Hover

Hover by Anne A. Wilson Page A

Book: Hover by Anne A. Wilson Read Free Book Online
Authors: Anne A. Wilson
Ads: Link
Captain Magruder says.
    â€œNice to meet you both,” Admiral Carlson says, extending his hand. “I want you to know we’re happy to have you with us in the strike group.”
    â€œThank you, sir,” Emily says.
    That was weird. I wonder why we were singled out like that. Well, no matter. I turn to find a seat, surreptitiously glancing in Eric’s direction as I do so. Shoot. He catches me peeking because he’s looking right at me.
    But that’s not what gives me pause.
    â€œIs she the one?” Admiral Carlson whispers.
    â€œYeah, that’s her,” Captain Magruder says.
    I bring my eyes to theirs, but they don’t look away. I wonder if they know that I heard them. Scanning to the left, I see that Eric’s eyes haven’t left my position.
    Emily heads to the open seat next to Eric, while I turn, finding two free chairs at the far end of our U-shaped table arrangement. Petty Officer Sampson, our lead mess crank, hurriedly approaches with lemon water and a larger-than-normal menu. I glance up to see that Eric is giving his full attention to Emily.
    Switching my gaze to Admiral Carlson, I think about the comment I just overheard. “Is she the one?” What on earth?
    I don’t have a chance to consider the question, though, because Commander Egan shatters my concentration with his arrival. He sits next to me, adjusting his chair until it touches mine, and I recoil. When he gets close, my skin gets prickly. I swear, I’m going to break out in a rash as this cruise progresses, with him around.
    â€œSara, Sara, Sara,” he says. “Talkin’ it up with the admiral, I see.”
    Maybe he’s trying to be funny? I don’t even look at him. “Yes, sir.”
    I had planned to order something off the menu because Petty Officer Sampson has pulled out all the stops for Admiral Carlson. But I don’t want to sit here waiting for my food, drawn into a conversation I don’t want to have with Commander Egan. I can give myself space by selecting from the salad bar instead. I push my chair back, and as I walk away from him, every inch I put between us allows me to breathe easier.
    I pick up a plate from the storage well and begin piling it with lettuce. The salad on the ship isn’t great by most people’s standards, but for me, I’m eating better now than I normally do. I inherited little—actually, make that none—of my mother’s legendary culinary skills, so having a mess hall has always been one of the perks of military life for me.
    â€œYou guys are lucky,” Eric says, silently appearing at my side.
    The current is a jolt this time.
    â€œWe’re lucky?”
    â€œTo have a salad bar,” he says, picking up a plate. “This would never fit in our wardroom.”
    â€œOh, yeah. This is really a great thing.”
    I add spinach and cucumbers to my lettuce bed, and out of the corner of my eye, I see that he’s filling his plate, too. Maybe he’s extra hungry. When I watched Emily take her seat next to him earlier, he had already been served a full plate of food, which included a salad.
    The ship takes a heavy roll and the cherry tomato I’m trying to harness with the salad tongs slips and accelerates across the grooved railings in front of the vegetable bins. I quickly grab the side of the bar to keep my balance as the tomato goes airborne at the end of the rails. Eric’s hand shoots out, snatching it in midair.
    I raise my eyebrows. “Nice save.”
    He turns to me, latches onto my gaze, and holds it. Uncanny, how he does that. And his all-business demeanor from earlier evaporates.
    â€œI wanted to ask how you were doing,” he says in a low voice. “I didn’t have a chance to talk with you before you left yesterday morning.”
    â€œThe flight went fine. We did the maintenance checks and—”
    â€œI wasn’t asking about the aircraft,” he says. “I

Similar Books

Away with the Fishes

Stephanie Siciarz

The Abominable Man

Maj Sjöwall, Per Wahlöö

Bodychecking

Jami Davenport

Revolving Doors

Perri Forrest

the mortis

Jonathan R. Miller