Breathless. Sharron McClellan

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one-on-one time. They were Marines. They didn’t need anything but water, air and the burning desire to do the right thing.

      She could train larger groups, but Jess knew one axiom to be true: there was nothing more detrimental to a mission than a half-assed operative who didn’t know what he was doing.

      Or worse, thought he knew but thought wrong.

      “Sound off,” she said, adjusting the vocals of her mask’s transmitter and receiver.

      “Latham.” Newbie One.

      “Taylor.” Her first in command and a trusted friend, the older, weathered Marine was an excellent teacher with an innate patience that the recruits responded to.

      “Eielson.” Newbie Two.

      The three men gathered around her, their dark, wet-suit-covered forms making them almost invisible in the night water. “As you know, our objective is the enemy ship, Sushi,” she said. “She’s approximately one mile away, and her coordinates were downloaded into your personal GPS systems before you entered the water. Upon arrival, Latham and I will set a charge at the bow of the ship. Taylor and Eielson, you’re taking the stern. Latham—” she addressed her partner for the exercise “—tell me our objective.”

      “Disable and distract. Once she’s crippled, the surface team will board her and retrieve the hostages.”

      “Good,” she responded. “Questions?”

      Nothing but silence. Not even the sound of burbling SCUBA tanks since they wore rebreathers to give themselves an unlimited amount of time underwater.

      Not that we have unlimited time, Jess thought. Nor did they need it. Marines did not screw around.

      “Move out,” she said. In unison, they swam to the diver propulsion vehicles, DVPs, that drifted in the water next to the boat that had transported them to the drop spot. Taylor and Eielson left first. Sinking below the waves, they’d parallel her and Latham as they made their way to the ship.

      She gave a short wave to the boat captain, who stood on the deck watching them depart, then powered up her DPV. Using the GPS coordinates for guidance instead of the running lights, she and Latham headed toward the Sushi.

      She almost chuckled at the name but kept quiet. Each new training group gave the ship a different name. Some serious. Some funny. Some as imaginative as blank paper.

      In this case, the name was given when the entire squad of nine went to a Japanese restaurant a few weeks ago. They’d eaten questionable sushi and sucked down sake.

      They’d spent the next day hungover and sick with food poisoning.

      She’d used the opportunity to take them on a five-mile run. Cruel, she mused. However, they’d all finished, proving their tenacity and strength of spirit not just to her but to themselves.

      “How you doing, Latham?” Jess asked when they were a few hundred feet closer to their objective.

      “Good, ma’am,” he replied.

      “It’s just us for the next few minutes,” she said. “If you have any questions, now would be the time.”

      “None, ma’am.”

      She didn’t think he’d have any. One of her best recruits, Chuck Latham was a husky young man from the Atlanta inner city. He’d been given a choice when he was sixteen and standing in front of a judge for theft—join ROTC and get his life in line or go to juvenile hall.

      Despite the ridicule of his peers, he chose ROTC. After graduation, he’d put himself through college. He was one of those rare recruits that had brains, instinct and heart. One day, he’d make captain or better. She was sure of it.

      “You understand how the charges work?” she asked.

      “Yes, ma’am.”

      She sighed, hating the formal term. She was only a few years older than Latham, and whenever he ma’amed her, it felt like a decade of difference in age.

      She was not ready to feel that old. Not yet. “Latham, quit ma’aming me. It’s Whitaker.”

      “Yes, ma’am. Whitaker, ma’am.”

      Newbies, she thought, rolling her eyes.

      The DPV sputtered, almost coming to a halt. Jess let up on the power, smacked the console, and it lurched forward. Damned machines.

      The combination of night and their depth in the water column left them blind as they motored along, but Jess knew the water around them teemed with life. Lobsters. Snappers. An occasional white-tipped reef shark. Moray eels hunting for food.

      And her favorite animal, mantas. Gentle giants that fed on plankton, their ten-foot-plus wingspans created pressure waves that she sensed, even through the skintight wet suit. Occasionally, one passed close enough that its wake rocked the DPV, making her trainee tighten his grip.

      “They won’t hurt you, Latham,” she said, a chuckle tinting her voice.

      “I know, ma’am. Whitaker,” he corrected himself. “They just startle me sometimes, and you have to admit those horns are a little creepy.”

      “They’re not horns. They’re cephalic lobes that help them funnel plankton into their mouths,” she said. “Stop thinking of them as horns, and they won’t make you jump when they catch you off guard.”

      “I’ll try, ma’am,” he replied, his deep voice taking on a drawl that he managed to hide except when he was nervous.

      “You do that,” she said, not bothering to tell him to stop ma’aming her. “There’s nothing that’ll get you killed faster in the ocean than lack of knowledge and being unprepared.”

      Ten minutes later, they arrived at the ship, and Jess checked her watch. Right on time.

      Opening the case attached to the front of the DPV, she pulled out the explosive device. Flicking on a small, pencilsized light attached to her helmet, she checked the mine. It wasn’t much. This was a training exercise, and they didn’t want to actually blow a hole in the ship.

      Or a recruit.

      She handed the device to Latham. “Tell me what you know.”

      Flipping on his light, he turned the cylinder over in his hands. “Limpet mine. Magnetic. Capable of a range of charges and producing a range of responses from barely noticeable to what the fuck, there’s a hole in my ship.”

      She chuckled at his description but nodded in approval. “Time to get away before it blows?”

      Latham examined the timer. “Anywhere from three seconds to three hours, depending on the required settings.”

      “Give me fifteen minutes,” she said, even though the explosion would be little more than the equivalent of a child’s cap gun and fifteen seconds was plenty. In a real-life situation, they’d need those fifteen minutes, and she preferred to treat this as real even though it was a teaching situation.

      Latham set the charge, and

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