"Negative
G forces coming. Hold on to your lunch."
Captain Josie Lockworth, USAF upped the throttle and pushed
forward on the stick of her T-38 supersonic jet. Out of courtesy
only, she offered the warning to reporter Shannon Conner
strapped into the back seat.
Not that she had anything against reporters. Hell, she'd flown
with top notch embedded journalists in the Middle East. Her best
friend was even a television correspondent.
This reporter, however, could only be called a hack. Her news
network soaked up scandal like a thirsty rag. Josie couldn't
afford bad press derailing her multimillion-dollar military test
project. Forget the money, actually small change as far as the
government was concerned.
Her mother's honor had been held hostage long enough.
The T-38 pierced a low-lying cloud. Blood rushed up to her head
with negative G forces, the reverse of positive Gs that pushed
blood down. The body tolerated fewer negative Gs before passing
out. One negative G. Two. Three. Spots danced in front of her
eyes on the mountainous horizon of the California desert.
Adrenaline sang through her veins. Sweat popped along her back
through her T-shirt. Her flight suit clung like a second skin.
But then the uniform was already as much a part of her as any
epidermal layer.
She pulled back on the stick, glancing up at the mirror to check
her passenger. Shannon was awake but slumped in her seat in the
tight cockpit, one strand of blond hair sneaking out of her
helmet to stick to her pale face.
No hurling yet. A twinge of respect trickled through Josie's
steady focus, even a bit of sympathy.
But she did need to keep the reporter busy and disoriented. How
better than nonstop acrobatics in a supersonic and nimble
airplane? Shannon had insisted on the full-out flying
experience. And Josie always delivered one hundred percent.
Tucking sideways, she slipped through a mountain pass. Through
her clear top canopy, she watched the sandy landscape scroll
past.
Josie forced oxygen in and out. Her huffed exhales echoed
through the headset Darth Vader style. Near silence swallowed
the cockpit, the only sound the rasp and drag of breathing
through the oxygen mask since they'd left noise behind with
speed.
As always, she flattened her frustration with familiar routine
of flying. The trainer jet zipped along over a range near
Edwards Air Force Base, approximately a hundred miles northeast
of Los Angeles. Not much longer left in this flight until she
landed where she worked in a military detachment at the nearby
Palmdale testing facility, also known as Air Force Plant 42.For
a test pilot, steely nerves were mandatory, leaving no room for
cranky emotions jangling her at a critical second. And during
test missions, any second could be critical.
Okay, so this wasn't a test and she was pissed.
That someone like Shannon had been allowed access to Josie's
current test project just proved higher ups were only paying lip
service to endorsing her work. Someone wanted this resurrected
project that had once been her mother's to fail. Damaging press
could facilitate their cause.
And yeah, yeah, she mentally rolled her eyes at her annoying
voice of reason. Part of her still resented Shannon from their
prep-school days at the Athena Academy for the Advancement of
Women.
Advancement? Shannon had tried to advance Josie right out the
front gates on a trumped up charge of stealing.
Good God, as if.
Her stomach which held strong against negative Gs grew downright
queasy over the notion of taking so much as a post office pen.
But back then, Shannon had convinced everyone Josie was off her
rocker like her washed up military mama. Who could expect
reasonable behavior from a Lockworth lady?
Anger fired hotter than an afterburner, jangling the singing
adrenaline off key. Her combat boots braced on the rudders. She
kept her right hand loose on the stick, her left on the two
throttles, flicking up to adjust dials then landing back on the
stick. Not a HOTAS - hands on throttle and stick, with all the
buttons attached. In the T-38 she had to take her hands off the
stick and throttle to work the controls. But for Shannon, she'd
give a new spin to the HOTAS - Hands On Tummy and Sickbag.
She ran the stick fore and aft, gliding the T-38 through the sky
in a porpoise-style swim along the rolling mountain range. Push
for a hint of a negative G at the top of the sine wave. Pull for
the kiss of a positive G at the bottom of sine wave. Push, pull.
Push, pull.
"Uh, Josie?" Shannon's thready voice echoed over the headset.
"Where's the eject button again?"
Crap. She'd gone too far, something she never did anymore. She
steadied the stick. "Just a little PIO - pilot induced
oscillation. My fault, and nothing to worry about. I've got it
back under control."
Time to get herself under control as well. She needed to tamp
down the old impulsive Josie in favor of her more structured
self she'd cultivated after her mother's breakdown. "We're on
the straight and narrow now. As long as you keep your eyes
forward, all will be normal."
Unlike looking to the side where everything blurred with speed.
She hugged the terrain with skill and calm. No one would ever
have reason to accuse her of weakness or emotional instability.
She knew how hard she would have to fight even a whisper of that
label since her mother had been locked away after "the
incident." But with this test project, Josie hoped to clear her
mother's name - and shake free of that dark legacy.
"Doing okay back there?" Josie's gaze flicked up to the mirror
again.
"Just fine," ever-prideful Shannon replied, brown eyes wide,
make up still impeccable.
Pride, Josie could understand. She had her fair share of that.
Sad thing was, Shannon really packed a genius brain under all
that uptight pettiness. Given the right direction, she could
have been an incredible asset to the Athena Academy alumni list
- if she'd even made it to the twelfth grade instead of being
punted out on an honor violation.
All a moot point since, more importantly, that genius brain
could twist things against Josie in a heartbeat if the intellect
wasn't otherwise occupied. And if her navigational calculations
were correct, they were seconds away from a guaranteed
distraction.
Bingo. Right on target, there it was, a nifty distraction for
any brain. "Bet you wouldn't expect to see that out here."
"See what?"
"A nudist colony." She hoped her words didn't convey the grin
she couldn't stifle.
Silence echoed over the headset, then, "You're making that up to
get me to look over to the side where it's tougher to keep
oriented with the motion. You just want to freak me out again."
"I'm only playing tour guide." Oh yeah, completely in control
again. "Not that I have anything against nudist colonies, but I
can't help wondering. Why have one in the desert? I mean think
about it. Wouldn't the sunscreen sting in sensitive places? And
sitting on a metal lawn chair, a guy would really have to watch
his butt and be careful of his, uh, well, hoo-hah hanging out
there."
"And this helps me with my feature how?" Broadcaster neutral
tones livened up with an extra touch of bitchiness.
"I'm trying to show you some of the local scenery. But if you
don't think it will work, no problem. Besides, hoo-hah might be
too technical a term for your viewers."
"You're so not funny."
This whole damned flight wasn't funny. And the threat Shannon
posed to her career was downright terrifying, but Josie had to
find moments of levity where she could.
"You're right. I totally understand if you don't want to look.
It's much easier to keep your lunch down if you're focusing
forward." Now wasn't there a nifty life lesson there? "Watching
out the side is only for folks with steely nerves."
She'd tossed down a gauntlet and Shannon would undoubtedly
accept the challenge. Wait. Wait for it.
"Oh my God." Shannon's face went waxy in the mirror. She jerked
back around front, gaze fixed on the horizon.
"Been that long since you saw a hoo-hah, huh?"
Shannon's growl echoed through the headset.
Josie concurred on a number of levels. Sadly, it had likely been
even longer for her since she didn't have time for a man lately,
much less his hoo-hah. Not that she would admit that to Shannon.
The woman resented her, always had. Right from their early
teenage years at Athena Academy, Shannon had envied Josie's
connections through her grandfather, past CIA director Joseph
Lockworth. Poppy had been directly responsible for starting the
prestigious all-girls prep school designed to empower women,
many of them going on to government security jobs. With only two
hundred students from grades seven through twelve, the bonds
forged among students were tight and lifelong.
She still sweated bullets over how Shannon's little stunt had
almost cost Josie her dream. Luckily, her best friend Tory
Patton had worked her own investigative skills and proved
Shannon was responsible for stealing the class's petty-cash fund
and setting up Josie.
Josie's hands fisted tighter. She should just get over it.
Besides, she had the Athena diploma. She could afford to be
magnanimous. Adult.
Easing back the stick, Josie skimmed a more scenic route along
California's desert valleys cut by the ridges of the Sierra
Nevadas with the Kern River running through. She cranked an east
turn away from the river valley, out of the Sierras back over
flat land of dry lake beds and creosote bushes, closer to her
Palmdale testing facility near Edwards AFB and closer to
dropping off Shannon.
Josie continued a tour-guide litany while her passenger stayed
silent for once. Thank God.
A road splitting the desert stretched straight and long ahead of
her, marred only by the dust kicked up from a motorcycle bearing
down toward the test facility. She lined up along the lone band
of road, pacing, gaining ground on the rider. And why not?
Everything in an aviator's life was a chance for competition.
Fringe rippled from the arms of the biker's leather jacket
giving off a Mad Max air that fit well with the scattered
miners, desert rats in rusted trailers. Wild and untamed, like
the old Josie who was no longer allowed free rein. The taboo
element entranced her all the more for being forbidden. Even
while she rambled her scenic explanations to Shannon, Josie
couldn't look away from a sight and yearning that held her
attention beyond any hoo-hah.
Her headset crackled with a cleared throat. Shannon's
interruption yanked Josie's attention back to the cockpit.
"Too bad you couldn't get Tory to cover your dog and pony show.
No doubt she would have televised anything you wanted. That
loyalty among classmates is something else. You two even covered
for a pregnant friend once - what happened to Kayla and her kid
anyway? Did she ever find a man to marry her?"
Okay, that ripped it. The old Josie still humming just below the
surface kicked her adrenaline level up into a freaking aria.
"For a smart woman, you sure do say some mighty unwise things at
times."
She could put up with someone smacking at her. But her innate
sense of justice which had once earned her the label "Josephine
the Tattletale Queen" really balked at letting an injustice go
unavenged.
Nobody messed with her friends.
"You know, Shannon, I don't think I'm lined up just right. We
need to go around." She clicked on the radio. "Palmdale Tower,
Bat two-zero on the go."
Josie popped the jet into afterburners, dumping raw gas into the
exhaust stream like a pilot light on a stove igniting, pumping
up the speed. Thwump. The plane jolted from the swift
kick in the ass. Exhilaration trilled within her like the final
high note exploding free to reverberate through an auditorium.
Her eyes flicked to the mirror. Shannon's face turned cucumber.
"Ah, hell, Shannon--" she couldn't quite suppress the sarcasm
"--I probably should have told you I was going to do that."
Shannon grappled at the face mask. Her throat worked, then
cranked down in a swallow. Impressive move, holding back the
volcano of vomit that would have spewed up through the mask.
Enough payback for one day. Point made. The last echoes of
justice faded, leaving an emptiness inside her that grew
increasingly difficult to ignore.
Josie leveled off at five hundred feet above the runway.
"Palmdale Tower, Bat two-zero requesting left closed."
"Left closed approved. Repeat base."
"Bat two-zero, left base with gear."
The control tower responded, "Bat two-zero, clear to land. No
traffic."
Coming in. Landing. One hundred and fifty miles per hour at
impact, the tires screeched in protest of the brakes. She kept
the nose up to bleed off speed as well until poof, the
plane's nose tilted down and kissed asphalt. The plane taxied
down the runway at a sedate pace.
Hand easing back on the throttle, she slowed, pulling off onto
the hammerhead toward Shannon's waiting television cameraman.
"Palmdale, Bat two-zero clear the active. Going to ground
control." She switched frequencies. "Palmdale ground, Bat
two-zero. Clear the active. Request parking."
"Bat two-zero, taxi via Alpha," ground control responded. "Back
to spot sixteen. Caution construction. Right hand side of Alpha
at Bravo."
A blue pickup truck slid in front of her with a "follow me" sign
in back to lead her onto the tarmac. The sun's rays baked
through the clear canopy, desert temps still notching in
November. Her flight suit stuck to her back against the leather
seat as she followed the truck past the guy waving wand
flashlights toward the parking spot--
And toward a uniformed man, the major, her boss, standing
waiting.
Not good. The murky cloud over her day went opaque.
Major Mike Bridges had no doubt made the trip out to the flight
line to coincide with her landing for a reason. Since he stood
by the hangar housing her two modified test models of the
Predator unmanned spy drone, he must be here for her. A problem?
If so, she needed scoop-hungry Shannon Conner out of the way
before any discussion.
Josie whipped off her helmet and deplaned. Wind tore across the
treeless expanse, lifting her short hair, drying the sweat on
her body with gritty gusts. Her combat boots smacked steamy
asphalt three steps behind Shannon, who was staggering toward
the nearest trash can.
Shannon gripped the metal edges and leaned, her borrowed flight
suit stretching across her heaving back. Wonder if the cameraman
would document that part?
Her boss frowned. Josie cringed, then braced. He'd only assumed
command a month ago, so she still wasn't sure where she stood in
regard to his approval and respect. Still, she'd followed orders
today - show the reporter around and pull out all the stops.
Okay, so she'd worked in a little revenge for her friend along
with it. And at a totally sucky time.
She needed to lay low after the fallout from her helicopter
diversionary stunt she'd pulled to help one of her Athena grad
friends with a mission a few months ago. Another wrong she'd
leaped in to avenge and damn the consequences. She'd never quite
understood why being right wasn't always the right thing.
Regardless, her flight and fun were over.
A rumble from behind the hangar interrupted her thoughts seconds
before a Harley rolled into view. The same low rider cruiser
she'd seen from her plane roared up with the guy wearing black
leather.
The motorcycle jerked to a stop by the fence gate. Fringe
rippled on the man's arms rippled. The growling engine shushed.
One boot slammed the cement. A muscled thigh in faded blue jeans
and black chaps swung over. The second boot pounded pavement. He
tugged off the helmet, shaking free coal dark hair longer than
any military regs allowed. The thick mane hit his shoulders.
Definitely not military.
He smacked along his leather-clad thighs, dusting, the action
and chaps drawing attention to a hoo-hah package that--
Nope. Not gonna go there even in her mind. Too much talk of
hoo-hahs must have her hormones on overload.
Her P.C. call sign might have started out as a Josie and the
Pussy Cats reference, but she'd quickly redirected it to
Politically Correct. She had rights and wrongs down pat.
Checking out a man's hoo-hah was as disrespectful as an
ass-check from him.
Even if this guy didn't have a problem with women who flew jets
and shot the big guns like other men she'd seen outside the
workplace, she didn't have time for a relationship. Hell, she
barely had time to do her laundry.
Once she cleared her mother's name, her life would be different.
Then she could shake off the ghosts of her past and not worry so
much about the repercussions of letting the occasional emotion
slip free.
She turned her attention back to the upchucking reporter,
reaching into her thigh pocket for a pack of tissues and a
peppermint. Silently she passed Shannon the candy and tissues.
Blond hair straggling forward, Shannon snatched the offerings
and started restoring order for a camera appearance. "My feature
about you is going to suck, you know."
"We both know it was going to anyway." Josie popped a peppermint
into her mouth as well and clicked it to the side against her
teeth.
Life might not always be right or fair, but people were
predictable for the most part. There was something comforting
about that, even when it brought negative garbage her way. At
least she could see it coming and strategize.
After her mother's breakdown and discharge from the Air Force,
Josie had submerged all impulsiveness, clinging to clear-cut
reason and stability. Except for a brief lapse today with
shaking up Shannon, she'd stuck to her plan. Emotionalism,
injustice, any upset in the cosmos launched jitters in Josie's
tummy that left her HOTAS.
Her wayward eyes skipped right over to the biker making his way
toward her commander. What the hell were the two of them
plotting? Her instincts screamed ambush ahead.