![]() | No ratings.
Rescued by military forces, start of a romance |
| Raymond Jackson, call sign Sharp, had never flinched from violence. Special Forces had carved him into a blade, forged for silent kills and cold decisions. Threats were targets. Emotion was noise. He lived that truth for years. Tonight, it faltered. The objective was simple: intercept insurgent leaders before they slipped into the mountains. Fast. Clean. Final. But as Sharp’s team ghosted through the shattered compound, a scream tore across the night. High. Panicked. Female. His jaw locked. Civilians weren’t supposed to be here. Through his scope, he found her—two insurgents dragging her across the dirt, her limbs thrashing until a fist cracked against her temple. She went limp, the sight punching straight through him with a fury he didn’t recognize. No waiting. No orders. His signals cut the air; his men moved like shadows. Seconds later, bodies cooled in the dust and silence returned. Sharp was already kneeling beside her. Dirt streaked her skin, yet even through grime and fear, he saw beauty. Long, wavy chestnut hair tangled across her cheek. A tank top hung ripped at the shoulder, losing the battle to cover generous curves. Mud-caked jeans clung to a slender frame no taller than five-and-a-half feet. Bare feet. Pink polish chipped and toes scraped raw. Fingernails broken, ragged, proof she’d fought like hell. Wildcat, he thought. Not a shrinking violet. Her breathing trembled in shallow pulls. Blood traced the curve of her lip. A bruise spread along her jaw. Carefully, more gently than he’d ever handled anything in combat, he lifted her, her weight fragile against his armor. As he carried her toward extraction, the thrum of rotor blades rolled across the dark. Something shifted under his ribs feelings, protective, primal, possessive in a way that had nothing to do with duty. What in God’s name was a girl like her doing here? A little sprite like that had no business in this hell. At the bird, the medic knelt beside her, hands quick and sure. Sharp hovered too close; his men noticed. They didn’t speak. “She’s dehydrated and a couple nasty bruises,” the medic murmured. “No signs of sexual assault. She’s stable for transport. We can drop her at base, let them take over.” “She goes with us.” Sharp’s voice cut like steel. “That’s final.” The medic blinked but didn’t argue. One of the men exhaled softly. “She kinda looks like that singer, Lindsey Case.” Sharp didn’t answer. He didn’t even know her name. But he knew this: something in him had shifted, clean and sudden, like a blade catching light. And Raymond “Sharp” Jackson the soldier, weapon, master of the knife, wasn’t walking off this mission the same man who walked in. |