almost always plenty to choose from. The host kitchen here, run by the Italian air force, operated under a different philosophy. There were only two entrées.
On the other hand, either one could have been served in a first-class restaurant. The dishes looked so good, in fact, that Turk couldnât decide between them.
âI would try the sautéed sea bass with the arancine and aubergine, â said a woman in an American uniform behind him. She was an Air Force colonel. âOr get both.â
âI think I will. Due, â he told the man. âTwo?â
âEntrambi?â asked the server. âSi?â
âI donâtââ
âYes, he wants both,â said the colonel with a bright smile. Turk couldnât remember seeing her before. âTell him, Captain.â
The server smirked, but dished up two plates, one with the bass, the other with quail.
Turk took his plates and went into the next room. The tables were of varying sizes and shapes, round and square, with from four to twelve chairs. They were covered with thick white tableclothsâanother thing you wouldnât typically find in a base cafeteria.
He picked a small table near the window and sat down. The window looked out over the airfield, and while he couldnât quite see the tarmac or taxiing area, he had a decent view of aircraft as they took off. A flight of RAF Tornados rose, each of the planes heavily laden with bombsâprobably going to finish off the airfield the government planes had used the day before.
No one wanted to talk about that encounter, Turk thought to himself. The briefing had been little more than an afterthought.
Oh, you shot down four aircraft. Very nice. So tell us about this massive screwup.
By rights, Turk thought, he ought to be the toast of the baseâhe had shot down four enemy aircraft, after all.
âI see why you took two meals,â said the woman whoâd been behind him in the line. âHungry, huh?â
Turk glanced down at his plate. He was nearly three-fourths of the way throughâheâd been eating tremendously fast.
âI didnât have breakfast,â he said apologetically.
âOr dinner yesterday, Iâll bet. Mind if I join?â
âNo, no, go ahead. Please,â said Turk. He rose in his chair, suddenly embarrassed by his poor manners.
She smiled at him, bemused.
âYou donât remember me, do you?â she asked, sitting.
âI, uhâno. Iâm sorry.â
âGinella Ernesto.â
âIâm Turk . . . Turk Mako.â
He extended his hand awkwardly. Ginella shook it.
âYou were involved in the Aâ10E program at Dreamland,â she said. âYou briefed us. My squadron took the planes over.â
âOh.â
âStill think the Hogs should be flown by remote control?â
âUh, well, actually I like the way they fly.â
Ginella laughed. The Aâ10Es were specially modified versions of the venerable Thunderbolt Aâ10, far better known to all as âWarthogs,â or usually simply âHogs.â The aircraft had begun as Aâ10s, then received considerable improvements to emerge as Aâ10Cs shortly after the dawn of the twenty-first century.
The Aâ10Es were a special group of eight aircraft with an avionics suite that allowed them to be flown remotely. There were other improvements as well, including uprated engines.
âWe had met before,â added Ginella. âI waxed your fanny at Red Flag last fall.â
âYou did?â
âYou were checking out a Tigershark. I was flying a Raptor. Masked Marauder.â
Turk had been at a Red Flag, but as far as he could remember, no one had gotten close to shooting him downâwhich was what Ginellaâs slang implied. But she didnât seem to be bragging and he let it slide.
Besides, though a good ten years older than he was, she was very easy on the eyes.
âHow do you
Sylvia Day, Allison Brennan, Lori G. Armstrong