wes walked at her side, his duffel bag containing his helmet and oxygen mask slung across his left shoulder. He liked Maggie’s flowing stride and those long legs of hers.
“How tall are you?” he asked.
“Five-eleven. You?”
“Six-five.”
“You’re a tall drink of water.”
“Might say the same of you,” he returned, catching her smile. Maggie was relaxing with every step toward the fighter sitting СКАЧАТЬ