Here we go again.
Lauren expelled an exasperated breath and punched the
elevator button for the top floor. Getting called to her
half brother's office was a lot like the way she imagined
getting called to the principal's office might have been if
she'd ever dared to get into trouble in school.
Trent didn't want her here—an opinion he'd made abundantly
clear in the six weeks since their mother had used her
position as president of the board of directors and the
company's largest stockholder to force him to hire Lauren as
a pilot for Hightower Aviation Management Corporation.
Trent couldn't fire her, but he'd done everything in his
power to make her quit. He seemed to relish personally
doling out lousy assignments no one else wanted: the
obnoxious clients, red-eye flights and landings at
substandard airports. Today's summons was bound to deliver
more of the same. But he'd soon learn she could handle
anything he dished out.
The elevator stopped on the third floor and two suit-clad
women boarded. Security badges labeled them HAMC employees.
Their cool gazes raked Lauren's clothing, making her wish
she'd taken time to don her pilot's uniform, but she could
hardly ride her Harley in a skirt. And if these two had
received a memo from her half brother ordering them to make
her work life a living hell, they'd discover she didn't care.
She'd never had anyone hate her before, but besides the
chill factor from other employees, she had three of her four
newly discovered half siblings wishing she'd disappear. Who
could blame them? She was a walking, talking reminder of
their mother's infidelity, the child Jacqueline Hightower
had borne to her pilot lover while still married to their
father, an embarrassing dirty secret Jacqui had managed to
keep tucked away in another state for twenty-five years.
The door opened on the tenth floor and the sour-faced women
disembarked. As the doors closed again Lauren fought the
urge to hit the down button, go back to Florida and forget
her new family. Too bad the Hightowers, bless their cold,
moneygrubbing hearts, were the only relatives she had left.
For her father's sake, for Falcon Air's sake, she'd suck it
up and deal with any and all unpleasant attitudes until she
had the information about her father's death that only her
mother could provide.
Had he committed suicide or had his crash been an accident?
Her mother had been the last to talk to him. If he'd been
considering something so desperate, surely he'd have given
Jacqui some clues? But, damn her, Jacqui wasn't talking. And
until the Federal Aviation Administration, the National
Transportation Safety Board and the insurance company
finished their investigations Lauren's hands were bound by
red tape.
She didn't want to believe her father had deliberately ended
his life, but the alternative was even more horrific. She'd
helped him build the experimental plane he'd crashed. If his
accident had been caused by an equipment failure, then she
could be partly to blame.
Grief and guilt squeezed her lungs and burned her throat.
She swallowed the caustic emotions. The elevator doors
opened to the executive floor. She took a deep, bracing
breath and readied herself for yet another battle.
Only for you, Daddy.
Tucking her riding gloves into the motorcycle helmet
dangling from her fingertips, she stepped out of the
compartment. Her lug-soled Harley boots sank into thick
carpeting, another reminder that she wasn't in Daytona
anymore. The luxurious Hightower high-rise was a far cry
from the concrete floors and drafty metal hangars she'd
grown up in.
She stretched her lips into as big a smile as she could
muster and unzipped her jacket as she approached "The
Sphinx's" desk. Getting her brother's administrative
assistant to crack an expression—any expression—had
become a mission. No success this time, either. The woman
should play poker for a living.
"Hi, Becky. The boss wants to see me." Becky—a warm and
friendly name for a cold woman. Talk about irony.
Becky looked pointedly at her watch. "I'll inform him you've
finally arrived."
Lauren bit her tongue. Trent was lucky she'd answered her
cell phone once she'd recognized his office number on caller
ID. But she was making an effort to be civil.
She studied the fresh-cut flower arrangement on the credenza
while Becky did her thing. The massive bouquet had probably
cost as much as an hour's worth of jet fuel. Pretty, but a
total waste of money, in Lauren's opinion.
"You may go in." Becky's stiff words pulled Lauren's
attention away from the cloying blooms that reminded her of
her father's funeral.
Such formality. Back home Lauren had knocked and entered her
father's and Uncle Lou's offices at Falcon Air without
playing the stupid Simon Says game. They'd had no secrets…
or so she'd thought.
"Thanks." Lauren pushed open the heavy six-panel door of
what she'd come to call the throne room. Her half brother
sat behind his football field-size desk in his massive
leather chair looking as arrogant and unwelcoming as ever.
"You called?"
Darn straight he had. He'd interrupted her motorcycle ride
along Knoxville's back roads. He couldn't know how much
she'd been enjoying blowing away her tension by cruising
along the curvy, hilly terrain after a lifetime of Daytona's
flat, straight streets. She'd be damned if she'd let him
know he'd ruined her day.
His upper lip hitched in disapproval as he took in her
riding gear.
The back of Lauren's neck pricked. She turned quickly to her
right. A raven-haired thirtysomething man rose from the
visitor chair. Alert dark eyes lasered into hers before his
gaze taxied over her black leather jacket, pants, boots and
back to the helmet hanging from her left hand. He had a
power and charisma thing going that she would have found
attractive in other circumstances.
While he assessed her, she cataloged his above-average
height, his wide shoulders and a don't-mess-with-me stubborn
jaw. From the perfect fit of his black suit she guessed he
was an HAMC customer. And if he was here for her, then he
was probably also an arrogant jackass no matter how handsome
he might be. Big brother had yet to assign her any other
kind of client.
Taking the initiative, she offered her hand. "I'm Lauren
Lynch. And you are…?"
"Gage Faulkner." His hand engulfed hers in a firm, warm grip
that made it difficult to inhale. She wondered how he'd
managed to squish the air from her lungs with a handshake
and how to abort that little trick. She blinked and gently
tugged her arm, but he didn't release her.
There was no welcome in his expression as he looked beyond
her shoulder to her half brother. "She looks too young to be
a commercial pilot."
"You know I'd never set you up with someone who wasn't
qualified," Trent replied.
Irked at being talked about as if she wasn't there, Lauren
gave her wrist a quick twist and hard yank, breaking
Faulkner's hold the way she'd been taught by an airport
security guard she'd once dated. "I'm twenty-five. I've been
licensed since my sixteenth birthday, and I've logged more
than ten thousand hours."
Faulkner's cool gaze found hers again, and she noted flecks
of gold in the brown of his irises. A tight smile twitched
his lips. Nice lips. Kissable lips.
Client.
The warning flashed in her brain like airfield lamps,
shutting down that runway. Getting involved with a client
was grounds for firing. Was Trent setting her up with a
gorgeous guy to take her down? She wouldn't put it past him
since all his other strategies had failed.
She cut her brother a suspicious look. Did he think she
couldn't resist an attractive face? Knucklehead didn't know
she'd been fending off men since puberty. Not that she was
beautiful or anything, but she wasn't ugly, and the
man-to-woman ratio at small airports left a lot of men
lonely and looking. She'd had her father and Uncle Leo as
growling watchdogs, but they hadn't always been around.
She'd learned a few lessons the hard way.
Trent hit her with his usual joy-killing glare. "Gage,
please excuse Lauren's attire. I assure you HAMC has a dress
code."
Her spine snapped erect. "It's my day off. I wasn't sitting
at home in my uniform waiting for your call. When you said
urgent I came straight in instead of making you cool your
jets while I went home to change."
Faulkner choked a noise that sounded a lot like a laugh. She
shot him a warning look. He wiped his jaw, hiding his mouth,
but his eyes glimmered with amusement. For some reason that
irritated Lauren even more. Their family feud was none of
his business.
"Sit down, Lauren." Trent's superior tone set her teeth on
edge. One of these days someone was going to knock the
landing gear out from under his ego. She hoped she'd be
around to witness him biting the asphalt. Unlikely she'd
have the pleasure since she planned to vacate Knoxville and
abandon her polar bear relatives as soon as she got what she
needed from her mother.
Lauren sat in the guest chair beside Faulkner's. A subtle
but pleasant trace of his spicy cologne teased her nose. She
focused on her brother, the arrogant butt-head in charge.
"What's so urgent it couldn't wait until I clock in tomorrow?"
"Gage needs a pilot. You're it."
That was her job, the job of any HAMC pilot, for that
matter. So why did that telling itch crawling up her neck
warn her that this wasn't a regular assignment?
"What and where will I be flying?"
Probably an albatross to some mosquito-infested, potholed,
mud runway or an unheated cargo carrier to the frozen
tundra, if her half brother continued true to form.
"Gage will use a variety of aircraft, depending on the
length of his trip and the size of the team accompanying
him. The majority of the time you'll fly a small to midsize
jet, but occasionally a helicopter or Cessna."
Excitement gurgled through her before she could dam it. The
job description sounded too good to be true—especially since
Hightower Aviation limited its pilots to flying only one
type of aircraft so they'd be familiar with the controls.
That had been her primary grievance since she'd arrived. She
lived for variety and loved testing the abilities of
different airplanes.
Her half brother was being nice and bending company
policy. Had his conscience finally kicked in? She studied
his impassive face, not buying altruism as his motive for
one second.
"Trent assures me you can handle whatever I need."
Faulkner's velvety voice snagged her attention, winching her
gaze back to him. He meant flightwise, didn't he?
Her stomach did a weird flutter thing that made her question
the sanitation grade of the roadside diner she and her
neighbors had stopped at for lunch.
"I'm certified to fly almost anything civilian with wings or
rotors. Mastering different aircraft is kind of a hobby of
mine." More like an obsession. "What's the catch?"
Did she imagine a quick stiffening of those broad shoulders?
The slight hesitation as he pursed that attention-getting
mouth? "If you fly for me, you'll be on call 24/7, beginning
tomorrow morning at five."
Again, standard procedure for HAMC pilots. They all flew on
four hours notice or less. Something wasn't right here. "And?"
"You'll be working exclusively for Gage."
Trent's statement had her head whipping his way as the
meaning of his bombshell sank in. "You're taking me off
rotation?"
"I'm giving you a special assignment."
The bully was farming her out to someone else, and there
wasn't one thing she could say about it in front of the
client, unless she wanted to get fired for insubordination.
She refused to mouth off and give Trent the satisfaction of
an easy way out.
Gritting her teeth, she fought her seething anger. Being cut
from the schedule was like being sent to her room or put in
time out. And damn it, she hadn't done anything wrong to
earn such shoddy treatment. Working for only one client
would limit her hours and her pay. Her mother would never allow—
No. She wouldn't go to her mother. Their
relationship was too new, too tentative and too volatile for
Lauren to ask Jacqui to choose sides between her oldest son
and her youngest daughter, and Lauren couldn't afford to
alienate her mother yet. This turf war was between her and
Trent, and Lauren refused to let him win.
Tightening her grip on her helmet strap rather than around
her half brother's thick neck as she'd prefer, she stared
him down. "I'll be the pilot-in-command instead of first
officer?"
Her idiot brother had limited her to flying as first officer
instead of the pilot-in-command. She hadn't flown in the
copilot seat in years, and the pilots he'd made her fly with
often had fewer qualifications than she did. But she'd
accepted the entry-level position while she earned her
certifications in the models and equipment new to her. She
could endure any indignity as long as it benefited her in
the end—even playing nice with her mother.
Trent tossed his pen onto his blotter. "None of the aircraft
Gage has requested require a copilot."
He threw her a sweet bone of concession to offset the bitter
deal he was forcing down her throat. "None of your other
HAMC pilots is assigned a one-on-one job."
"My other pilots don't have your…varied experience." He made
the comment sound like an insult instead of the compliment
it would have been coming from any other employer.
Don't let him rattle you. You know that's what he wants.
"How long is the assignment?"
"For as long as Gage needs you. Becky has your immediate
schedule and plane assignments." Trent rose and indicated
the door, dismissing her.
She'd learned early on that arguing with Trent was a waste
of time. Eager to escape the blockhead's presence as well as
see what and where she'd be flying, Lauren sprang to her
feet. The upside was HAMC had some sweet planes that her
brother had yet to let her touch. Maybe she'd get behind the
controls of a few.
Faulkner unfolded his long body beside her, making her aware
of his height and the smooth, athletic way he moved. He
towered over her as he offered his hand. "I look forward to
flying with you, Lauren."
His chilly tone belied his words and made her wonder if
Trent had poisoned yet another mind against her. She
reluctantly put her hand in his. That same breath-stealing
surge shot through her again, and something flickered in his
eyes, making her wonder if he felt it, too—whatever it
was. Didn't matter. That wasn't a trip she'd be taking.
"I'll do my best to deliver smooth, punctual flights."
Ripping her hand free, she spun on her heel and hustled her
boots out of the throne room. Killjoy Trent shadowed her to
The Sphinx's desk.
"Lauren, Gage is a close personal friend." He pitched his
voice low enough not to carry back through the open door of
his office. "Don't blow this or you're out of a job."
Ah. The catch. She rocked back on her heels. Trent had
assigned her to work for a spy—one who would help him find
grounds to get rid of her.