Navy Wife. Debbie Macomber

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Navy Wife - Debbie Macomber

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the phone rang it caught her off guard, and she widened her eyes and placed her hand over her heart as shock waves washed over her.

      It rang one more time before she decided to answer it.

      “Hello?”

      “Lindy, it’s your mother.”

      “Oh, hi, Mom.” Lindy smiled at her parents’ habit of identifying themselves. She’d been able to recognize her own family’s voices since she was a child.

      “I take it you’ve arrived safely. Honey, you should have phoned—your father and I’ve been worried.”

      Lindy sighed. “Mom, I just walked in the door not more than ten minutes ago. I was planning to phone after I fixed myself something to eat.”

      “Did your car give you any problems?”

      “None.”

      “Good.” Her mother sounded relieved.

      “Everything’s fine—just the way I said it would be,” Lindy added.

      “What about money?”

      “Mom, I’m doing great.” A slight exaggeration, but Lindy wasn’t desperate—at least she wouldn’t be if she found a job reasonably soon. The unemployment problem was one she hoped to correct first thing in the morning.

      “I talked to your Uncle Henry in Kansas City and he said you should think about applying at Boeing…that airplane company. He claims they’re always looking for someone with a degree in computer science.”

      “I’ll do that right away,” Lindy answered in an effort to appease her mother.

      “You’ll let us know when you’ve found something?”

      “Yes, Mom. I promise.”

      “And don’t be shy about asking for money. Your father and I—”

      “Mom, please don’t worry about me. I’m going to be just great.”

      Her mother expelled her breath in a long, anxious sigh. “I do worry about you, sweetie. You’ve been so terribly unhappy. I can’t tell you how disappointed your father and I are in that young man of yours.”

      “Paul isn’t mine anymore.” Lindy’s voice trembled a little, but she needed to say it out loud every now and then just to remind herself of the fact. For four years she’d linked all thoughts of her future with Paul; being without him felt as though a large part of herself was missing.

      “I saw his mother the other day, and I’ll have you know I took a great deal of pleasure in looking the other way,” Grace Kyle continued, with more than a hint of righteous indignation.

      “What happened between Paul and me isn’t Mrs. Abram’s fault.”

      “No. But she obviously didn’t raise her son right—not if he could do something this under-handed and despicable to you.”

      “Mom, do you mind if we don’t talk about Paul anymore? Ever?” Even the mention of his name brought with it a sharp pain, yet part of her was still hungering for news of him. Someday, Lindy vowed, she’d look back on these awful months and smile at the memory. Someday, maybe. But not now.

      “Lindy, of course I won’t talk about Paul if you don’t want me to. I was being insensitive—forgive me, sweetie.”

      “It’s all right, Mom.”

      A short, throbbing silence followed. “You’ll keep in touch, won’t you?”

      “Yes,” Lindy answered and nodded. “I promise.”

      After a few more minutes of filling her parents in on the news of her trip, Lindy replaced the receiver. The washing machine went into the spin cycle behind her, and she tossed a glance over her shoulder. That was the way her world felt lately, as if she were being put through a churning wash. The only question that remained to be answered was if she’d come out of this drip-dry and wrinkle free.

      Rush Callaghan stood on the bridge of the USS Mitchell, a pair of binoculars gripped tightly in his hands. He paused to suck in a deep breath of tangy salt air and sighed his appreciation for the clear, clean scent of it. Being on the open seas stirred his blood back to life after three long months of shore duty. He relaxed, home at last, as the huge l,092-foot-long aircraft carrier cut a wide path out of Puget Sound and into the dark green waters of the north Pacific. Rush was more than glad. He had recognized from the time he was a boy that his destiny lay on the swirling waters of the world’s oceans. He’d been born on the sea and he’d known ever since that this was where he belonged, where he felt truly alive.

      Rush had dedicated his life to the sea, and in turn she had become his mistress. She was often demanding and unreasonable, but Rush wouldn’t have had it any other way. A gentle breeze carried with it a cool, soothing mist. The spray came at him like the gentle, caressing fingers of a woman riffling through his hair and pressing her body against his own. Rush grinned at the picturesque image, knowing his lover well. She was gently welcoming him back into her arms, but Rush wasn’t easily fooled. His mistress was fickle. Another time, possibly soon, she would lash out at him and harshly slap his face with cold, biting wind and rain. Her icy fingers would sting him with outrage. It was little wonder, Rush thought, that he’d come to think of the sea as his lover, since she often played the role.

      When the Mitchell had pulled out of the Bremerton shipyard eighteen hours earlier, Rush had left nothing to tie him to the shore. No wife, no sweetheart, nothing except a Seattle apartment where he stored his worldly goods. He wasn’t looking to build any bridges that would link him to the mainland. He’d learned early in his career that a wife and family weren’t meant for him. If the waters of the world were his mistress, then the navy would be his wife. There’d been a time when he’d hoped to divide his life, but no more.

      A quick exchange of angry words followed by an outburst of disgust from his fellow officer, Jeff Dwyer, caught Rush’s attention and he lowered his binoculars.

      “Problems?” he asked when Jeff joined him on the bridge.

      Jeff’s mouth tightened and he nodded. “The captain’s just ordered us back.”

      “What the hell?” Rush felt a hot surge of anger pulse through him. “Why?”

      “There’s something wrong with the catapults. Apparently maintenance doesn’t have the necessary parts to repair the problem.”

      Rush swore under his breath. The catapults were used to launch the Hawkeyes, Intruders, Tomcats and other aircraft from the carrier runway. They were vital equipment for any assignment at sea.

      Fortunately the squadrons flying in from two navy airfields on the West Coast—a hundred planes were scheduled to rendezvous with the Mitchell—had yet to arrive. As chief navigator it was Rush’s job to guide the carrier through the waters; now it was up to him to head the Mitchell back to the shipyard.

      “I’ve already sent out word to the airfields,” Jeff informed him. “They’ve turned the planes back.”

      Frustration built up in Rush like a tidal wave. After three months shore duty and a mere eighteen hours at sea they had to bring

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