Read Rescuing Emily (Delta Force Heroes Book 2) Online
Authors: Susan Stoker
Emily had been silent up until then, but let out a shriek of terror at the sound of a shot echoing in the night.
Jacks’s grip on her loosened as he fell to the ground and Emily felt something wet splatter across her face.
For a moment she thought he’d done it, that he’d shot her in the head, but she wouldn’t still be standing if that were the case.
“Emily?”
Ghost’s voice was frantic as he called up to her.
“I’m okay. At least I think I am.” Her voice shook, and wasn’t very loud, but she was alive and in one piece. She quickly took a step away from Jacks and looked at him fearfully. The last thing she wanted was him jumping up and grabbing her again. He lay still on the metal rooftop, a puddle of blood forming underneath his head. She took another step away from him and bent over, resting her hands on her thighs, trying to catch her breath.
“Em.”
That was Fletch’s voice again—and he sounded so close. She whirled around and gaped. It
was
Fletch. How had he gotten up there? She had no idea how he’d appeared behind her all of a sudden, but didn’t care. Emily glanced at Jacks again, he hadn’t moved from the last time she’d seen him. She had no idea if he was dead or not, but at the moment, she couldn’t really care.
Instead of coming to her, Fletch moved towards Jacks, securing both his rifle and pistol before turning toward her.
“How, what—” Emily didn’t get anything else out before she was engulfed in Fletch’s arms. Everything else faded away. She inhaled deeply, smelling Fletch’s unique scent that never failed to soothe her. Safe. She was safe. Everything else didn’t matter.
She felt herself being carried away from the edge of the container, and Jacks’s body. Fletch’s arms were tight around her, holding her to him as if he never wanted to let go. She’d never felt anything more reassuring in her life.
Remembering her daughter, Emily pulled back a fraction and frantically asked, “Annie?”
“She’s fine. I ran into her playing soldier and she’s safe, far away from here,” Fletch reassured her in a choked voice.
“Thank God. I didn’t know if I should let her go by herself or keep her with me.”
“I’d say you made the right decision.” He loosened his hold on her just enough so her feet could touch the ground, but he didn’t let go.
Emily nodded and snuggled back into Fletch. They stood like that for a long moment, thankful they were both alive and breathing.
“Yo, Fletch, mind putting the ladder down?”
Emily didn’t want to move, but knew she couldn’t stay up there forever, so she reluctantly pulled back. She started to look at Jacks again, but Fletch put his hand under her chin. “Don’t look, Em. It’s over. He’ll never hurt you again.”
“Is he dead?”
“I don’t know and I don’t care.”
“Will you guys get in trouble?”
“No.”
“But—”
“I’ll explain later.”
“How’d you get up here?”
“With a boost. It wasn’t hard, Em. I’d climb mountains to get to you.”
Emily nodded and squeezed his hand as she followed him to the other side of the Conex, where he lowered the ladder. Within seconds, Ghost and Hollywood had joined them.
“Shit’s gonna hit the fan, we gotta roll,” Hollywood urged after seeing Jacks. “The colonel specifically said nonlethal.”
Ghost walked over to the man lying motionless and put his fingers on his throat, checking for a pulse. “First of all, Jacks isn’t dead. Second of all, it’s not gonna hit the fan,” Ghost reassured the other man, as if he knew something Hollywood didn’t.
“Nonlethal force was our directive,” Hollywood argued, repeating himself, ignoring the first part of Ghost’s statement.
“I
said
, it’s not gonna hit the fan,” Ghost repeated firmly. “Come on, let’s get Emily off this damn roof and reunite her and Annie, yeah?”
Not stupid, Hollywood gave the team leader a long look before finally nodding and kneeling down beside the ladder to keep it steady.
“Come on, Em, I’ll start down, you come down after me. I won’t let you fall,” Fletch told her.
“I know you won’t. I trust you with my life.”
“Damn straight. Let’s get you cleaned up, then go find our soldier girl.”
Emily waited until Fletch had gone down a rung or two and followed after him. She had a ton of questions, but vowed to keep her mouth shut until she was alone with Fletch. She was thrilled to be with him again. That was all that mattered at the moment. Emily supposed later she might have a flashback, or somehow not deal well with Jacks being shot when he wasn’t even a couple inches away from her, but at the moment, knowing she, Annie, and Fletch were alive and in one piece…it was enough.
E
mily sat
on the couch with her feet tucked under her and snuggled into Fletch’s hold. She’d taken a long, hot shower, it was now two in the morning, and she was dead tired, but weirdly too wired to sleep. Ghost had followed them home, obviously wanting to talk to his friend before they had to meet with the general the next morning.
Dealing with the aftermath of the events that night had taken longer than it had for the Delta Force team to take out all of Jack’s recruits. Not one minute after her feet had touched the ground, the area had been lit up by two helicopters and about forty soldiers. The cavalry had arrived, but ultimately it wasn’t needed to save her.
All of the men the Deltas had run across lay where they were found, unconscious. None were injured, other than the headaches they’d have when they awoke. Apparently everyone on the Delta team was skilled in ways to make a man unconscious with little to no fuss.
The man who’d been up on the container with her and Jacks, Specialist Brown, was airlifted to the local hospital, most likely with a broken back…but Hollywood had reassured her that he’d live.
And surprisingly, Ghost had been right, Jacks wasn’t dead. Whoever had shot him had either been unlucky, or extremely talented, as the bullet had only grazed the side of his head. A groove had been carved out from his right temple to behind his ear, but he was alive. Fletch wasn’t happy he was still living, but Emily didn’t care.
The best part of the night was when Truck had walked into the clearing after Jacks and Brown had been taken to the hospital—with Annie’s hand in his. The Ranger who’d taken responsibility for her had brought her to the scene after it was safe for her to be there. Emily had never been so happy to see her daughter in all her life. The little girl was beaming from ear to ear, thrilled as she could be to be in the middle of a “military op,” as she’d started calling it.
Emily had seen one of the soldiers who was late to the party, unvelcro the rank from the front of his uniform and pin it onto Annie’s shirt, after the whole story came out about what she’d done. Emily didn’t care if her daughter told the world that she saved her mom’s life…as long as she was safe, and emotionally healthy, Emily was content.
She hadn’t wanted to be separated from Annie after everything that had happened, but it was obvious the higher-ranking officials wanted answers. She agreed, after Fletch’s reassurance, to allow another soldier to look after Emily by the vehicles. She waited for the adults to be done, safe and out of earshot.
Emily had been surprised to find the general was out for blood and had detained everyone involved in the “incident,” as he’d called it, until he had answers as to exactly what had happened that night. She kept her mouth shut as Ghost explained, in great detail, his team’s role in the entire thing. She wanted to know as much as the general, what had happened between the time she’d been kidnapped and when she’d seen the Deltas while she’d been on top of the shipping containers.
“You mean to tell me Sergeant Jacks—”
“Ex-sergeant, Sir,” Ghost interrupted. “He’d already been chaptered out of the Army.”
“You mean to tell me
ex
-Sergeant Jacks planned to kill Ms. Grant and her daughter?” the general asked, obviously pissed off about the entire situation.
“Yes, Sir.” Ghost kept his answers short and to the point, which Emily thought was probably a good idea.
“And he knew you had no-kill orders?”
“Yes, Sir.”
“Does anyone want to explain to me then, if this was a nonlethal op, how ex-Sergeant Jacks was shot with a live round?”
Nobody around them said a word, which didn’t help the situation.
“Obviously, someone didn’t get the memo,” the general complained. “I have a conference call scheduled with the President tomorrow, when I have to try to explain just what the fuck happened with this goat-screw tonight. You’re all restricted to quarters until further notice,” he snarled out.
“Sir?” Emily ventured cautiously.
“What?” The word was still barked, but lacked some of the bite he’d used toward the men.
“I don’t know who you think shot Jacks, but it wasn’t Ghost or his men.” Emily could say that with one hundred percent confidence. She continued at his doubtful look. “Jacks had his arm across my chest and his pistol pointed at my head. He was going on and on about vengeance and how he was going to kill me to get back at the guys. I can tell you, I heard every single one of Ghost’s men trying to talk him down. They were on the ground below us. I knew I was going to die, and there wasn’t anything they could do about it.”
The general frowned at Emily and crossed his arms over his chest. “The bullet creased the side of his head. Only someone extremely trained would be able to do that. Someone like a special forces operative.”
Emily nodded. “I know,” she whispered. “I felt his blood spurt on me and thought for a second he’d actually pulled the trigger and it was
my
blood I was feeling.”
The highest-ranking man on the entire Fort Hood base cocked his head and didn’t say anything for a moment. Finally, he asked in a low voice, “Why should I believe you, Ms. Grant? It’s obvious Fletch has feelings for you, and that they’re returned. Maybe
he
did it and you’re covering for him.”
“With all due respect, while I might love Fletch and I
would
cover for him if I thought it’d work, how in the world could Fletch shoot Jacks and then be shoved up the back side of the container two seconds later? I know without a doubt that he wouldn’t have risked it with me so close to him.”
The general had looked away from her then, and had met the eyes of each of the men on the Delta team. One by one, without a word, he studied them.
Finally, he speculated, “I talked to Specialist Brown before he was taken to the hospital, and he backed up your stories, but the bottom line is,
someone
shot ex-Sergeant Jacks. Despite what I asked Ms. Grant, I
am
aware the angle of the bullet wasn’t an upward trajectory…meaning if you were all on the ground, or getting Fletcher’s ass up to the top of the containers, it couldn’t have been any of you. So—who was it?”
Silence greeted him again, and finally the general sighed. “You guys are killing me. Go home. All of you. But be in my office tomorrow at oh-eight-hundred. We’ll continue this discussion then.”
A chorus of “Yes, Sirs” rang out around them. Each of the men saluted the general as he turned to leave. At the last minute, before he disappeared around one of the shipping containers, he turned around and stated, “You’re a very lucky woman, Ms. Grant. I’m glad you’re all right.”
“Thank you, Sir. I am too.”
The Deltas hadn’t said a word, hadn’t given each other secret looks, they’d merely acted as if the fact that they’d almost lost their jobs—and everything they’d worked for in their career—was a nuisance, rather than the disaster it really was.
“Come on, Em, let’s get you and Annie home,” Fletch said, wrapping one arm around her waist and pulling her into his side.
It wasn’t quite as easy as that, but eventually they were allowed to leave, and now Emily was sitting next to Fletch at home, safe on the couch, and it felt divine.
“So what really happened tonight?” Emily asked Ghost and Fletch, feeling oddly mellow.
“What do you mean?”
“Don’t act dumb,” Emily scolded Ghost. “Who shot Jacks?”
“Is that like ‘Who shot JR?”
Emily glared at the man sprawled out in the chair next to them. He looked unconcerned with everything that had happened, as if it was just another normal night for him.
Ghost finally wiped the smile off his face and leaned forward. He spoke in a soft, serious tone. “You can’t ever tell anyone this, Emily.”
“I won’t,” she agreed immediately.
“No one. Not Rayne. Not Mary. Not Annie.
Ever
,” Ghost reiterated.
“I almost died tonight,” Emily said, instead of reassuring Ghost again. “I knew you guys were in no position to do anything to help me. I didn’t lie to the general about that. Jacks was hyped up and was shaking with adrenaline. I knew it was just a matter of time before I’d die. He was going to pull that trigger and I would’ve never gotten to see Annie grow up. I’d have missed out on everything in her life. I wouldn’t be sitting here right now. I don’t care that he was shot. I don’t care that he may or may not recover. If one of you managed it, great, fine. I just…I’d like to know.”
“We had a back-up plan in place, just in case. We didn’t know if we’d need to use it or not. There aren’t a lot of Delta Force soldiers out in the world who have retained their skills. It’s tough to get in and it’s even tougher to
stay
in. It’s a shit job where we have to do shit things. We learn loyalty early, and that doesn’t end when someone leaves the teams. There are no ex-Delta Force solders. Once a Delta, always a Delta.” Ghost paused and looked Emily in the eye.
Apparently seeing the seriousness of his words was sinking in, he continued.
“I worked with a guy before I was stationed at Fort Hood. He got out, but he’s a highway patrolman who works down in San Antonio. As soon as we knew who it was that took you, I called him. He was a sniper.”
Those four words said it all. He. Was. A. Sniper. Thank God.
“Thank you.” Emily breathed. “And when you talk to your friend again, thank him for me too?”
“I will. We good, Fletch?” Ghost asked.
Emily had left the men alone while she’d gotten Annie settled. It had taken a while, the little girl seemed to be as hyped up as the rest of them. She wanted to go over what she’d done, and how Fletch had grabbed her, and then how she’d made her way back to home base with the Army Ranger. It was one big adventure for her, one that Emily knew would be rehashed over and over again, like the shooting at her school. But since the ending was a good one, Emily didn’t mind.
Obviously during that time, Ghost and Fletch had worked out what they were going to tell the general the next day.
“Are you guys gonna get to talk to the President?” Emily asked in awe.
Both Fletch and Ghost laughed. “Hopefully not.”
“But that’d be cool.”
“Trust me,” Fletch said, kissing Emily on the nose. “It would
not
be cool.”
“Whatever.”
“I’ll see you in a few hours,” Ghost told Fletch as he stood up to leave.
“Will you tell Rayne if she wants to come over tomorrow…I wouldn’t be opposed?” Emily asked, suddenly shy. She knew Rayne, they’d spent some time together, though they weren’t best buds yet. But Emily thought it might be nice to talk to another woman dating a Delta. They truly were a breed unto themselves, and she knew now she could use all the help she could get in understanding them.
“Will do.” Ghost leaned down and kissed the top of Emily’s head. “Glad you’re all right. Annie too. See you tomorrow, Fletch.”
Fletch didn’t bother to get up and see his friend out, he tightened his arm around Emily and asked her, “You good?”
“I’m good.”
“Are you really all right, or are you just saying that because it’s what you think I want to hear?”
Emily turned in Fletch’s arms and said earnestly, “I’m good. Seriously. You’re okay. I’m okay. Annie’s okay. I’m more than all right. Promise.”
“I almost lost you tonight.” Fletch’s words were muffled as he buried his face in her hair. It was just dawning on Emily that she should’ve been asking Fletch if
he
was all right instead of the other way around.
“You didn’t.”
“I would’ve if Ghost hadn’t called TJ.”
“But he did. While I can’t say I’m thrilled that I was that close to a bullet, I
can
say that I’m one hundred percent fine with the outcome. Fletch, look at me.”
“I can’t say that
I’m
thrilled you were that close to a bullet. He could’ve shot Jacks on the other side of the head…away from your face.” Fletch ran his hand through his hair, agitated at the thought of how close the bullet from the former Delta Force operative’s rifle had come to
her
skull.
“Fletch,” Emily said gently.
He finally looked up.
Emily waited until Fletch’s eyes met hers. “From the second I woke up in that container, until I heard and felt you behind me, I knew you’d somehow save me and Annie. That’s the
only
reason I allowed my six-year-old to wander off by herself. I knew you’d be out there. I trust you with my life, but perhaps more importantly, I trust you with
Annie’s
life. If tonight had to happen again, I’d want it to go down exactly the same way. I love you, Cormac Fletcher. I am so damn thankful I got up the courage to inquire about that apartment for rent.”
“Me too, darlin’, me too.”
“Will you get in trouble tomorrow?”
“I doubt it. The general is a stickler for the rules, he has to be, but the colonel will vouch for us, and I think what you told the general tonight went a long way.”
“Won’t he want to know who shot Jacks?”
“Yeah, but he won’t find out. TJ is back home, and from what Ghost has told me, he’s too good to leave any trace that he was here. The general is going to have to get used to the idea that he’ll never know who it was who shot that fucker.”
Emily yawned and closed her eyes as she settled even deeper into Fletch. She felt him turn sideways and pull her on top of him. Without opening her eyes, Emily groaned in contentment. “Man, this feels good.”
“I should’ve drawn you a bath. You’re gonna be bruised tomorrow.”
Emily shrugged. “Whatever. I’ve been bruised before. Not a big deal.”
“It’s a big deal to me,” Fletch returned resolutely.
“You can make it up to me later,” Emily mumbled, half asleep. “I love you.”
“Love you too, Em. Sleep. I’ve got you.”
“Don’t you need to lock the door? Set the alarm?”
“Nope, Ghost did it on his way out.”
“’Kay. Fletch?”
“Yeah, love?”
“Between losing a couple of years off my life during the school shooting, when I didn’t know if Annie was in the gym or not, to being blackmailed, and then tonight…I think I’ve had enough adventure to last me at
least
the rest of the year.”