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Let It Ride

Page 10

by Jillian Burns


  An hour later, it was finally over and, after ditching the rented gown, she made her way outside, preparing to hail a cab. But there he was. Waiting in the warm night beneath a street lamp across the road. So handsome in his sharply pressed uniform with medals and ribbons pinned down its front.

  With the crowd swirling around her, she watched him unobserved for a moment. He’d cut his hair and the short cut combined with his stiff posture screamed military officer. So different from the scruffy, jeans-clad bad boy on a motorcycle she’d first met. But the unsmiling intensity of his dark gaze was the same as he scanned the throngs of people exiting the convention center.

  She stepped off the curb and crossed the street. He caught sight of her and his eyes widened, then heated as they traveled down her body and back up again. Coming to a stop before him, she shifted her weight from one heel to the next and wiped her damp palms down the fabric of the tight black dress.

  When their gazes met again, he smiled. In an instant his face transformed from starkly handsome to boyishly good-looking, and all Jordan could do was stare and try to catch the breath that had left her lungs.

  “Hi,” he said.

  “You came back.” What a stupid thing to say. Of course he was here. “Uh, I mean, I thought you were shipping out. Back to Iraq.”

  He shook his head. “Went to visit my folks in Phoenix.”

  “Oh.” Dozens of thoughts and questions spun around in her mind. Had he come back just for her? Or was he required to be here to await orders? Where was he staying? Was he only here for one night?

  “Did you talk to Mrs. Simco? Is my mom okay?”

  “I did.” He nodded. “And she is.” He clasped his hands before him and rocked on his heels.

  Jordan found herself leaning forward in anticipation of his next words, but they never came. “So, what are you doing here?”

  He shrugged and looked up at the convention center. “Just sightseeing.”

  Jordan blinked up at him until a smile slowly spread across his face. “I’m here to take you out to dinner, egghead. To celebrate.”

  “Oh.” Here she was, a college graduate, and “oh” seemed to be the sum total of her vocabulary. How embarrassing.

  “So.” He extended his elbow. “Shall we go?”

  There was nothing she wanted more. But first…She opened her purse and pulled her cell phone out.

  “Mrs. S said to have a good time and don’t come back too early.” He grinned, took her hand and curled it around his arm.

  Jordan stared at his hand on hers, feeling the warm roughness of it, the promise in his touch, the anticipation tingling from him into her. Then she looked up into his eyes and saw a truth reflected there. He’d come back to Vegas…for her.

  9

  OBJECTIVITY hit the proverbial fan when Cole saw Jordan again. Meeting her gaze, he felt a jolt shoot through him. Hell, it was as if she saw something in him no one else saw. She looked past the Air Force officer and saw something…more.

  Pulling his keys from his pocket, he led her out to the parking lot, but Jordan hesitated beside his Harley, her adorable brows crinkled.

  “Um…” She glanced down at her tight black dress and heels.

  Cole could’ve kicked himself. He hadn’t thought. Eight hours of planning every last detail for tonight, including enlisting Grady’s help for special clearance at Nellis, and he hadn’t thought to rent a car. “I’ll get us a cab.” He turned to head for the street.

  “No.” She grabbed his arm. “It’ll be okay.”

  “You sure?”

  At her nod, he mounted the bike then held out his hand to her.

  She hitched up her dress, took his hand, then stepped up on the footrest and swung her leg over.

  He gulped. That glimpse of bare thigh beneath her dress turned him on more than the stockings and miniskirt of her casino uniform. It was going to be an uncomfortable ride.

  She leaned close, her hands sliding to clasp around his chest, and nuzzled her nose into his spine.

  Cole’s insides shook. Having her pressed against him reduced him to a quivering mess. Clenching his fists, he started the engine and pulled out of the lot.

  The eight miles from downtown out to the base seemed like eighty-eight with Jordan’s hands on him. Thankfully, her fingers didn’t stray below his belt. When he pulled up to Nellis’s gate, the guard stepped out; Cole showed his ID and Jordan supplied her social security number, her expression doubtful. The guard opened the gate and waved Cole through with a salute.

  If Jordan wondered where they were going, she kept it to herself as they circled around the squadron’s hangars and headed out to a remote field. He came to a stop just outside the hangar that housed several retired Second World War aircraft, kicked the Harley’s stand down, and held out his hand to help Jordan climb off.

  She gave him a cautious look, and he couldn’t help himself. He smiled, knowing what waited inside. The hangar was dark except for the streetlight at the barbed-wire-topped fence surrounding the base.

  “Worried?”

  “This isn’t exactly what I had in mind when you said ‘out to dinner.’” She arched a brow, trying for nonchalance, he guessed, but then ruined the effect by grinning.

  She’d pulled her hair up into some fancy style, but the ride had blown it into wild magnificence. She looked so beautiful, so soft and feminine he had to hold himself back not to pull her into his arms.

  “Trust me?”

  “Yes,” she answered without hesitation, as if her simple yes held a deeper meaning.

  Cole shoved down a lump of emotion and reached into his pants pocket and pressed the button on the garage door opener.

  Rumbling and grinding, the hangar door lifted. Cole ducked under and strode in to light the candles and turn on the CD. Pure satisfaction filled him as he heard her soft gasp.

  Delmonico’s had provided the table setting, but Cole had arranged for a buffet cart to hold his ingredients and a couple of mini propane burners so he could sauté his own shrimp and cook the pasta. He’d hand-selected the prosciutto and asparagus that morning.

  His breathing quickened as he returned to Jordan and led her inside the hangar.

  “Oh, how beautiful.” Her eyes glowed with appreciation as her gaze roamed over the white cloth table set with china, silver, fresh flowers and candles. “Oh, Cole.”

  So far, so good. She liked.

  She cupped a rose from the vase, leaned down and inhaled. “They’re gorgeous.”

  “The lady at the florist’s shop said the combination of red and yellow together meant Congratulations.”

  “Wow.” She rounded the table, closed the distance between them, and planted a quick kiss on his cheek. “You keep surprising me.” She held his gaze for a split second while he stood immobilized by the look in her eyes. The same look had been in his sister-in-law’s eyes when Kenny had turned down a night of beer and pool. Before Cole could recover, Jordan turned and walked over to the nearest aircraft. “What kind of plane is this?”

  “She’s a B-24, a Liberator.” He followed her over to the plane, lifted his free hand and touched one of the four giant propellers. “Probably flew over most of German-occupied Europe. She had eleven machine guns, and carried an eight-thousand-pound bomb load. Winston Churchill had one of these babies customized for his personal transport.”

  Her heels clicked on the cement as she walked around the bomber’s nose. “Think of all the stories this plane could tell. How many men sacrificed their lives? How many did she bring safely home?” She was almost whispering, a hint of reverence in her voice. He turned and saw her staring up at the glass, front-mounted machine-gunner’s cabin. He couldn’t take his eyes off her.

  “Yeah. I think about that, too. My dad used to tell us about his uncle Joe flying over the Pacific in the Second World War. But he never talks about ’Nam.”

  She turned her big blue eyes on him. “No matter how worthy the cause is, I imagine war haunts you.”

  Cole
thought of his nightmares and the counselor who’d told him they were nothing to be ashamed of. Here, now, with Jordan, that didn’t seem so ridiculous.

  With a quick smile he gestured toward the elegant dining table. “Dinner will be served in a few minutes.”

  She slipped her hand into his and let him lead her to the table. “So, you are going to feed me,” she said lightly, letting the subject of war go.

  His fingers tightened around hers. “Did you ever doubt me?” He pulled out a chair for her.

  A pause, then “Not lately.”

  At her careful choice of words, he raised a brow. “Fair enough.”

  She sat and snapped open her thick linen napkin, placing it over her lap, then smiled up at him. “I still can’t believe you did all this.”

  Cole shrugged, trying to ignore his pounding heart. “We’re celebrating, right?” While soft jazz played, he poured champagne. Then he took off his uniform coat and tie, rolled up his sleeves and began preparing the meal.

  She crossed her legs and took a sip of champagne. “Where did you learn to cook?”

  “Believe it or not, in Alaska.” He explained about the summer he’d spent up there between his junior and senior years with the son of an Air Force buddy of his father’s who’d bought a restaurant in Anchorage. Their fathers had flown together in ’Nam. Cole shrugged. “I ended up hanging out in the kitchen.”

  “So your great-uncle, your father and you—all military pilots? Flying runs in your family?”

  “Yep.”

  “You must love being up there, speeding through the sky.”

  Damn. His throat tightened. “Yeah.”

  “Adrenaline junkie, right? Into extreme sports?”

  Could he refuse to answer any more questions except his name, rank and serial number? He forced a smile. “You bet. Can’t keep me away.”

  “Being cooped up in the hospital must have been awful for you.”

  “Oh, I don’t know. All those sponge baths…” He wiggled his brows and gave her a pointed look as he glanced at her.

  Something—disappointment?—flickered in her eyes before she covered it with a patently fake smile. “Oh, right.” She looked away and started swinging her crossed leg.

  Mistake. Big mistake. Maybe he should tell her he’d never fly a jet again. Tell her the most exciting thing he’d be doing now was air traffic control. He’d been reduced to a freaking traffic cop.

  But bringing up his new assignment might lead to more questions. Questions about their future that he had no answers for. He poured the pasta into the boiling water and turned the shrimp.

  From the corner of his eye he could feel her gaze on him. The burners didn’t produce as much heat as her stare. “I shouldn’t have said that,” he said, backtracking. “You were being serious and I was—”

  “No, it’s fine.” Her face glowed softly in the candlelight, but she looked vulnerable now, closed off. Damn it.

  Unease shot through his gut as he filled their plates and sat beside her. He lifted his champagne glass with another forced smile. “To an intelligent and beautiful lady,” he toasted her. “Congratulations.”

  Her eyes softened and she picked up her glass and clinked it against his. “Thank you.” But she avoided his gaze while she sipped.

  Without another word, she picked up her fork and started eating.

  He took a bite of shrimp and swallowed. Another moment of awkward silence followed. Somehow he had to regain what had been lost.

  “I hated every second in the hospital.”

  At last, she looked at him. “You don’t have to—”

  “No, it’s okay.” He cleared his throat. “I was in the hospital in Germany for about three weeks. Then another three weeks in the States. Followed by a couple of months in rehab.”

  “But you’re back in shape now? Ready for action?” Her mouth curved in a small smile.

  Was that a double entendre? Could she be as innocent as her expression seemed? “Yes, ma’am. Ready and willing.”

  Her eyes flared wide and her cheeks pinked. That started his engines. “How about you? Are you still going to work at The Grand?”

  “I can’t afford to quit until I have another job lined up.” Jordan’s eyes lit up. “But I have two interviews next week.”

  Unreasonable panic stabbed at him. If he’d been released from the hospital just a few weeks later, he might never have met Jordan. “Interviews with whom?”

  “One is with a new research development corporation. I’d be a systems programmer. The other is with Nevada Power, supporting their internal e-mail systems. That one sounds more likely since it’s an entry-level position.” She pressed her palms to her stomach. “I’m so nervous. I’ve dreamed of this for so long.”

  “You’ll do great. You’ve worked hard. I know you’ll get everything you wish for.”

  “Thank you.” She smiled at him and held his gaze for a long moment before picking up her fork and taking another bite.

  “Where are you staying?”

  “I’m crashing at McCabe’s for now, the miserable SOB.”

  “What do you mean? Why is he miserable?” She took a dainty bite, confusion in her big blue eyes.

  Oh, hell, she hadn’t known the details of the bet. “Never mind. I shouldn’t have brought it up.”

  “No, tell me. You can’t leave me hanging.”

  Shaking his head, knowing he’d probably regret it, he explained the conditions of the bet, and how Hughes had used it to get back at McCabe last week.

  “Captain Hughes? Get him back for what?”

  “McCabe and Hughes have been pulling practical jokes on each other for years. It all started as a good deed by McCabe.”

  “A good deed? Captain McCabe?” Her skeptical tone wasn’t lost on Cole.

  “You have to understand. When Hughes first joined our squadron, the guys treated her differently because she’s female. So, naturally he had to do something awful to her, something he would’ve done to any new cadet, to prove that she was just one of the guys.”

  “I never thought of it that way.” Her voice lowered to a conspiratorial whisper. “What’d he do?”

  “He had her arrested for soliciting a prostitute.”

  “Oh, no!” Jordan’s eyes widened.

  “The whole thing was staged. She was fine.” Leaning close, he added, “She paid him back a few months later.”

  A wicked grin lit up her beautiful face. “What’d she do?”

  “Uh, I’ll let her tell you about that.”

  Jordan groaned in frustration. “At least tell me what she did to him last week.”

  Cole grinned at her enthusiasm. “She must’ve called every woman McCabe ever sl—dated and invited them all on base to torture him.”

  Jordan’s boisterous laugh was contagious. She brought her napkin up to her mouth, looked at him and broke into laughter again. “I should shake Captain Hughes’s hand. See if she wants to have lunch sometime.”

  “Oh, no, I have a feeling you two getting together might be hazardous to a guy’s health. And I gotta live with said guy.”

  Her smile soared across the table and hit him right in the gut. He watched her finish eating, mesmerized when her lips closed around her fork. She reached up and tucked a strand of hair behind her ear and he envisioned nibbling the tender spot behind her delicate silver earring. The movement also shifted the front of her dress. It came to a V between her breasts, and the rounded flesh peeking out moved with her every breath, enticing him, torturing him.

  “So, how long before you have to leave?”

  Cole shifted his gaze to her face and blinked. He had to bring his mind back from the brink of his sex-on-the-table fantasy and think about what she’d just asked. “I have to be in San Antonio on Monday.”

  “This Monday?” She sounded shaken. He’d wanted to do something special for her graduation and see her one more time before heading to Texas. Though he hadn’t thought how she might interpret this dinner.

&n
bsp; He avoided looking at her as he got to his feet and started clearing dishes. “I should get you home.”

  “Yeah.” Jordan stood, too, grabbing the champagne glasses.

  “You don’t need to do that, I have a cleaning crew coming in.” He took the crystal from her and their hands brushed. Just that small contact made him feel as if the room had become a vacuum and he was without his oxygen. When he looked at her, her lips were parted. Her eyes had darkened to a stormy ocean blue.

  Incapable of stopping himself, he leaned in and kissed her, just a feather touch, barely brushing across her mouth. Then he pulled back. He hadn’t meant to assume anything tonight. Every muscle tensed, he stood there.

  She reached up and ran her hand down his temple and jaw. Her touch left a trail of fire along his skin. Then her hold pulled him toward her and she pressed her lips to his. Soft, open-mouthed, deep.

  Cole groaned, wrapping his arms around her, pulling her tightly against him. He wished they could stay here, in their own little world where no one could intrude. In her arms he was sure of himself. He felt as if his life had purpose. Her hands ran under the collar of his shirt, and her stomach pushed against his rock-hard erection. His body screamed for more.

  He cupped her bottom and lifted her to the table, shoving silverware and napkins aside as he stepped between her knees. His lips traveled down her soft neck to the hollow of her throat, and farther down, nuzzling as far as the dress would allow, tasting her supple flesh.

  “Cole,” she moaned his name, and it enflamed his already desperate need. He slid a hand under the hem of her dress, savoring the creamy skin of her thigh.

  Without warning she grabbed his hand and pushed him away. “I can’t.”

  His breathing ragged, Cole closed his eyes. His blood pounded. His cock ached. “I didn’t expect you—” he gestured to the table behind her “—this, tonight.”

  “It’s not that I don’t want to.” She slowly slid off the table, adjusting her dress, fidgeting with her hair. Then she drew a deep breath and let it out as if coming to a momentous decision.

 

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