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Chapter no 7 – NATHANIEL

In the Likely Event

Kabul, Afghanistan August 2021

โ€œChange your mind,โ€ I ordered Izzy when she opened her door the next morning. Fine, maybe it was more plea than order. Sleeping hadnโ€™t been an issue for me in years, but Iโ€™d tossed and turned all night after she told me why she was really here.

Searching for her sister was going to get her killed. Every step Izzy took outside this embassy was a calculated risk, and weโ€™d prepared security for her precise itinerary, not for hunting a needle in a haystack. American photojournalists made excellent propaganda targets for the enemy around here, and with the country destabilizing, the odds of finding Serena in the window of Izzyโ€™s visit were grim.

โ€œGood morning to you too.โ€ Izzy cocked an eyebrow at me and held open her door so I could enter. โ€œGive me about three minutes, and Iโ€™ll be ready.โ€

โ€œReady to change your mind?โ€ Fuck me, she smelled good. The scent was straight out of every dream Iโ€™d had over the last decade.

โ€œNo.โ€ She buttoned what looked to be a linen blazer up to her throat and packed a scarf in her tote bag with a pair of overear headphones. โ€œReady to get on the helicopter. Is Mayhew ready?โ€

โ€œAlready downstairs.โ€ The junior aide was so much easier to deal with than Izzy, but then again, Iโ€™d never been in love with him, so that probably influenced my opinion.

โ€œI see youโ€™re dressed for a funeral again.โ€ She eyed my all-black combat gear.

โ€œAs long as it isnโ€™t yours. Tell me something. What exactly was your plan coming here?โ€ I leaned back against her door.

She glanced down at my M4. โ€œYou really have to carry that everywhere?โ€

โ€œYes.โ€ I didnโ€™t bother to tell her about every other weapon I had strapped to me. โ€œNow what was your plan, Isabeau? Just show up here and start calling out Serenaโ€™s name?โ€

A blush rose up her cheeks as she shouldered the tote and faced me, lifting that stubborn chin of hers. โ€œSomething . . . like that.โ€

I let my head fall back against the door for a heartbeat. โ€œIโ€™ve always known you would do anything for herโ€”youโ€™d do anything for each otherโ€” but this is ludicrous. How long has she been in country?โ€

โ€œFive months. She was offered the opportunity to end her assignment early when the ratherโ€โ€”she wincedโ€”โ€œabrupt handover of Bagram indicated a larger . . .โ€ Izzy searched for the right words.

โ€œShit show was about to go down?โ€ I supplied. โ€œBecause thatโ€™s whatโ€™s happening.โ€

โ€œWithdrawal was never going to be pretty.โ€ Her chin lifted a good three inches. โ€œI just didnโ€™t think Serena would be stubborn enough to stay, especially after the embassy staff was reduced back in April. But sheโ€™s . . .โ€ Izzy shrugged.

โ€œSerena.โ€

Izzy nodded. โ€œIf I can just find her, I can talk some sense into her and get her out of here.โ€

โ€œDo the other members of your delegation know what youโ€™re up to?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ She gripped the straps of her bag so tight I half expected them to start screaming. โ€œAnd I know you arenโ€™t going to tell them either.โ€

I pushed off the door and flat out invaded her space. โ€œAnd what makes you think that?โ€

She looked away, and her throat worked before she dragged her gaze back to meet mine. โ€œBecause you owe me.โ€

โ€œI. Owe. You?โ€ My eyebrows rose. Apparently, she remembered New York a little differently than I did.

โ€œAfter leaving me inโ€”โ€ She closed her eyes and blew out a slow breath through puckered lips that claimed every ounce of my attention.

My stomach drew tight, remembering exactly how soft those lips felt under mine, against my skin.

โ€œYou owe me,โ€ she said, straightening her shoulders, our gazes colliding. โ€œBesides, Iโ€™ve already put feelers out at her paper and narrowed it to those two provinces, without, you know . . . advertising that Iโ€™d be here with a congressional delegation. Sheโ€™s a photojournalist for theย Times. She canโ€™t just disappear, Nate.โ€ She winced. โ€œI mean, Sergeant Green.โ€

โ€œPeople disappear here all the time.โ€

โ€œWell, not Serena.โ€ She shrugged, like her statement could somehow give her older sister a layer of impossible protection that simply didnโ€™t exist here.

โ€œAnd youโ€™re willing to bet your life on it?โ€ I wasnโ€™t. As much as I cared for Serena and everything she meant to Izzy, my priorities were clear as fucking day.

โ€œItโ€™s not going to come to that.โ€ Izzy shook her head. โ€œWe both know that as secret as weโ€™d like this fact-finding mission to be, it isnโ€™t. Serena will know Iโ€™m here. Sheโ€™ll find us, and weโ€™ll put her on the helicopter, and Iโ€™ll bring her home with me.โ€

Disbelief mixed with a heavy dose of anger raced through my veins, and I took a step backward. โ€œYouโ€™re using yourself asย bait?โ€

Her eyes narrowed. โ€œPlease donโ€™t pretend that youโ€™re concerned about my welfare.โ€

โ€œYour welfare has been my concern for the last ten fucking years!โ€ I snapped, immediately regretting the slip. Damn it, this woman pushed me to the edge faster than anyone on the planet.

Silence stretched between us as I fought to level my head.

โ€œLetโ€™s go.โ€ I turned around and walked out of the room, holding the door so she could walk through first.

Tension radiated between us as we walked down the steps and into the lobby.

โ€œIsa!โ€ Kacey Pierce, one of Senator Laurenโ€™s junior aides, raced over from one of the glassed-in conference rooms, notebook in hand. โ€œIs there anything else you need me on while youโ€™re gone?โ€

Izzy adjusted her tote bag, looking over the list that Kacey shoved at her. โ€œI think this just about covers it.โ€

I moved closer and leaned in, putting my lips dangerously close to her ear. โ€œAsk her to pull the latest correspondence from any American journalists with accompanying pictures, and have them printed for when we get back.โ€

Izzy turned her head so quickly, her gaze whipping to mine, that I barely had a millisecond to draw back before the entire lobby would have been spectators to a crossed line. โ€œYouโ€™re helping?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s just a suggestion.โ€ Blatantly retreating, I waited by the door as Izzy gave her orders to the junior aide. Had to admit, leadership looked really damn good on her.

We made our way to the convoy, where my team already waited. She protested when I took her bag from her and tossed it on the floor of the armored vehicle, then drew out a Kevlar vest.

โ€œArms out.โ€

โ€œThis is ridiculous.โ€ She put her arms out, and I slipped the vest over her head and the practical french braid sheโ€™d woven her blonde strands into this morning.

โ€œSo is you being here, but at least this will stop bullets.โ€ I brought the straps from the back of the vest under her arms and secured them to the front with as much professionalism as I could muster.

โ€œItโ€™s heavy.โ€

โ€œBeing shot is worse.โ€ I reached into the vehicle and brought out a Kevlar helmet.

She glared at me. โ€œSeriously?โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™re not too bad!โ€ Mayhew, the other junior aide, called out from inside.

โ€œNo preferential treatment.โ€ I shrugged at Izzy. โ€œPut it on, or you stay here.โ€ She wasnโ€™t getting shot in the head on my watch.

She shoved it onto her head, then climbed in next to Mayhew, and I took the front passenger seat just like yesterday, while the rest of the team filed in.

Within moments, we rolled through the embassy gates, heading toward the field just down the road where the helicopters were staged.

We passed through a barbed wire gate and onto the field, where six Blackhawks were all in various stages of run-up. Taking her into blatant danger went against every instinct I had, but I knew sheโ€™d just go without me if I refused her, which meant I got out of the car and opened her door. Sheโ€™d managed the seat belt just fine by herself this time.

โ€œIs this a . . . soccer field?โ€ Izzy asked as she stepped out of the car.

โ€œYep,โ€ I answered as Graham came around the car, Torres not far behind.

โ€œWhich one is ours?โ€ Izzy asked. โ€œWeโ€™re taking the front two.โ€

โ€œTwo?โ€ She shot a confused look my way.

โ€œYeah.โ€ I nodded. โ€œWe travel in two in case something happens, like one getting shot down.โ€

Her eyes flared.

โ€œBlack, Rose, and four grunts are in the second aircraft,โ€ Graham said, moving out of the way when Holt stumbled out of the car after Mayhew.

โ€œItโ€™s so damnedย hot,โ€ Holt muttered, rolling his neck as Kellman rolled his eyes behind him.

โ€œThat works for me. Weโ€™ll take the first one,โ€ I told Graham before turning to Kellman. โ€œGood luck with that one today.โ€ I cracked a smile as Holt wiped the sweat from the back of his neck.

โ€œI should say the same thing to you.โ€ He shot a poignant look at Izzy, who stood looking at the Blackhawks with wide eyes before cramming her sunglasses on her face. โ€œLooks like youโ€™ve got a knuckler.โ€

Fuckity, fuck,ย fuck. What was she thinking?

I walked over to her, dust coating my boots, and took her elbow, leaning down so she could hear me over the high-pitched whine of the engines. โ€œIโ€™m guessing you never got over your fear of flying?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m fine.โ€ She yanked her elbow out of my grip. โ€œIโ€™ll be . . . fine.โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™re not big, cushy planes where you can put your headphones on and pretend youโ€™re somewhere else,โ€ I warned her as we headed for the first helicopter.

โ€œIโ€™ll manage,โ€ she shouted, glaring over her shoulder at me as she stepped up into the bird Iโ€™d led us to, walking past the door gunner.

โ€œThis should be fun,โ€ Torres said with a grin. I rolled my eyes and climbed in.

The Blackhawk was set up to carry troops, and I took the seat directly against one of the pilotโ€™s backs, facing Izzy. The pilot twisted in her seat, handing me a headset. I nodded my thanks, fitted it around my helmet, and turned it on, but I kept the mic muted.

Izzy strapped herself in with surprising efficiency and took out her overear headphones from a shoulder bag that looked like it cost more than I made in a month, looking at them with dismay.

Yeah, those werenโ€™t going to work with her helmet, and putting her through a flight without music was . . . unfathomable to me, a torture I

wasnโ€™t willing to impose on her.

She dropped the headphones into her bag and stared out the window like nothing was wrong, but her back was ramrod straight, her lips pressed between her teeth, and she white-knuckled the seat as we launched.

Her gaze met mine as we left the ground, and just like that, we werenโ€™t in the Blackhawk. We were staring into each otherโ€™s eyes, our hands clinging as flight 826 plummeted into the Missouri.

She slammed her eyes shut, and I unhooked my belt, adjusted my rifle, and pulled my AirPods out of a cargo pocket on my Kevlar. Then I moved, kneeling in front of her.

A touch of her knee had her eyes flying open and locking with mine. My chest tightened at the fear in those brown depths. She blinked quickly, trying to mask it, but sheโ€™d never been able to hide anything from me.

Reaching up, I slipped my AirPods into her ears, then sat back in my seat, aware of her gaze tracking my every move as she adjusted the fit.

The aircraft was nearly full, and yet it might as well have been only the two of us as I pulled out my phoneโ€”disconnected from service, but not the music I kept downloadedโ€”and scrolled through my library.

I tapped on โ€œNorthern Downpour,โ€ and our eyes locked as the helicopter rose above Kabul, heading toward JBAD.

Her lips parted, and the way she looked at me . . . shit, it may as well have been 2011, or 2014, or any of the other years fate had thrown us together. It was one of her favorite songs, which was one of the only things we had in common. The shaky breath she drew, her chest stuttering, nearly unraveled me.

To sit here, to see her and not touch her, not demand to know whose ring was on her finger, was a hell I wasnโ€™t sure I could live through, and yet, Iโ€™d endure it without faltering if it meant Iโ€™d get to see her one last time.

After all, she was . . . Isabeau.

She mouthed along with the lyrics, then ripped her gaze away, staring at her knees.

I leaned forward and handed her my phone so she could pick whatever she wanted to listen to, then sat back and pulled out the paperback ofย The Color Purpleย Iโ€™d kept in the cargo pocket of my pants for the last few weeks and began to read.

 

 

The embassy was bustling with tension and a touch of chaos when we returned later that evening.

Izzyโ€™s meeting with leadership in Jalalabad had been only an hour, maybe less, but what sheโ€™d heard hadnโ€™t eased her tension or mine. There was an atmosphere of desperation, yet resolve, and I hoped the latter won out against the former.

The news weโ€™d received once weโ€™d gotten back to the bird a few hours ago had only confirmed what everyone knewโ€”the country was destabilizing. Zaranj, in the southern Nimruz Province, had fallen to the Taliban today.

Expected, yet . . . disappointing.

โ€œAnd these are the last articles from American journalists in country,โ€ Kacey said after filling Izzy in on the day, shoving a manila folder at her as we trudged up the stairs to her room.

โ€œPerfect. Thank you. Iโ€™m going to shower off the dust, and then Iโ€™ll be down for dinner,โ€ Izzy said, leaving Kacey at her bedroom door before shutting it.

I nodded at Kacey and then turned my back on Izzyโ€™s door like I was standing guard.

After thirty seconds, I tried the handle, and it opened. โ€œDamn it, Izzy, canโ€™t you lock it?โ€ I snapped, shutting it behind me and throwing the dead bolt.

โ€œI knew youโ€™d follow me in,โ€ she said from her bedroom, kicking off her shoes in the doorway. โ€œFolder is on the table.โ€

I picked it up and thumbed through the latest articles. โ€œThey shouldnโ€™t even be here,โ€ I muttered, checking the bylines for Serenaโ€™s name. โ€œAmericans have been warned to get the hell out for months.โ€

โ€œYou know Serena,โ€ Izzy said, shrugging off her blazer and then throwing it onto her bed. Couldnโ€™t blame her for wanting it off. It had been hot as hell out there. She walked over in just her dress pants and lace- trimmed camisole.

Nope, not looking at the way her breasts rose against the fabric. That way lay madness.

โ€œI do know Serena.โ€ I shook my head when I reached the last of the articles. โ€œShe didnโ€™t file today, or yesterday, and last weekโ€™s didnโ€™t give a precise location. Weโ€™ll have to check every day until we see her name.โ€

Izzyโ€™s eyes widened, and the corners of her mouth tilted up into a smile that made my pulse quicken. โ€œYou really are going to help me, arenโ€™t you, Nate?โ€

God, that smile, those eyes . . .

โ€œYeah. I want you out of here as fast as fucking possible,โ€ I said, gesturing to her ring. โ€œAnd I bet he does too.โ€

Her sharp inhale told me Iโ€™d crossed a line, but I didnโ€™t care. That was all we were together: one giant, crossed line that neither of us belonged on the other side of.

I put the folder on the table and got the hell out of there.

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