Soldier's Pregnancy Protocol. Beth Cornelison
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“You’re awake. Good.”
She angled her head toward his voice and found him peering over his shoulder from a narrow seat at the front of the confined space. He wore a headset over one ear with a microphone at his mouth. The green glow of a control panel cast harsh shadows on his angular face and square jaw. “I was just about to wake you. Can you tell me who the president is?”
She did. “Now can you tell me where the heck we are?”
“North of Denver. At about 15,000 feet.”
The tiny space she was in jostled and dipped. Her stomach rose to her throat. “15,000 feet? In the air?”
“Don’t panic. I have hundreds of hours’ flying experience.”
Despite the hammering protest of her head, Erin struggled to sit up and take stock of her situation. “Oh God.”
She was in a small propeller plane from the looks of it. And Alec was alone at the controls. She fought the swell of nausea and anxiety that swamped her. “Wh-why am I here? Where are you taking me?” She heard the shrill note in her voice but didn’t care.
“Easy, sweetcakes. I’ve got everything under control.”
“That doesn’t answer my question!”
Deep breath. Slow exhale. The exercise didn’t help. Her nerves still jangled, and her stomach pitched.
“Alec, why am I in this plane? How did I get on this plane? I thought you were taking me to a hotel!”
He angled another look over his shoulder. “Anyone ever tell you that you sleep like the dead? I decided I’d get fewer arguments from you if I didn’t wake you until we were in the air.”
“You’re kidnapping me now?” She gaped at him, stunned by his stunt.
“Trust me. It’s better this way. Because of your concussion—a minor one, the doc assures me—you needed someone to watch you for the next day or two.”
Erin’s heart gave a little kick. She hadn’t had anyone looking out for her interests in a very long time.
“But I had to get out of town, shake the men who’ve been following me.” Alec returned his attention to the dials and gauges in front of him. “At the safe house, I’ll have the facilities to start tracking Daniel and protect you at the same time.”
She grabbed the back of Alec’s seat as the plane jolted through another air pocket. “So why are these men following you? What do they want?”
Alec didn’t answer.
“Can you at least tell me which side of the law you’re on? Are you one of the good guys?”
He shrugged. “Depends who you ask. We’re getting close. Better get ready to go.”
Erin shifted to look out the front windshield at the mountainous terrain. “I don’t see any airstrip. Where are we supposed to land?”
“We’re not landing.”
A prickle started at the base of Erin’s neck. “Pardon me?”
“We’re jumping. I only had one chute in the plane, so I picked up a tandem harness before we took off.”
Pinpricks of dread crept down her spine. “We’re jumping? As in parachuting? As in … No!” A cold sweat beaded on her lip as an image of Bradley’s final moments flashed in her mind. “No, Alec! I can’t!”
He flipped some switches and slid out from behind the controls. “Fine. Stay on the plane. Although you only have a couple minutes’ worth of fuel. Do you know how to land a Cessna?”
“No. I—” Erin’s breathing grew ragged, and her heart clambered. “A couple minutes of fuel? But if we jump, the plane—”
“Crashes. I know. That’s the point. With luck, the people after us will believe we’re dead.” Alec stepped over her toward the back cargo area of the tiny plane.
“But—” Erin’s head pounded, and her mind spun.
This was a nightmare. No, worse than a nightmare. This was real.
“Please, Alec. There’s got to be another way to do this! I can’t jump!”
“You’ll be strapped to me. Perfectly safe. I’ve done this dozens of times.” He handed her a nylon mesh harness. “Put this on.”
Bile burned her throat, and she swallowed hard, searching for her voice. “Alec, wait! You don’t understand. Bradley died—”
A screeching siren from the controls interrupted her. “Low fuel! Low fuel!”
“This is our stop.” Alec cinched a strap tighter across his chest, then looked at the harness still in her hand. “You coming or not?”
Erin scrambled to don the device, and Alec stepped closer to show her how to arrange the straps and clips. “Please, don’t make me do this, Alec! Stay with me! Turn the plane around and land it somewhere. I can’t do this!”
He tested one of her straps with a firm tug. Then, grasping her shoulders with strong hands, he met her eyes with his piercing blue gaze. “Yes, you can. I’ll be right there with you the whole time. I won’t let you get hurt.”
His assurances echoed with a distant familiarity. Her stomach lurched. “That’s what Bradley always said.”
Alec forcibly quashed the sympathy that stirred in him when he looked in Erin’s terror-stricken eyes. “Turn around so I can hook up your harness.”
She squeezed her eyes shut, and a tear leaked onto her cheek. The sight of that tear as she dutifully complied with his directive landed a sucker punch in his gut.
He had to shove down his reactions to Erin and focus on the jump, focus on getting them both safely to the ground. Drawing a cleansing breath, Alec slid a hand around her waist and pulled her back against him. With his hand splayed on her belly, he held her in place while he fastened the D-rings of her harness to his. With effort, he shut out the sweet scent of her hair, the odd firmness and round swell of her stomach, the shudder that shimmied through her.
“Alec,” she said, her voice trembling, “It has to be dangerous for a woman in my condition to—”
“You’ll be fine. I’ll protect your head when we land.”
“I don’t mean—”
“Time to go. Walk with me.” He nudged her forward. Opened the rear cargo door. Braced as the slipstream roared into the plane.
“Alec!”
“We jump on three! One … two …”
“Alec!”
“Three!”