Nightshade discarded her.., p.20

Nightshade (Discarded Heroes), page 20

 part  #1 of  Discarded Heroes Series

 

Nightshade (Discarded Heroes)
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  Her lip quivered, forcing tiny dimples into her chin. She shook her head. “A rescue team is coming.” A tear slipped free, mingling with the dirt on her face and forming a dark streak down her cheek.

  He started. “A rescue?” Jon clasped her shoulders. “You’re certain?” Only then as he held her and light streamed through the slats of the hut did he see it. Yellow tinged her skin. Jaundice. His stomach clenched. A fatal phase of the dengue fever.

  Shouts outside jerked them both rigid. Jon rushed to the wall and peeked through the wood. More than a dozen Higanti swarmed toward them, yelling and shouting. Faces streaked with red and white, they bore the blue cross that smeared from chest to belly. Two rushed forward. Several others seemed to be wrangling someone.

  “Get back,” Jon hissed, snatching Maecel from the bed, startling her awake. “Stay in the corner.” Even as he talked, he nudged them into the space between the wall and the foot of the cot. “Down.” He pushed on Kimber’s head just seconds before light burst into the hut.

  He spun—only to see the two warriors lunging at him with their sticks. “Back!” they demanded in a foreign tongue. “On the ground. Don’t look.”

  Jon complied, turning his face toward his wife and daughter. Despite Kimber’s gentle words and bouncing, Maecel shrieked.

  One guard started for them, but Jon leaped in between. Pain stabbed through his back. He grunted but withstood it, huddling with Kimber and Maecel.

  Seconds later the chaos ended. The hut darkened. Jon braved a glance to the side, verifying that the door was locked. “Okay,” he mumbled.

  “Are you okay?” Kimber asked as they both stood, hugging each other.

  “Fine.” The sting in his back would go away eventually.

  “They hit you,” she mumbled, her eyes glossing.

  Jon cupped her face. “I’m fine. Okay?”

  Behind him, he heard a soft crunch.

  He whipped around—and froze.

  Cowering in the corner, arms wrapped around her, was a young girl. Her face was badly beaten and swollen. But the eyes … he remembered the eyes.

  “Kezia?”

  CHAPTER 15

  You ready to see your baby, Mrs. Jacobs?”

  Flat on her back, Sydney stared up at the ceiling, wishing the doctor would say that a little more quietly. Having grown up in Richmond, she knew just about every woman in the office. And what if a friend sat on the other side of the wall?

  “Yes.” No. Yes. This baby she’d never planned … but wanted. Yet didn’t want. Guilt hung low and wide over her for even thinking that. Cutting ties with Max wouldn’t be as clean now that they’d have a child together.

  The OB squirted what felt like ice-cold gel on her belly, making her gasp. “Sorry. I guess the warmer isn’t working.”

  Taking the bottle of goo from the doctor, the nurse smiled down at Sydney. “So are you hoping for a boy or a girl?”

  “A healthy baby.”

  The Doppler glided over her slight protrusion as the doctor worked a keyboard. “I’m going to take measurements, check the fetus’s health; then we’ll get to the fun part.” The doctor worked quietly for several minutes, clicking, angling, and measuring, then typing.

  Mesmerized by the color 2-D imaging, Sydney stared at the monitor. There you are. Something deep and maternal welled up within her as she stared at her baby. A real, live growing and developing baby. Her baby. Tears pricked her eyes as she watched an arm swimming across the screen. A foot dashed out.

  She felt a kick against her belly.

  The doctor chuckled. “A feisty one. Doesn’t like me poking around.”

  Sydney laughed at the personality already budding in her womb. She wished for her mother’s hand while she caught the first glimpse of the child stirring up chaos in her life. Already like Max. Familiar longing slithered through her, aching for Max to be a part of this. But he wasn’t. And wouldn’t be. She just had to draw up her chin and survive as she’d always done.

  “Well, everything looks good. I see no abnormalities. The heartbeat is strong and steady.”

  Oh, thank You, Jesus. Sydney tried to stem the tears that slipped over her composure.

  “And,” the doctor said, angling the Doppler to the side, “there. Can you tell what it is?”

  It was difficult enough to make out the arms. Sydney wouldn’t even attempt a guess at the baby’s sex. “I haven’t a clue.”

  “It’s a boy. And according to the measurements, you’re right on target with the projected due date of June 1, which means you’ve got just a little less than four months left. You’re carrying small, but that won’t last much longer.” He chuckled.

  A son. Tears streamed down her face. Max would have a son. A new pain embedded itself in her heart. She and Bryce had grown up without a father, and she knew how much that had affected her brother. Even though Max had never told her exactly what had happened with his father, he detested being associated with the man.

  God, I want my son to know his father. He was a good man, honorable and strong. When he found out about this baby—his son—he’d demand to be a part of the child’s life, wanting to do the right thing. Sydney just wanted her husband and his love back.

  A soft touch to her shoulder reminded her she lay on a table with goo all over her belly and was flanked by a white-jacketed doctor and his nurse. “You okay, Mrs. Jacobs?”

  “Yes,” she mumbled, wiping her tears as the nurse cleaned her belly and lowered Sydney’s shirt so she could sit up. “Just overwhelmed.”

  “Do you have a name picked out?” the nurse asked, washing her hands.

  Shaking her head, Sydney realized that she had not fully accepted her child’s existence until this moment. “Not yet.”

  The doctor laughed. “Well, I’ve seen couples nearly end their marriage because they couldn’t agree on a name, so take your time with it.”

  An hour later and feeling borderline euphoric armed with her single snapshot and video disc of the baby, Sydney walked the aisles of a supercenter for groceries. She had no idea if she bought what she was supposed to buy, because every few minutes she tugged out the photo and stared at the two-dimensional image of her baby. Her son. She sighed—and froze as her gaze hit the infant section. Glancing down at the carpet that divided the infant department from the aisle, she felt that if she crossed that, it was like … no going back.

  Insane.

  She couldn’t back out now anyway. She pushed herself and the cart onto the carpeted area and browsed. Rounding one corner, she spotted a man and woman huddling over a portable scanner. He bent and kissed her, and she wrapped her arms around him.

  Throat raw, Sydney hurried past them, past the painful reminder that she was alone. Would she ever stop thinking in those terms? Would she ever feel whole again?

  A book of baby names caught her attention and stopped her. Flipping through a few pages only had her wrinkling her nose. None of them appealed to her. What would Max think of the name Devin? He’d probably call it too uppity. Smiling, she laid the book in her cart and started on—only to stop again. A small onesie seemed to dance under the tease of the air conditioning. Camo. BORN IN THE USA scrawled in red, white, and blue across the front. Sydney lifted the ultrasoft garment from the rack, rubbing the material between her fingers.

  Her phone rang, snatching her out of the moment. She laid the onesie on the book and answered the call. “This is Sydney.”

  “Sydney, you’re not going to believe this.”

  At the sound of Lane’s voice, she pushed her cart toward the front of the store. “What now? Is Buck threatening to fire me because I’m not in the office?”

  “No, but listen. You need to come first thing in the morning.”

  “He ordered me to take a week off after he yanked me from the story. I have two more days left.” And she was going to take them.

  “I have one name for you.”

  Sydney wheeled up to the register and started unloading the groceries, silently daring him to make a difference in her obstinate decision to wait out Buck’s grumpiness. “Okay.”

  “Holden Crane.”

  “I’ll be there at eight.”

  A scream shattered the quiet beach.

  Max spun, squinting against the sun-drenched Filipino shoreline. A dozen feet away, the Kid, dressed in nice slacks and an expensive button-down, writhed against the two hulking giants carrying him down the dock. He screamed like a little girl. “Put me down!”

  “Say that again,” Legend boomed as he and Cowboy—one holding the Kid’s ankles, the other his arms—swung him back and forth toward the churning waters. “Say, ‘Marines are wimps,’ again.” Each swing gave them more momentum.

  “I take it back! I take it baaacckkk.” He was hurled up into the air, flipping like a fish out of water.

  Splash!

  Cowboy and Legend high-fived.

  Max laughed as the Kid burst up out of the water, shouting and vowing revenge. Dressed up for a night on the town, the team waited as Marshall dragged himself to dry ground. He glared up through thick black hair plastered to his face. “That was uncalled for.”

  “What you said was uncalled for,” Legend corrected. “Look around you, Kid. We are the best, the elite of the elite. Each of us deserves respect.”

  Marshall pushed his hair out of his face, panting. “I have to go and change.”

  “We’ll wait,” Cowboy said, the laughter clinging to his words.

  The sparkle of the water glistening under the bright glow of a full moon, beauty unparalleled, stretched around Max. In the hills of the island. Over the surging ocean. Serene and peaceful. Reminded him of his honeymoon in Maui. Watching Sydney trudge through the waves back to their rented beach house, knowing that she was his, forever and always.

  Only forever wasn’t forever. And always was only a memory.

  “Sure is beautiful.”

  Max eyed the cowboy, the only member of the team in jeans. Granted, the jeans were crisp and dark, making him look just as dressed up as the rest. Finally, he turned his attention back to the waters. “Ever notice how peaceful it is, how calming? One of the reasons I became a SEAL. I run and swim to work off tension.”

  “Then you’ve been swimming for what, three years straight?” Cowboy’s tease morphed into a laugh. “It’s a good way to work it off, Frogman. But what do you do when you can’t swim or run?”

  Explode.

  “That’s where God makes the difference,” Cowboy said. “Did you do that reading yet?”

  Max shook his head. “Can’t be that easy.”

  Cowboy chuckled. “That’s the exact thought that keeps you from God. It’s part of our sin nature to believe more in our own mortality and inept power than in God’s sovereignty and majesty.” He pointed to the waters. “Look at it, Max. All this was an accidental explosion of atoms? I don’t think so. Neither are you. God made you just as you are, but something broke down on the way to here. Only God can show you the blueprints and how things should work. Open up. Let Him. I think you’ll be surprised—and maybe, just maybe, if you get ‘er done, that beautiful wife of yours will still be available. And waiting.”

  The words speared Max’s soul. Like little piranhas, the thought of Sydney with another man, the thought of her going on with her life, the memories of all they’d shared in the six years they’d known each other, ate at him. Pecked and chewed his courage. He’d failed her so completely and utterly. She was the one person he was willing to be real with, give 100 percent to—outside the SEALs—and he’d failed.

  “I can see how much you still love her, Max. Part of God’s plan for you was Sydney. Your pride got in the way. Don’t you think it’s time to let go of that and reach for her, for God?” Cowboy slapped Max’s shoulder. “We’re going to check on the Kid. See if he needs more saltwater to wash his mouth out.”

  Sand crunched gently under Cowboy’s feet as he plodded up the sand bank to the strip of hotels and tourist traps lining the street. With one last glance at the waters and the past, Max headed back to his room at one of the four hotels the team had holed up in.

  You’re running again.

  He stretched his neck, ignoring the conviction that penetrated deeper than he’d admit. Never had liked thinking, sitting around bemoaning choices and events. Life was cruel and unforgiving. He’d learned to accept that when his father had walked out on him and his mother on Max’s thirteenth birthday. He doubted his absentee father had even known it was his birthday—he’d had that other woman to distract him. Then his mother disappeared, leaving Max to be raised by his grandmother, a wonderful woman who’d tried her best to raise an angry teen.

  Max marveled—why hadn’t he thought of Grandma Lollie in years? She was a good woman. But Max ran over her like a quad over dunes—behavior he profoundly regretted.

  Just like with Sydney.

  He let himself into the room and locked the dead bolt. Collapsed on the bed, he stared at the cracked and brown-stained ceiling. What was with his treatment of Lollie and Sydney? How did he never see the parallel until tonight? Two women who’d loved him completely and always given him the benefit of the doubt, and he’d torched their efforts. Torched their attempts to attach roots to his heart.

  Pulling himself up, he rubbed a hand over his chin. He bent forward and rested his arms on his knees. Lollie had died shortly after Max left for the military. She’d probably believed he hated her, resented her. Truthfully, he’d been so humiliated by his parents and so convinced that he must’ve been the cause for their hasty departures that he had pushed her away, not wanting to hurt her or be hurt by her when she realized the trouble he was.

  But Sydney …

  He felt like an animal. An angry, violent animal. He hated the way he dealt with things—or in more cases than one, didn’t deal with them. Yet everything in her, everything she’d given and shared with him, left him aching for more. Left him wanting her to see that he wasn’t a screwup.

  But I am.

  God made you just as you are. Cowboy’s words seeped past the condemnation. So, had God made a screwup?

  A nagging desire wormed through his chest to read up on King David like the cowboy had told him to. He had nothing to lose. Max huffed and lifted his almost indestructible laptop from the bag and powered it up. He searched for an online Bible then stared at the books of the Bible listed on the page and paused. Where was the story of David? What had Cowboy said?

  Irritated that he couldn’t remember, he went back to a search engine and typed in “King David.” Dozens of pages of results popped up. He picked one randomly. Over the next few hours, he read details of the famous king’s life, of his riches, his wise and incredibly wealthy son Solomon, and … of David’s failings. Killing a soldier under his command so he could take the man’s wife, whom he’d impregnated. Then the punishment for that mistake as he pleaded with God for the life of his son.

  Yet when God did not grant that request and the boy died, David stood up and went on with his life. Max clicked on the commentary link, which explained that David had realized that he had been seeking his way instead of God’s way. As a result, his son had died.

  Reading more, he saw a dichotomy. God called David a man after his own heart, yet He refused David the privilege of building the temple, saying David had been a warrior and bore too much blood on his hands.

  Max looked at his own hands. He curled his fingers inward and clenched them. He’d killed. Many. As a soldier, it was part and parcel of the package. A grim reality he never liked. Yet the adrenaline rush left him wanting more.

  He shoved away from the laptop and stalked to the barred window overlooking the small bay. Night-blackened water stretched toward the shore, kissing it and then sneaking away into the night. His gaze wandered to the twinkling stars in the sky, and he sighed.

  “God …”

  Everything in him closed up.

  He couldn’t do this, couldn’t face the deep well of burning fury that choked him, made him—

  “No.” He braced his hands against the windowsill. “I have to do this.” Every muscle tensed, he pushed his eyes to the heavens. “God, I—”

  Bang! Bang!

  “Open up.” Legend’s voice stomped through the air.

  Defeat leeched his strength as he crossed the room, unlocked the door, and yanked it back.

  “Intel’s in. Time to go.”

  CHAPTER 16

  Could you repeat that, please?”

  The man in the blazer and jeans smiled at her, looking and apparently feeling pretty cocky. “CougarNews will fund the trip to London, arrange the meeting with a contact who has the information you need, and we will grant first rights to print.”

 

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