Read SEAL Under Siege (Men of Valor) Online
Authors: Liz Johnson
Shaking her head, Ashley’s face became a mask of uncertainty and warring emotions. Finally, in a small voice, she asked, “Why isn’t he taking Robin?”
Ashley asked the question as if Staci should know the girl, and her stomach twisted painfully. “I’m not sure. Who is she?”
“Oh.” Ashley was definitely surprised that Staci didn’t know about Robin.
So, who was she? Probably someone who would fit in at a navy ball. Someone without a red scar marring her face. Someone beautiful and elegant.
Someone whole.
Staci sighed as the mental image of a statuesque blonde in a figure-flattering gown on Tristan’s arm flashed across the back of her eyelids.
That was the type of woman he’d want.
She didn’t need to know Robin to know what type of woman he’d usually take to this kind of event.
Because whatever his type, it wasn’t Staci.
He’d made that clear on the phone. This was part of uncovering the information on the map and keeping her safe from an American terrorist. He didn’t want her. And she couldn’t blame him.
* * *
The next morning Staci was ready for another training session just as she’d promised. But no matter how clear Tristan’s instructions on the blue mat, she couldn’t focus on anything but the image she’d conjured of his Robin. Who was she? What was she like? How long had they been together? Or not together?
“Hold a key between your fingers like this.” He held up a fist, one jagged key protruding from between his middle and ring fingers, the rest of the key chain clasped in his palm. “See? Now try to hit me. Dig it in deep.”
She nodded, taking the keys from him and doing like he’d shown. Except when she swung at him, her hand opened, and the keys clattered to the mat. They bounced twice, and she could do nothing but stare at them as he stooped to pick them up.
As he knelt on one knee with one forearm propped on the other leg, he gazed up at her.
She gasped, coughing on the sudden intake and concurrent lurch of her pulse.
If he only knew.
There, with mussed brown hair, wide blue eyes filled with compassion and an easy grin, he looked like he might be proposing. Except for the absent ring, everything about his stance called to her childhood fantasies of romantic proposals.
Even the unusual location fulfilled her dreams of a memorable tale to tell friends and family.
If she were another woman—any other woman—maybe he would have been.
Instead, he frowned up at her. “You okay? You seem distracted.”
“Yes, well...” She couldn’t very well admit that she kept picturing another woman in his arms, and it made her heart ache and her muscles limp. That when he held her, it made her feel like a real woman, if just for a few minutes, which made it all the harder when reality sunk back in.
His gaze dropped to where his hand wrapped around the keys. “Want to tell me what’s going on? You didn’t say two words to me last night.”
“I was tired.”
“You went to bed at twenty-one thirty. Still tired?”
No. Yes. He didn’t need to know that she’d stayed awake for hours, huddled under her covers, trying to force the picture of him with an imaginary woman from her mind every time she squeezed her eyes closed. That she’d finally given up and stared through the darkness at a ceiling she couldn’t see because it was easier than wondering if he was in love with someone else.
She could only blink like an owl in response to his question.
Of course she was tired.
But that wasn’t why she was dropping keys and throwing halfhearted punches.
“I’m sorry that you’re under so much pressure. I know you probably don’t want to go to the ball, but I can’t think of any other way for you to interact with so many men on the base.”
There. He’d just given her the out she’d hoped for. “But won’t you get in trouble for being seen with me? We’re not supposed to spend time together. You said so yourself.”
He ruffled his hair with a flat hand, never taking his gaze from her face. “We’ll fly under the radar as best we can. And I’ve talked to my superiors. They understand enough of the situation that we’ll be in the clear.” The corner of his mouth rose in a lopsided grin. “Besides, you won’t look much like your picture in the papers, and we’ll just keep from using your last name as much as possible.”
Her shoulders fell, her breath escaping through tight lips.
“If you could pinpoint the voice of the man you heard in Lybania, wouldn’t it be worth it?”
He thought she was upset about going to the ball. He thought that’s why she kept dropping things, bumping into walls and refusing to answer his questions.
If only he could understand that the minute she spoke, she knew Robin’s name would fly out of her mouth.
It was eating her up inside not knowing who Robin was and what she meant to him. Not knowing if she had grown far too fond of a taken man. Even her concern about the gala stemmed from her uncertainty about Robin.
She rubbed her eyes with her fingers, blinking her contacts back into place until the contours of his hair came into focus. She managed two quick breaths, trying to formulate some sort of response. Some kind of explanation.
She wanted to go to the ball with him. She just didn’t want to go when there should be someone else on his arm.
She wanted to hear the voices of the other men on the base, searching out a familiar lilt or recognizable phrase.
She wanted to find the man she’d heard inside her jail cell and make sure justice was done. And then she wanted to go back to her old life, where she didn’t spend every day in close quarters with a man who insisted on making her long for a different destiny.
But her words fell short.
And vanished altogether when he put his hand on her waist.
It was heavy, his fingers splayed over the small of her back, his thumb rubbing a slow circle on her side, a gentle prodding to open up to him. Beneath long, pale lashes, his eyes implored her for something more than broken glances and trembling hands.
She took a fortifying breath. “I want to go, but...” Her words were more air than sound, so she cleared her throat before continuing, torn between wishing that he’d pull his hand away and that he’d keep it right where it was forever. Chewing on her lip, she closed her eyes and just let out the truth as fast as she could. “Don’t you think Robin might be upset if you take me?”
He jerked his hand away, and a chill swept down her side in the absence of his embrace. “Robin?”
She risked peeking at him through one eye. His eyebrows reached toward his hairline; his mouth hung open.
“How’d you hear about—” He cut himself short. “Ashley.” With eyes reflecting an internal storm, he shook his head.
“Please don’t be mad at her. When I told her about the ball, she just asked why you weren’t taking Robin.” Suddenly the words wouldn’t stop flowing, and she didn’t want them to. “And she didn’t tell me who Robin was, but I just figured that there was someone special in your life, and I wouldn’t ever want to get in the way of that. And this is important—but maybe there’s another way. I just don’t want to be in the way. And I don’t want Robin to be mad. And maybe she’d feel better if she could meet me. Or knew that there was nothing going on.” She flapped her hand between them, feeling ridiculous with Tristan still on bended knee. Pushing the terrible nerves in her stomach away, she opened her mouth to plunge forward.
Maybe if she just kept talking, she’d pass out and hit her head hard enough to forget that she’d ever blabbered on like this, as he kept a perfectly straight face.
“This isn’t Ashley’s fault. She’s just concerned about you. And I’m a guest in your house, and...”
Her words died on her lips as the corner of his mouth slowly rose, his eyes gleaming.
Ever so slowly, he stood, his hand brushing her arm and no more than a breath between them. When he was all the way upright, he bent his head, looking straight down into her eyes, his smile now full-blown.
“I guess I never got around to telling Ashley.”
“What?” The word was a croak. But it was all she could handle as her skin buzzed with his nearness.
“Robin hasn’t been in the picture for more than a year.”
TEN
T
ristan stumbled back as Staci pushed flat palms against his chest, the force of her impact catching him off guard.
“You jerk,” she said.
“Good hit.” He laughed as he caught her wrists in his hands and tugged her closer.
“You let me just keep going on and on.” Her chin bent low. Long hair hanging over her shoulders, she shook her head. “Why didn’t you stop me?”
His smile dimmed as he tucked her hair behind her ear. But he didn’t really have an answer for her. At least not one that made any sense. He couldn’t just tell her how cute she’d been, her eyes so filled with concern.
“You should have stopped me. I sounded like an idiot.” She sighed, still not looking up from the piece of mat between her tennis shoes. “Maybe I am one. A useless idiot.”
His fingers drifted up her arms, until he cupped her elbows. The space between them vanished. Battling the tension around his heart, he skimmed his fingers back down her arms. “You’re not an idiot. And you’re most certainly not useless. I’m a jerk. You’re right. I should have stopped you, and I’m sorry. I wasn’t expecting you to ask about Robin. I didn’t think you knew who she was.”
“I don’t.”
He held her at arm’s length then, ducking down until he could see her face. Glistening pink lips had all but disappeared as she chewed on them, her jaw in constant motion as she ran her fingers down the side of her face. She refused to look at him, and the band pulled tighter around his chest.
Taking a shallow breath, he shot a glance around the room. When he was certain they were alone, he said, “I didn’t tell Ashley because I didn’t want her to know.”
Big green eyes, filled with curiosity, fluttered up at him. “What didn’t you want her to know?”
“That Robin and I stopped seeing each other.”
As though he’d spoken the invitation, she slipped her hand into his, holding it as though she could squeeze the hurt from his past. “I’m sorry.”
He took a quick step back, suddenly unsure of what to do with the hand she’d captured. He’d had no problem holding her close to comfort her before. But this reversal of roles where she consoled him didn’t sit quite right.
Of course, that didn’t mean he was eager to let go of her hand, either.
He just had to keep himself from getting used to the feeling of having her around. It wouldn’t last forever. It couldn’t.
“Why didn’t you want Ashley to know?” Her words were as gentle as the breath that tickled his arm.
The short version. He could just keep it simple. She didn’t have to know the whole story, the part that still felt like a knife to his chest every time he thought of it. He didn’t want her pity or need her sympathy.
And he most certainly didn’t want to relive his most terrible memory—what happened with Phoebe that made his relationship with Robin doomed from the start. No, he wouldn’t bring that up.
Especially not in front of this woman, who carried her own tortured past.
“After Ashley and Matt got married, my sister started worrying about me. Worried that I’d end up old and alone.”
“You’re not old. Not yet, anyway.”
He laughed. “Thanks for that.”
Her head tilted back, her eyes filled with concern. “Why would she be worried that you’d end up alone?”
Oh, the million-dollar question. The one guaranteed to give him heartburn. He’d rather face down another building full of tangos than answer her question. Her words held no contempt or unkindness. She hadn’t meant to dredge up old memories and the bitter past.
But he couldn’t tell her.
“Was there someone else before Robin?”
He didn’t have to say it. He didn’t have to answer her question. He did anyway. “Yes.”
Staci’s thumb on the back of his hand rubbed in a soothing circle, and he let his shoulders relax, the tightness in his chest releasing. Maybe he could tell her a little. Just enough to satiate her curiosity.
“Her name was Phoebe.”
“Tell me about her.”
It had been more than four years. He’d dated Robin since then, been promoted, and even learned to be happy for Matt and Ashley. But the memory still crashed through him, stealing his breath and leaving his muscles limp. How could he speak the words?
It was better to avoid them altogether, right?
Better to dodge the truth, cover the emotional scars and keep it together.
Even better to walk away before he began longing for something that he didn’t have a right to want. Something that couldn’t be his.
Something that was more and more attractive the longer he held on to Staci.
But he couldn’t be both a SEAL and a spouse. He couldn’t be abroad saving the world and save his love, too.
Phoebe had proven that.
So then, why was having Staci this close so sweet?
Oh, Lord.
His breath caught on the two-word prayer, his chest a battleground of agony as he pulled Staci into his arms and thought of Phoebe.
He didn’t want to think about her. He didn’t want to talk about her. And he couldn’t give up her memory.
Staci leaned into him. “I mean, you don’t have to say anything if you don’t want to.”
Good. He didn’t want to. But his mouth didn’t get the message, and suddenly he was talking about her. “We met when I was just out of SEAL school. She was incredible. Funny and smart and intent on being a veterinarian. She loved animals, always bringing strays back to her apartment. I think I fell in love with her the first time she made me pull over on an old two-lane highway to check on a wounded dog. We took it to a pet hospital, and she held on to my hand so tight that I couldn’t feel my fingers anymore. And then she cried when the vet said the mutt was going to be fine thanks to her.
“I’d never met anyone like her. So full of life and joy. Always checking in on her elderly neighbors and volunteering at the humane society. She said it kept her busy while I was deployed.”
“Were you gone a lot?”
“I did two six-month tours while we were dating. She never complained, so I knew she was the one. I proposed the day after I got back from my second tour.”
Staci wrapped her arms around his waist. “She sounds perfect.” There was a note of something pained in her voice, but he couldn’t quite put his finger on it.
“She almost was.”
Silence surrounded them. Staci was waiting for the rest of the story, but he didn’t know if he could tell it. Didn’t know if he could survive another chest wound. Rehashing the past didn’t do him any good. He’d never talked with Ashley about it, barely said two words to Matt right after the funeral. There wasn’t much to say.
“What happened?”
He’d never said the words aloud. Four years and everyone who should know did. He’d never had to speak them. A fist around his heart made him doubt if he even could. But he wanted Staci to know. For some reason it was important that she understand his past and why they could have no future. He squeezed his eyes closed and took a deep breath. “I was on a short mission, and she was killed in a carjacking gone wrong about a month before we were supposed to get married.”
He shook his head and dropped his arms. He couldn’t hold Staci so close and grieve for Phoebe, too. It was just too much. Stepping back, forcing Staci to release her grip as well, he stared into her face. Pity and tears shone in her emerald eyes, but she didn’t look away.
“I am so sorry.” She blinked and rubbed a knuckle under each of her eyes. “I didn’t know.”
Jabbing one hand through his hair, the other firmly planted on his hip, he did the last thing he normally would. He looked away. It was too hard to meet her gaze. “I was gone, and I couldn’t protect her. I lost my chance for a future and a family in a split second. And I was thirteen thousand miles away.”
He covered his head with his hand, bending his neck until his chin met his chest. His words were still tinged with bitterness, the pain still so acute. Yet somehow he felt the tiniest bit lighter inside.
Had he missed out by not talking about this with someone before?
When she finally spoke, her voice shook, like she was the one with all the regrets. “I’m glad you told me.” She slipped her hand back into his and said, “Let’s go home.”
* * *
Staci wrapped an escaped curl at her temple around her finger, then slowly pulled her hand away as it bounced back into place.
“Your hair is so pretty up like this.”
She glanced up to meet Ashley’s eyes in her reflection, and they shared a smile as Ashley pushed one more pin into place. Only an abundance of hairspray and bobby pins could keep her dark hair swept up into the French twist, a few loose locks framing her face. “Thank you for helping me get ready for tonight.”
Her lips parted as her smile reached all the way to her eyes. “There’s nowhere else I’d rather be.”
Staci shifted her gaze back to the vanity mirror in Ashley’s room. Despite the perfect makeup that Ashley had meticulously applied, she turned just enough to see her scar, its presence a reminder of everything she’d faced, and everything that was yet to be revealed.
“If only...” There were too many to say them all. If only there was no scar. If only she’d never been in that prison. If only she were just a woman dressing up for an evening out with a man who really cared for her. If only Tristan could be that man.
If only she could be the woman he deserved.
She clamped her shimmering lips together and closed her eyes against the rush of wishes.
She didn’t have to be bitter or angry about the things that would never be. She didn’t have to long for them. It didn’t do her any good.
There was no wishing herself whole.
Four days before at their training session, Tristan had said he’d hoped for a family. When he was ready again to look for love, he’d look for someone who could give him what he wanted.
It wouldn’t be her.
Ashley’s voice in her ear stopped her fingers from brushing across her cheek. “Try not to touch your face. Especially right there.”
“All right. I’ll try.” But she couldn’t make any promises as the lump in her stomach swelled with every passing moment.
In less than an hour she’d be on the base at Coronado. She’d be among the navy men, listening, searching for a familiar voice. And if she heard it?
What then?
The rock that had been a petty annoyance in her stomach suddenly burst. What then, indeed? Would she motion to Tristan, and he’d just know? And would he confront the man then and there?
And what if the conspirator recognized her first? What if he knew her and tried to keep her silent?
Sweat burst onto her forehead, and Ashley was there in an instant, dabbing an oil-free pad against the makeup. “I’m not sure what happened. It looked great a moment ago. Are you too warm?”
“Just nervous, I guess.” She rubbed her damp palms against a tissue instead of on the green silk dress that skimmed her legs.
“Don’t worry. Tristan will take care of you tonight. You’ll have a good time.”
She was sure of the first, but the second remained to be seen. Despite her dry mouth, she managed to swallow the fear that bubbled up just as Tristan knocked on the door.
“You about ready in there?”
Ashley let him in while Staci picked up her purse and a sparkling black wrap that wouldn’t even begin to keep her warm against the evening chill blowing in off the ocean. But somehow her black hooded sweatshirt didn’t quite match the flowing silk that reached just to the top of her strappy black heels.
With clutch and scarf in hand, she looked up and straight into Tristan’s unblinking eyes. Everywhere her skin danced with goose bumps, as if his gaze was tangible. Immediately, her hand shot up to cover her scar, but she stopped just in time at Ashley’s quick shake of the head.
“You look—” His voice broke, and he cleared his throat. “You look...really nice, Staci.”
“Thank you.” She tried to keep the disappointment from her tone. Three hours of dress shopping with Ashley. Two and half hours on her hair and makeup. And she still only looked “nice.”
Right. Nice.
She shouldn’t have hoped for more, and she began to chastise herself for it. But as her gaze swept over him, she lost track of every thought except how good Tristan looked in his uniform. His black dress shoes shone in the overhead light beneath crisp and perfectly creased black slacks. His matching black jacket boasted a row of small medals over his heart above the parallel rows of three shimmering gold buttons. A black bowtie at his throat topped off the immaculate presentation. Even his usually tousled hair was a little bit straighter, a little more polished.
The smirking smile was just the same as during their training sessions, though.
“You got a haircut.”
“There’s going to be a senator and a handful of admirals there tonight. Thought I should look my best.”
Mission accomplished.
He held out his hand, and she slipped hers into it. Despite all the contact they’d had at the gym, every time he’d held her and the time he’d thrown her over his shoulder during her rescue, this felt like the most intimate contact they’d ever shared.
“You kids have fun,” Ashley laughed as she held the front door open for them.
“You will call if you need anything?” Staci turned back at the last minute.
“Of course. But I won’t need anything. I’m absolutely fine.” She rubbed her hand over her belly. “Still two weeks to go and not a contraction in sight. You both have a good time.” Then she dropped her voice to a conspiratorial whisper. “You look amazing, Staci.”
He led her to the driveway where his truck sat. “Are we taking that?”
His eyes narrowed. “What else would we take?”
She looked down at her skirt then back up at him. “I might need a hand.”
Understanding lit his eyes in a flash. He walked her to the passenger side and pulled the door open. Pinching a piece of silk between her thumb and finger and lifting her skirt out of the way, she moved to put her foot onto the running board.
But he beat her to it, sliding his hands around her waist and lifting her into the seat as if he’d done it every time she’d ridden in this truck.
He disappeared, slamming her door behind him.