Hannah gave her sister a squeeze. “I think you’re beautiful.”
“Just what every gal wants to hear,” Sammy said, but she squeezed back.
“Regardless, there will be more of these. Squadron Officers have to call on the new CO.” She softened the blow to Sammy’s ego with a smile.
“Back up, you’re saying they have to call on you?”
“It gives me a chance to talk with them one-on-one.” Just like she had a duty to call on her superiors. As McCaffrey had been so quick to point out, she’d only managed to put off the inevitable confrontation. From here on out they moved in the same social and professional stratosphere. Avoiding him was out of the question.
At least she had the lunch with Lu to look forward to. Officers’ wives tended to exclude female officers from their circles, but then so did their husbands. Rarely did she experience the day-to-day camaraderie her male counterparts relished.
With the exception of her co-pilot, fellow pilots were respectful but guarded around her. Like her XO. Which was fine. She wasn’t interested in anything but a professional relationship with them. She should have extended her rule to include the SEALs they shuttled. Of course she’d never felt the need for such a rule before.
“So we’re going to have a parade of single guys over for dinner?”
“It doesn’t have to be dinner.”
“Are you kidding? I love to cook,” Sammy said with a cat-that-swallowed-the-canary grin.
“Sammy, do not consider my command your personal dating service.”
Her sister fanned herself with Parish’s card. “I think I’m going to like being your nanny, Hannah.”
“DRINKING ALONE? And before noon?” Admiral Bell pulled up a stool next to Mike.
“You know I take my drinking seriously.” Mike automatically checked his bare wrist, then dug out the watch from his pocket. “Besides, it’s after noon.”
By six seconds.
And sitting at this bar kept him out of the main banquet hall. Out of sight, out of mind. Yeah, right.
At least the lights and the music were lower in here, which suited his mood.
“Nice watch,” Warren commented as Mike strapped his shackle back on. “Since when do commanders make more than admirals?”
“It was a gift.”
“Nice gift. Chase-Durer, the military pilot’s watch of choice.” Warren picked up on details like that. Mike could only imagine the conclusions the man had already drawn. “How long after you received the gift before you started running?”
Mike snorted back a half laugh. Warren knew him too well. “I started running before,” he admitted.
“You must have really liked this one.” Leaving Mike to sort out his conflicting thoughts on the subject, the admiral ordered a rye. “A double. And another round for the Commander here,” he said to the bartender, even though Mike was still nursing his first beer.
He did like Hannah. That was the problem.
After their drinks were lined up, the admiral dispensed with the small talk. “I saved you a seat. What happened?”
“Got back late from San Clemente.”
“So I heard. Something about a case of ouzo exchanging hands.” Warren nodded in the direction of a young airman.
“What the hell?” Mike watched said case go by on the shoulder of the enlisted man. “Tell Norton I’m going to kick his ass if he pulls a stunt like that again,” Mike called after the kid. The airman stepped up his pace and Mike had no doubt the message would be delivered to HCS-5 along with the B. Stefanouris. “So that’s how she did it.”
“Which is beside the point. What the hell were you doing on S.C.I. to begin with? I told you to have your team stand down.”
“We were standing down.”
Despite Warren’s bluster, the admiral had been kept apprised of Mike’s whereabouts. And Mike had kept up with the more mundane tasks of being a Commanding Officer.
“I know the demons driving you, Mac. Maybe you don’t want a break, but your men deserve one.”
“I gave them the option. They volunteered for SCI.”
Warren set down his drink. “With everything hanging over their heads right now, I guess I can’t blame them.”
Mike scrubbed a weary hand over his face. “We lost two good men last time out. Then came home and—” he shook his head because he still couldn’t quite believe it “—now Nash is accused of killing his pregnant wife in some posttraumatic-stress-disorder episode.”
“There was an eyewitness. The sister-in-law—”
“Nash didn’t kill his wife.” Mike defended his men as hotly as they fought for him in battle. “But he’s being called a monster and looking at life from behind bars while his newborn son fights for his.”
“Kenneth Nash had his day in court, Mac.”
And thankfully still had a few appeals to run through. “Nash is—” Mike shrugged off the present tense he’d been about to use and replaced it with the past “—was one of the few married men on my team. The others are scared of the fear they see in their wives’ eyes. And the rest of us don’t even have that much to go home to.” Thank God. Mike swiveled to look at Warren. “Trust me to know what’s best for my team.” And right now that was keeping them busy.
The eyewitness was wrong. Nash would have come to him if he’d thought he was losing it. Because of their ingrained buddy system, SEALs had a low rate of PTSD. They served as a team. They went into ops together and they came out together. Homecomings were quiet affairs, and while home they were each other’s support system.
The other services were just now learning this.
But what if Mike was wrong? What if Nash had lost it?
Wasn’t he himself on edge? Feeling unsettled?
“All right, Mac. You win. But since you can’t show up on time and without ants in your pants I’ve decided that instead of Team One, I’m sending your team to Nevada to work with the new Commander of HCS-9.”
“Are you shittin’ me?”
“You have a problem with that?”
“Other than I’d rather donate another pint of blood to the Middle East, none at all.” Telling the admiral his problem with the Commander wasn’t an option. So he sucked it up and polished off his beer.
Warren stirred his drink, clinking the ice against the glass. “You know her old man was a SEAL.”
Mike nodded. Rosemary Stanton had said as much. She’d also told him her husband had died on a training op. After ’Nam. But that was all the information she’d volunteered. Maybe that was all she knew.
Training op was often code for undisclosed mission. Like the Shadow War in Laos that started before and ended after Vietnam.
It sure as hell wasn’t a two-week boondoggle in Nevada.
“What was he like?”
“Van Stanton?” The admiral looked thoughtful as he tapped into his memories. “Wide receiver for the U of Wisconsin-Oshkosh Titans. Nationally ranked player. Good, but not good enough. Instead of being drafted into the NFL he was drafted into the Navy. Though I don’t remember him as being the type to look back on what might have been.”
“That wasn’t my question.”
“He was a lot like you, Mac. One hundred and ten percent in the game. Whether that game was football or shadow ops.”
Mike cursed under his breath. It wasn’t what he’d wanted to hear, but it was what he needed to know. He glanced across the bar and had to do a double take. Hannah was doling out cash to the bartender, probably for the case of B. Stefanouris.
Calypso’s signature drink. She wanted rid of him that bad, huh? She caught sight of him and returned his bold stare. He raised his beer in salute. She nodded, but without that teasing light in her eyes he’d grown accustomed to seeing over the years. Was he responsible for putting that light out?
Why had she wanted him in the first place?
And why was he driving himself crazy wanting her? He’d been the one to walk, or rather run. Coward.
Warren’s gaze followe
d. “Trust me to know what’s best for my Teams.” He threw Mike’s words back at him, emphasizing the plural. “You’re going to Nevada. Whatever’s between the two of you, get it worked out. You have two weeks.”
Mike knew better than to argue with subtle suggestions that passed for bona fide orders. Warren whipped out his wallet and enough bills to cover the tab. “Do the right thing, Mac.”
“PINCH ME so I know I’m not dreaming,” Sammy said.
They’d arrived home that evening with a stack of calling cards. Hannah turned the key in the lock and pushed the door open. “You’re dreaming.”
“I don’t know. Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Holden has a nice ring to it, don’t you think? Or is that Lieutenant and Mrs. Spencer Holden?”
“Don’t start sending out the invitations just yet.” Sammy had managed to corner Spence. The pair had danced a couple of times. But she failed to acknowledge that he’d danced with every other female in the room. Except Hannah, who’d politely refused.
“A girl can window-shop, can’t she?”
Hannah flipped on the light switch in the entry hall. “That depends. For the dress or the man? With the right shoes a little black number can do wonders. But you don’t need a man to make you whole. You know that, don’t you?”
“I may not need him, but I want him,” Sammy said, missing the point entirely. “Besides if he doesn’t want me, there’s always one of these guys.” She rattled off a couple names. Then stopped at one card. “That Marine, Hunter, wasn’t half-bad—he really stood out in a room full of sailors. And of course, Parish,” she said with a snort, having reached the bottom of the pile. “Did you notice his receding hairline? I give the guy ten years tops before he’s a total cue ball.”
“Some men look good bald.”
“He’s not one of them.”
“Don’t go screwing with my XO’s head—” Hannah hung her purse on a peg near the door, but stopped in the middle of removing her jacket. The house remained unusually quiet except for the soft sound of someone crying.
“Mom?” Hannah called out as she ran through the bare living room and up the stairs toward her own bedroom and the baby’s Portacrib. When she entered, Fallon was sound asleep. Her mother sat in a dark corner, rocking the single chair in the room and hugging the flag.
Hannah knew those private tears too well. She wanted to tell her mother it was okay to cry. But she knew her mother wouldn’t think so.
“Mom, it’s okay to talk about him.” I want to talk about him. “I know you must miss him.” I miss him, too.
But I’m afraid I can’t remember him.
Please, help me remember him.
“I’m fine,” her mother said, blotting her eyes with a perfectly folded tissue. Because her mother did everything perfectly. One fold for every blow. Which was exactly three times. Then dry eyes and a stiff upper lip. “It’s just being back here after all these years. Everything is the same, and so different.”
Hannah sat down on the window seat, ignoring the ocean view she’d paid such a pretty penny for. “Captain Loring asked why you weren’t at the reception. I didn’t realize you two knew each other.”
“You were probably too young to remember. But JJ and Liz were our neighbors when we lived in Navy Housing all those years ago. Of course, Liz is gone now, as well.”
“I don’t remember,” Hannah confessed. Those happy days were lost to her, locked up somewhere too painful to remember.
CHAPTER FIVE
PETER PETRONE ARRIVED by taxicab the following morning. Hannah stepped out her front door just in time to watch the cab pull away from the curb. “Peter?”
“You sound surprised.”
“I am.”
He wandered up her walkway, briefcase in hand, summer-weight suit jacket flung over his arm. His wrinkled pants, rolled-up sleeves and loose tie had been the norm since college. “Don’t I get a hug?”
“Of course.” She stepped into his outstretched arms.
She’d never slept with him, but her college roommate had. Sydney claimed she couldn’t resist that boyish dimpled grin. Personally Hannah liked the rumpled blond hair and intelligent green eyes behind the wire-framed rims.
The three of them had taken aerospace engineering courses together at CU Boulder—go Buffs—but only one of them was a genius. Syd had dropped out of aerospace altogether. Hannah, a typical over-achiever, had worked hard for every grade she got. For her it had been all about flying anyway.
But for Peter the laws of physics and how to defy them came naturally. He’d had offers from Boeing, Lockheed-Martin and NASA before he’d even graduated. Instead he’d joined forces with a small Boulder-based company, making Hall-Petrone Aerospace Tech and himself rich with his patents.
She pulled back and looked into his eyes, still wondering what the hell he was doing here.
“Look at you,” he said. “So this is what all the well-dressed pilots are wearing to wage war?”
“Drab olive-green is always in season,” she said through tight lips. She knew what was coming next.
“I wish you’d change your mind, Hannah. Come home.”
“It’s not a matter of changing my mind. My mind is made up. It’s my duty to be here.”
“And is it your duty to get yourself killed halfway around the world? For what?”
“I’m not going to debate foreign policy or politics with you, Peter. I made my commitment to the reserves long before I came to work for you. Please, let’s just agree to disagree on the subject. You didn’t fly all this way for an argument, did you? Why are you here?”
“I told you I was flying in for the weekend.”
She tried hard to remember their hurried phone conversation. “You may have said something,” she conceded. Clearly she’d misunderstood. “But, Peter, I have a job to do. The work doesn’t get put on hold just because it’s Saturday.” Not when she had to ready the squadron to deploy on Monday. And she was already late for her first day as Commanding Officer. What an impression that would make. “I don’t have time to entertain company. I have to get to the base—”
“I could tag along,” he offered hopefully.
Hannah almost groaned out loud. A male tagging along was not the image she wanted to present to her squadron her first day at the helm. “That’s really not a good idea.”
“Not for the whole day, just to the base. I scheduled a meeting at the Naval Amphibious Base with a Rear Admiral Bell. He wants a look at the prototype for the fuel cell.” Peter tipped his briefcase. “This could be my biggest military contract yet. We can celebrate at dinner.”
“And that doesn’t seem the least bit hypocritical to you? You object to my contract with the service because it involves personal sacrifice, but you’re willing to contract with the service for personal gain.”
“Hypocritical? Not at all, not if you’re assigned as my Navy liaison. You won’t have to fight. And you’ll be doing your duty from behind a desk in Colorado. You do want to stay home with Fallon, don’t you?”
Oh, great. Now he was going to throw that guilt trip at her. He was worse than her mother. Or in league with her. Hannah felt positive she wouldn’t feel like being wined and dined this evening. But they needed to talk. Big time. “Peter—”
“I’ll take you somewhere nice,” he said. “I’m staying at the Hotel Del Coronado. How does the Prince of Wales Room sound for dinner?”
She knew the hotel’s restaurant by reputation only. “Like you’re going to need a lot of pull.” Not to mention a reservation—unless of course you were a gazillionaire with a company named after you about to go public on the NASDAQ, or was it NYSE? She knew he’d get the reservation, but she was more concerned he might actually have enough clout to get her reassigned.
For whatever reason, her personal merit or some admiral wanting to add “politically correct” to his résumé, she’d been given the opportunity to command. She didn’t think she’d lose it per one civilian’s request. But if she screwed up, the Navy might thi
nk she’d be better off serving in another less visible capacity. It would be best if Peter understood her position right from the start.
“Peter,” she began again, but before she could argue the point further, McCaffrey pulled up in his battered Jeep.
What was he doing here?
“Need a ride?”
He’d asked that question once before and it had led straight to the bedroom. The end of their two-week drill in Fallon had started out simple enough. She’d stepped out of the Stillwater Inn after checking out, wearing her Summer Whites for travel and carrying her gear. A short while later they were on US-50 headed west. Nothing but sixty miles of open desert road ahead of them.
When she’d almost lost her cover to the wind, he’d given her one of his ST-11 ball caps to wear instead. Today he wore a similar ball cap with his khakis. A knot formed in her stomach as she realized she still had that other one somewhere. She should find it and set it aside for Fallon. Someday her daughter would have questions about her father, and Hannah intended to answer them honestly. Mac was a good man. But like the wind, he couldn’t be tied down.
He hopped out of the Jeep. And once again removed his cover in anticipation of her salute.
She pulled her own HCS-9 ball cap down low. She hadn’t meant to get caught wearing her flight suit off base. Not that she couldn’t wear it to and from work, just that it felt inappropriate to appear that lazy in front of a peer. It was up to her to set the standard for her squadron. She should have worn her khakis into work and changed there.
“Is that your duty driver?” Peter asked as McCaffrey strolled toward them.
A commander, a duty driver? Now that was laughable.
“It’s…him,” was all she said, pleading with her eyes for Peter to keep his mouth shut. For the moment it worked. “A little out of your way isn’t it, Commander? Imperial Beach is on the other side of the base.”
The Seal’s Baby Page 5