Read WAR: Opposition: (WAR Book 3) Online
Authors: Vanessa Kier
Three Weeks Later
Sudan
K
irra waited
for the applause to die down at the Rally to End Violence. For days after she’d escaped from the rebels, she’d felt so raw inside that she couldn’t even imagine wanting to sing in public again. It had taken weeks for her to move past the terror of thinking both Dev and Seth had been killed.
But eventually, as demonstrated by the butterfly tattoo now covering the X-shaped scars on her hand, she’d moved beyond the fear. The butterfly, newly emerged from its cocoon, represented her triumph over violence. Each time she spotted it, she felt renewed determination to fight against violence no matter where it occurred.
For now, she was keeping the rest of her scars as a reminder of how much she’d endured. But she suspected that some day she might also decide to replace them with more attractive symbols of her strength.
The crowd settled into an expectant hush. “For my final song,” she said quietly into the microphone, “I’d like to play something new.”
The crowd roared its approval.
In the nearly four months since she’d been separated from Seth, she’d performed at a number of benefit concerts similar to this one across the globe. Every few weeks she composed a new song to deal with her anxiety and loneliness. Each time she played one of Seth’s songs, the crowd reacted with just the same rapt attention as they had that night at the festival.
At first the excitement of performing before live crowds, in countries she’d never visited, had muted the pain of her separation from Seth. But now her wanderlust had faded. This would be her last concert for the foreseeable future. Dr. Kirk had passed along a job offer from a program in West Africa dedicated to helping orphans of the rebels’ violence, as well as those children reclaimed from the ranks of the rebel armies. The director was interested in starting an art and music therapy track, and wondered if Kirra would head up the music program.
The idea appealed to her, but she wasn’t ready yet to make a commitment. She needed time to herself. Time to process all that had happened.
And time to let the U.S. military know that they’d kept Seth long enough. She wanted him back.
Kirra once again waited for the audience to fall quiet before plucking out the first few notes of the song. As usual, she kept her eyes closed as she sang, not wanting to reveal her emotions to the audience. She preferred that they experience the song without any input from her other than her voice and her guitar.
A few bars before the end of the song, a tingle shimmied down her spine. She opened her eyes, scanning the area in an attempt to figure out what she’d sensed, and finished the song on autopilot.
When the last note hung over the audience, she stood, ignoring the applause and calls for an encore. But another check of her surroundings revealed nothing. What had—?
“Kirra.”
The voice came from stage right. Kirra spun and her heart leapt. Seth stood in the wings, staring at her as if she was the most precious being on earth.
With a cry of delight, Kirra tore her guitar from around her neck, dropped it unheeded on her stool, and raced toward him. She threw herself into his arms and he caught her, spinning her around until she felt dizzy. Then he slowly lowered her to her feet and kissed her.
Tears welled up in her eyes. She was home, finally. No matter where she’d traveled, and despite moving to a more secure apartment back in Johannesburg, she’d never felt as if she was where she belonged. Now she understood why. Seth’s arms were her home.
The kiss went on for some time before Kirra noticed the cheering. She broke away from the kiss and looked behind her. The emcee stood center stage, holding the microphone. She made a comment in the local language and gestured toward the giant viewing screen. The crowd roared.
Kirra’s cheeks heated as she stared up at the oversized image of her and Seth. Then she laughed and blew the camera a kiss, before taking Seth’s hand and leading him to her private dressing trailer.
When the door closed behind them, she wrapped herself in his arms again. “I’m so afraid that if I let go, you’re going to disappear,” she whispered. They’d exchanged letters, but she’d been cautious in what she said, knowing the letters were being monitored due to security protocols. She hadn’t seen Seth’s face or heard his voice since the day Wil had kicked her out of his hospital room.
“It’s okay. I’m really here,” Seth murmured. “I’m not leaving you again. That’s if you’ll still have me.”
Kirra leaned back and grabbed hold of his shirt, bringing his face close to hers. “I would still have you even if you were in prison,” she said fiercely. “Just because the trouble with the rebels and the assassin is over doesn’t mean I’ll stop fighting for you. For us.”
Seth leaned his forehead on hers. “Thank God.” He gave a shaky laugh. “I don’t have more than a few cents to my name and I don’t even have a job yet, although I did just receive a potential offer from WAR, the group your brother works for.”
Kirra stroked her hand over his hair. “I don’t care about that,
liefie
. It’s Seth the man I love, not his money. Besides,” she gestured to the posh furnishings in the trailer, “I’m making decent money. The benefit concerts have resulted in skyrocketing album sales.”
“I’m so happy for you.” He hugged her and ran his hands down her back. Then he gave her a long, slow kiss that erased all those weeks of doubts and worries.
“Knowing I had you waiting for me was the only way I stayed sane,” he told her.
He pulled her hips against his and she wriggled to get closer. “Are you done for the evening?” he murmured.
“Yes.” Kirra took his mouth again, unable to get enough of his taste. Finally she broke away. “Take me to bed, Seth.”
He scooped her into his arms and carried her to the bed, then proceeded to undress her with a reverence that brought tears to her eyes. If the last time they’d made love had been about good-bye, this time was all about hello. They took their time relearning one another’s bodies. When Seth finally entered her, Kirra sighed at the perfection and the sense of wholeness. And when at last he sent her flying into a powerful release, all the tension she’d been carrying incinerated and was replaced with a sense of peace and hope.
Some time later, Kirra traced a pattern on Seth’s bare chest. He’d just finished explaining about the tedious hours of questioning and testifying, and his shock over being released with a clean record. “I’m so proud of you for keeping your cool when faced with the general.”
“Yeah, well, I had a lot of time to think about what happened and everything you said to me about letting my anger go. I even spoke to a therapist a few times. And giving the news of the commendations to my teammates’ families really helped give me a different perspective. Not one of them blamed me for the deaths of their loved ones. So it finally got through my thick skull that maybe I could leave my anger in the past.”
She kissed him through her tears. “What happened with your family?”
Seth sucked in a breath. When he finally released it and began to talk, emotion thickened his voice. “I went to visit them at the SSU compound. My mom welcomed me back as if I’d only just walked out the door the day before. When I disappeared, she’d contacted the military and been told that I didn’t exist. She decided that meant I was working on some top-secret mission. So when the SSU agents told her that she needed to go into protective custody because of something I was involved in, she concluded she’d been right. She—” his voice cracked.
Kirra rubbed her cheek on his chest in silent understanding.
“All these years of no word and my mom still thinks of me as her hero,” Seth said thickly.
“You didn’t try to convince her otherwise, did you?”
He huffed in disbelief. “Are you kidding? She’s as stubborn as you are.”
“Hmm. What about your sister?”
“Ah.” He drummed his fingers on Kirra’s lower back, which sent sensual little pulses to delightful places. “Danika was furious that I’d put them in danger, and wary about letting me back into her life. I don’t blame her. She’d had to pull Brianna, my niece, out of school in order to go with the SSU agents. She resented the disruption. Plus, she didn’t want Brianna to become attached to me only to have me disappear again.”
“So what happened?”
He chuckled. “My mom stepped in and handled it. She told Danika that kids are resilient. That it would be irresponsible of her to deny Brianna a chance to know her only uncle. My mom explained that since I’m a man who was willing to make the ultimate sacrifice for his country, I’d set a good example for my niece.”
“Smart mom.”
“Yeah, she’s always been a rock.” He cleared his throat. “So Danika eventually let me meet Brianna and…uh…Damn if that little girl didn’t wrap me around her finger. Within ten minutes I found myself having tea with her dolls and stuffed animals.”
Kirra laughed. “I can just picture it. Big, bad, scary Seth playing nice with a bunch of Teddy Bears and Barbies. Please tell me you wore a pink boa.”
“Worse,” he grumbled. “Apparently all guests must wear a special tiara decorated with pink rhinestones, and a glittery, pink-and-silver cape.”
Kirra burst out laughing.
“It’s not funny. My sister took photos. If I ever forget Brianna’s birthday or other important milestones, Danika will send the photos my next employer.” He sighed dramatically. “I thought I was finished with being blackmailed.”
“Ha! I think I like your sister.”
“Don’t even think about joining her to gang up on me,” Seth warned. “Speaking of siblings, how’s it going with Dev?”
Kirra sighed. “He’s as thick-headed as always, but deep inside he does love me. He pulled my mostly burnt guitar out of the wreckage of the bus, which was incredibly sweet and thoughtful of him. I never would have believed he’d think to do that.”
“Does it help, having it back?”
“Yes. Even though it’s burnt, I hung it on a wall in my studio. As a reminder that violence scarred me, but didn’t destroy me.”
Seth raised her hand to his lips. “Like your tattoo. Very sexy, by the way.”
“Yes.” She listened to the comforting beat of Seth’s heart a moment. “So, Dev is still finding it hard to fully accept that I’ve matured into a woman capable of making the tough decisions in life. Every few weeks or so he sticks his nose into my business and I have to remind him that I don’t need his help.”
“He’s your brother. He’s always going to worry.”
“I know. Which is why I don’t blow up at him very often. We’ve started to talk regularly, and now talk about important issues, so I feel as if I’ve reached a new level of understanding with him.”
“Excellent.”
“Did you ever figure out why your blackmailer went after you?”
“I talked to Wil Lansing about it. He thinks my blackmailer had plans that required someone with knowledge of American military protocols and helicopters.”
“He was setting you up to be a fall guy?”
“Probably. Lansing suspects the man is well-connected enough to know that I’m alive, but with everything that’s been going on in the region since I left, he believes my blackmailer is too busy to have time to go after me. Plus, Wil hinted that they might be close to taking the man down.”
“I’d prefer to have heard that the man is dead, but we have to work with what we have, right?”
“Aren’t you the fierce one?” Seth teased.
“That’s right. I fought for you. I’m not letting anyone take you from me now.” She’d never meant anything as much as she meant those words. “Does that mean that your family is now safe from your blackmailer?”
“We think so. The SSU located people in law enforcement who weren’t in my blackmailer’s pocket, so the hit man is now behind bars, along with several cops.” Seth snuggled Kirra tighter against his side. “My family is returning home this week. For my peace of mind, I’ve worked out a deal with a security firm recommended by the SSU. They’ll keep an eye on my family for a few more months. Although, I think my sister might have something going on with one of the SSU agents. So she might receive some personal protection.”
“Good for her.”
In response, Seth ran his hand up and down her back, then he murmured, “I’ve bought all of your albums.”
“Really?”
“Yeah. I love your music, so I played them for all my visitors until I’d either converted them to a fan or been ordered to cease and desist.” He laughed. “I even got Brianna dancing around the house to a few of your livelier songs.”
“But—?”
“Now that we’re together again, do you think you could stop writing songs about me? Or at least not sing them in public?”
Kirra raised herself onto her elbow. “Why, Seth Jarrod, who knew you had such an enormous ego? I don’t believe I’ve mentioned your name in a single song.”
He leveled a mock glare at her. “Don’t play games with me. The emotions in those songs are the same ones I’ve been feeling since our separation.”
“Okay, I admit it, you’re right.” She pressed a fast kiss to his lips. “But nope, I’m not going to make any such promise.” She put her mouth close to his ear. “However, I wrote a private song in hopes of seducing you with it some day.”
Desire flickered in his eyes. “Yeah?”
“Uh-huh. Wanna hear it?”
“Damn straight. Anything you’ve got, I want. Now and forever.”
She sat back and gave him a wicked smile. “Forever.”
One Month Later
WAR Airfield
The Democratic Republic of the Ivory Coast
West Africa
“
S
o
. I’m supposed to vouch for you.”
Seth winced as Marcus Jones leveled a hard stare at him.
Kristoff Wren, the American in charge of WAR’s military teams, had offered Seth a job on the condition that Marcus validate both his flying skills and his trustworthiness. Seth had no doubt that even three years out of practice he could still fly circles around most helicopter pilots. It was the character reference he worried over.
He’d known this meeting was going to be hard. Marcus never had been one to forgive easily. “Yeah,” Seth admitted. “Your boss seems to think you’re some sort of lie detector when it comes to me.” He couldn’t stop a confrontational tone from seeping into his words. “It’s been four fucking years, Marcus. Aren’t you ever going to forgive me?”
He’d expected a smart comeback. Instead, Marcus just watched him without expression. Seth had to give the man credit. He’d aged into an even tougher son-of-a-bitch than when they’d been friends. No matter how much Texas swagger he used to hide it, Marcus was a man you didn’t want to cross. A man you’d be lucky to call friend and have watching your back.
Seth should know. The two of them had gone through flight school together. They’d been roommates. Best friends. Co-conspirators in those crazy stunts that the corporal had been so impressed by. Until they’d had the biggest fight of their lives. Then Marcus had barely been able to tolerate being in the same room as Seth.
“Where the fuck were you?” Marcus demanded. He had his flight helmet under one arm. His hair was sweat-stained and blood dripped down his face from a cut at his temple.
Sick dread tightened Seth’s belly. “Jesus, Marcus, what happened to you?”
“We were attacked. That’s what fucking happened.” Marcus dropped his helmet and shoved Seth up against the wall of the corridor. “Bryan and his crew are dead and two of my crew are critically injured.”
“But Charlie was supposed to be flying for me. Not Bryan.”
Marcus pulled Seth away from the wall so he could slam him back again. “Charlie got food poisoning. In between puking his guts up, he asked Bryan to take your flight instead.”
Seth stared at Marcus in dawning horror. Bryan was a decent pilot, but not—
“If you’d been at the flight controls, the crew would have survived,” Marcus snarled. “Hell, even Charlie, good as he is, would have struggled to fly out of that trap. But you, damn you, you would have flown out of there by the skin of your teeth.”
“I’m sorry.”
Marcus sucked in air and Seth knew he was fighting not to beat him to a pulp. “So I’m asking you again. Where. The. Hell. Were. You?”
Guilt and shame twisted inside Seth, but he’d sworn an oath. “I can’t tell you.”
Marcus shook his head, stunned. Then his lips curled in disgust. “Fine. We’re through.” He jabbed his finger into Seth’s chest. “I’m holding you responsible for their deaths.” Spinning on his heel, Marcus stalked away.
Two days later, Marcus had accepted a transfer to another unit.
Seth sighed. “I asked Charlie to fly for me that day because General Sandberg had assigned me to another mission.” A mission during which Seth and his crew had unknowingly killed innocent people. “I’d taken a vow not to disclose my activities to anyone.” He searched Marcus’s face for any signs of forgiveness, but found nothing encouraging. “I’m sorry I wasn’t with you that day.”
As Seth patiently endured Marcus’s scrutiny, he hoped the increased maturity he sensed in his old friend included an added level of compassion.
“Why the fuck didn’t you call me?” Marcus finally demanded.
“What?” The wounded fury behind Marcus’s question didn’t make sense. “What the hell are you talking about?”
“Once you realized you’d been set up. Once you were on the run. Why didn’t you call me?”
“Because you didn’t even want to talk to—”
“Bullshit. You know I would have been there for you, asshole. Why didn’t you reach out?”
“Because everyone I turned to for help ended up dead. I wasn’t going to do that to you, too!”
“I would’ve helped, no matter the risk.” Marcus met Seth’s eyes. “Once I’d cooled down, I realized that it wasn’t really you I’d been mad at. I blamed myself for not recognizing the signs that we were flying into a trap that day.”
“No. It wasn’t your—”
“—fault. Yeah. I know.” Marcus pinned Seth with a stare. “But you know what it’s like, don’t you? Because you blame yourself for falling under the general’s influence and losing Michael’s team.”
“You’re not supposed to know about that.”
Marcus snorted. “The CID called me. They wanted my take on your character. I told them you would’ve flown into a cliff before knowingly killing innocents.”
It took Seth a moment to speak past the lump in his throat. “Thanks, man.”
“So,” Marcus said, “we good?”
Seth gave a disbelieving laugh. “I think that’s my line.” When Marcus continued to watch him, waiting for an answer, Seth nodded again. “Yeah. We’re good.”
“Excellent. Now, let’s see how your flying skills have held up.” He led Seth outside.
“You know you want to hire me,” Seth said as he followed.
“Yeah? Why’s that?”
“Who else is going to challenge you, fly boy? Since no one’s been breathing down your neck for the spot of top pilot, I bet you’ve become slow and complacent. You should do your teammates a favor and let me join.”
Marcus shot him the finger, just like old times.
Seth grinned. Damn, it felt good.
They rounded the side of the hangar and there she was. A proud beauty of engineering mastery.
His vision blurred.
Christ, he supposed it made him a complete sap and ruined his tough guy image to be getting all freaking teary-eyed over a helicopter. But God, he’d missed flying helicopters so damned much. Cargo planes and passenger jets were all good and fine if you liked fixed wings. But he’d never felt the same visceral thrill with them that he felt with his beloved Black Hawks.
It had hurt so badly those first months on the run that he’d woken up crying, like some broken-hearted idiot who’d been kicked in the balls by his girlfriend. Once he’d started flying fixed-wings, he’d stopped dreaming about helicopters. Except for the nightmares of Michael’s helicopter going down. Those dreams still came, although with decreasing regularity.
Learning to fly fixed-wings had satisfied his need to be in the air, but hadn’t completely filled the void. Still, it had been better than nothing. He thought he’d resigned himself to never flying another Black Hawk. Now that he was on the verge of being in the cockpit again, he was terrified of screwing this up. Because the pain of walking away might kill him.
“Seth? You okay, man?”
Jesus. He must have been lost in thought longer than he’d realized. Seth gave Marcus the thumbs-up. And there was something else he’d never expected. To be working toward repairing his friendship with Marcus Jones. Former best friend. Still the best damn helicopter pilot Seth had ever met. And yeah, he’d known it even back then but been unable to accept it. Not that there was a hell of a lot of distance between Seth and Marcus. But the little bit of something extra Marcus possessed nudged him into a category all by himself.
Seth didn’t mind admitting that today. Even formerly self-centered bad boys could grow up. And he’d done a hell of a lot of growing since the day his world fell apart.
“Seth?” Marcus prompted.
Great, if he continued to stand here staring into space like an idiot, Marcus would never give him the job. “Sorry. I’m okay. But, if you don’t mind. I’d…ah…like to check her out on my own.”
M
arcus raised a brow
. “Sure.” He nodded for Seth to go on, then stepped back into the relative coolness of the shade cast by the hangar.
Seth approached the helicopter with reverence. It was the same way Marcus had felt the first time he’d been allowed close to one of these magnificent beasts. An awe born from the love all the best pilots had for their aircraft.
“What’s he doing?” Dev asked a few minutes later, stepping outside to join Marcus in the late afternoon heat. Dev had been the one to drive Seth out here and would escort him back after the flying test.
Out on the tarmac, Seth had his hands pressed palms down against the side of the chopper and his head bowed. The emotion of the posture made Marcus’s throat tighten. “Private moment,” Marcus murmured. He took Dev’s arm and pulled him into the office. “Let’s give the man some space.”
No matter what Seth had done since Southeast Asia, he’d been one of the military’s best pilots. Not being able to fly helicopters, his first love, for all these years would have felt like an amputation.
Marcus knew Seth’s skills would be slightly rusty, but training would take care of that. It was Seth’s heart Marcus had been worried about. And what he’d just seen convinced him that whatever else he’d done, Seth still had the heart of a pilot.
Thank heavens. WAR needed another pilot with Seth’s level of combat experience.
When Marcus and Dev entered the office, they found their teammate Levine standing at the window. Levine had one hand fisted by his side. The other gripped the side of the frame.
Marcus caught the expression on Levine’s face and swore under his breath.
“Yeah,” Dev murmured, throwing Levine a sympathetic glance.
Marcus checked to see what had Levine looking so lost.
Out on the tarmac, Seth was walking around the Black Hawk with an expression of such joy, it hurt to watch. Yeah, any flier would recognize the bond Seth had with helicopters. But Levine would understand Seth’s position better than anyone. Levine had lost his ability to fly fighter jets after his accident. He’d recovered enough to fly cargo and passenger planes, but he’d never again be able to tolerate the high g’s associated with flying the fighters that had once been as integral to his life as helicopters had been to Seth’s.
A fist tightened around Marcus’s heart. He couldn’t imagine being denied his one true love. Suddenly finding the atmosphere inside the office suffocating, he nodded at the back door to let Dev know where he was going, then walked outside. He’d give Seth and Levine another five minutes to deal with their memories and emotions.
Marcus pulled out his phone.
“Are you done already?” Kris asked when he answered the call.
“No. We haven’t even started. But he’s in.”
There was a long pause. “Are you certain? You’ve been calling Jarrod your evil twin for years. What’s changed?”
Marcus sighed. Kris was only just back from his tour with Azumah, so he hadn’t been briefed yet on Marcus’s testimony to the CID. “Evil twin was an affectionate nickname partly based on our rivalry and partly due to another issue between us, which we’ve just hashed out.” He walked around the side of the office building and spotted Seth sitting in the cockpit. Yeah, that’s where the man belonged. “Listen, I’m confident it will take only a short time to bring his flying skills back up to fighting level. We need him. He’s a fighter who won’t give up. I believe his time on the run proved that he’s innovative enough to handle any situation that’s thrown his way. He’ll be an asset to the team.”
“And if he betrays us?”
Marcus snorted. “He won’t. Seth is as loyal as they come.”
“All right. I’ll let Azumah know. But if he fucks up, it’s on you.”
“Understood.”
Marcus stared into space a moment after Kris hung up. Then, shaking himself back to the present, he returned to the office, grabbed his helmet and his clipboard, and strode out to the waiting helicopter.
“All right, Parakeet,” Marcus said. “You’re in. Let’s see what you’ve got.”
Seth glared at him. “I’m not joining if you insist on calling me by that stupid nickname.”
Marcus grinned. Their first squadron leader kept mispronouncing Seth’s last name as Jarrett, which one of the guys pointed out sounded like Parrot. As a joke, the rest of the squad started calling Seth Parakeet instead. “I don’t know, think you’re up to earning another one?”
“Damn straight.”
Marcus snorted and pulled on his helmet. “We’ll see.”
Several minutes later, Seth whooped as the Black Hawk lifted into the air. “Watch out boys and girls. I’m back!”
“Yeah,” Marcus said. “Welcome home.”
* * *
WAR: Retaliation
, Book Four in the WAR series, is coming in 2017. It’s available for preorder at select retailers.