Protected by a SEAL (Alpha SEALs, Book 6) (22 page)

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Authors: Makenna Jameison

Tags: #forbidden romance, #military romance, #alpha male romance, #Navy SEAL romance, #navy seal romantic suspense, #Military Romantic Suspense, #opposites attract romance, #navy seal erotic romance, #navy seal series

BOOK: Protected by a SEAL (Alpha SEALs, Book 6)
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He glanced down at the nasty stab wound on
his forearm, sewn neatly shut with nine stitches. Compared to other
injuries he’d gotten over the years as a SEAL, this was nothing but
a scratch.

Another member of his team, Mike “Patch”
Hunter, had stitched him up in the field after they’d battled with
insurgents. Patrick and his men had conducted a raid on an enemy
compound, rescuing an American soldier being held hostage, and had
slipped back into the night in their Black Hawk as quickly as
they’d arrived.

After tracking the enemies’ movements for
four days, last night they’d completed their mission and gotten
their man. And luck didn’t have a damn thing to do with it.
Patrick’s SEAL team was among the best of the best. His men trained
together daily and fought as one in battle. They were his brothers,
and he’d lay down his life for any one of them, just as they’d do
for him.

“Are you meeting us at Anchors tomorrow,
Ice?” Christopher “Blade” Walters asked as he caught up to
Patrick.

“Maybe,” he commented noncommittally as the
two men fell in step beside one another.

“You should—we missed your sorry ass last
time.”

“Needed my help picking up women?”

“In your dreams. More like fighting them
off.”

Patrick smirked. A local bar near their base
in Little Creek, Virginia, Anchors was a popular hangout frequented
by the locals and military members alike. It was always packed with
SEALs looking to unwind and local women intent on taking one home
for the night. And vice versa.

Not that Patrick had complained about that
in his younger days, but at thirty-five, and as one of the older
members on his team, he didn’t hang out there much anymore. Nor did
he have the time to, but it was a tradition for the six guys on his
SEAL team to go there the day after they’d returned from a
deployment to have a few beers and decompress.

“Although I am hoping to avoid that cute
little blonde I met last time. She was way too clingy.”

Patrick raised his eyebrows.

“I took her home for the night, and she
stuck around all morning. I finally had to convince her we had
training that day. Even put on my PT gear before I escorted her out
my front door.”

“You’re such a charmer.”

“I do what I can. And don’t get me wrong—she
was a tiger in bed.”

“That’s exactly why I avoid the place.”

“The blonde?”

“The women.”

Patrick had met his ex-wife at Anchors years
ago. He’d thought he was hot as shit back then, nothing but
six-foot-three inches of solid muscle with the ability to easily
attract all the ladies within a fifty-foot radius.

The other guys had joked they were glad that
he was off the market when he’d proposed to his ex. He’d never had
trouble finding a woman to take home in the past and had enjoyed
more than his fair share of the ladies over the years. Something
about his ex-wife had drawn him in though, in a way no one else
ever had before. She was open, sweet, and caring—the exact opposite
of his own calm, cool, and collected demeanor.

Patrick had earned the nickname “Ice” in
BUD/S, Basic Underwater Demolition/SEALS training, for that very
reason—he was completely calm, as cold as ice, no matter what
situation was thrown at them.

And they’d dealt with a lot. That instinct
to keep a level head had been honed over years on the battlefield
and deployments to hell holes all over the planet. Between those
experiences and what he’d gone through with his ex, nothing could
faze him now.

She’d announced that she was leaving him
when he’d returned from his second deployment, a two-week tour of
hell in the jungles of South America. The other men on his team
were all single, and Patrick thought he was the lucky one, having a
woman to come home to. A wife who supposedly loved him.

Fuck if he was wrong about everything. She
couldn’t handle the stress of not knowing where he was, how long
he’d be gone, or if he’d even return. Plenty of those who served
never did come back—or when they did, they weren’t ever the same.
War hardened a man, changed him, kept him on edge and completely
alert even when he was back in his own bed. The women they left
behind could never completely understand what they’d gone
through.

One deployment was hard enough, but having
to go through that shit again and again? She couldn’t deal.

Patrick’s first SEAL deployment had been
difficult, but they’d talked afterward, and Patrick thought he’d
left on good terms. That they’d work through it. Then after his
second tour, she’d taken their young son and left, moving in with
her parents the moment he returned.

He’d been shocked. Dealing with the break-up
of his marriage had him feeling like his goddamn heart was being
ripped out, but he was determined not to let a damn thing get to
him afterward. He sure as hell wasn’t about to let a woman ever do
that to him again. He’d be just fine, thank you very much, living
alone and seeing his son when he could. Maybe he’d enjoy the
pleasure of a woman once in a while, but he sure as hell wouldn’t
ever let one into his heart again.

When she’d told him she had cancer last year
and only had a few months left to live, that had sealed the deal,
cementing his decision. No one should have to watch anyone they
loved suffer that much—and he did still love her, despite their
divorce. She was the mother of his child, the woman he’d pledged
himself to honor and protect. Just like that, his world had
crumbled apart once more.

Now her parents watched Logan when Patrick
was deployed, and the rest of the time he devoted his life to his
six-year-old son. He had no desire or need for a committed
relationship again. No, his son, his SEAL team, and the occasional
lady he found to go home with were more than enough to fulfill
him.

Patrick took a deep breath as they walked
off the C-17, inhaling the salty air that came from being near the
water. Best thing about living here. Damn, if that didn’t feel good
after being in the dry, desert heat for a week.

It had been a short mission, but that didn’t
make it any less difficult to leave his son. He’d take his kid down
to the ocean this weekend if the weather was good—soak in all that
sun and salty sea air.

“Come on, that’s never kept you away before.
It’s tradition,” Christopher insisted.

“Fuck, yeah!” Mike shouted, catching up to
them. “About time you join the rest of us for a night on the town
again.”

“We’ll see,” Patrick said. “I just got
back—it’s gonna be hard to leave the kid again.”

“Kids sleep,” Christopher commented. “Just
come for a few hours.”

“Agreed; that’s not an excuse. How’s the
arm?” Mike asked.

“Good as new.” He held it up for Mike to
admire his handiwork.

“You picking up Logan tonight?” Christopher
asked.

“Yeah. I’m gonna drop my gear off and shower
first, but within the hour I’ll be over at his grandparents’
house.”

“Sweet. That kid is growing like a weed. The
last time I saw him he was throwing a damn good spiral.”

“And Ice taught him that?” Mike joked.

Patrick had been all-American in high school
football, but rather than take one of the many football
scholarships that were offered to him, he’d joined the US Navy and
become a SEAL. He’d felt it was his duty to serve and protect, and
although he loved football, it didn’t hold a candle to serving his
nation.

September 11 had only furthered his resolve
to make the military a lifelong career, and he hadn’t looked back
or regretted his decision once.

He’d seen a lot over the years, in warzones
and deployments to other war-torn areas, proving just that much
more how much guys like him—like any of the men on his SEAL
team—were needed.

Patrick and his team had been wounded on
numerous occasions but had successfully completed every mission
they’d deployed on. They’d helped women and children who had
nothing, protected those who needed someone to defend them, fought
against men who were hell-bent on causing nothing but harm and
destruction, and rescued Americans from situations others wouldn’t
imagine in their worst nightmares.

And not once had he wished for the cushy
life of a professional athlete. Of the fame and glory that came
with it. The SEAL’s motto was, “The only easy day was yesterday,”
and that suited Patrick damn fine. He’d push himself every day to
serve his country and protect others, and he expected nothing less
from the other men on his team.

None of that meant he was about to take shit
about his ball-playing days from his teammates. Patrick shot Mike a
look that would’ve killed a lesser man, his cool blue eyes like
ice.

“Easy,” Mike joked. “I’m only kidding around
with you about Logan because I plan to stay single for life. No
wife or kids tying me down—and plenty of ladies to keep me
company.”

“I heard that!” Evan “Flip” Jenkins turned
around and shouted from ahead of them. “You’re gonna be a lonely
old man some day, Hunter.”

Mike laughed and flipped him the bird. “I
just flipped off Flip. Get it?”

“Fuck you,” Evan spat out
good-naturedly.

“Is that how you got your name, Flip?” Mike
joked, moving ahead to catch up with Evan and the other guys.

They were walking across the tarmac of the
airstrip now, speeding up as they got closer to the hangar. An
overnight flight on a military cargo plane was less than
comfortable accommodations, and none of them could wait to get out
of there, get cleaned up, and enjoy life back in the good ole U.S.
of A.

“That kid can throw,” Christopher continued
as the others walked off ahead of them. Flip jokingly punched Mike
in the arm, and the guys tussled back and forth a minute with the
other two members of their team egging them on.

“Don’t I know it,” Patrick said with a rare
laugh. “He’s gonna play ball like his old man.”

“Think he’ll be a SEAL some day?”

“Hell if I know. The kid can do whatever he
wants, and he’ll have my full support.”

“Are you turning soft on me, Ice?”

Patrick laughed, feeling lighter than he had
all year. He’d pulled off another successful mission with his team,
they’d rescued an American hostage, and he was about to see his
kid. At the moment, life didn’t get much better than that. Even his
guys ribbing he could take, because they knew he’d throw it right
back at them when the mood struck. They fought with each other like
brothers sometimes, but when the shit hit the fan, he could count
on each and every one of his men with his life.

He’d lay down his own life for them any day,
their brotherhood forged on the battlefield and stronger than blood
ties.

Save for his son, each of those men were the
most important thing in his life. Patrick’s duty to his country
came first. He put his country and SEAL brothers before anything
else, and nothing would ever change that.

www.makennajameison.com

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