Call Sign Karma
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Synopsis
LOVE IN THE NO-FLY ZONE... Distraught over the loss of her brother in a fighter jet accident, Tinklee Pinkerton decides to follow in his footsteps--and prove the tragedy wasn't his fault. But when she's chosen as the first woman to fly the Air Force's F-35, her plan for a life that revolves around work is thrown off course by a handsome, mysterious stranger... Thanks to Locke's seductive British accent, sweet nature, and one too many beers, Tink is soon inspired to throw caution to the wind--and herself into his arms. She thinks maybe love can heal after all--until she discovers Locke is her superior officer. Tink has no problem risking her life in the air, but with everything on the line, is she brave enough to risk her heart on the ground? 89,811 Words
Release date: January 5, 2015
Publisher: Lyrical Press
Print pages: 272
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Call Sign Karma
Jamie Rae
There was zero chance of survival—for either of us.
The thought caused my insides to twist as I stood, paralyzed staring at the blazing inferno. I watched in shocked horror from the window of the control tower as the jet-fueled flames fed on his body, still strapped inside of the cockpit.
Tonight the distant flames were from a bonfire that danced happily in celebration of a holiday, but their flames were close enough to ignite the memories. Memories that still fueled my nightmares. A familiar chill skated down my spine.
I slammed down the beer bottle on the table next to me and looked away from the flames. Sweet honey lager splashed out and onto the cover of my tablet that sat on the edge of the table.
The tablet called to me. I couldn’t help but reach for it. My shaking hand nearly knocked over the beer bottles that surrounded it. My index finger hovered over the screen. The damn arrow glowed as if challenging me to touch it.
Go ahead Tink, watch me one more time.
I swallowed the boulder-sized lump in the back of my throat as I accepted the dare. My finger tapped the start button and instantly dropped me in the middle of the nightmare that had consumed and wrecked my life.
“Altitude. Altitude. Pull up. Pull up.” The unemotional, mechanical female voice of the jet’s warning system rang out.
Her words rattled in my head like a pinball looking for its escape. I studied the altimeter screaming toward two thousand feet.
“Pull up,” her empty voice commanded. Each time she repeated those words, my stomach lurched. That voice, that command, still haunted me.
I squeezed my eyes closed unable to stop from reliving that day in the tower and how her robotic tone had sent everyone into a panic. I stood frozen, unable to do a damn thing as the jet continued its nosedive.
My own weight crushed me as if I were being pushed down by the forces of a hard turn in the cockpit. I gasped for oxygen, my lungs rebelling as the image of the jet pitched down. I began counting between breaths to keep from passing out the way they had taught us in pilot training.
Three.
The sound of calm breaths from video filled the air. The ground rushed closer as the jet blitzed toward fifteen hundred feet.
“Pull up,” the voice repeated. “Pull up.”
Two.
I leaned forward and my lips parted as if I were going to retch, but nothing spilled out. I forced each breath to prevent me from blacking out like Colin. His calm, sleeplike breaths seeped from the tablet’s speakers, haunting me in its wavelike rhythm. I held the tablet tight in my hands. The breaths were the last sound that I’d ever hear from him.
“Pull up! Pull up!”
A giant green arrow flashed across the video. It acted as a forewarning of the jet’s impending impact. My entire body shuddered as adrenaline thrust through my veins.
I wanted to choke the aloofness from her tone. To the jet’s warning system it was just another jet. To me, it was my world coming to an end. She may as well have tacked the word ‘idiot’ onto her feeble attempt of a warning.
The military Humvees scrambled on the screen like cockroaches escaping the light. I was paralyzed. I couldn’t do anything to prevent it from happening then. Why did I still hope I could stop it now?
“Pull up!”
I closed my eyes.
It was too late.
“Pull up!”
One.
I opened my eyes. The ground rush on the display was exactly how they described it in pilot training; the world blossomed as earth ripped through to meet you in the cockpit.
Her vacant voice instructing him to pull up was the last thing to ring out right before my life shattered. Everything exploded into a bright blinding haze on the screen with a blaring detonation. The blood cooled in my veins.
I flipped the tablet cover and traced my still trembling finger along the lines of the worn material. I had stolen the video from my father’s files the night after the funeral. I had watched it a thousand times, each time reliving the horrors of that day.
But tonight, once was enough.
Tonight, I had to figure out how the hell I was going to climb into the cockpit and fly the jet that killed my brother.
* * * *
The annual Fourth of July fireworks filled the sky right on cue. Red sparks showered down as the blue lights twirled across the backdrop of an onyx sky. It used to be our favorite family tradition.
A wave of guilt washed over me then pooled deep in the pit of my belly. How was it fair that I was standing here watching the fireworks, while Colin was buried six feet deep?
The reflection of the flashing lights off the ocean blinded me. High pitched screams and loud blasts shook the windows behind me as I leaned on the banister of my deck, watching the show, alone.
The silver ones that whistled were Colin’s favorite.
My heart pounded at the thought of my tenderhearted brother. I squeezed my eyes tightly together to try to force out tears, but nothing fell. Not a single drop. I had cried so much that I had become numb to the pain.
My phone vibrated in my back pocket, interrupting the fireworks display. The ringtone of magical chimes followed. I sighed loudly. This was not a call I wanted to take.
Ignoring my mom wouldn’t make her go away. It would only make her more determined. It was like she had a beacon implanted in my brain to know when I was thinking about my Colin’s accident. I pulled my phone from the back pocket of my cutoff jeans and growled.
Pink 1 flashed across the screen.
My thumb hovered over the ‘Off’ button, but I couldn’t bring myself to press it. She would know that I had dismissed her call. My mother knew everything, except when I didn’t want to talk, or maybe she knew, but that still wouldn’t stop her until she ‘heard my voice’. It had gotten even worse since Colin’s death.
A chime alerted the arrival of a new text message.
I forced myself to look at the screen and read the words;
He loved you.
I let out a long drawn out breath. Her words were always the same.
I picked up the bottle of sweet brown lager and gulped it. All of it. I reached for another. I twisted off the lid, and spun the tiny metal cap across the deck.
I wanted to feel Colin’s pain and grief for a life he’d never have. But I couldn’t shed any more tears. I was empty. Broken. There was nothing left of me. The only thing that kept me putting one foot in front of the other was the determination to prove that his death was not due to pilot error. I would prove it, or die trying.
The phone buzzed again.
Pink 1.
I swallowed another drink before I surrendered and answered the call. “Hey, Mom,” I said, my voice higher than usual in a failed attempt to mask my misery.
“You okay?” she asked with her usual cautious tone.
“Yeah, I’m great. I’m heading to Krusty’s for dinner,” I lied. “Can I call you tomorrow?”
“I wanted to hear your voice, sweetie, and wish you luck.”
Luck? I needed a helluva lot more than luck. Tomorrow, I started training to fly the jet that cremated my brother.
“Thanks, I’m excited,” I said as another lie slipped off my tongue.
It was becoming easier to fib to my mother. They just popped out one after another. I was never dishonest as a child, but now it felt like I never told anyone the truth.
“I’m looking forward to getting started.” The words sounded sweet, but I’d need another lager to wash out the bitter taste. So much for being a pillar of honesty.
“Oh, Tinklee, you are such a liar,” my mother said. “I know you’re nervous. Who wouldn’t be? I’ll be there, in spirit, and so will he.”
Her voice was warm and tender, as if she were smiling through her tears. She sniffled loudly. She was okay with her tears.
“Okay, I’m losing the connection. I gotta go.”
“I can tell you don’t want to talk so I won’t keep you. I’ll see you soon. And remember sweetie, keep your circle….”
“Stop Mom, I’m twenty-two, enough with the positive affirmations.”
She ignored my plea. “If you keep your circle positive, you’ll attract good Karma.”
I rolled my eyes and held back a sigh out of respect to the woman who spent thirty-six hours in labor for me.
“Besides, age doesn’t matter. I love you, baby girl. You’ll always be my little Tinklee,” she said. Her voice danced when she emphasized ‘little’ and ‘Tinklee.’
I couldn’t help but cringe. She’d screwed me with that one.
A blond-haired, blue-eyed fighter pilot trying to make it in a man’s world couldn’t be taken seriously with the name Tinklee Pinkerton.
Good job, Mom. You rock.
If only I could drown the pain. I grabbed the last bottle from the cooler and hopped the deck rail into the sand. The grains were warm, baked under the hot July sun all day and retaining the heat well past sunset. I wiggled my toes, cracked open the bottle and tossed the lid over my shoulder onto the deck.
I loved this beach almost as much as I hated it. My parents bought this house when my dad was stationed here and kept it as a vacation home when he retired from the military. My mom insisted I stay here during my training, but being here just trudged up memories of Colin and me watching the jets fly over the beach. We dreamed of the day that we’d be in the cockpit flying side-by-side. And now, like him, those dreams were buried.
My chest tightened and I stifled a short breath. I wasn’t ready for tomorrow. I was going to need something a hell of a lot stronger than the honey lagers that were going down like sweet tea. Taking a drink, I strolled toward the ocean’s edge and stepped into the water. The coolness washed over my ankles and the current tugged at my feet. Everything in my life seemed to be pulling me in a direction I didn’t want to go.
I wanted to be a fighter pilot from the first time I’d held onto the pant leg of my father’s flight suit and breathed in the pungent scent of jet fuel. But now, as I moved another step forward to achieving my dream, nothing about it felt right.
I was selected to be not only the first female, but also the youngest pilot to ever fly the Air Force’s prodigy, the F-35, Joint Strike Fighter. Not to mention doing it right out of pilot training. All that glory on top of the fact that my head was so screwed up over Colin scared the shit out of me.
Still, I plastered a smile on my face and told everyone that I was ‘fine.’ I had tits in a testosterone world and showing any sign of weakness was not an option. I. Was. Fine.
Only the best of the best would fly the Air Force’s awesome creation. It could fly from D.C. to L.A. without showing up on radar if it wanted. But what were the chances of my being selected to fly it? I wanted a Viper and avoided the F-35 because of our messed-up history. I made sure I graduated top in the class of Undergraduate Pilot Training to be able to choose any other jet. But as it always did, my plan came back and bit me in the ass. I gambled and lost. Vegas style.
It wasn’t fair.
“Why have you taken everything from me?” I screamed into the sky and kicked an incoming wave. “Leave me the hell alone.”
I stumbled as a another wave rolled in. A light pressure appeared behind my eyes skewing my vision just a little. I realized that I may have drunk a little too much, but I was beyond caring.
The ocean spray soaked my clothes and hair. I steadied myself against the current. A chuckle escaped my lips. It sounded dark and slightly crazed. A rage, like I had never felt before swirled inside me like tornado looking for its target. I swallowed the last sip of lager and shook the bottle toward the star-filled sky.
“Here’s to you, Karma,” I shouted. I closed my eyes and twirled in a circle.
I spun until I was so dizzy that I could barely stand. I roared and launched the bottle with enough force that I nearly fell face first into the water. I steadied myself.
“Bloody hell, Karma’s a bitch!”
My eyes opened to see a tall, shadowed man with broad shoulders towering over me. His arm was raised as he rubbed his forehead. I gulped as I spotted my bottle a few inches from his foot.
I stepped backwards and my heel dug into something sharp. A shooting pain launched up my leg and knocked me off balance. I swore, flailing backwards and fell into the ocean, landing with a big splash. Shock was quickly replaced by mortification. Heat traveled from cheeks to my ears.
Something, cold, smooth, and scaly swept over my legs. I shrieked and prayed a creepy crawly wouldn’t bite off one of my limbs.
With about as much grace as a pig on ice, I scrambled to the shore. Adrenaline pumped through me, but it only made me feel more woozy. Just as I swallowed a gasp of air, a blunt object smacked into my head. Rays of light blurred my vision and I shouted as a blistering pain radiated from my head.
I balled my fists with the thumbs on the outside, like Colin had taught me. Did this guy just attack me? Did he have any clue who he was dealing with? Sure, I was tipsy and not steady on my feet, but I wouldn’t go down without a fight. I was a frigging fighter pilot.
I pushed wet strands of hair from my eyes and squared my shoulders preparing to counter attack, but he waved me away as he held his nose. Blood speckled his shirt and dripped from the bottom of his hand. I softened my fists slightly still prepared to defend if needed.
“Blast it girl. You’re dangerous,” he said in a British accent that made my insides awaken. I pressed my lips together and prayed that I didn’t just kick off another Revolutionary War.
Holy shit, it was time to go. The last thing I needed was for him to call the cops or the county mental health department. And as badly as I felt, apologizing would only be an admission of guilt in a court of law or worse, land me standing at attention in front of my commanding officer for an ass-chewing.
I bolted, teetering like a penguin, to the house and hauled myself up the side stairs of the deck, dripping wet. Mom’s voice echoed inside my head to take off my sandals. The image of bloody, sandy footprints in my hall seemed almost as horrifying as the stranger’s ass I just accidentally kicked.
“Damn it,” I cursed under my breath.
I grabbed a towel on the deck chair and rushed for the outdoor shower stall on the side of the house. The water was ice cold, but it rinsed the blood from my foot and thinned a few lagers from my brain. Of course, it did nothing for the two pounds of sand in my underwear weighing me down like a sagging diaper.
I ditched the clothes and wrapped myself in the towel, shoving on the door to the inside of the house. Damn, it was stuck. I’d have to go back the way I came. I gripped my towel tighter and swung open the outside door.
Thud.
“Ouch. Bloody hell!”
I leapt backward, my hand slamming tighter into my chest. Oh my God! This could not be happening.
The guy from the beach collapsed back onto the ground, grasping at the newest wound on his head. The second I had caused in less than five minutes.
I didn’t stop to apologize, just wrapped the towel over my chest, and sprinted back into the house, locking the door behind me. There was a pair of shorts and a tank top crumpled in the corner. They were as good as anything to wear. It’s not like I wanted to dress up for my stalker, but if his knocking on the back door turned into kicking it down, it’d be nice to wear some clothes for the crime scene pictures.
Crap, where was my phone? My heart thudded in my ears. If I just ignored him, would he go away? If he didn’t take the hint, my father kept a baseball bat in the hall closet.
Three quick knocks rapped on the back door.
As I ran for my weapon, I caught a glimpse of the man standing on the deck. He peered through the glass of the French doors. I swung open the closet, pulled out the Louisville slugger, and limped toward him. I may have played soccer instead of Little League, but I still knew how to swing a bat.
“Go away. I called 911,” I shouted.
I flipped on the outside deck light so I could get a better look at the man. I’m guessing the detectives, FBI, and office of Homeland Security would need a description.
He was six foot, possibly two, with short, wavy blond hair and lightning blue eyes that were squinted from the porch light. He held a handkerchief to his nose and wore a light blue, bloodstained, linen shirt that was partially unbuttoned revealing his ripped abs. I hesitated until I remembered I was in danger.
He had on khaki shorts, flip-flops, and a tattoo on his ankle. I scanned back to the top of his body. Muscular, tan, tall, and wow, those electrifying eyes. Holy hell, this guy was freaking hot. He was going to have a really good mug shot. If only we had met under different circumstances, I might actually offer him a beer.
A soft smile tugged at his lip as he dangled my smartphone in his hand. My wet, sand-covered smartphone.
“Son of a bitch,” I moaned as I remembered that it was in my back pocket when I fell into the ocean. I had to get it into a bag of rice and fast. It had my music, my schedules, and all my passwords. I was lucky if I remembered my own number, let alone everyone else’s.
“Leave it on the deck. And go.”
I tightened my grip on the bat. Mr. Tall, blond, and handsome removed the handkerchief from his nose.
A tiny flutter tickled in my chest. My head tipped slightly to the side. He didn’t look threatening. Minus the blood, lumps and cuts, he looked like he just stepped off the front cover of GQ.
“Sorry, Miss Nutter, but do you think I could trouble you for an icepack?”
“No,” I replied.
“Please?”
He sounded and looked like a real life Prince Charming. The only thing missing was his white horse. Maybe the Karma gods had sent a peace offering? I shook my head. No. My house was built of stone and there was no way I was letting a freaking wolf in, no matter how smoking hot he was.
I needed to protect myself.
But why did I need protection? I looked at the bloodstain drying on his shirt. If anything, he needed protection from me.
As if he had read my mind, he shook his head and laughed. He sat my phone on the bench, raised his hand in the air in a non-threatening manner and turned to walk away. Where was he going?
I dove forward and gripped the door handle ready to pull it open, but I stopped as my father’s stern, no-nonsense voice boomed in the back of my head—”Don’t ever let strange men into the house.”
But when in my life would I meet another crazy beautiful man with a British accent that twisted my lady parts into a knot? His hand rested on the railing as he was about to walk down the steps and out of my life forever. I cursed under my breath and prayed that I wouldn’t wind up on the news.
“Wait,” I called to him as I swung open the door. He stopped and turned to look at me. “There’s ice there in the cooler. There, by the chaise.” My voice cracked as our eyes met.
“Thank you,” he said. His steps back toward the house were hesitant. His eyebrow rose as he pointed to the bat in my hands. “Are you planning on hitting me with that?”
His lips tugged into a smirk. It was the most incredible half-lifted-top-lip smirk I had ever seen. And that damn accent. Holy hell it was getting hot in here.
“I didn’t do a good enough job before,” I said and I couldn’t help but smile.
“You are a bit of a nutter, aren’t you?”
“I guess it would appear that way, wouldn’t it?” I wasn’t sure of the exact definition of nutter, but the way it sounded rolling off his tongue and the way his shirt gripped his muscles it didn’t matter what he called me as long as he didn’t leave.
I handed him a towel that I’d left out earlier. “Here’s a peace offering.”
“With a smile like yours, your mental state is forgiven.”
In a bar, that line would’ve earned an eye roll and a sigh, but with his alluring accent, I’d let it slide. His smile widened as he accepted the towel and wrapped the ice from the cooler inside. He pressed it on his forehead and winced, his smile replaced by a scowl. A sexy scowl. Damn, I was so going to need another cold shower
“Thanks,” I stammered and glanced down. My cheeks burned. “I need to get my phone into rice.”
I scooped up my cell from where he’d left it and nearly dropped it with my shaking hands. I turned to head inside but stopped, “Can I get you anything? Maybe something to drink?”
I wasn’t sure what I was doing. He needed to go, but I liked the way he looked me over. Maybe a drink wouldn’t be so bad. It wasn’t like I had anything else to do. The Fourth of July and all I had planned was screaming at the ocean. A cute guy’s company sounded like a fun, sane option.
“Is it safe? You don’t plan on finishing me off with a poisonous pint, do ya?” he asked.
I was just about to laugh at his comment when he winked and it stopped me short. My breath hitched in my chest. What the hell was it about this guy that made me react like I was in heat?
Take control, Tink.
“You’ll have to decide if you want to take your chances,” I replied with a slightly flirty tone.
“Something tells me to run like bloody hell, but something else tells me to take my chances. I think that might be the head trauma talking.”
I fought a smile. He was charming and witty and I couldn’t help but want to know him better.
He kicked off his sandals and tucked his handkerchief in his back pocket before sitting on the chaise lounge. He held the ice to his nose. His eyes reflected in the moonlight. I knew nothing about this strange man, yet his presence had made me remember how good it felt to smile again.
I took my phone to the kitchen and caught his reflection in the window. He continued to stare at me with a smirk. My insides stalled and hit a free-fall.
I opened up the pantry, and rummaged through the container. The closest thing to rice was quinoa. It was a grain, wasn’t it? I shrugged and dropped the phone in the bag. It was close enough.
Out the window, my stranger remained sitting on the deck with his icepack. At least it gave me a little time to run to my room and scope out my reflection.
My hair was drying into a natural beach wave and I tousled it to add a little volume. I breathed into my hand, then squirted a blob of toothpaste onto my toothbrush and quickly scrubbed my teeth. After adding a little mascara on my lashes, I swiped my lips with lip balm. Oh my God. What was I doing?
I didn’t understand how this guy could make me feel so crazy. I didn’t know a single thing about him—not even his name. I was acting like a high school girl with a crush. This wasn’t me. Were an accent and a panty-dropping smirk all it took to ground me?
I was having a horrible night before he came along and tomorrow was going to be a shit day. I had enough to drink and I didn’t give a damn. Tonight, I would allow myself to feel something—anything. For one night. Then, tomorrow he would go back to wherever he was from and I would continue onto my path of hell.
After all, it was a holiday, a day to celebrate independence. It used to be my favorite. Maybe, just maybe, it could be once again.
One hot Brit and a cold beer coming right up.
Thankfully, I had another six-pack stashed in the back of the fridge. Swallowing my nerves, I tucked it under my arm and limped outside.
“Are you all right?” he asked as he stood up.
“Yeah, I think a crab bit my foot in the water,” I replied and shrugged to downplay it, but my foot hurt like hell.
He reached out, took the bottles and placed them in the cooler.
“You should prop it up,” he said folding a towel on the chaise.
I nodded. I sat and elevated my foot as he opened two of the bottles and handed me one.
“Cheers,” I said and lifted mine with gratitude.
He flinched.
“Really?” I choked out, but I couldn’t blame him after our initial meeting.
“Sorry, it was a bit of a knee-jerk reaction,” he said. “Round one was a bottle to head. Round two was a nut to the nose, and round three, the door smashing. Who knows what round four holds?”
“Nut to the nose?” I asked and fought a grin. “What the hell does that mean?”
“A head butt.”
I laughed, trying to shake the first visual from my mind.
“Yeah, really funny,” he said with a smile. “You injured me three times, then left me to die.”
He raised three fingers, but then laughed. I liked the rich baritone sound.
“You caught me off guard,” I said and took a swig of my beer.
“I caught you off guard? Hell, I didn’t know what hit me. Literally.”
“I’m sorry,” I fina. . .
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