The Woman Left Behind Read online



  Taking a deep breath, she called headquarters and told MacNamara’s assistant she had to talk to him. She’d expected to have to wait a month or so—he was never accommodating—but instead she was told to get there immediately.

  MacNamara’s normal expression was a blend of surliness, impatience, and downright hostility, but when Jina sat down in his office he regarded her seriously. “You went through some tough shit,” he commented, leaning back in his chair.

  She shrugged, not wanting to talk about it. But for him to even acknowledge her situation was unusual, because normally his attitude ran along the lines of suck it up and do your job. She had, way past what she’d thought she could do, but now she couldn’t. “I want to transfer back to my old job,” she said.

  Instantly MacNamara morphed back into his normal self. “Sorry. We’ve spent a lot of money on your training, and I’m not going to throw it away. Request denied.”

  She’d expected that, accepted the course she would have to take. She gave him a level stare, then stood and said, “In that case, I quit.”

  She’d never said those words before. She’d had to fight with herself to come to this point, because it was so alien to her. She could return to the team, she could force herself forward . . . but she didn’t want to. Hearing herself say the words broke a barrier inside, one she’d never let herself cross before. She was in unchartered territory, but abruptly she felt free and calm. This was her chosen path. She was done.

  To her surprise, instead of instantly tossing her out the door, MacNamara leaned back and steepled his fingers, studying her over them. “Don’t be so hasty. Think this through.”

  “I have. Through, over, under, around. I’d prefer doing one more mission—with someone else’s team, which isn’t going to happen—just to prove to myself that I have the guts to do it, but for the most part . . .” She shook her head. “I’m finished.”

  “Ace made the right call, the only call he could have made with the information he had.”

  “I know that. I’m still done.” Knowing and accepting were two different things. She couldn’t even argue that he’d made the wrong decision. He’d thought she was dead in the explosion. She got that. That didn’t alter what she still had to deal with, the emotions she’d felt when she stood alone in the desert and known he’d left her behind. She wasn’t a computer; she couldn’t reboot and start fresh. She couldn’t shove all that into a different compartment of her brain and ignore it as if it had never happened.

  MacNamara shrugged. He wasn’t the type who kept beating at something, he had too much going on. “You still don’t get your old job back. I’m not wasting your training. I’ll switch you to drone training, you can be an instructor in that, but not communications. Your choice.”

  Her mouth fell open. To say she was flabbergasted was putting it mildly. She loved working with Tweety, loved every bit of the nerdy software stuff and how absolutely cool the little drone was. The flabbergasting part was that no one who knew MacNamara ever expected him to be accommodating. “What? Are you sure? I mean—thank you.”

  He scowled at her. “Get out before I change my mind.”

  She did. She left in a daze, knowing she had just walked out of one part of her life and entered another. She had quit. And she had begun.

  Twenty-Four

  She cried a little bit as she drove to the training area, knowing that she had to tell the guys in person, she couldn’t just let them hear about it from someone else. Maybe they already knew, maybe MacNamara had immediately called Levi, but that didn’t matter: she’d quit, but she couldn’t let herself be a coward about it.

  Her heartbeat hit double-time as she parked, looked around at a place that, for the past year, had been more familiar to her than her own condo. There was nothing glamorous about it: the dirt, the sand, the buildings for practicing shooting situations, the obstacles and pits and soul-destroying humidity, the coolers of bottled water placed at strategic points, the dust kicked up by pounding feet, the groups of sweating and swearing men working through different rotations. She spotted Kodak and his team, working with the new drone trainee whose name she didn’t know because she still couldn’t get past the ache that Donnelly was gone and this was his replacement, so she’d been ignoring the man’s existence. She wouldn’t be able to do that now, though; she’d be training him in the drone program.

  What she didn’t see was her own team—correction, her former team. The thought made her heart ache, but she knew she’d made the right choice. She took out her phone and shot a text to Boom. Maybe she should have texted Levi, but today she was taking the easiest path she could—because she was now a quitter.

  Quitter. The word jolted her down to her bones, knocked her world askew, and she had a feeling it would never be on quite the same plane again. She’d spent her life measuring herself against Jordan and Taz, pushing herself to keep up with her brothers, and when she’d been assigned to the teams she’d carried that compulsion to the point of insanity. She had even jumped out of freakin’ planes, and what sane person did that? Pride and stubbornness had kept her plugging away at something she didn’t want, until she’d become fond of the guys, of Terisa and Ailani, of the kids, and made a place for herself in their world—never mind that their world had never been anything she’d wanted.

  Training the drone operators was so much more in her wheelhouse; she’d look forward to going to work every day, instead of dreading what she’d have to put herself through to prove that she wasn’t a quitter. There had been days she’d enjoyed; she’d learned to like being in good shape. She would never look at running the same way, not after the desert, but the truth was if she hadn’t done so much running here in training, she never would have been able to survive that brutal run. Being on the team had put her in a desperate situation, but it had also given her the ability to handle it.

  With a sharp pang of surprise, she realized she wanted to keep up part of what she’d been doing. She wouldn’t have a team she could train with, but she could run, she could join a gym and lift weights, do some rope climbing, keep those skills sharp and her conditioning up.

  Who knew? Someday she might have to run for her life again. If that kind of situation ever arose—maybe running from a mugger—then she wanted to be able to do it. She wanted to leave any mugger in the dust.

  Her phone buzzed with an incoming text. She glanced at the screen to see Boom’s short reply that they were on the way.

  She would have gone to them. Did they think she wasn’t able to make it that far under her own steam? Or did they already know she’d quit, and she was no longer allowed on the training site?

  Tears burned her eyes again, because likely she wouldn’t be back on this site unless something came up with one of the drone trainees. Making this change was tough, and not just because she’d had to turn her back on how she’d always defined herself, though perhaps it was equally true that she’d let the challenges of others define her. Regardless of that, the guys on her team meant a lot to her, and not having them in her everyday life from now on would leave a huge hole.

  Her world had changed drastically the day she’d been assigned to the GO-Team, and now it had changed drastically again because she’d left them. Before, she’d had friends with whom she shopped, went to movies; she’d dated, though not seriously. She had gone to museums and plays, to ball games. She’d had a life. Now she hadn’t touched base with any of those friends since she’d been assigned to the team, because she’d barely had time to do her laundry and every other minute of her day had been taken up with training, eating, and sleeping.

  If the guys didn’t want to associate with her anymore—what then?

  She’d handle it, that was what. She hadn’t had any friends when she’d moved to D.C., but she’d made them. She was friendly, and social. She could start over.

  She could, but she didn’t want to. She wanted the best of both worlds. She wanted to stay friends with them, but she didn’t want to go out on missions;