by Trisha Telep
Damn, it was hot in here.
Ken had been given a file on Lily and the rest of her team before leaving the marine base in Oceanside, California. According to the papers, this was the second time she and this group had volunteered to be dropped into the ass-end of the jungle. They planned to immunize the locals against the divN1 virus and set up a makeshift clinic to help curb infant mortality rates.
While they set up shop, Ken planned to put a bullet through Juan Garcia – an ex-general with grand ideas of raising an army to stage a coup – then hump it out of the jungle with John before anyone was the wiser. Unfortunately, that would take time since the satellite photos showed three potential locations. Until John scouted them all out and found where Garcia was hiding, Ken would have to play holy man under the watchful eyes of Dr Lily Houser.
His gaze strayed to her legs again. Her tan thighs poked out from beneath khaki shorts before tapering into a pair of snug hiking boots. He could think of worse places to be than beneath the good doctor.
Lily felt his eyes on her again. She couldn’t see the blue hidden behind those mirrored shades, but there was no mistaking the heat. She resisted the urge to tug her shorts down over her legs. It wasn’t like they were indecent. They came to mid-thigh. Yet under his gaze, she felt naked. Lily crossed then uncrossed her legs in an attempt to get comfortable in the cramped space. Weren’t priests supposed to only have eyes for God?
It didn’t help that Ken didn’t look like your average priest. Her eyes slid over his well-muscled form, long-fingered hands and dark head. He kept his hair short and his rugged face cleanshaven. She caught a whiff of something musky, thought it might be aftershave until she smelled it again and realized it was simply soap and man.
Father Ken wasn’t classically handsome. He was too rough around the edges for that, but he was striking, even more so when she could see his eyes. The colour of glacial ice, there’d been nothing cold about the way he’d looked at her. Any more heat and he’d have melted the polar caps. Lily was more than a little ashamed that she’d noticed.
When he and John had first reported to the aircraft, she’d baulked. Her regular nurse, Amy, had backed out of the trip at the last minute without much of an explanation. The crew Lily had put together was skeleton enough without losing a key member. Every member had a specific function. Without someone there to fill in the missing piece, the team would fail.
Lily had little choice but to accept the new additions. That didn’t mean she had to like them. She’d put her personal preferences aside because children were dying down in Cielo Bonita. A delay to seek out new team members would only mean more unnecessary casualties.
Still, she’d made a few phone calls. Lily couldn’t afford not to since she had to depend on her team when they reached the jungle. Father Ken and Nurse John had checked out much to her chagrin. Lily didn’t like working with new people, especially out in the field. You never knew how they’d react to the conditions.
Her gaze strayed to Father Ken. He didn’t look like the delicate type. She glanced at the large black duffel bag at his feet. In fact, he looked as if trips like this were second nature to him.
The plane dipped and everyone but Ken and John gasped and grabbed for their harnesses. John hadn’t missed a beat as he chatted up her other registered nurse, Karen Matthews, a cute redhead with stunningly long legs that went on for miles. From the look on her besotted face, the advances he was making weren’t exactly unwelcome. Karen laughed and touched his arm as John pulled a face behind the pilot’s back. As long as their antics didn’t jeopardize the team, Lily didn’t care what two consenting adults did in their free time.
Lily forced her hands to release the straps and calmly smoothed out her short blond hair. She was still getting used to the length, since she’d cut it specifically for this trip. When she realized Ken was still watching her, Lily dropped her hands into her lap. If he wasn’t rattled, then she wasn’t going to be either. Men like Ken and John wouldn’t respect a leader who couldn’t even handle a little plane ride.
She rolled her shoulders and forced herself to make eye contact. His lips quirked and the cramped aeroplane space suddenly got warmer. Lily looked away and thought she heard him laugh as the wheels bounced off the runway, then touched down.
Cielo Bonita wasn’t more than a few shanty houses perched next to a winding river full of deadly anaconda and cayman – a cousin to the crocodile. To call it a town was being generous, Ken thought. Why Dr Lily wanted to build a clinic here didn’t seem immediately apparent. Fifty miles over the towns got bigger. There was more need, according to his intelligence.
He unloaded his duffel with his clothes and bibles in it. His M-21 rifle, Glock pistol, KA-BAR knife and ghillie suit would be buried beneath foliage at the fallback site. He and John couldn’t afford to count on airport security, even though they’d been paid ahead of time to look the other way.
Ken waited for John to get his gear. His spotter scope had been disguised and placed with photography equipment. Lily glanced back at them as John approached.
“I think the good doctor has the hots for you,” he said. “She’s barely taken her eyes off you since the flight began. Maybe she has a taste for the forbidden.” He laughed and waggled his eyebrows.
“Or maybe she hasn’t made up her mind about us,” Ken said, looking his way. “We need to stay on our toes. We can’t afford to tip off the natives or the friendlies.”
“Tell me you wouldn’t like a piece of that,” John said, his eyes straying to Lily’s bottom. “She’s your type and she has one smokin’ body.”
Ken elbowed him hard. “I don’t have a type. Try to stay focused on the mission.”
John grunted, then gave him a knowing smile. “That’s what I thought.”
“We better help them set up. Don’t want to give our new boss an excuse to send us packing,” Ken said, ignoring his partner. The mission came first. It didn’t matter that Dr Lily Houser had a mouth that was utterly kissable or that his hands itched to touch those luscious curves she kept hidden under that loose blue T-shirt. Ken had a role to play and it didn’t include seducing the utterly fuckable doctor. Lily would be horrified if she knew what he was thinking, not to mention if he acted on his carnal thoughts. He tugged at the collar again, then forced his hands away. A real priest would be used to wearing the damn thing. Of course, most priests didn’t have seventeen-and-a-half-inch necks.
If he had a brain in his head, he’d do his job and get the hell out of here. His prolonged presence would only endanger the sexy doctor and her team. Ken had no doubt they’d be receiving a visit from some of Juan Garcia’s men either today or tomorrow. He planned to make himself scarce when they arrived. No sense in tipping them off. They probably already had eyes on the place. He scanned the faces of the villagers who’d come to get a glimpse of the new arrivals.
“What’s wrong?” John asked. “Are you having one of those feelings?”
Ken looked at the faces once more, but didn’t get the itch between his shoulder blades that always let him know when he was being watched. He shook his head and rolled his stiff neck. “Let’s get moving,” he said. “We don’t have much time.”
“Right behind you, boss.”
Ken shot him a warning glance and pointed to his collar. Just the thought of it choked him.
“I mean Father,” John said then chuckled.
“More like undertaker,” Ken muttered and they both laughed.
Two
Despite Ken’s resolve to stay away from the luscious Dr Lily, he’d had little luck doing so in the three days since they’d arrived. She was like a magnet for his attention. Her sexy laugh and caring demeanour drew him repeatedly to the makeshift tent they’d set up as a temporary clinic. The patients had been flowing in ever since word got out that a doctor had arrived. She’d treated well over two hundred people in the past two days and more kept coming. Lily was a tireless worker, who never lost her bedside manner no matter how exhausted she
became.
There’d been times he’d had to step in and make her take a break, drink some bottled water and have a bite to eat. Those times had been his favourite because he’d learned a lot about the woman. She was the youngest of three kids in a family of lawyers. Lily had fought to go to medical school, even though her father had expected her to join the family firm. Ken had read most of the information from her file, but Lily had made the facts come to life with her animated storytelling.
If Ken had learned anything over the last few days, it was that Lily was a scrapper. Despite her diminutive size, she fought for what she wanted and what she believed in. She had very strong opinions about a variety of subjects and wasn’t afraid to share them. He’d enjoyed every second of their verbal sparring, but didn’t miss the fact that it hid a deeper attraction. One that was getting harder and harder to ignore.
They’d just finished their lunch, when the first of Juan Garcia’s men arrived. It had taken longer than Ken had expected. Whether that was due to the distance from his camp or extreme caution, he didn’t know, but would find out soon enough. The man had come in under the guise of a wounded farmer, but Ken and John had recognized military training in his gait and his watchful gaze.
Lily left Ken’s side and rushed over to help him into the tent. She was already asking questions with the help of a local interpreter before the flap closed. Ken shot John a sharp look and jerked his head towards the tent. John followed Lily inside.
Ken rose slowly and put his hands together so that it looked like he was praying. All the while, he scanned the tree line. He had no doubt they were under surveillance. The spot between his broad shoulders was twitching. He crossed himself, then stretched out his stiff muscles and calmly made his way towards his tent. The heat from the jungle punched the air out of his lungs. The sweet smell of blossoms wafted on the breeze, leaving him light-headed or maybe it was the company he’d been keeping. Ken wanted to go into the medical tent, but there was no reason for him to be there. It wasn’t like the man was dying and needed last rites. John would report back on what the soldier said. He just had to wait. It turned out to be a very long two hours.
The man who’d come in under the guise of a farmer hadn’t said much. John noted that he’d looked over their equipment and eyed the staff suspiciously. He was spying, trying to ascertain if they were who they said they were. His actions left no doubt that Juan Garcia was in the area. Fortunately, the rest of the afternoon and evening were uneventful.
The next morning three more men showed up. These guys hadn’t bothered to disguise their uniforms. Lily had hesitated when she saw them, but then quickly ushered the men into the medical tent for treatment. Up to this point, Ken had respected Lily’s work ethic and intelligence, but now he was beginning to wonder if he’d misjudged her.
It was one thing to treat a man in disguise, it was quite another to knowingly treat the men that had caused some of the injuries she’d seen over the last few days. She was deliberately putting herself in harm’s way. She needed to get that sexy butt back to San Diego where she’d be safe. It took every fibre of his being not to march into the tent, pick her up and put her on the next flight out of town.
Lily stared at the men dressed in green fatigues. One man watched her and her team while the other two searched their tents and luggage. No one tried to stop them and for that she was grateful. She hadn’t known she’d been holding her breath until the last man came out of Father Ken’s tent empty-handed. Lily’s shoulders eased a little. Logically, she knew there shouldn’t be anything to find, but that hadn’t stopped her from worrying. For one terrifying moment she’d imagined them shouting that they’d found something other than bibles.
He’s a priest, she reminded herself again, hating that she had to keep doing so to prevent her growing feelings for the man from showing.
Lily had known coming into Cielo Bonita that she might have to contend with the politics in the region. In this case, that meant the corruption, intimidation and violence, which were rampant. Like various areas in South America, civil unrest was common or at least had been in the past. Between the drug trade and power struggles, violence was as normal as breathing. She didn’t know which cause had these men knocking at her door and she didn’t care. The faster she treated them, the sooner they’d be gone. Hopefully for good.
The many paid the price for the few bent on destruction. She knew these men had caused some of the wounds she’d treated. Lily had heard whispers of kidnappings, torture and enslavement. The latter used for labour in the drug trade. She’d even heard stories of young girls being taken from their families and forced into prostitution to entertain the soldiers.
She’d taken the warnings seriously, but she hadn’t been able to turn her back on the people. Any more than Lily would turn her back on these men. She’d taken an oath to treat everyone no matter their background and Lily intended to keep it.
Karen Matthews stood next to her, her gaze going again and again to John Ekle, who had finally shown up to work.
“Long night?” Lily asked.
John had the decency to blush. “Longer than I thought.” He grinned and Karen scowled.
“Doctor, should we give him an antibiotic?” she asked.
“Yes,” Lily said as she finished dressing the soldier’s leg. He’d had a cut that had gotten infected. If he’d left it much longer, she would’ve had to amputate.
“No, I meant him,” Karen said, pointing to John.
His grey eyes flared. “I always use protection, darlin’. You don’t have to worry about me,” he said, winking at her. “I’m a regular Boy Scout.”
John’s words were playful like always, his actions smooth and relaxed. Nothing he did seemed out of place as he helped them bandage the soldier, but Lily couldn’t shake the feeling that he was watching their patient closely.
“You are disgusting,” Karen said, helping the soldier off the table.
The man glanced between them and his lips quirked. Some things were universal and didn’t require interpretation, Lily thought, as the soldier hobbled out of the tent. The armed group left shortly thereafter. No doubt to report their findings.
John leaned forwards, not missing a beat. “You still like me?”
Karen baulked. “Not any more. You’re a himbo.”
“Ouch,” he said, clutching his chest.
She snorted. “Like calling you a male bimbo would ever hurt your feelings.”
His grey eyes glittered in amusement as he gave Karen’s body a slow perusal. “I’ll make it up to you tonight,” John said. “I promise.”
Karen glared. “You said that last night and the night before.”
“Yeah.” He shoved his hands into his pockets and gave the nurse a lopsided grin. “But now I mean it.”
“You two need to get a room,” Lily said, shaking her head.
“Oh, I intend to,” John said, sending a heated glance Karen’s way. “What’s it going to be, darlin’, your tent or mine?”
Karen let out a frustrated growl, but from the look in her eyes she had every intention of taking John up on his offer.
Lily’s thoughts wandered to Father Ken. “Not going to happen,” she muttered under her breath, before tossing her latex gloves into the trash.
Ken made himself scarce, keeping towards the tree line, but couldn’t bring himself to go far in case Lily needed him. He didn’t think the men would try anything, but you never knew with home-grown militias. At least she wasn’t alone.
Despite his nocturnal activities, his spotter was in there with her. John had spent the past few nights traipsing through the jungle and studying satellite images to try to figure out where the ex-general had been hiding himself. Ken had covered his absence when Lily noticed him missing by telling her that John had met a local woman in the town. She’d frowned, but accepted the story, since John had done nothing but flirt since they’d arrived. It was a good cover. No one who’d been around him for any length of time would suspect it was
a lie.
This morning John had reported that he’d located their equipment and a crude four-room house seven klicks south of their position. He’d seen movement and had been able to get a positive ID on Juan Garcia. John had scouted out a tree-covered hill 2,000 feet away that looked to be a good spot to try to take the shot. The dense brush would give them the cover they needed.
Ken watched the soldiers leave. He didn’t relax until they were out of sight. He hadn’t seen the location John had picked out yet. He’d need to survey the place for himself before he knew for sure if he could take the shot from that position. It wouldn’t do for a tree branch to be in the way. They would be leaving tomorrow morning and, if all went as planned, they would not be returning. A fact that bothered him more than it should . . . thanks in part to a certain blonde-haired doctor, who in a short while had managed to weasel her way under his skin.
Three
Morning came early for the medical team. The heat and the noise made sleeping in impossible. The sounds of the jungle grew in volume as the animals began their daily struggle for survival. The hot air accentuated the damp musky odour of the rich soil and the sharp tang of the muddy river nearby.
As was her habit, Ken found Lily sitting on a log by the fire, a bowl of instant oatmeal in her hands. Her hair had been pulled back and she wasn’t wearing any make-up, allowing her inner beauty to shine through. She hadn’t noticed him yet, so he continued to stare. He was going to miss seeing her face every morning. His chest constricted as he stepped forwards into view. Lily smiled brightly then scooted over so he’d be able to sit beside her. It was a routine they’d both gotten used to over the short time they’d been here.
“Good morning,” she said, before taking a sip of coffee.