The Trouble With Tomboys (9 page)

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Authors: Linda Kage

Tags: #Romance

BOOK: The Trouble With Tomboys
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He looked too pale. She didn’t like scaring him, so, having pity, she reached over and squeezed his hand. He squeezed back and wasn’t going to let go.

B.J. would’ve thought his fingers would be freezing, but they were warm and comforting, and she wanted to hang on forever.

But...“Okay, I need my hand back now,” she

finally admitted.

He immediately let go, and she wrapped her

fingers around the throttle.

The next half hour held some of the most nerve-wracking minutes of her life. The engine kept coughing and wheezing, not getting the gas it needed, and the gauge level kept sinking closer and closer to empty. Her father got back on the radio and started asking for updates more frequently. As B.J.

calmly relayed how the steering was getting

choppier, she wished Pop would shut up so she didn’t have to say aloud what was going on, letting Grady know how bad things were getting.

When their hangar finally came into view and 65

Linda Kage

she could read the large black letters spelling “T.

Creek” painted on the silver tin roof, she’d never been so relieved.

“We’re going to make it,” she said and grinned at Grady...just as the engine died.

The only sound that followed was the free wind, whistling through the cracks of the aircraft.

His eyes went wide. “Oh, my God.”

“No, it’s okay,” she assured, her voice calm as she held the throttle, nice and steady. “It’s okay. I’ve got it. I’m not going to let anything happen to you.

We’re still going to make it.”

He managed a nod but looked green around the gills. Not that she blamed him. He probably wouldn’t believe her until they actually touched ground.

It wasn’t the smoothest landing she’d ever

made, but with shaking hands and no help from her plane, she thought she did damn fine. By the time they stopped skipping down the runway and were slowed to a stop, Grady had his seatbelt off and looked like he was going to leap from the plane and kiss the tarmac. But he stayed rooted to his seat, both hands wrapped firmly around the edge of his thighs as if they might have to be surgically removed.

B.J. tugged off her headphones and undid her safety harness. “You okay?”

He nodded. “Yeah. You?”

“I’m good,” she said, then let out a whoop of triumph. “God
damn
!” She leapt across the cockpit and right into his lap. Grady jerked in surprise as she threw her arms around his neck and gave him a brief but hard victory kiss on the mouth.

When she pulled away, she grinned and let out a breath. “Was that great, or what? Oh yeah! It feels good to be alive.”

Ignoring the stunned look on his face, she

shimmied off him and threw open the door, already 66

The Trouble with Tomboys

hopping out.

Her father and all three brothers barreled

toward her. As soon as her two feet hit the runway, she hurried to meet them, aiming straight for Leroy.

“You could’ve gotten us killed, you jackass,” she snarled, her fists already clenching.

“What?” he said. “You landed just fine.”

Growling, she wound her arm back and decked

him full in the mouth, causing his head to snap back.

He cursed and covered his face with both hands.

Red immediately seeped through the cracks between his fingers.

Feeling no remorse, B.J. raged, “Next time

you’re not going to do something I ask you to, tell me so I can goddamn do it myself.”

“Next time, just do it yourself.” Leroy muttered, wiping blood out of his nose. He took a step toward her, his own hand balling. B.J. widened her stance and braced herself, in the mood to fight.

But Rudy caught her around the waist and

pulled her away just as Buck put a hand on Leroy’s chest and stopped him midstep.

“Cut it out, you two,” Pop bellowed.

“She hit me first,” Leroy said, scowling around Buck’s shoulder at her.

“And you deserved it,” Pop stated, getting a defiant sneer for his comment.

B.J. was about to smart back something else to set Leroy off even more when she finally noticed Grady exiting the plane with his bag in tow.

She paused and turned. Still pale as all get out, he hobbled past them. Her innards lurched with guilt.

“You sure you’re okay?” she said, moving toward him. “I’m fine,” he said and held up a hand as if to ward her off.

67

Linda Kage

“Grady.” Pop stepped forward, yanking off his ball cap and holding it to his chest. “On behalf of the Gilmore plane service, I apologize for all this trouble.

If you’ll just follow me to the hangar, I’ll write you out a refund right now.”

B.J. gulped, suddenly remembering he was a

customer, and she’d just gravely mistreated her customer. Damn, he could sue her if he wanted, and not just for almost getting him killed, but probably for sexual harassment too. Shit.

But Grady shook his head. “No...just...just send it through the mail.”

He began to turn away when Leroy opened his

dumb mouth. “Hey, you ain’t going to sue us now, are you?”

B.J. tensed and held her breath. She noticed her brothers and father doing the same.

Grady glanced around to glare at Leroy, and she was sure that was it. They were going out of business from one lawsuit. But Grady’s eyes

flickered her way, silently studying her. “No, I’m not going to sue you. I just want to be left alone.”

He pivoted and strode away. Still feeling crappy for the way she’d treated him, B.J.’s shoulders deflated. This just wasn’t his week. And it was all her fault. Realizing the best thing she could do for him was leave him alone, she stood back helplessly and watched him leave.

68

The Trouble with Tomboys

Chapter Six

Grady waited two weeks after that near-fatal flight home before he visited the cemetery. With him, he brought a handful of Amy’s favorite flowers.

He’d played the Houston trip over in his mind a thousand times. There were so many things he could’ve done differently,
should’ve
done differently.

He wasn’t proud of himself, and he wasn’t satisfied with how things had turned out. B.J. might’ve pressured him into doing something he hadn’t felt ready for, but he’d done it under his own free will and even instigated a good portion of it. He didn’t need to feel any kind of anger toward her for that.

But he did.

Then she’d turned around and saved his life the next morning, keeping her head under pressure and landing them safely. If she’d kissed him a second longer after landing, he would’ve overcome his shock and kissed her back. Hell, he probably would’ve taken her right there in the cockpit. And it wouldn’t have had anything to do with gratitude either.

“I guess you already know what I did,” he said without preamble, setting the irises at the base of his wife’s marker and kneeling down to sit on the grass beside the bouquet.

He gave a small laugh as he looked at his hands.

“Yeah, you always knew what I did, usually before I was even going to do it.” Grinning, he lifted his face and stared at the name of his wife on the gravestone.

“Remember when I proposed? You were holding out your hand for the ring before I’d even gotten down on one knee.”

69

Linda Kage

Grady smiled for a good three seconds before his face fell and his muscles tensed in misery. Dropping his gaze from the name that always caused him heartache, he caught sight of a weed and pulled it up. Amy didn’t deserve weeds growing over her dead body.

“The funny thing is,” he confessed as he reached for another, “I didn’t feel guilty. Not during, anyway.”

Tossing the weed away from Amy’s plot, he

lifted his face toward the bright day and squinted at the sunlight. For some reason, he wondered if B.J.

was up there somewhere, cruising through the clouds in that death trap of hers. God, he hoped she’d fixed the fuel line.

Jerking his gaze guiltily from the sky, he turned back to Amy’s name.

“I always thought it’d feel different than this. I thought, I don’t know...I just assumed I’d think of you the whole time...that’d I have to close my eyes and pretend it was your lips I was kissing, your body I was touching.”

He shook his head and lowered his gaze,

ashamed. “But I didn’t even remember you. Not till afterward.” Letting out a long sigh, he closed his eyes and confessed, “And that’s when the guilt finally came.

“I know I didn’t betray you,” he said after a moment of silence. “You’d want me to move on. And I know you’d even approve of the woman. You always liked…” He couldn’t say her name aloud, so he settled with, “
her
. But, God, I don’t know, Amy.”

Pausing, he wondered why he was confessing all this to someone who couldn’t hear him. Probably because she
couldn’t
hear him, he decided.

“I feel bad because I didn’t picture you at all through any of it. I didn’t think of how you—hell, I wasn’t thinking at all. And that’s not me. You know 70

The Trouble with Tomboys

that’s not me. As soon as she touched me, my mind just shut down. I lost control of myself like I’d never lost control before. I just...I had to have her...right then.”

He winced when he whispered, “That never

happened with you. I think that’s what bothers me most. I experienced something strong and intense with someone else and...it should’ve been you.”

He cradled his head in his hands. “I’m not sure what I’m trying to say. I guess, I’m sorry. I’m all tore up because I felt something...something amazing, and it wasn’t because of you. You had nothing to do with it. Well, okay, it all started because we were fighting about you, but...as soon as the clothes came off, you were completely erased from my mind. I was so mad and desperate I would’ve done anything to get inside her. And I can’t even say it was just about sex. It was
her
.

“I hate to admit this, but if you’d walked into the room at that moment, I still would’ve wanted her.”

He was quiet for a moment. Then he said,

“That’s what has me feeling so crappy. I wanted a person...a specific woman, not just some warm body to fill the space you left. For the first time in two and half years, it wasn’t about you.

“Yeah. If you were here now, you’d be giving me a lecture, I know. You’d be happy I made a big step with moving on...and you’d be mad because I haven’t called her.”

He shut his eyes and rested his back against the gravestone. “I know I should call or go see her...or something. I’m not a one-night stand kind of person, and I’m not going to be. But damn it, Amy, I’m scared to death. That woman intimidates me. She makes me want things, feel things...things I never felt or wanted with you. I lose my head when I’m around her, and I don’t know how to deal with that.

You always let me be my logical self, go my slow, 71

Linda Kage

methodical pace. She doesn’t. I can’t talk to her or look at her. I’m just...I’m not ready yet.”

Nothing answered his troubled report but a light breeze that sifted through his hair. He smiled lightly, keeping his eyes closed, and imagined it was Amy’s fingers. But then he frowned. He couldn’t remember what his wife’s touch felt like. Instead, he remembered a brown-haired wildcat who cursed like a sailor when she came apart in his arms. Frowning, he fisted his hands in the grass and wished for things that could never happen.

He wanted his wife back. He wanted his safe, comfortable, predictable Amy. He wanted to shred her tombstone with his bare hands and dig out her body so he could grab her by the shoulders and shake her back to life if for no other reason than to just talk to her.

He and Amy had been inseparable since their

freshman year of high school when they’d first started dating. Not only had the woman become his wife and lover, but she was the best friend he’d ever had. They’d talked about and shared everything.

If Amy were here, she’d know what to do

concerning B.J. She’d be honest and tell him how to handle everything. But then, if Amy were here and still alive, there’d be no issue with the tomboy to resolve.

That thought caused his breath to hitch in his chest.

As much as he regretted ever being with smart-mouthed B.J. Gilmore, he still relished those few minutes they’d shared in her hotel room. At the twinge of guilt rippling through him, he lifted his hand to the center of his chest and rubbed, because the pain was actually physical. The agony ate at him, and he couldn’t deny the truth.

No matter how much he missed his wife and

wanted her back, deep down, he was secretly glad 72

The Trouble with Tomboys

she’d been out of the way so he could experience a taste of B.J., because nothing had ever been as good as sliding inside her. Those few minutes she’d wrapped her legs around him had been hotter than all the years he’d spent with Amy.

Lowering his head, he buried his face in his hands and shuddered. “I’m so sorry.”

****

Three weeks after sleeping with Grady, B.J. still felt awful about what she’d done. She figured she should do something to show her regret, make it up to him somehow. But she’d already apologized, and that was a record for her. Besides, she never saw the man much anyway. Maybe she should just leave it alone and forget it had happened...except she would dream about their time together and wake in the middle of the night, aching.

She’d flop on her back and curse at the ceiling.

There definitely had to be something wrong with her if she got off on making good men like Grady Rawlings suffer.

So, she tried to ignore the situation and act like it wasn’t happening. That didn’t work either.

Though they lived in the same small community, they usually didn’t spot hide nor hair of each other for months at a time. But B.J. knew she was cursed when she saw him three times in that third week.

The first instance, she’d seen him retreating as she’d stepped from the post office. He’d hightailed it out of there like he’d seen her inside and was escaping before they could cross paths.

Since he was trying the whole evade-and-ignore remedy, she did the identical thing back to him the second time around. She’d been about to go into the hardware store to order new parts for her airplane when she saw him standing at the checkout counter, getting something for his oil rigs, no doubt.

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