tossed his way by her ubercurious students. The small smile on her lips made him think that she was enjoying putting him in the hot seat.
Looking at her mouth made him hot, hot in a different way. Hot to kiss her, hot to taste her mouth, part her lips with his tongue and…
Joe blinked. What was he doing? He had no business fantasizing about his commanding officer’s daughter. No business at all.
Ordering his gaze away from her, he reminded himself that she was off-limits to him in every way.
“Is it true Marines have nicknames like Jughead?” Keishon said.
Joe tried not to wince. “Jarhead, not Jughead.”
“What other nicknames do Marines have?”
“Devil Dogs,” Joe replied.
“Sounds like a kind of hot dog they have at Dog ’n’ Suds. I think it has hot peppers in it,” Pete said.
Joe tried not to grit his teeth. “Sinatra, do you know why Marines are called Devil Dogs?”
“It better not be because they’re mean to dogs,” Keishon, the animal activist, said.
“Marines aren’t mean to dogs. The name came from the Germans during the first World War,” Sinatra proudly replied.
“Teufelhunden,” Joe said. “So named because of the Marines’ tenacity in combat during the Battle of Belleau Wood. Nice going, Sinatra.”
“Teacher’s pet,” Pete muttered.
“What was that?” Joe demanded, using his drill instructor voice.
“Nothing,” Pete quickly replied. “I was just…uh…coughing, sir.”
Just when Joe was sure he couldn’t stand being cooped up with this bunch a second later, Prudence cheerfully announced, “We’re here!”
The Sunshine Trailhead wasn’t nearly as impressive as it sounded. In reality it was merely a graveled parking lot. But it represented the end of the line as far as being stuck in this van with Pete, Keishon, Gem, Rosa and Sinatra—not to mention their impossibly sexy teacher Prudence.
Joe was the first one out of the van. As he watched the really short recruits climbing out of the van, he was reminded of circus routine he’d seen as a kid with clowns tumbling out of a VW Bug.
This wasn’t the most graceful bunch of really short recruits he’d ever seen. Not that being graceful was something a Marine aimed for, but this group seemed to fall over their own feet an awful lot.
Meanwhile Prudence stood watch with a clipboard, ticking off items as they were unpacked from the van.
“Six sleeping bags…” She paused to count them off as each student donned their backpack. “Check. Two tents. Check. Six backpacks. Check. I’m assuming you’re responsible for your own items, Sergeant Wilder?”
“Affirmative,” he replied, while efficiently adding the larger of the tents to his pack.
Prudence watched him work, the muscles in his arms rippling as he easily hefted the pack and put it on. He didn’t have the bulky frame of a football player or wrestler, but he was powerfully built in a lean-and-mean kind of way.
The sun had seared crinkles around his eyes, or maybe those were laugh lines? She was only now noticing that his nose and jaw weren’t perfectly symmetrical, saving him from a merely pretty-boy handsomeness. His was the face of a man who’d seen and done more than his fair share of living.
He’d been fairly good-natured about the kids’ incessant questions during the drive. She was surprised. She shouldn’t have been. Marines were infamous for following orders and as Joe had told her more than once, he’d been ordered to accompany her and her students on this field trip.
But that didn’t mean he’d grown any more comfortable with the situation. She still didn’t know what it was about the kids that made him uneasy. Maybe he was an only child or something and didn’t have much experience with kids.
She could ask him, she supposed. But she was hesitant to form a friendship with him. She didn’t want to know if he was an only child, didn’t want to know why his nose was a little off-kilter. The man himself made her feel off-kilter all the time. Keeping her distance, emotionally even if she couldn’t do that physically, was clearly the wise thing to do in this situation.
Yes, she was spending the weekend in the mountains with him, but they were being chaperoned by five sixth-graders. And it wasn’t as if she was dressed like a fashion model or anything. Her hardy hiking boots were hardly the thing to turn a man’s head. She was wearing the same khaki slacks and white T-shirt she’d had on earlier. She’d added a long-sleeved denim shirt and tied a red windbreaker around her waist.
Glancing at her reflection in the van’s outside mirror, she adjusted the silver hair clip she’d fastened her hair back with before turning to inspect her students. She checked each child’s backpack to make sure it was properly positioned, wasn’t too heavy and that the straps weren’t twisted.
Finally they headed off, with Joe in the front and Prudence bringing up the rear. From this vantage point she watched Joe. She’d always had a thing for guys in jeans, which is why she was surprised to find her heartbeat quickening. The man was wearing camouflage utilities, for heaven’s sake. Camies. Hardly sexy attire. But it was the man not the uniform that was getting to her. It was the man who was getting away from her as he set a pace much too fast for this group.
“Sergeant, we’re not on an enforced march here,” she called out. “We’re supposed to be enjoying the wilderness, not marching through it double-time.”
Joe shortened his usual long stride and fast tempo in order for the others to keep up with him. Even so, Prudence wasn’t satisfied, as she indicated when they took their first rest stop.
“Sergeant, you’re supposed to be leading the troop,” she said, “not running away from us.”
Her words were a deliberate red flag. A Marine never ran away from anything.
Prudence was trying to taunt him. He refused to give her the satisfaction of reacting.
Ignoring her comment, he spoke to the really short recruits, addressing them as if they were “poolies”—high school seniors who’d signed up for delayed entry into the Marine Corps upon graduation. “While we’re paused here, I’ll review the Marine Corps Survival techniques. Think of the word Survival. S stands for Sizing Up The Situation.”
The situation was that Joe was stuck in the mountains with a forbidden woman and five kids.
Shoving that thought aside, Joe asked. “What can you hear and see?”
“I hear birds and the wind in the trees,” Sinatra said.
“And I see a squirrel on that tree over there,” Rosa said.
“What about smell?” Joe asked.
“Hey, I took a shower this morning,” Pete declared. “I don’t smell.”
Joe stifled a laugh. “Close your eyes and sniff the air. What can you smell?”
“Pine. I smell pine,” Pete replied. “What about you, sir? What do you smell?”
Perfume. Joe smelled Prudence’s perfume. Like Al Pacino in that movie, Joe was pretty good at identifying a woman’s perfume. But this one had him stymied. It was something citrusy with a bit…of cinnamon maybe?
Erase that thought, Joe ordered himself. He refused to allow her entry into his thoughts. And if she barged into his thoughts, he vowed to toss her out.
“I smell pine, too,” Joe replied. “Now U stands for Undue Haste Makes Waste.”
“My point exactly,” Prudence inserted.
“R stands for Remember Where You Are.” Joe pointed to the topographical