Authors: MaryJanice Davidson
Z
ANE
stood on the landing outside Rosemary's door and resisted the urge to tug at his collar. Jesus, he wasn't some kid picking up his date for the junior prom. Just because he'd put on a shirt that actually had buttons for once didn't mean anything. Nothing at all.
He was only here to apologize. He'd been a little rough on her last night at the Oasis. Sometimes he forgot that not everyone liked to risk life and limb for a hundred-dollar bet and bragging rights. Some people preferred a slower pace. Time to smell the roses, or whatever.
He didn't understand those people, but he knew they existed, nevertheless.
Oh, hell. Who was he kidding? He was here because he wanted to see her again.
His dark-haired angel intrigued him on a lot of levels. The ones south of his waistband were easy to understand. She definitely had a look about her. Sexy and innocent, world-wise and naïve all at the same time. She had that fresh kind of face that didn't need makeup, a body that didn't need designer dresses to look good.
Some of those other levels, though, weren't so easy to explain. Like the whole guardian angel thing. He didn't believe in the “angels among us” propaganda, but she had saved his life. He figured that created some kind of bond between them.
He was curious about her. Since he'd been a kid, he'd liked to take things apart and put them back together again to see how they worked. Bicycles, toasters, enginesâhe always had to know what made them tick.
Now he wanted to know what made Rosemary D'Amica tick.
Pulling his shoulders back, he pasted a pleasant smile on his face and rang the bell. A moment later she answered, and the sight of her erased every word of his carefully rehearsed apology from his mind.
“Um,” he said.
Her feet were bare, as were her legs up to the fringe of her cutoff denim shorts. She wore an old football jersey that fell off one shoulder, and her wild curls spilled out of a ponytail that looked like it had been caught in a windstorm. In the crook of her arm she held a pint of Ben and Jerry's double fudge chocolate ice cream with a soup spoon sticking out of the open tub.
He grinned. “Breakfast of champions, huh?”
Good going, Romeo. Way to make points.
“I, uh, I wasn't expecting company.” She dropped the ice cream on an entry table and turned back to the doorway, looking at him quizzically. “What are you doing here?”
“Brought you something.” He pulled the bouquet of daisies from behind his back and held them out for her.
Her eyes widened as she took them. “Why?”
“I'm sorry about last night. I got a little carried away with the whole race thing.” He peered over her shoulder. “Can I come in?”
After only a brief hesitation, she stood aside and ushered him over the threshold. In the kitchen, she put the daisies in a vase in the middle of a butcher block table and gestured him toward a chair. He sat while she retrieved her double fudge chocolate from the entryway.
“Isn't nine a.m. a little early for ice cream?”
She hugged the tub protectively. “It's never too early for chocolate. I never tasted any until yesterday. I think I'm addicted. You want some? I can get another spoon.”
“No, thanks. You never tasted chocolate?”
“Mmm,” she said, spooning a bite into her mouth. “I've led a very sheltered life. So you were saying? About the race?”
“Yeah.” He traced a finger over the beak of a hummingbird embroidered into a navy blue placemat in front of him, and his mouth watered as Rosemary's lips closed over another bite of ice cream. “We goof off sometimes,” he said, looking away. “Just letting off steam, you know? I shouldn't have dragged you into it, though. It can be a little intense.”
“Intense is one word for it. Crazy would be another that comes to mind.”
“You think what I do is nuts. I get that. But in reality, every stunt I do is planned out, every detail. My team is the best, and we take every precaution to make the show safe.”
She waggled her spoon at him. “So I ended up fishing you out of the lakeâ¦why, exactly?”
“I miscalculated the burn rate on the chute. Look, I didn't say there isn't some element of risk. But if you really want to know why I do what I do, then come see for yourself. Come out to the airfield and let me show you how much preparation goes into every stunt.”
“Okay.”
He opened his mouth, but managed to stop the argument he was about to make just in time. “Really?”
“Really.”
He narrowed his eyes. That was way too easy. “Why?”
“Actually, I was talking to my editor at the paper this morning. I told him a little bit about what you saidâmaking kids believe they can fly and allâand he wants to do a story on you. Sort of a follow-up to the accident piece. And he's agreed to let me write it. This could be my big break.”
“Well, I wouldn't want to get in the way of that. It's a date, then.”
The spoon froze halfway to her mouth.
“Well, not a date, exactly,” he corrected. “More like aâ¦a⦔ He lost his train of thought as she ate her ice cream and pulled the spoon out of her mouth slowly between closed lips, wiping away every hint of chocolate. Except for the smudge left at the corner of her mouth.
“A business meeting,” she said.
“Yeah. Sure.” He swallowed, working hard to pull his gaze away from the chocolate smear. “Business. I should go now.” Before he did something stupid, like taking care of that little dab of chocolate on her lipsâby tasting it for himself.
He stood and headed for the door without looking back. She followed and leaned against the jamb as he stepped outside. If he hadn't turned around to say good-bye, he might have gotten away clean. But no, suddenly he had to be Mr. Manners.
Aw, hell. He lowered his head toward hers, until he could feel her breath on his cheek and see the individual flecks of green in her wide eyes. With his heart thunking against his breastbone, he blew out a deep breath, and lifted his hand. “You've got aâ” He motioned toward her face.
He moved to wipe the tiny daub of ice cream away, but her hand got there first. She frowned, looking for somewhere to wipe the mess, and with his gaze still locked on hers, he took her fingers in his and brought them to his lips. Gently he nuzzled away the chocolate, then released her.
Her hand hovered in midair, as if she hadn't realized he'd let her go.
“So. I'll see you this afternoon.” His voice sounded rough all of a sudden.
“This afternoon.” She still hadn't moved.
He smiled to himself as he turned and left, checking his watch as he jogged down the steps. He had to get to the airfield. He had a hangar to clean up and a crew to browbeat into being on their best behavior.
Most of all, he had to figure out how he was going to pull his head together enough to perform an aerial stunt this afternoon, when all he could think about was the taste of chocolate and Rosemary D'Amica on his lips.
Â
“Hello? Earth to Rosie!”
Rosemary felt someone tapping on her shoulder and turned to hear Zane's muffled call. “What? Oh.” She pulled out the plastic earplugs she'd bought at a drugstore on her way to the airfield.
“Sorry about that,” she said, shrugging. “All the engine noise and such. Have to protect the old eardrums.” Actually it wasn't just the engines, but the crying children and their cheering parents, the hawking of the hot-dog vendors, the blare of the loudspeaker that bothered her. She was still having a hard time adjusting to the constant noise. She hadn't realized that the noise had abated when they'd left the field and walked into the hangar.
Zane guided her over to a vintage biplane and she walked along the fuselage, trailing her hand across the riveted metal.
“It gets a little loud out there sometimes,” he said, “but I doubt it's anything that'll do you any permanent damage.”
“Better safe than sorry.”
“So some people say.”
“Not a theory you subscribe to, I take it.”
“There is such a thing as being too cautious. Missing out on some of the best moments life has to offer just because they involve a little risk.”
Near the front of the plane, Rosemary climbed the stepladder and peered into the rear cockpit.
“Go on,” Zane said behind her. “Climb in.”
In the copilot's seat, she tried to imagine soaring a thousand feet up with nothing beneath her but air. The thought brought goose bumps to her arms.
“So what's on the bill for you today?” she asked. “Hurling yourself out of a perfectly good airplane with nothing but a bed sheet to slow your fall? Shackle your hands and feet like Houdini and see if you can escape the locks in time to pull your parachute cord?”
“'Fraid notâalthough that last one is not a bad idea.” He patted the side of the biplane like a favorite pet. “It's Louise's turn. Wing-walking day.”
“While the plane is flying. Wing walking.” She pointed forward and to the left of her seat. “Out there.”
“That's generally where the wings are, yes.”
“You really should have your head examined, you know that?”
He swung up onto the wing to demonstrate. “Look, it's not that bad. I have these struts here to hold on to. And when Jasper gets ready to do the barrel rolls, I slide my feet into these straps here on the lower wing.”
“Barrel rolls?”
“Yeah, we do a few acrobatics while I'm out. Slow and easy, though, nothingâ”
She held up her hand to stop him. “I really don't think I want to know.” The turkey dog he'd bought her for lunch wasn't sitting well on her stomach, and this conversation wasn't helping.
Smiling, he grabbed her hand and pulled. “Come on. I'm closing the show tonight, so I've got a couple of hours before I have to get ready. Let's go walk around.”
She let him lead her around the aircraft on display and listened patiently while he lectured her on wing design, air speed and avionics. Surprisingly, she found if she focused on his voice, the background noise didn't disturb her as much as it had before. And she enjoyed listening to him. To her, they were just a bunch of airplanes, but he was like a kid in a candy store. His eyes lit up as he made an airplane shape with his hand and flew it around, even making engine noises as he explained the concepts of bank, pitch and roll to her.
Everywhere he went, people watched him. He'd been right about the kids, she realized. They stared at him in awe, and a few of the braver ones even ran up and asked for his autograph.
Amused, she noticed the children weren't the only ones staring openly. Rosemary caught a fair number of young women ogling him as well, especially at his backside as he walked away from them. Not that she blamed them. He did fill out those worn jeans quite nicelyâ
She caught herself and stamped out that thought before her own gaze wandered into forbidden territory.
What was she thinking?
The Angel of Death should not be lusting after the soul she'd come to collect.
All too soon the afternoon wound down and it was time for the last stuntâZane's wing walk.
Her stomach quivered unhappily as he climbed into Louise's second seat behind Jasper, his pilot, and gave the thumbs-up. It protested significantly more vehemently when the yellow biplane soared over the upturned faces of the air-show crowd and a figure clad in black coveralls and goggles climbed out onto the left wing. He waved and they cheered, and her breath stalled as he ambled along the rear edge of the wing all the way to the tip, where he held on to a strut with one hand, braced his feet and bowed dramatically backward off the tip of the wing, before levering himself up and proceeding down the front edge of the wing as if he were strolling down a country lane.
The plane made a large loop at the edge of the airfield. Zane crossed over Louise's fuselage and repeated his performance on the right wing.
When Zane was headed back toward the cockpit, Rosemary finally dared suck in a lungful of air, thinking the show must be almost over. Until he stopped halfway up the wing and stretched his arms out to the struts on either side of him.
Jasper climbed to a higher altitude, then eased the biplane into a slow, spiraling roll to the left. The crowd gasped. Rosemary covered her mouth with her hand, afraid to look and yet unable to close her eyes.
When Louise had leveled out, Jasper executed the same maneuver in the other direction and the crowd let out an approving roar.
And then the unimaginable happened. Halfway through the roll, while the airplane was upside down, a black dot separated from the plane's wing and tumbled through the sky, end over end.
Oh, God. Oh, no. Oh, God!
Zane had fallen.