Navy Justice. Geri Krotow
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How could she forget? Whenever she wanted to torment herself with the whys and why nots of her love life, she looked at his profile, which he’d made under a fake name. He’d messaged her when he requested she friend him on Facebook to make sure she knew it was him. He’d only ever posted one photo—of a sunset over the view of the Atlantic from Dam Neck, Virginia. She’d imagined them there, together, in different circumstances hundreds of times since they’d wrapped up Farid’s case.
Since she’d helped Brad stay out of trouble.
“What good will having my military ID do? Aren’t you still in the reserves? What about your ID?”
“I don’t have it. Truth is, I haven’t got any ID on me.”
Interesting.
“Any reason why?”
His green eyes revealed very little, but his slumped shoulders put the fear of God into her.
“Brad, what happened? Please tell me you weren’t involved in the explosion.”
His head snapped up.
“You know about it?”
She pushed away from the counter and crossed her arms. “I saw it. From my sunroom.”
“Did you see the aircraft?”
“I saw two F-18 Growlers, followed by a P-3 and a P-8. They flew west for a minute or two before I saw the fireball. I was worried it was one of the planes at first.”
“Did you see anything else that seemed suspicious?”
“No more from me, Brad. You said you needed help. If you want my help, you have to cut me in.”
He rubbed his hands across the back of his head and neck, much as she’d seen countless military men do after they removed their uniform covers. It was a habitual reaction for him, a sign of his stress, perhaps. His dark hair was longer than he’d worn it as a sailor, longer than Navy regulation by far. The lustrous curls at the nape of his neck made her grip her upper arms to keep from reaching across and touching him.
He was her idea of beautiful, if the adjective could be applied to a man.
“I’m FBI now. I’ve been working undercover trying to break up a cell.”
FBI. That was the “government job” he had. On Facebook he never got specific.
So he’d been out of the active-duty Navy this entire time. She’d thought his murky job description was because of his SEAL designation.
You could have gotten together.
No. She’d dismissed her attraction to Brad. Or rather, locked it away. Months ago.
Hadn’t she?
He shook his head. “Damn, it wasn’t supposed to go down like this.”
His profile was achingly familiar. Yet instead of the hardened strength she remembered, he gave off an air of uncertainty. Brad, vulnerable?
“How about some coffee?” She asked for him as much as for herself. She needed an immediate task to keep her thoughts where they belonged. If she was going to help Brad she needed to listen to his story instead of thinking about how sexy he looked standing in her kitchen.
* * *
“YOU’VE GOT UNTIL the police officer shows up. You can shower after I leave for work, wash and dry your clothes, make whatever food you need.” She handed him her largest mug, the one with the Navy JAG crest on it.
He raised his eyebrows in acknowledgement.
This was the man she’d come to understand first briefly in Cuba, and then Norfolk. He missed nothing; no detail was too minute to him.
“The cops?”
“I reported the explosion. They asked me to wait here until someone can take my report.”
“So I’m not safe here.”
“You’re safe for now. Tell me what you know, Iverson.”
“I’m working an undercover op. Let’s just call it against the bad guys for now. My job is to infiltrate them and monitor any suspicious activity. I assumed I was bringing in the suspects today. Things didn’t go according to my assumptions.”
He took a long pull of his coffee. The dirt under his fingernails made her wonder if he’d had to climb up from West Beach to get here.
Was that possible? The cliff was a straight drop.
Brad was a trained SEAL and now an undercover agent for the FBI. Scaling a cliff was all in a day’s work for him.
“You climbed up the cliff, didn’t you?”
He ignored her and continued his explanation. “This morning I was supposed to monitor the Sound from West Beach, as instructed by the suspects. I think, and so does my team at the Bureau, that they may want to hit the Naval Air Station since they’ve been surveilling the area for a month. Last night one of the suspects called and told me I should watch the horizon from West Beach very closely this morning.”
“And?”
“I had my team figure out what was on the docket for the squadrons on NAS Whidbey for the next several days. This morning is the start of a major West Coast Fleet exercise. When I put it together with what the suspects were feeding me, I took the initiative and decided to be out on the water instead of on the beach.”
Dread seemed to wrap itself around her.
“With the Navy? On a Navy ship?”
She knew the answer before he said it. “No. I was in a small inflatable powerboat. That’s all I’m going to tell you about it.”
“What did you see, Brad?”
He quietly tapped the side of his mug. “One of the suspects I’m familiar with was out there in a fishing boat. I stayed as far away from him as I could, as long as I could, but then I saw what looked like a SAM in his arms.”
“A surface-to-air missile?” She knew enough to realize there was always the possibility of terrorists smuggling in war weapons. The reports she’d read over the years had discussed shipments being stopped by US Customs at the border or sooner.
“Yes. I had a feeling something wasn’t right about the way they’d told me to watch from the shoreline. After putting it together with the Fleet exercise—it all pointed to trouble of the biggest kind.”
She had a feeling that the “something not right” was directly related to the explosion.
“Go on.”
“I took him, and the weapon, out.”
“Who’s him, and what exactly do