by Marie Force
“I love to fly. Being grounded never sits well with me.”
She shook her head with dismay. “I’m sorry.”
“Why?” he asked, smiling. “You didn’t punch me.” She blushed again, and Cole couldn’t take his eyes off her. “Can I buy you a cup of coffee?”
She consulted her watch. “I have twenty minutes until I have to be back.”
“So do I.” He stood and held out a hand to help her up. “Shall we?”
***
He’d come back. Just like Jenny had said he would, and he’d come looking for her! This time, she felt the jolt just by glancing up to find him watching her. Walking to the coffee shop, Olivia stole glances at him and discovered he was even more gorgeous than she remembered. What is it about a man in uniform? Tom Cruise has nothing on this guy!
“You look a lot better than you did the last time I saw you,” she said. The black eye was all but gone, except for a fading yellow bruise on his cheek.
“I imagine I do. It’s been a long two weeks, that’s for sure. I almost went stir crazy.”
“Are you one of those people who don’t know what to do with a vacation?” she asked as they helped themselves to coffee from the urns on the counter.
He loaded his with cream and sugar and paid for both. “Oh, I know what to do with a vacation—when I have time to plan one and when I’m allowed to do more than sit on my ass recovering from a concussion.” Leaning in close to her, he added, “I’ve got to tell you, though, I love Dr. Phil. I’d never seen his show before.”
She laughed at the goofy face he made and followed him to a table in the food court. “So what happened at the hospital that day? I’ve wondered how it went.”
“I had a CT scan that showed a concussion, which I could’ve told them, and X-rays of my shoulder, which was just badly bruised. They kept me overnight for observation. The whole thing was a royal pain, especially that woman from the airline. Even though she kept the media away, she drove me totally nuts.”
“What about the cops? Did you hear any more from them?”
“They called to say the guy had pleaded no contest to felony assault. Because it was his first offense, they gave him two years’ probation.”
Olivia clucked with disapproval. “They should’ve thrown him in jail. He could’ve killed you.”
“I didn’t want to deal with testifying at a trial and all that, so I’m fine with it.” He took a sip of his coffee and studied her.
Her face heated under his intense scrutiny. “What?” she finally asked.
“You’re very beautiful, but I’m sure you hear that all the time.”
Caught off guard by the compliment, she rolled her eyes. “Sure. Every day.”
“You don’t believe me.”
Glancing up at him, she found his bright blue eyes trained on her.
He reached across the table for her hand. There it was again. The jolt. What was that?
“I’m not feeding you a line, Olivia. I mean it. I thought of you… when I was sitting on my butt at home. I was looking forward to seeing you today, and when I couldn’t find you, I was really bummed.”
Her tongue tied in knots, she focused on their joined hands. “Oh. You were?”
“Uh-huh.” He checked his watch. “Damn. I have to be back in five minutes, and so do you.” With what seemed to be great reluctance, he released her hand. “I’d like to see you again.”
Surprised, she stared at him. “You would?”
His deep, rich laugh warmed her from head to toe. “When I came to that day and saw you there…” He shrugged. “I want to see you again. Is that possible?”
“I guess. Sure.”
Cocking an amused eyebrow at her, he said, “You guess. Hmm. Okay.” He stood up and tugged a pen out of his breast pocket. “I’ll leave it up to you.” Reaching for her hand, he wrote his phone number on her palm. “If you decide you can bear to see me again, give me a call.”
By the time he’d pressed a kiss to the back of her hand, released it, and begun to walk away, Olivia had forgotten how to breathe.
He suddenly spun around. “Hey,” he called to her. “What’s your last name?”
Olivia untied her tongue to say, “Robison.”
“Call me, Olivia Robison.” He smiled, waved, and was sucked up by the crowd moving down the concourse.
“Was he talking to you?” a woman at the next table asked Olivia.
“Huh?”
“That was Cole Langston, right? Captain Incredible?”
Olivia wondered if he hated the nickname the grateful passengers had given him. “Uh-huh.”
“Was he talking to you?”
Still trying to process what had just transpired, Olivia said, “Um, yes. He was.”
“Well, I don’t know about you, but if a guy that hot and famous said that to me, I’d already be on the phone.”
She grabbed her bag and walked away before Olivia could reply.
Chapter 4
Olivia made it to nine o’clock before she called Jenny.
“You’re early,” Jenny said, stifling a yawn.
“I know. Is Billy asleep?”
“Finally! We’re just getting around to eating. What’s up?”
“Call me when you’re done.”
“I can talk. Will’s pretending not to watch the Nats game anyway.”
“He came back.”
“Who did?”
“Cole Langston.” Olivia felt her face grow warm as she said the words.
Jenny shrieked. “I told you he would!”
“I hate to say it, but you were right.”
“Did you run into him, or did he come looking for you?”
“He came looking.”
“Oh, wow.” The single word came out as a long, breathy sigh. “What did he say? How did he look?”
Olivia laughed. “He looked good. The bruises were almost all gone.”
“Just good? Not great? Not fabulous? Not sexy?”
“All of the above,” Olivia said softly.
Olivia had to hold the phone away from her ear when Jenny screamed. “Oh my God! I knew it!” To Will, she said, “Liv’s hero pilot came back.”
“Jenny! Stop! Don’t tell him. He’ll want to know everything.”
“Oh. Um…”
“Of course you’ve already told him the whole story.” Olivia didn’t really care, and Jenny knew that. Will had the unique ability to be “one of the girls” with them without sacrificing his manhood.
“We’re married. I had to tell him.”
“No, you didn’t.”
“Forget about that, and tell me what he said!”
“He said… I’m very beautiful and he wants to see me again.”
“Oh, Liv. Oh!”
“He took my hand, kissed it, wrote his phone number on my palm, and said it was up to me if I want to call him.”
“That is, without a doubt, the most romantic thing I’ve ever heard.” To Will, she added, “Hush! I’ll tell you later.” Returning to Olivia, she said, “So you’re going to call him?”
“I don’t know.”
“Olivia! Are you kidding me? Why in the world wouldn’t you?”
“I don’t even know him. This whole thing is too weird for me. Besides, he must have a million women flocking around him.”
“All right, you need to listen to me. Are you listening?”
“Yes,” Olivia said, laughing.
“He sounds like a really nice guy. How many people in this day and age would stick up for a stranger the way he did for you?”
“Not many,” Olivia conceded.
“Doesn’t that and what he did for that other pilot in January tell you everything you need to know to make a phone call? I’m not telling you to have an affair with the guy. I’m just saying… call him. See where it goes.”
“I don’t know anything about him except he’s an often heroic pilot. He could live in Alaska for all I know.”
“I can’t believe you hav
en’t Googled the hell out of him by now. Are we really related?”
“Very funny. I haven’t had time.”
“What’s the area code on his phone number?”
“Eight-four-seven.”
“Already got it memorized?”
“No!” Olivia lied.
“It’s Chicago.”
“How do you know?”
“I’ve got my laptop right here, and unlike you, I know how to use Google.”
“He’s older than me.”
“So?”
“And he’s…”
“What?”
“Accomplished. Hugely accomplished. I can see that just by the way he carries himself.”
“And so you think you’re not good enough for him? That’s crazy. You’ve gotten yourself three-quarters of the way through school with no help from anyone. You have no reason to feel inferior to him.”
“He’s been places, done things… Hell, everyone in America knows who he is. How do I compete with that?”
Jenny sighed. “Don’t do this, Liv. It’s a phone call.”
“There’s a jolt.”
“A jolt? What’re you talking about now?”
“I feel a jolt… of something… when he touches me.”
Jenny went silent.
“Jen?”
“Call him. Right now. Tonight.”
“I’m too nervous.”
“Are your palms so sweaty the phone number is smudging?” Jenny asked, alarmed.
Olivia laughed. “I wrote it down.”
“Oh,” Jenny said with a sigh of relief. “That’s good. If I were you, I’d never wash that hand again.”
Olivia would never admit to having had that very thought. “Too late.”
“You have to call him. Can you imagine if you don’t? You’ll wonder for the rest of your life what would’ve happened if you had.”
“I hate when you get all logical on me. I like you better when your head’s in the clouds.”
“Hey! I resemble that remark!”
Olivia laughed at Jenny’s foolishness.
“I’m going so you can call him, and the minute you hang up with him, you’d better call me.”
“I’m not calling you back tonight.”
“Yes, you are.”
“Honestly! Were you always such a pain in the ass?”
“All my life and you know it. That’s why you love me. Hanging up. Call me back.”
Olivia left the phone on her bed and got up to pace the small room. It wasn’t that she didn’t want to call him. No. She wanted to call him. Badly. But a guy like him could have any girl he wanted—and probably had them lined up hoping to get a scrap of his attention.
What could he possibly want with her, a woman with precious little experience with men, when he had willing women throwing themselves at him? She had stayed with two past boyfriends far longer than she should have, and since she broke up with the more recent one, she had dated only sporadically—and certainly not anyone like Cole Langston.
But he had seemed so… sincere. That was the only word she could think of.
She stared at the phone on the bed.
“Oh, what the hell.”
Before she could lose her nerve, she grabbed the phone and dialed the number she had already committed to memory. Her heart pounded while she waited for him to answer.
“Hello?”
Suddenly frozen, Olivia couldn’t think, talk, or breathe.
“Hello?”
“This is Olivia.” She cleared her throat. “Robison.”
“Olivia.” She heard the smile in his voice. “Are you crank calling me?”
“No!” she said, horrified. “That wasn’t my intention anyway.”
“What was your intention?”
“I have absolutely no idea.” His laugh was so sexy that she dissolved onto the bed. “Where are you right now?”
“Driving home from the airport.”
“Where’s home?”
“Just north of O’Hare in Des Plaines. Outside Chicago.”
“Did you grow up there?”
“Nope. Lafayette, Indiana. How about you?”
“Right here in Alexandria.”
“I love the D.C. area. I still remember the first time I was ever there for our senior trip in high school.”
“I love the city, too. I spend as much time as I can there.”
“So how was the rest of your day?”
“Oh, you know… same old, same old. Nothing as exciting as yours, I’m sure.”
“Why do you assume that?”
“Well, flying planes has to be more exciting than scanning candy bars and magazines into a computer.”
“Can I ask you something, and will you promise not to be offended?”
“I guess so.”
“When you can draw the way you do, what are you doing working as a clerk in a store?”
She didn’t want to be offended. Really she didn’t.
“Olivia?”
“I work there because I need the money. For school.”
“Art school, I hope.”
“Business school.”
“Why?”
“Because someday I’d like to make some real money.”
“Olivia, that woman in the airport today would’ve paid you hundreds of dollars for that portrait you did of her kids.”
Olivia scoffed. “No way.”
“Wanna bet?”
“What do you mean?”
“The next time I come to DCA,” he said, using the airport’s call letters, “we’ll find a family for you to draw. When you’re done, we’ll ask the parents how much they’d pay for it.”
“That’s crazy.”
“What’s crazy is you not knowing how exceptionally talented you are.”
She hesitated, debated, and decided. “My mother calls them doodles. Olivia’s doodles.”
“They’re so much more than that.”
“I’d like to draw you,” she confessed. “You have a great face. Good bone structure.”
“Is that like saying a girl has a nice personality?” he asked with laughter in his voice.
Olivia’s face burned with embarrassment. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to insult you.”
“You didn’t. I’m flattered you want to draw me.”
She didn’t mention that she already had.
“I want to see more of your work.”
“Really?”
“Yes, really. I’ll be back on Friday. Could I see it then?”
Touched by his interest, she rested a hand on her chest to contain her galloping heart. “Sure. If you want to.”
“I want to. How about dinner? I get in at eight, and I’m there overnight.”
“Dinner.”
“You know, the meal that comes at the end of the day?”
“Very funny.”
“Yes, you are. So are you free?”
“I get off work at seven.”
“Do you mind killing an hour?”
“No, that’s fine.”
“How’s the Sam Adams place at eight?”
She swallowed hard. This definitely counted as a date. “Good. I’ll meet you there?”
“As soon as I can get there. And Olivia?”
“Yeah?”
“I will be there. I promise.”
“Okay.” After a pause, she said, “Can I ask you something?”
“Anything you want.”
“How old are you?”
“I just turned thirty-six.”
“Oh.”
“Is that a problem?”
“I don’t know.”
“How old are you?”
“I just turned twenty-seven.”
“Well, I can see why you would think that’s a problem, you know, with me being so much older and wiser than you. Yes, that would definitely put you at a disadvantage.”
She couldn’t contain a ripple of laughter.
“I like the sound of that.”
&nb
sp; “What?”
“You. Laughing. You’re very serious most of the time, aren’t you?”
That he had summed her up so easily, so effortlessly, was unnerving.
“I guess I am.”
“Then I’ll have to keep you laughing.”
“Cole?”
“That’s the first time you’ve called me by name.”
“Is it?”
“Uh-huh. What were you going to say?”
“I was just going to ask you… What is this, exactly, that we’re doing here?”
“I have no idea,” he said, laughing softly, “but I’d like to find out—that is, if you aren’t too put off by my advanced age.”
“I’m not if you’re not.”
“No worries on my end. So what do you think? Should we find out what this is? Together?”
Her heart stuttered. This time he had caused the jolt with just the soft cadence of his voice. If she hadn’t been so busy trying to breathe, she would’ve been petrified.
“Yes,” she managed to say. “I think we should.”
“Good. Friday at eight then?”
“I’ll be there.”
“Olivia?”
“Yes?”
“I’m really glad I got knocked out in your store.”
She laughed—again. “So am I.”
“See you soon.”
When she called Jenny back, there was more shrieking. At one point, Olivia wondered if her cousin had hyperventilated.
“Take a breath, Jen.”
“This is so far beyond cool! We have to go shopping. Tomorrow, we’re going shopping.”
“For what?”
“You need something new for a date like this. It’s required.”
“All right, if you insist. Pentagon City?”
“Works for me. I’ll make sure Will gets home early to watch Billy. So have you drawn him yet?”
“Maybe.”
“I’ll need you to bring it.”
Olivia sighed.
“What’s wrong?”
“It’s just…”
“What, Livvie?”
“Scary. I like him. I don’t even know him, and I like him. A lot. There was something about him, right from the beginning. Even when he was out cold on the floor, there was something.”
“Don’t get ahead of yourself. Just think about Friday. The rest will take care of itself.”
“Good plan.”
Chapter 5
Friday dragged. Every time Olivia glanced at the clock only five minutes had passed. From inside the store, she watched the sky grow dark and stormy. Perfect! She wondered if his flight would be delayed—or worse yet, canceled—and wished she had thought to get the flight number from him so she could check.