True Valor (4 page)

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Authors: Dee Henderson

Tags: #FICTION / Religious, #General Fiction

BOOK: True Valor
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* * *

 

The party cleanup was just about done. Grace dropped the dishrag into the sink and walked back to the kitchen table she was working to clear, wedging her cell phone against her shoulder while she dried her hands. The handmade mahogany display case she’d ordered for Jill’s birthday was in. Grace listened to the message as she pulled out a chair, found a pen, and turned pages in her day planner.

How was she going to fit a trip into her schedule before she left without Jill hearing about it? It was perfect for the blown glass figurines Jill collected and too important a gift to risk getting damaged in shipping. The next week was already packed with notes; she turned the page and bright red boxes met her. The deployment date wasn’t moving.

“Okay if I join you?”

Grace waved her cousin into the kitchen. She saved the message and closed her phone. “As long as you don’t expect much. I’m talked out,” she whispered, fighting the hoarseness that had messed up the end of her day. She bit her lip to stop the laughter—someone, probably Jill, had given Wolf one of the white paper sailor hats. It had been autographed by a number of people, and he had one of the party toothpicks stuck in the crown.

Wolf settled beside her at the table as she refilled her glass of ice water from the pitcher. Grace rested her cheek against her palm and felt the ring she wore cut into her cheek. She turned it back around with her thumb. The party had been a smashing success. If she gained the energy, she would go home and take advantage of having a real bed. Of everything she knew she would crave while on deployment, topping the list was a real bed and a soft pillow.

“Good party.”

“Thanks. I knew you’d enjoy it.” His definition of a good party was quite broad: the general denominator being “unstuffy” people and edible food. “How did Jill take the deployment news?”

“Got quiet. Said
oh
.”

Grace read between the lines. The news had stung. “It’s a long time.”

Wolf just nodded. He returned the salt and pepper shakers to the center holder, then tugged out a napkin and shook it out. She slid him her glass of ice water. He wet the napkin and scrubbed at a spot of drying chocolate topping she had missed. Emotion swelled up inside as she watched him. She loved this man, and there was something so endearing about the boy still inside. She was two years older than he was; he’d been the brother she never had. “Going to tell me what else she said?”

“Nope.”

“I can get you a dishrag.”

He wadded up the napkin.

Grace knew the problem. For the first time her cousin was letting his heart get deeply involved. He was scared to leave. He couldn’t control what would happen to his relationship with Jill while he was gone. Grace had been there; she knew exactly what it felt like to be heading for a deployment with uncertainty on the home front. The pressure of her first deployment had been complicated by Ben’s reaction to her being gone.

She could count on one hand the best friends in her life. Jill was at the top of the list. They’d met when she had flown into Norfolk and over one weekend had to find an apartment near the base, get her car tags for the base, and make arrangements to ship furniture. Jill had become a friend in those twenty-four hours of whirlwind decisions. Wolf had his work cut out for him to make the relationship with Jill work, but Grace had never counseled against it. She’d been the one to introduce them three years ago. The man deserved to be happy. And she knew they were both too stubborn to give up. “Why don’t you take her to a movie?”

“Tonight?”

“Take advantage of the time you have left stateside. Trust me, she’ll say yes.” He had no idea. For the last decade, Jill had been talking about being married by the time she was thirty. Wolf dragging his heels was making her best friend miserable. Grace was afraid Jill was going to get tired of waiting for him to reach the point he wanted to settle down.

She had never been a civilian, never been the one left stateside, so it was hard to offer much practical advice. It wasn’t that she didn’t understand; she just didn’t know what to suggest. Wolf was not leaving the Navy, and at times that was the only solution Jill could see to the separations. Silence was hard on a relationship, and Wolf deployed places where no mail or phone for weeks at a time was common.

“She’s still talking with Bruce, saying her normal very long good-bye.”

“She doesn’t see him often enough.”

“I’m not complaining. I know the feeling. I haven’t been able to see you nearly enough either.”

“You mean you’re not tired of me yet?” she teased and he laughed as she had known he would. She knew being around to see her was one of the reasons he’d accepted a transfer from the West Coast back to the East, though Jill had been the main reason. He normally worked Pacific assignments, but the increase in military deployments over the last two years had led to the shifting around of SEAL teams to help cover the demands in Europe. But even living in the same area, they still had to coordinate schedules to see each other.

“Are you ready for the next six months?”

That she should have given him reason to wonder made her sad. “I’m ready. It’s too quiet here. I want to get back to sea.” She was ready to get away from the low-grade grief she felt stateside. There was peace to be found in work and she needed it. Too many places stateside had been shared with Ben, and she kept encountering reminders of what she had lost.

“I’ve got few regrets.”
The words from Bruce’s letter echoed in her memory. His letter had arrived at a vulnerable moment, catching her off guard. She’d read it many times during the last two weeks. She had regrets, so many they haunted her.
If only . . .
She’d been living with the words during this shore leave and they were wearing her down. She envied Bruce that peace he had about life. She had made one decision. No more regrets. It was time for better decisions. Wiser ones.

“You can’t hide in work forever.”

She smiled at Wolf, appreciating the fact he cared enough to push. “Another six months. You can give me the moving-on speech after this tour.”

Wolf crossed his arms, the fabric of his shirt pulling taut against well-defined muscles, and he rocked back in the chair as he considered her. “Promise me you’ll be extra careful while you’re gone. I don’t want to have to open that letter you insisted on handing me.”

“It’s the grown-up thing to do, writing that letter.”

“I’m not writing you one.”

She reached over and squeezed the back of his neck. He wouldn’t need to write one. She knew he loved her. “Write one for Jill. Just in case.”

“Grace—”


Sweetheart
is a good way to start it.”

“Mushy.”

“Relationships are designed to embarrass guys with mushy words. Go find Jill.”

“Want to come along to the movie?”

“Thanks but no. My feather pillow is calling my name.” Had Ben been here, she would have found the energy, but tagging along as a third wasn’t worth it. She could feel herself growing old in the little changes to her priorities. “Same plan for phone calls as last time?”

“Yes. I’ll track you down.”

“Good. Finding you is hard. Your platoon tends to hide.”

“Just look where the shooting is going on.”

She laughed. “You
will
come back in one piece—you owe me after Ecuador.”

He got to his feet and ruffled her hair. “Promise. Have a good deployment, Grace.”

“You too, Wolf.”

 

* * *

 

“You’re sure you don’t mind watching the mutt?” Bruce asked.

Jill leaned through the car window to reach in and pet the dog curled up in the passenger seat. “You’re going to hurt her feelings. I’ll be glad to have Emily while you’re gone.”

“I’ll bring her bed and food and chew toy with me. Extra keys to the car. My checkbook. What else?”

Jill chuckled. “I like the list so far. Don’t worry about it. If I need anything else, Beth has your house keys and can forward it to me.” She stepped back from the car as the porch lights came on and Wolf stepped outside. “Give me a call when you reach Charlotte.”

“Will do.”

Jill waved as Bruce pulled out of the drive. He’d had a good time today; she took comfort in that as she asked him to make yet another round-trip from Florida to Virginia. He sometimes could catch a flight into Naval Air Station, Oceana, but he’d driven this time in order to bring her the old hutch that had been in their parents’ home. She’d seen him talking with Grace. This deployment was putting so many things on hold, not the least of which was a budding friendship between her brother and Grace. It was hard to play matchmaker when they were leaving for four and six months respectively.

Wolf wrapped her in a hug from behind and she leaned against him, enjoying his strength.

“Good party.”

“Great party,” she corrected, wrapping her hands around his.

“Grace suggested I take you to a movie.”

She giggled. “You didn’t tell her?”

“Honey, I know better than to tell my cousin I’m taking you to look at rings.”

“I said we could look, not that I’d accept one.”

“I’ll convince you.”

“You’ve been trying.” She knew how miserable she would be while he was gone. She was still trying to adjust to a relationship where bad news was inevitable, but it wasn’t easy.

“We’ll make it through this separation. I’ll write at least every other day.”

“I know you will.” She turned. Wolf would do everything he could to make it work. She reached up to tap his square jaw. The man was a SEAL, had the build of a boxer and a great smile in a face that was far from symmetrical. She looked into his deep brown eyes and found steadiness. She loved him. “Let’s go look at rings.” She’d know by the end of the summer if she could deal with what it meant to accept one.

Three

 

* * *

 

MAY 10

USS
GEORGE WASHINGTON
(CVN 73)

M
EDITERRANEAN
S
EA
OFF
W
EST
C
OAST
OF
T
URKEY

Her flight boots had salt whitened from months at sea, and her flight suit under the white life vest had picked up a long day’s worth of grime inherent with working on an aircraft carrier flight deck. Grace narrowed her eyes against the sun as she tracked the plane in the landing pattern.

She wore wraparound sunglasses, ample ChapStick, and had brought thick foam earplugs to cope with the noise of jets landing a few feet away. In her left hand she held the handset putting her in open radio contact with the approaching plane. At this moment she was the most important person in that pilot’s life.

The aircraft carrier had turned into the wind to allow for recovery of planes from the second op of the day. Grace had been flying during the first op, doing a mirror-image training flight for what she would be doing for real tonight. After the debrief, she had come up to take a rotation as the landing signal officer. This was the eleventh plane landing in this cycle. They were arriving in sixty-second intervals, and she was handling the pressure with a cool precision.

Grace kept her right hand over her head holding up the pickle switch controlling the Fresnel landing lights, reminding all the other LSOs on the platform with her that they had a foul deck. The F/A-18 Hornet that had just landed had not yet cleared the deck. Grace resisted the impulse to turn and look over her shoulder to see what the holdup was. She had a bigger problem coming toward her. The EA-6B Prowler on approach was flown by a nugget—a new pilot in the air wing on his first sea cruise.

The USS
George Washington
had been at sea two months now of this six-month deployment, and Grace worried that Lieutenant Junior Grade Ellis “Patrick” Jones was losing confidence in his flying skills, not gaining it.

She’d mentally nicknamed him “Jittery” because he got excited easily, and from the very first meeting it was apparent he was overwhelmed with the transition to carrier operations. Unlike shore deployments, life aboard an aircraft carrier ran at high speed with only rare pauses. Every nugget had to learn to cope and there was precious little time to learn how. He was task saturated. It was showing in his landings, and she knew that would sink his career if he didn’t improve soon. The Navy didn’t have much use for a pilot who couldn’t safely land a plane on a ship.

If he came in high as he tried to land, the Prowler’s tailhook would miss the wires, and he’d be forced to go full throttle to fly off the deck before he careened into the sea. If he drifted right, he’d take out a row of parked jets at millions a pop. If he drifted left, he’d slide off the ship. And if he came in low . . . The Navy called them ramp strikes when a pilot literally flew his plane into the back of the ship. At a hundred plus knots, the resulting fireball was spectacular. Grace was standing a few feet away from the point he would impact.

It was her role to talk him safely down onto the deck. She would get him down alive. It was her job. And she was good at her job.

“Clear deck!”

“Roger, clear deck. Lights and gear set for a Prowler,” Grace shouted back to the LSO to her far right. She lowered the pickle switch back to her side. She had a radio handset and the large bank of signaling lights behind her. With them she had to work a minor miracle. She was earning her pay today. Patrick was plane number 774, and Grace listened to the radio traffic bringing him in.

“774, three quarters of a mile, call the ball,” the air controller said.

“774, Prowler ball, 4.5,” Patrick tersely replied.

Patrick could see the massive glowing “meatball” light behind her. The plane was now hers.

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