She had never wanted any one man particularly. They could be fun. And sex was a very pleasant way to pass the time on occasion. She imagined it with Jesse and decided that maybe it could be more than that—much more.
How insane was it that now she’d found a man she wanted—she didn’t dare touch him. She noted her body position, glued up against the passenger door. She’d always thought that a Toyota Camry was a bigger car, but now it felt so claustrophobic that it was making it difficult to breathe.
“I’m not toxic,” Jesse’s voice was as gentle as if he was talking to a skittery horse. And far too insightful for a guy.
“Are you sure?”
It earned her that low laugh that a woman wanted to wrap around her shoulders at night.
“I’m not exactly willing to trust that.”
“No, I suspect not,” Jesse sounded sad when she expected angry or frustrated. He turned onto a one-lane road that she soon realized was a long driveway.
The fences were weathered split rail, but they were in immaculate condition. A mile in, she spotted a barn, one of the biggest she’d seen, also neat and tidy. The ranch house was hidden in a small orchard of apple trees.
Jesse slowed the car to a stop and rolled down the windows. He breathed in deep and sighed happily. “Smells like home.”
“It smells,” she sniffed carefully, “horsey.” It was so dry in comparison to the jungle that it almost hurt her nose. Once she was past that, she could smell the freshness of mown grass and the hint of apple blossoms, which were dusting the small orchard with a bright pink. In the jungle, she’d forgotten that it was spring.
“It does smell horsey. Thank the Lord that some things never change. Care to try a little experiment, Hannah?”
“No. What?”
“I have a theory.”
“As long as you keep your hands to yourself, I’m listening.”
“My theory,” he turned to face her and she felt suddenly trapped by those blue eyes, “is that you won’t…ah…create a sound less’n you’re wanting to.”
Hannah considered the idea.
“I haven’t heard a peep—outside of you,” his broad wink had her considering what physical mayhem she’d unload on him if she dared to touch him, “—since we left the jungle.”
“You’re thinking that my…curse only works in the jungle?”
“No, ma’am. I’m thinking your gift is more in your control than you’re thinking. Go on. Give her a try.”
Hannah didn’t want to, but she had to understand what was happening to her. She still couldn’t look away from Jesse’s blue eyes—they were awfully nice ones—so she imagined a loud gunshot outside his window.
Jesse just smiled.
A large brown horse standing nearby raised its head—not in alarm, but rather in curiosity.
She threw her psyche into a colossal racket.
The horse stepped forward and sniffed at the air near where she’d intended the sound to be. Then it returned to its grazing.
“Now,” Jesse held out his hand, palm up. “Take my hand, but don’t think about projecting a sound.”
Hannah had been trained to tackle her fears so that they didn’t control her. If she hadn’t, she’d have begged off. Made an excuse. Worn Kevlar plating the rest of her life. But that wasn’t how the Army selected or trained its Delta operators.
So she reached out and rested her palm on his.
Jesse felt as if he was the one who wanted to shout out and create a thunderclap. The contact shock of Hannah’s palm resting lightly against his was more powerful than bedding some women. There was a rightness and a power to it that went beyond anything in his experience.
Ever so slowly, she curled her fingers until they were laced in his as tight as the braid on a horse’s mane all dandified for the state fair. Her hand felt good in his. Delta strong, but her fingers were still fine. Her hand felt feminine, despite the calluses. Or maybe it felt so good because of the calluses. It felt like no other woman’s hand he’d ever held—as unique as the woman it belonged to. And if he got much sappier about it, they were going to have to put him out to pasture or put him down.
“Nothing?” her voice little more than a whisper.
Nothing? He didn’t know what he was feeling, but it was definitely something. Oh! She means the sounds, Jesse. “Nary a peep big enough to spook a housefly.”
Her grip tightened convulsively on his and he gained a new appreciation for the meaning of Delta strong.
“Before you crush my fingers to dust with relief—”
Hannah eased up instantly and tried to pull away, but he held on to her.
“—try making a slightly bigger sound than the one before. Just don’t be making it Texas-sized.”
It sounded as if someone dropped a steel pot on a concrete floor just outside his car window.
It was followed by a sharp whinny of surprise and the sound of Brownie cantering off. “Well, she’ll definitely have a story to tell when she gets back to the barn tonight.”
“I’m so sorry. I didn’t think about—”
“Don’t you be apologizing. Brownie is gettin’ old and set in her ways. Do her good to run around a bit.”
“Brownie?” He could feel her laughing at him.
“I didn’t name her,” but Hannah’s smile didn’t let him off the hook. “Okay, maybe I let a girl in junior high who I was trying to impress do it.”
“You going to let me name one of your horses?”
“We’ll see. Hav’ta try another experiment first.”
“What?” Hannah froze up again.
Rather than answering, he leaned in and kissed her.
She made a brief gurgle of surprise, but then gave in to it. He’d been right about her taste—fresher than a stretch of spring prairie. But the feel of her was different. They were both still buckled in, held apart by their tightly clenched hands. But he knew her now. At least a little, and that knowledge spread between them like the kinetic flow when pilot and helicopter combined to make a single whole. When a change in attitude was no longer happening to one or the other of them, but both at the same time.
Jesse could feel the flow between them grow as if they were each other’s amplifiers until he wondered if they’d overload without some release.
They finally parted, not with a harsh slap of change, but rather it was a fullness that was so big it didn’t fit on the prairie. They ended the kiss, still buckled into their seats, with their noses and foreheads touching.
“That was something,” her whisper was pure surprise.
“Right nice, what with no one shooting at us.”
“That too.”
“And no, I didn’t hear anything. Though I was a mite distracted.”
“Too distracted to come up to the house,” his father’s voice sounded from just outside the car window.
“Daddy!” Jesse leapt out of the car like he’d been launched by a James Bond ejection seat, again leaving her sitting cold at the end of an impossibly hot kiss. He was not supposed to be causing ground-shaking changes to her life but never following through on even one of them.
And Hannah would never get used to a culture where grown men called their parent “Daddy.”
She unbuckled and got out the other side of the car like a normal person while the two men embraced and thumped each other on the back. Another impossible action for a child and parent, at least in her world.
They were cut from the same cloth. Jesse’s father was a little shorter, more wrinkled and sun-worn, but still from a hale-and-hearty breed that left no doubts as to their manly virility.
He wore a white cowboy hat to Jesse’s black one. The horse he’d ridden up on was mostly white as well, with a silver-gray mane. Would Jesse’s horse be black like his hat? “Daddy” tipped his hat politely as he came around the car to greet her, while Jesse hung back just long enough to retrieve his own from the dashboard.
“Sorry ’bout my boy, what with him not knowing that, when o
n a ranch, you’re supposed to kiss a woman on a horse, not in a car.” His handshake was as firm as his son’s, a man who definitely worked with his hands. “Terry Johnson, pleased to meet you, ma’am.” It was clear where Jesse had inherited his manners as well.
“Hannah Tucker.”
He held her hand for a moment longer, turning it up to look at it. Even ran a thumb over her shooting callus—a thick pad on the webbing between thumb and forefinger that marked her as Delta.
“Are you in the same line of work as my boy?”
“Similar, yes, sir.”
“I’m not a sir. I worked for a living. Though can’t say as I understood the Air Force’s thinking about putting a Texas rancher on a chow line for two years at Elmendorf up in Alaska, but we worked hard and had a good time. Name’s Terry.”
“Yes, sir.”
He smiled at her pert answer. “You keeping him safe?” There was a lot of weight and worry behind the question, though he was clearly trying not to let it show.
“Him?”
Jesse strode up beside his father, his daddy. Two damned handsome cowboys. And one too sure of himself by far.
“I don’t know, sir. Do you really think he’s worth the trouble?”
Terry unleashed a bark of laughter that startled the poor returning Brownie into running away once again.
She noticed that the big gray that Terry had ridden up on, without either her or Jesse noticing, grazed patiently, clearly used to his master’s sharp laugh.
He slapped his son hard on the shoulder. “Well, Hannah. You be sure to let me know if you find out that Jesse is worth it. Been trying to solve that one for all his natural-born life. Boy always was a handful. See y’all up to the house.” Terry climbed on his horse and in moments had disappeared out over the prairie.
Jesse leaned back against the hood of the car and simply waited, as if he had nothing better to do in the world than sit out beneath the warm Texas sunshine.
“You belong here, don’t you?”
“S’pose I do,” he nodded. “I’m happy on the ranch.”
“What’s your ma like?” Rather than feeling worried, Hannah was curious to see what of his mother had ended up in the man.
“Don’t rightly know,” Jesse’s hat brim hid his face as he looked down at the dirt and scuffed it with his boot. “Momma died the day I was born. Daddy speaks well of her. Never remarried despite more than a few offers.”
“But,” she looked at the intricate beading of his hat band. He’d said his mother had made it for him. That meant she’d made it for the man before he was even born. No wonder he’d killed the NERC who dared to wear his hat.
Jesse looked up and saw where her attention had gone. “The only gift I ever got from my momma other than the gift of life.”
“Then why are you in the service rather than helping with the ranch? You know it worries your pa.”
“It does?” His look of surprise didn’t appear to be feigned.
Could someone please explain men to her? Though she’d bet even small words and simple sentences wouldn’t unravel the puzzle for her.
“I serve because Daddy said that every man should do his duty, though I come home whenever I get leave. Seems like the right thing to do. Got in and discovered I liked it.”
“But?” She hadn’t expected to hear a ‘but’ in that statement. Night Stalkers were like Delta, career soldiers.
Jesse took off his hat and toyed with the hat band for a moment. She could see his touching it was what let him think hardest.
He finally tucked his hat back on, snugging it down sharply before answering.
“How many missions have you prepped for but never been sent on? Or sent on, but the ROE kept you from doing what really needed to be done?”
“Rules of Engagement are there for a reason, Jesse. You want to go rogue or vigilante or something?” Though she definitely knew what he was talking about. Those NERC guerillas would gladly have kidnapped and raped her, only then considering whether to ransom her or feed her to the crocs. Whereas she was only allowed to kill in self-defense. She’d even been stretching the rules when she’d fired upon the men in the clearing, because they hadn’t shot at her first. However, they’d shot her ride home out of the sky and she’d taken that as sufficient offense. Thankfully, so had the guys running her debriefing.
“No. Not really. But I wish we were doing more. Don’t you?” And again those blue eyes wouldn’t let her look away.
“Personally, I’d be happy if I could just keep up with what was happening.” Because the overwhelm of her situation wasn’t easing up even a little. Learning that she had some control over the sounds she made was encouraging. But any comfort in that part of her life was being rapidly offset by her growing attraction to one particular cowboy.
His slow smile came back. “All of a sudden-like, I suspect we’re not talking about the military anymore, are we?”
She sighed. It seemed they weren’t.
“Come along,” Jesse pushed to his feet and opened the passenger door for her. “Your colonel said we should call some people about this gift you’ve got. Let’s call ’em right off. You won’t rest easy until we do.”
“I still can’t believe he said that to you.”
“I dunno,” Jesse closed the door and circled back to his own side, “Seemed like a smart guy to me.”
“He is.”
“I do have a question for you, though. Does he threaten every man who wants to date you?”
“He threatened you? I knew there was a reason I liked Colonel Gregorio.”
Jesse just groaned and drove them up to the house.
5
There were times that Jesse wished he had the common sense that God gave a horse. First thing he’d done at the house was track down Faith Wilding Halloran. And it had spun out of his control from the first moment.
“Colonel Gregorio referred you? Well, isn’t that just so interesting. Yes, Mark and I would love to meet with you, but we’re leaving the country in a few hours. Not exactly sure for how long. How about we meet for dinner? There’s a wonderful spot right by the airport.”
“We just came from the airport, ma’am,” and having just gotten Hannah to the ranch, he wasn’t planning to backtrack or the next thing he knew they’d be all the way back in the Colombian jungle. Just like a long rubber band stretched taut.
“Oh, sorry. Not SAT. We use a private airfield northeast of the city.”
She’d given him the address, which was thankfully quite nearby, and they’d been on their way before they even had time to shower—separately or together. He’d barely had time to leave a note for Daddy so that he wouldn’t worry.
Someone was conspiring against him getting his hands on Hannah. A matter on which he was going to be filing a letter of complaint right soon if they didn’t cut it out.
The “wonderful spot” was pure Texas. It was a weather-battered building that might have once been painted white, or maybe brown. It had a sun-faded sign that said “BBQ” and a smell that had teased him from a mile out. Inside it was just as a man would expect: battered Formica tables with red leatherette and rusting chrome seats. It had a soda jerk fountain, a massive coffee machine, and a short menu board on the wall that hadn’t been altered in decades by the look of it: beef ribs, pork ribs, or brisket sandwich. The only fresh-painted thing in the place was a sign that declared, “No cash, No food.”
Less than twenty miles to home, how had he missed this place?
The couple waiting for them was a study in contrasts.
Not many men made Jesse feel small, but Mark Halloran was definitely one of those.
“You work with Gregorio?” Halloran jumped straight in.
“That would be the lady,” Jesse nodded toward Hannah, which earned him a surprised grunt. “Do not underestimate her,” he warned the big guy.
Halloran smiled at that. “I know the feeling,” he nodded toward the woman at his side. She was shorter than Hannah, long brunette
hair with eyes to match, and very nicely curved. She was lighter—no warrior build—but there was something about her that said she could take care of herself.
Then he remembered what Gregorio had said. This wasn’t just some woman, this was Faith Wilding, the author. He’d never met an author before. He’d always thought they’d be less…normal-looking. She greeted Hannah with a friendly smile and a warm embrace, just like any two women meeting for the first time. Strange.
Faith and Hannah slid into a long booth, which left the two of them to go up to the window for food.
“So, what’s your twist?” Halloran’s voice was Delta-soft despite his massive size.
“Twist?”
Halloran ordered two servings of the beef ribs and two sodas.
Not knowing what Hannah would like, he ordered one beef and one pork; but the soda machine stumped him. Finally, he decided she was from the South, so he poured two Cokes. Halloran hadn’t missed his hesitation and Jesse ignored his unspoken question. The things he didn’t know about her were vast and not knowing if she drank Coke only emphasized that in ways he wasn’t comfortable with.
Halloran shrugged and went back to his earlier question, “Gregorio wouldn’t have sent your lady to Faith unless she had a twist. A gift.”
Jesse sighed, glossed over that he didn’t know whether or not “your lady” applied either. He’d thought that relationships were supposed to make more sense with time, not less. Halloran’s accent said local, which meant that the phrase “your lady” could mean a lot more than it seemed to, or a lot less, depending on the circumstances.
“Sound,” Jesse said the single word, hoping he wasn’t speaking out of school.
“Huh! That’s a new one. Just her, or are you part of it?”
Jesse picked up the tray at the window, “Bit of both, actually.”
“That’s good. Most of our ladies, it’s their act alone. But Faith and I share ours. I like that.”
Jesse suddenly wished he had a horse racing program to figure out this conversation, but they were already back to the table.
Faith Halloran was in mid-sentence. “—four of us who are now setting up a Psi Department to assist Phoenix Agency.”
The Phoenix Agency_The Sum Is Greater Page 6