Authors: Lora Leigh
won’t.”
“She was a beautiful little girl. I saw her pictures later.” His voice was agonized,
tormented.
Chaya heard the pain-filled moan that left her throat. Even when she was being tortured,
she hadn’t made a sound like that.
“He stole her.” He groaned the accusation as she felt his forehead press against hers. “She
was safe with your sister, wasn’t she, Chay? If he had just left her there.”
“Don’t do this.”
“She looked like you. She had your smile and your hair. Your innocence.”
“Stop it!” She screamed the words at him, tearing from his embrace as she pressed her
fist against her stomach and swallowed back the sickness rising in her throat. “You didn’t
know her. You didn’t raise her, and you didn’t love her. And it’s none of your damned
business.”
Beth. Sweet Beth.
“She was three years old, and your husband had her flown to Iraq. While you were being
tortured, she was landing at the airport in a military transport believing she would see her
mommy again.”
Her heart felt as though it were shattering in her chest now, and she didn’t want to
collapse from the pain of it. She had lost everything in that damned desert. She didn’t
want to remember it, and she didn’t want to think about it or talk about it. Especially not
with the man who had been there to witness it, who had held her back, who had covered
her with his own body to protect her while her child died.
“Why?” She turned on him, tears she swore she wouldn’t shed escaping now. “Why are
you doing this to me? Do you think I don’t know what happened?”
Her voice was rasping. She sounded nothing like herself. She sounded like the demented
creature she had been the day she lost Beth.
“Army Intelligence didn’t know he had your child.” His expression looked as agonized as
hers felt. “They didn’t give the orders to bomb that hotel, did they, Chay? Someone else
did. Something fucked up like it always fucks up, and your baby was killed.”
She shook her head. Her body shook. Tremors raced through her as she stared at the
ceiling. But she didn’t see the ceiling; she saw the missiles, ribbons of steam flowing
behind them, the hiss of flight, the fiery destruction with impact.
“I know who killed her,” she whispered. She had always known.
Her husband. Beth’s father. He had killed their child just as surely as he had ordered his
wife’s torture and death. But she knew even more than that. She knew there had been
others, those who knew what her husband had done, and they had struck out. They had
killed her child when there had been a chance of saving her.
She lowered her eyes back to Natches and saw the pain, his eyes so dark with so many
emotions. Grief and sorrow and need.
“You hold her between us as though it were my fault,” he said then, his voice graveled,
accusing. “As though I ordered the attack or I arranged her death, Chay.”
Chaya swallowed tightly and turned away from him again. She didn’t know which way to
turn, which way to run. She wanted to run. She wanted to escape the shared memories,
and she wanted to escape her own loss.
Natches had been with her when they had learned where Beth and Chaya’s husband,
Craig, were staying. The suspected headquarters of a terrorist cell. He had raced after her
when she went to rescue her child. He had thrown her to the street, held her down, and
tried to shield her eyes as missiles slammed into the building.
“I held you when you identified her. I held you then, and I held you through the night.
Did you think I wouldn’t hold you longer, Chay, if you had given me the chance?”
FIVE
Craig Cornwell had been a major in Army Intelligence and a traitor. He had been selling
secrets to Iraqi terrorists, and when he’d known he would be identified for it, he had
arranged for his daughter to be brought to Iraq, believing he could hold her for Chaya’s
cooperation in helping him escape.
He couldn’t have known the cell he was tied to had already been targeted and that their
headquarters would be taken out so violently.
Natches stared into her face now, paper white, her golden hazel and brown eyes dark with
the memories that tore at him as well. And he wanted to howl out in rage, in agony.
Because he felt the need to wipe the horror from her. To tear aside that wall she had
placed between them.
“I don’t blame you.” She tried to tear herself from his hold again. “I never blamed you
for her death.”
“You blamed me for saving you instead,” he snapped, fury rising inside him at the
thought of losing her like that. “Is that what you wanted for me, Chaya? For us? To have
it all end that way?”
And despite his anger, he could only touch her with tenderness. He lifted his free hand,
brushed back the hair that fell over her forehead, and he ached.
“There was no us.”
She only infuriated him with that statement, because he knew better. He’d always known
better. From the moment he’d torn into that fucking cell and seen her struggling to drag
that dead guard’s clothes on, her eyes swollen shut, lips bloodied, and courage shining in
her face, he’d known there was going to be an “us.” It was just a matter of time.
And later, buried in that hole, waiting on extraction, he shouldn’t have been attracted to
her. She had been in shock. She had been hurt and fighting so valiantly to stay conscious.
And in such a short time, she had dug her way inside him. Into a place he hadn’t realized
existed within the killer he had been shaping himself into.
He’d breathed in her pain when she’d realized her husband had betrayed her to the
enemy, that he had betrayed his country and their marriage. And he had soaked in her
pain the night she’d lost her child. He’d stroked her trembling body as she’d begged him
to hold back the horror of what she had seen. He had taken her, amid both their tears, and
the next morning, when he’d awoken, she had been gone.
He released her now, grimacing, feeling his flesh tighten over his muscles, as though
something within him stretched dangerously, confined by his own skin and growing
impatient.
“I guess there wasn’t, because you were gone the next morning,” he bit out.
“And you were gone that night when I returned,” she snapped back, anger trembling in
her voice, anger and something else. A finely threaded emotion that had his gaze
sharpening on her pale face. “You didn’t come back.”
Natches stared back at her, his eyes narrowing. Had she come looking for him when he
had believed she was gone?
“I was called in that afternoon for a mission. It was a quick strike; I was flown directly to
my drop-off. I returned three days later, and you had left Baghdad,” he told her.
He remembered his rage. He had torn apart his quarters with it, and then he had torn apart
the hotel room they had shared. The MPs sent after him hadn’t fared very well either.
As he stared at her now, he remembered all the reasons why he had gone insane over
losing her. The lush lips, the stubborn angle of her chin. The way she knew how to smile,
the feel of her coming alive against him. He had known all that before the day she had
lost little Beth. He’d known it because he had spent two weeks haunting that damned
hospital, teasing a kiss out of her, a laugh. Knowing she was married, knowing she was
bound to a traitor.
And she had known. She had known, and like a flower opening to the sun, she had slowly
begun opening for him.
She shook her head now, her eyes, that deep golden gaze locked with his, the color
shifting, shadowed with so much pain. “Timothy said he checked. He was there that
morning I went in to finalize custody of Beth’s remains.”
She crossed her arms over her breasts as though she were huggingthe pain inside herself
when all he wanted to do was wipe it from her. “He wanted me to leave immediately to
take Beth home, then join DHS. I wanted to talk to you first.” She shrugged stiffly. “You
were gone. He said he checked to see if you were on a mission and you weren’t.”
Lying bastard. Natches grunted at that. “DHS ordered the mission. They had a line on
Nassar Mallah. I went out after him. When I finished and returned, you were gone.”
Chaya bit her lip as she moved across the room and lifted herself heavily onto one of the
stools that sat at the counter. She looked tired; she looked hopeless. And that look tore at
his heart.
“Sounds like Timothy.” Her voice was nearly toneless. “But it didn’t matter, not really. I
couldn’t function then, Natches. Not for either of us.”
God he wanted to hold her now. What the hell was it about this woman? She was inside
him, and five years of fighting it hadn’t managed to push her out of his soul.
Was it love? Hell if it felt like anything he had seen out of Dawg and Rowdy. He didn’t
feel gentle. He felt like he wanted to devour her from head to toe. He wanted to roll
around in oil with her. He wanted to lift her to that counter and spend hours eating the
tastiest flesh he’d ever found between a woman’s thighs.
She was hurting, enmeshed in memories that he knew had to be ripping her guts to
shreds. The sight of it made him crazy. He would do anything, say anything, to ease her
pain, but by God she wasn’t hiding from him anymore.
She held that past between them like a spiked shield, and he’d had enough of it. Five
years. He’d let her torment him through endless, aching nights. He’d suffered every
nightmare he knew she suffered, and his pain for her sliced through his soul with each
memory.
“You’ve had long enough to begin functioning then.” He had to force himself to stand
back from her, to not touch her.
She looked lost, lost and lonely, almost as broken as she had looked the day they told her
her husband was the traitor who revealed her to the terrorists who had kidnapped her.
He watched as her shoulders straightened then, her chin lifted. He didn’t know what the
hell she had in her mind now, but he knew exactly what she intended to do, and he’d be
damned if he would let her.
She was not walking out on him again. Not like this. This was the closest he’d managed
to get to her since the night her daughter had died. And then, it had been comfort, not
need, not hunger. She had needed someone to hold on to. Someone to take her away from
reality while she found a way to handle the coming grief.
He’d given her that. He wasn’t willing to be that someone to her again though. He wasn’t
a warm body to hold back the pain, and damn her to hell, he was sick and damned tired of
being relegated to her past. A part of a memory she desperately wanted to forget.
“I would have divorced him for one night with you.” And all the need, the hunger, the
driving, aching desperation he felt himself was echoed in her voice.
Her declaration surprised him though. And he could tell by the tone of her voice that it
filled her with guilt.
She turned to him then, her gaze haunted. “Using the excuse that our marriage had been
lost before then doesn’t help. I took vows, and I meant them. But I was going to leave
him, even before I knew he had betrayed me. I was going to leave him, Natches, and I
made that decision because of you.”
He could feel the “but” coming, and he knew it was going to piss him off. He could feel it
in the tension gathering in the air around them.
“He was a bastard,” he snarled before she could say anything more. “You knew it, even if
you didn’t have proof of it.”
He had known it. Any man who allowed his wife to face danger alone deserved to lose
her to another man. Women were precious. Women who loved, who honored their vows,
were more precious than the finest gems. And Chaya would have honored those vows
until the ink dried on the divorce papers. He knew it. And sometimes he wondered if he
hadn’t hated that part of her.
“That doesn’t excuse it,” she said, staring at him from where she sat, her expression
somber, her gaze flickering with guilt. “I wanted your kiss, Natches. I wanted you; I
wanted your touch and your voice whispering all those naughty little secrets you used to
whisper to me when I was in the hospital. I wanted it. I was married, and I ached for it.
And I paid for it.”
It took a moment, one long, disbelieving moment, for that comment to soak into his head
and light the spark of his normally rational temper.
“Son of a bitch.” He stared back at her in complete amazement. “I’ll be a son of a bitch.
You’ve let that bastard steal your soul even from the fucking grave.” His voice rose as he
spoke. “Is that how you’re blaming yourself now, Chay? That Beth was taken from you
because you wanted me?”
Anger poured from him as he watched her flinch, saw the truth in her eyes. Stubborn
pride lined every curve of her body. She actually believed what she was saying. Believed
every word of it.
“I don’t expect you to understand,” she whispered, her voice hoarse.
“I understand this, by God. If you were my wife, Chaya—my woman—you’d never,
fucking never, be on a mission without me. You’d never face danger alone, and you’d
never know a night that I wasn’t in your damned bed. How long had that bastard been out
of your bed?”
“That’s not the point.” Her voice trembled. He could see the fear in her eyes now, a fear