âgive me those scissors. Iâll alter the pant-leg length. If you can get me a cammie blouse, Iâll do the same for the arm length.â
He liked her attitude. The Shadow pilot was emerging, in charge, confident and assertive. He liked it a whole hell of a lot. âI have a second ruck in the other cave. While youâre cutting a pair of my trouser legs off, Iâll get it, stock it and bring the shirt back with me.â
Her spirits rose as she sat down and began to cut the thick fabric, making the trouser length shorter for her legs. Kellâs T-shirt was huge on her, but she wasnât going to cut it.
Kell came back about ten minutes later. In one hand, he had a ruck just like the one he wore. In the other, his blouse. He handed it to her.
âPut it on and Iâll shorten the sleeves for you with the scissors,â he told her.
Getting up, Leah saw the trousers length was fine. Sheâd taken dark green nylon rope this morning and fashioned a makeshift belt out of it, the trousers staying around her waist instead of sliding down to her hips. She shrugged into his blouse. It was huge on her, his shoulders were so broad.
Kell grinned, taking the sleeve that hung below her long, beautiful fingers. âYouâre a little thing, arenât you?â he murmured, quickly cutting away the extra fabric. She turned, holding out the other sleeve.
âLittle but mighty,â Leah said, smiling up at him. If Kell was upset with her going along, he didnât show it.
âThat you are,â he agreed gruffly, the cuff material falling away.
âThis is fine,â Leah said, her hands visible now. She turned and looked at the ruck. âWhatâs in it?â
Kell put the scissors away and walked over to the ruck, opening it up. Kneeling down, he said, âItâs an identical copy to the one I wear. SEALs believe one is bad and two is good. Your ruck is going to weigh around fifty pounds. Iâll transfer most of the mags out of it and into mine. I donât want you humping sixty or seventy pounds. It will really throw you off your stride and quickly tire you out.â His eyes narrowed. âAnd you need to remind yourself that youâre not fully recovered yet, Leah. We donât need to go far tomorrow, which is good, but the heat out there is a killer, too.â
âAs long as I have water and a hat, Iâll be fine.â
âEver done any covert intelligence work?â
âNo.â
Kell double-checked the ruck, took out a boonie hat and then closed it up. âYouâre going to have to stay close to me, Leah. Thereâs a lot to stalking and youâre going to have to learn it on the fly.â
âIâll learn, Kell. And I wonât be a pain in the ass.â
Shaking his head, his lips curved. âYou would never be that to me, Leah. Come on, letâs get all your gear ready now before we bed down for the night. Tomorrow, when we get up, weâre going roll fairly quickly, then eat a protein bar once we get set up for the recon.â
For the next half hour, Leah felt as if she contributed. Used to working as a team, pilot and copilot, she felt excited about being Kellâs partner. An ignorant one, for sure, but she promised herself sheâd catch on fast so she wouldnât be a distraction.
Finally, she sat down on her bag after everything she needed was nearby. Surprised, Kell came over and knelt down beside her, his face unreadable
Resting his hands on his thighs, he frowned. âIâm worried because youâve had a nightmare every night youâve been here.â
Leah nodded, feeling guilty. âAnd thatâs not good,â she agreed, apologetic. Voices carried. And in a cave system like this, Leah realized she could possibly alert the enemy to their whereabouts. âWhat can I do? I know Iâm a liability.â Feeling bad, there was no way she wanted to put them at risk. Maybe stuff
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