2
Big John Wallace pulled off his helmet and scrubbed his fingers through his sweaty hair, reveling in the sensation. Out of the corner of his eye he watched Sergeant Connie Davis as they and their broken Black Hawk were lowered into their position at the air base. The moment they cleared possible enemy sight lines, she began stripping the equipment.
Not her helmet, not the hot flight suit, not her harness. Always first things first by the book with Sergeant Connie Davis. Her Minigun’s ammunition belt slotted back into its case, her last round hand-cleared from the Minigun’s chamber, caught in the air, and stowed in the loose-round bag.
Every move in US Army official order. Every bit of maintenance she ever did was done as if she were a walking, talking training manual. An attempt to alter any of her actions was met with page and paragraph quoted from memory. He’d stopped checking her on that, mostly. He hadn’t tripped her up yet, but he still had hopes.
He’d flown with her on a couple of training missions, but Kee Smith was his usual gunner. Except now she was Kee Stevenson and off having her honeymoon. Better Archie than him.
Before Kee, John had thought no one would ever replace Crazy Tim, but even Tim bowed to Kee’s marksmanship. And Kee ranked damned cute. Not his type, but real easy on the eyes, assuming you didn’t tick her off and get a punch in one.
Sergeant Connie Davis, on the other hand, while awesomely nice to look at… he had no idea what to think of her. The woman never laughed, never smiled. Built at the US Army factory and shipped to the front with all parts in certified working order.
Even Kee was more his type than Connie. Sure she looked like the sitcom dream girl next door, the quiet, smart one. The Kate Jackson of the original Charlie’s Angels. Taller than the feisty elf that was Kee, but not the long and leggy of Major Beale either. John was typically drawn to the latter, but there were two issues there. One, Major Beale had married Major Henderson, and two, she was also perhaps the scariest woman alive. A good person as a commanding officer, but lethal at any distance. It was a wonder Major Henderson had survived his courtship. Actually, considering what they’d been through, he almost hadn’t.
Kee barely came up to Big John’s armpit, while the major rose well past his shoulder. Connie stood tall enough to rest her head right on his shoulder. Her long hair would fall in its soft waves across…
Connie stared at him square-on from three feet away across the Black Hawk’s cargo bay. And he was definitely staring without realizing that he was.
“Sir?” Her helmet was off and her cascade of brunette hair flowed around her face exactly as he’d imagined it, looking as if she hadn’t spent the last six hours flying hot and sweaty under heavy gunfire. Her mirrored Ray-Bans were in place against the sharp light of the desert dawn.
“Sergeant, not ‘sir.’” He responded automatically. He wasn’t a commissioned officer. He knew he sounded rude, inconsiderate. Though her eyes were covered, he knew they were a soft hazel and set wide across the bridge of her nose. He also knew that they were the only part of her that indicated someone was home. A soft brown that never stopped watching.
On first meeting Connie Davis, he’d wanted to dismiss her as no more than a cute Connie Homemaker. The girl next door brought to life right out of the television screen.
But he’d run into the wrong end of her keen mechanic’s mind more than once. Now she sat there, expressionless and unreadable, waiting for what he needed of her.
Those eyes. Despite her sunglasses, they pinned his brain somewhere he couldn’t readily access. He cleared his throat to make it work.
“Nice catch on the stutter.” He turned back to clear his own weapon.
He barely heard her quiet reply of, “Thank you, Sergeant,” before she exited the helo.
He cleared the chamber round and stowed the belt. Time to get moving. Connie would probably complete the damage inspection by the time he’d made sure his weapon was cleared and locked. She’d probably have it analyzed and half repaired by the time he had a chance to look it over.
He was either going to kill the woman with his bare hands or… He had no idea what lay on the other side of the equation.
And he didn’t want to know.