Chasing Fire
talk. “Catch up with you later.”
He noted her disapproving frown, but slipped out and walked straight to his quarters. There, he booted up his laptop and got to work.
He shut down, passcoding his work when the siren sounded. He wasn’t on the first or second loads, but he ran to the ready room to assist those who were. He loaded gear on speed racks, hefted already packed and strapped paracargo onto the electric cart.
He listened, and he observed.
With Rowan and Dobie, he watched the plane rise into the wide blue cup of the sky.
“It’s good L.B. got that briefing in before the call.” Rowan shaded her eyes from the sun with the flat of her hand. “The sky looks a little dicey to the east.”
“Might be jumping ourselves before long.”
Hearing the eagerness in his voice, Rowan angled her body toward Dobie. “You’ve got jump fever. The best thing for you is to go sleep it off.”
“I got me an assignment. I’m on PC,” he said, using the shorthand for paracargo. “Packing and strapping in the loadmaster’s room. You, too, pal,” he told Gull. “Swede pulled the loft.”
“Yeah, I saw that, and that anybody on the Alaska jump could take a two-hour break first. But what the hell.” He leaned over, kissed Rowan. “We’ll get back to our agenda later.”
“Count on it.”
“I don’t see how it’s right and fair you got a woman right on base,” Dobie said as they walked toward the loadmaster’s room together. “The rest of us have to hunt one up, if we’re lucky and get a turn at a bar.”
“Life’s just full of not right and not fair. Otherwise I’d be stretched out on a white sand beach with that woman, drinking postcoital mai tais.”
“Postcoital.” Dobie snickered like a twelve-year-old. “You beat all, Gull. Beat all and back again.”
SINCE HE DIDN’T FIND her in her quarters, Gull assumed he’d finished up his duties before her, and went back to his room to continue on his project.
He sat on the bed, left the door open in a casual, nothing-to-see-here mode.
People walked by now and then, but for the most part his section stayed quiet.
Since he’d left his window open as well, he caught snippets of conversation as people wandered outside. A small group not on the jump list made plans to go into town. Somebody muttered to himself about women as the shimmering afternoon light dimmed.
He took a moment to shift to look out, and saw Rowan had been right about the eastern sky. Clouds gathered now, sailing in like warships.
A storm waiting to happen, he thought, toying with getting his run in before it did, then decided to wait for Rowan.
She and the first grumble of thunder arrived at the same time.
“Lightning strikes all over hell and back,” she told him, and flopped on the bed. “I ran up to check the radar. Tornadoes whipping things up in South Dakota.”
She circled her neck, rubbing hard at the back of her left shoulder as she spoke.
“We’ll probably have to run on the damn treadmill. I hate that.”
He pressed his fingers where she rubbed. “Jesus, Rowan, you got concrete in here.”
“Don’t I know it. I haven’t had a chance to work it out today. I need that run, some yoga . . . or that.” She sighed when he shifted and dug his fingers and thumbs into the knotted muscles.
“We’ll do our run after the storm’s over,” he said. “Use the track.”
Lightning struck, a flash and burn, and the wind rattled the blinds at his window. But no rain followed.
“When things slow down, we’ll hit L.B. up for a night off and get a fancy hotel suite. One with a jet tub in the bathroom. We’ll soak in it half the night.”
“Mmm.” She sighed her way into the image he painted. “Room service with fat, juicy steaks, and a great big bed to play on. Sleeping with somebody who has money and doesn’t mind spending it has advantages.”
“If you’ve got money and mind spending it, you can’t be having much fun.”
“I like that attitude. Are you e-mailing back home?”
“No, something else. You’re not going to like it.”
“If you’re e-mailing your pregnant wife to ask about your two adorable children and frisky puppy, I’m not going to like it.” She angled around. “That’s the kind of tone you used. Like you were going to tell me something that meant I had to punch you in the face.”
“My wife’s not pregnant, and we have a cat.” He gave her shoulders a last squeeze, then got up to close the door.
“You
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