February: Over the Persian Gulf
"We've been hit!"
The aircraft commander's words popped like bullets through
Senior Master Sergeant J.T. "Tag" Price's headset. Ricocheted
around in his brain. Settled with molten-lead heat as J.T. sat
in his solitary loadmaster perch beneath the cockpit in the
cargo plane.
Not that he even needed the aircraft commander's announcement.
The teeth-jarring thump still shuddered through the C-17. Yet up
to that last second, he hadn't given up hope of a minor
malfunction.
Minor? The wash of warning lights blazing across his control
panel told him otherwise.
"Details," he quizzed, quick. Brief. Never one to waste words
even on a good day.
This sure as hell wasn't a good day.
Aerodynamics went to crap. The craft already rattled, strained.
"Missile hit," the aircraft commander, Captain Carson "Scorch"
Hunt, answered from the cockpit above. "Probably a man-portable,
fired from a boat, I think."
The plane bucked. Shuddered. His checklist vibrated off the
console. "Are we gonna have to put down somewhere bad or can we
make it to Europe?"
"We're not going to make it to Europe."
Silence echoed for two seconds, cut only by the rumble of
engines taking on a progressive tenor of pain.
Crap.
J.T. pivoted toward the cavernous cargo hold containing a pallet
full of top-secret surveillance equipment. The technology could
not fall into another government's hands. Beyond that, the
stored intelligence from monitoring terrorist cell phone traffic
would give away field agent identities. "Plan of action?"
"We'll have to circle back and haul ass toward the coast to land
in Rubistan."
Definitely bad. But not as bad as it could be. Relations with
the country were strained, yet not outright hostile. Still, the
equipment on that pallet made for a serious time bomb if they
didn't offload it before reaching land. "How much longer 'til
feet dry?"
"Ten minutes until we make the coastline."
Tight, but workable. Scooping his small black binder off the
floor, he flipped through to the destruction checklists. "All
right, then. Stretch it if you can while I destroy as much of
this crap back here as possible before ditching it in the
ocean."
Then pray like hell they didn't end up ditching the plane too.
"Make it quick, Tag. I can buy you one, maybe two extra minutes
over the water, but hydraulics and electrical are going all to
hell."
"Roger, Scorch." J.T. unstrapped from his seat. "Beginning
destruction checklists. Get the back ramp open."
He pivoted toward the man strapped into a seat two steps away.
Spike - Max Keagan - also an OSI agent undercover as a second
loadmaster on the flight, another potential land mine if the
Rubistanians discovered the man's real job. "Stay out of the way
'til I'm through, then get ready to start pushing."
Spike flashed him a thumbs-up while keeping clear, laser sharp
eyes processing from his agent's perspective. He raked his hand
over his head, normally spiked hair now in a buzz cut for his
undercover military role.
Feet steady on the swaying deck thanks to twenty-four years in
the Air Force and five thousand flying hours, J.T. charged
toward the pallet. He flipped red guard switches, started hard
drives erasing data about terrorists financing operations by
trafficking opium out of Rubistan. And somewhere on their own
base in Charleston was a leak. Thus the involvement of the Air
Force's Office of Special Investigation.
As he destroyed data, J.T. tried not to think about all the
government time and money wasted on the trafficking
investigation. He hooked his fingers in the metal rings, pulled
while also pushing a small plunger. Foam filled the
motherboards, seeping out.
The load ramp yawned open. Wind and light swept the metal
tunnel. The coughing drone of wounded engines swelled.
Now to finish the last of the destruction the old fashioned way.
He yanked the crash ax off the wall. Hefted back. Swung.
Hack.
What a helluva way to miss an appointment with his wife at the
divorce attorney's office. Sorry I can't make it, babe, but I'm
a guest of a foreign government right now.
Or worse.
He jerked the ax free of the cracked metal, swung again. God,
he'd worried more times than he could count about leaving Rena a
war widow, knew she had prepared herself for it as well. But how
the hell did anyone prep for a peacetime front door visit from
the commander, nurse and chaplain?
He'd already caused her enough grief over the years, and now to
end it this way. Damn it. She deserved better.
But then she'd always deserved better than him.
J.T. hefted, arced the ax over, repeated, again, endlessly.
Sweat sheeted down him, plastered his flight suit to his back.
Air roared and swirled through the open hatch. Still,
perspiration stung his pores, his eyes.
The aircraft's tail end swayed more by the second. His muscles
flexed, released, burned until the surveillance computer
equipment lay scattered, split into a pile of metal and wires.
"Destruction checklist complete," he reported, then nodded to
Spike. "You ready?"
"Roger." The undercover agent charged forward to push, no help
forthcoming from the screwed electrical system.
They tucked side by side behind the pallet. Air and ocean waited
to swallow the equipment.
J.T. shoved, grunted. Rammed harder. Toward the gaping hatch,
yawning out over the gulf. Boots planted. Muscles knotted,
strained, until…
The pallet gave way, hooked, caught, lumbered down the tracks
lining the belly of the plane, rattling, rolling, tipping.
Gone.
Swiping a sleeve over his forehead, J.T. backed from the closing
ramp, avoiding the friction-hot rollers along the tracks.
"Quickest you'll ever throw away a billion dollars. Now get your
ass strapped in upstairs."
"Roger that." Spike clapped him on the back on his way toward
the front.
J.T. jogged past his loadmaster perch, up the steep stairwell to
the cockpit. For a crash landing, the higher up, the better. Two
seats waited behind the pilot and copilot. J.T. darted right,
Spike left, and buckled into the five-point harness.
The clear windscreen displayed coastline and desert meeting,
sunrise cresting. He plugged in his headset again, reconnecting
to the voices of the two men in front of him. Their hands flew
over the throttle, stick, instrument panel as they battled the
hulking craft.
Scorch, their aircraft commander, filled the left seat, a
fair-headed guy who looked more like some mythological Greek god
from the book in J.T.'s flight suit pocket, a book he'd packed
in anticipation of the quiet time out over the Atlantic. Hell.
Scorch would need to tap into some godlike powers to get them
out of this one.
Bo, the copilot, sat directly in front of J.T. The dark-haired
kid must be all of maybe twenty-five or six. Not much older than
his two kids, for God's sake. Nikki was just finishing up her
junior year at UNC. Chris was still in high school.
Regret seared. Damn but he wanted to see his daughter graduate,
the first member of his family to get a college education. Of
course he'd attended Rena's graduation a couple of years ago,
been proud as hell of her honors grades and quick landing of a
job as a civilian counselor employed by the Charleston Air Force
Base hospital.
But educational successes were expected for her since all her
siblings had already sported a few diplomas triple matted on the
wall when he'd met her. Hers had been delayed because of
marrying him so young.
His head thunked back against the seat. Images of Rena scrolled
through his mind on high speed as if to jam forty years more
living into the next four minutes in case he never saw her
again.
Never made love to her again.
Hell, right now he'd even settle for fighting with her,
something they did as well and frequently as making love, which
was mighty damn often. I'm sorry, Rena. For so many things.
Scorch thumbed the interphone button. "We're not going to make
it to an airstrip. We'll have to put her down in the desert.
Strap in tight. This one's going to smack so hard your children
will be born dizzy."
J.T. braced his boots. And if they survived the landing? The
Rubistanian government would detain them. Question them. It
wouldn't be pleasant by a long shot, but they would make it
home.
As long as the tribal warlords didn't get them first.
Chapter One
May: North Charleston, S.C.
The doorbell echoed through the house.
Rena Price resisted the urge to duck and run upstairs to keep
from answering. Instead, she kept her feet planted to the floor
for a steadying second while she tipped the watering can into a
potted begonia by the sofa.
Yeah, that sure would make a dignified image, a forty-year-old
woman cowering under her bedroom quilt. And all because she was
scared spitless she wouldn't be able to resist jumping the man
standing on the other side of her oak door. But then her
emotions had never been easy to contain. Especially around J.T.
Water gushed Niagara Falls style over the sides of the porcelain
pot.
"Damn it." Rena dropped the watering can and scooped up a
burgundy throw pillow from the sofa to blot the water off the
floor. She'd just wash the pillow later.
Sheesh. She wasn't the same eighteen-year-old at an air show all
gaga-eyed and drooling over a hot airman in his flight suit. She
was a mature woman.
The bell pealed again.
A mature woman who needed to answer her door so her soon-to-be
ex-husband could start his weekend visitation with their teenage
son.
She Frisbee-tossed the soggy pillow across the room and out of
sight into the hall, flipped her long hair over her shoulder.
Whew. Composed? Hah. Not inside. But enough to pass muster
outwardly for at least five minutes.
Rena tucked around and past the fichus tree beside the
overstuffed armchair. "Hold on. I'm coming. Just, uh," her eyes
fell on the telephone, "finishing up a call."
Liar. Liar. Her heels chanted with each click along
hardwood floors, then muffled on a braid rug as she made her way
toward the broad shouldered shadow darkening the stained glass
inset.
Regret pinched, not for the first time. How sad that she'd come
to a point in her life where her husband had to ring the bell at
his own house. He deserved so much better than this.
Better from her.
They'd sure as hell tried for years until she'd booted him out
six months ago. Taken him back once he returned from Rubistan
and whatever horrors he'd endured after being captured. Only to
have him walk out on her a few days later.
She slowed in front of the door, pressed her hand to the glass
magnolia pattern, her cluster of silver bracelets jingling and
settling up toward her elbow. He wouldn't think anything of the
gesture if he saw her on the other side since she was unbolting
the lock with her free hand. But she let her fingers linger on
the colored window for a second longer over the place where his
body shadowed the pane.
After twenty-two years of sleeping with this man, her body
instinctively hungered for the comfort and pleasure she could
find in his arms. Her mind, however, reminded her of the
heartache.
Her hand fell away from the glass.
Rena opened the door. "Hi, J.T......"