Doctor's Mile-High Fling. Tina Beckett

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Doctor's Mile-High Fling - Tina  Beckett

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swallowed the bile that rose higher in her throat. Her mother would have one more loved one to bury. Just like she’d predicted in that last rant before Molly had left the house for good.

      Scratch that. They’d never found the bodies of her father or the nurse he’d been travelling with.

      If Molly and Blake crashed into the ocean, theirs probably wouldn’t be found either.

      The siren cut off. Chancing a glance to the side, she noted the way Blake’s hands fought with the controls, and she hurriedly shifted her attention to his face. The sight there wasn’t any better. The muscles in his jaw stood out in stark relief to the rest of his features, his eyes narrowed in fierce concentration.

      That had to be a bad sign. The man who worshipped Evel Knievel was worried.

       Are we going to crash?

      She kept the words to herself, but they repeated over and over inside her head.

      The plane plummeted for several gut-wrenching seconds, before righting itself and climbing back to its previous position. Her stomach didn’t follow suit, though. It was still dangling somewhere beneath the aircraft.

      A mass of multihued gray bands seemed to scrape along her window as the plane plowed through the middle of the clouds. She flinched at each new bump and shimmy, expecting to be sent tumbling headlong into the sea at any moment. The fact that they were even high enough to be swallowed by clouds surprised her. For some reason she’d thought they’d be cruising well below them. “Don’t worry. I’ve flown through worse.” The tight words swirled around the cabin as if they too were caught up in the boiling turbulence outside.

      Her hand went to her stomach and pressed hard. He’d flown through worse? An alarm had sounded, for heaven’s sake. How much worse could it get?

      A gust of wind shoved the plane to the right before releasing its grip. She couldn’t hold back the question any longer. “How much farther?”

      “We’re about a half hour out. We can’t land until the weather clears a little.”

      “Can’t we climb above the storm?”

      Another blast of air kept Blake from answering her for a minute or so. “Cessnas can’t fly as high as commercial jets.”

      “Oh.” Molly decided it was in her own best interests to let him concentrate on flying rather than having to field a constant stream of questions. Besides, there was always the not so off chance that her voice could transform into a high-pitched scream that would end up killing them both.

      Better to maintain silence.

      Between stutters and bumps, she studied him, finding that concentrating on something other than the conditions outside the plane helped keep the nausea and fear at bay. At least, partially.

      Blake’s hands were strong, his long tanned fingers gripping the controls. He’d shoved the sleeves of his black sweater halfway up his forearms, exposing lean muscles that bunched and released as he worked to steady the aircraft. Her eyes followed his arm up, curving over substantial biceps before she reached his shoulder. Broad. Taking up his space and some of hers in the tiny cockpit.

      Reliable. Competent.

      She couldn’t see his eyes at the moment, but knew they were deep blue. She’d watched them go from warm and balmy to icy cold in a matter of seconds. Much like the weather outside had done.

      Unfortunately, just as she was about to move her attention to that thick head of dark hair, he turned, catching her in mid-stare. “You okay?”

      “Oh, uh…yeah.” She scrambled for an excuse. “Just seeing if the view from the side is as horrible as it is from the front.”

      Ack! That hadn’t come out right. “I meant the view outside the plane. I wasn’t talking about you.”

      Maybe trying to explain herself wasn’t the way to go.

      She caught the flash of white teeth as he turned to face the weather again. “Well, that’s a relief.”

      Forcing her attention back to the front windshield, she noted that the wind was calming a bit, along with her stomach.

      Thank God. Maybe it was almost…

      Suddenly, like a bullet exiting the barrel of a gun, they shot through the clouds and came out on the other side. The fierce turbulence vanished as quickly as it had started.

      The contrast between dark and light was so startling, she was forced to squint as the sun peeked in at her and glinted off the nose of the plane. Once she regained her equilibrium, she sat up and drew a slow, careful breath, making sure she was still in one piece. Still alive.

      She exhaled just as slowly. The second breath she took, however, was in reaction to the beauty surrounding her.

      “It’s gorgeous,” she whispered. “I’ve never seen skies so crisp and blue.”

      “It’s pretty amazing, isn’t it?” Blake’s voice had gone soft as well.

      She glanced to the side and caught him looking at her. Her stomach tightened. Why had she ever thought his eyes were cold? Right now they were warm and alive, and looking at her like…

      She shook herself. He was glad they’d broken through the clouds. Just like she was.

      That shivery look he’d thrown her meant nothing more than that.

      She leaned forward as several land masses came into view. Some of them stretched toward the sky like the volcanoes she knew them to be. “The Aleutians.”

      “Yes.” The reverence behind the single word made her take a closer look below. Her father had loved the islands, despite the treacherous conditions she constantly heard about in the news reports. She’d never understood why someone would willingly live in a place where fog, wind and icy conditions were almost constant companions.

      Until now.

      One of the distant island peaks wore a thick covering of clouds like a top hat. It brought a smile to her face.

      “My father loved it here.”

      “I know.” Blake’s hands loosened on the wheel. “He told me.”

      Molly’s mother had often complained he loved the islands more than his own family. Why else would he take a job most pilots chose to avoid? He could have had a nice cushy job as an airline pilot, and been better paid for his trouble. He’d turned a deaf ear to his wife’s protests and as the years had gone by, her clinginess and grumbling had taken a toll on their relationship. If he hadn’t been killed, Molly doubted their marriage would have survived another year.

      It was one of the reasons she’d wanted to take the job, to try to see the islands through eyes that weren’t tainted by bitterness.

      The turbulence of the last half hour had made her rethink that decision. But the second they exited that storm, well, she’d been blown away.

      The experience had been breathtaking. Magical.

      She’d

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