“Thank you.” She threw her arms around Jack. “It was wonderful.”
“Stop that.” He extricated himself. “Remember, you never got into the plane. You had nothing to do with that flight.”
“I know, I know.” She shoved the motor hood into her pocket, but she couldn’t so easily wash away her disappointment. “I was just congratulating you on an excellent flight.”
Jack glanced from Burrows, who was climbing down from the wing, to the gathering crowd, clearly worried.
“Just a kink in the fuel line,” said Burrows. “I’ll check it over, fill her with gasoline and oil, and we can be on our way.”
“I’ll get the oil.” Jack sprinted to the barn.
Leaving? Right now? How could he fly off, after what had just happened? Jack Hunter held the key to her dream. He could teach her to fly. He couldn’t leave. She started after him.
“Miss Shea?” The wiry mechanic caught her arm. “A word of warning. Jack Hunter is not the marrying type.”
She pulled away. “Who said anything about marriage?”
“I just thought…” he let his voice trail off as Jack reappeared with an oilcan.
Burrows was wrong. Despite Jack’s admittedly attractive qualities, she had no intention of marrying. She had to fly first. Her interest in Jack Hunter was strictly professional.
She caught Jack’s arm. The leather was cold and dead, but the man beneath it was not. “Take me with you.”
He stared, a mixture of shock and wariness that sent her spirits tumbling.
“I’ll earn my way,” she said, words spinning out faster and faster. “I’ll work. I won’t be a financial burden. I have to fly. I will do anything to fly. Anything. Please?”
Jack looked disgusted, and for a second she saw herself through his eyes—a pathetic, pleading woman so consumed with her dream that she’d throw away propriety.
“Darcy?” Papa’s gruff voice shivered down her spine. He’d heard. He’d heard everything. She looked for Jack, but he was climbing into the cockpit. Burrows pulled the propeller. No! The cry wailed deep inside, but she dared not let it out, not when she stood face-to-face with judgment.
Excuse after excuse whirled through her mind in time with the propeller’s revolutions. The din spared her from answering her father immediately, but once the plane sped down the field and arced into the air, sun glinting gold off its wings, the reprieve ended.
“What was that about?” he asked.
She fought the horrible deflation. “It doesn’t matter anymore.” She swallowed, but the pain would not diminish. “It’s over. All over.”
The aeroplane grew smaller and smaller until it vanished.
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