Snowbound - Page 93



they knew how arrogant I’d been, how I risked the lives

of a bunch of kids.”

She stared at him with wide, now wary eyes. She had

to wonder what in hell he was going to tell her.

He cleared his throat and began. “Somewhere I read

recently that there may be personality types more at risk

of developing posttraumatic stress disorder. I think I’m

one. I mean, I didn’t handle war very well from the beginning. The things you see.” He looked down, startled to realize his hand had tightened on hers to a point that

had to be painful, and muttered an oath. Letting her go,

he said, “God, I’m sorry!”

Fiona shook her head. “No, it’s okay. Really.” She

touched his thigh in reassurance.

He kneaded the back of his neck. “I probably would

have come home a normal, screwed-up vet if it weren’t

for this.” He gestured at his scar and all it symbolized.

“Maybe I’d have had nightmares. Some pictures in my

head I couldn’t get rid of.”

The compassion on her face was almost his undoing,

but he forced himself to continue. “But me, I decided I

could do some good while I was there.” He gave a harsh

laugh. “Prove that Americans were decent.”

He told her about the nearby field, if you could call

the bare, dusty ground a field. About the makeshift

goals that had caught his attention. How there were

often boys there, kicking soccer balls around.

Expression arrested, Fiona said, “That’s why it upset

you so much when Hopper asked if you had a soccer

ball.”

“Yeah. Having them around awakened enough unwelcome memories. Having them heading a soccer ball…” He almost shuddered, even now.

“Did you start playing with the boys?”

He nodded. “I’d played in college, so… We worked

on skills. Eventually I organized them into a team. We

started playing some games with other teams. Nothing

official, not like a league. Just pickup games.” He tried

to smile, God knew why, maybe still deluding himself

that it was possible to lighten the tragic results of his

heedlessness. “Word got around. An American soldier

was coaching Iraqi boys.”

“Were they Sunni or…”

“A mix. I was never really sure. I have no doubt they

were aware—how could they not be, these days?—but

the neighborhood was integrated and they’d grown up

together. In the end, it didn’t make any difference. They

were just…convenient material for a lesson.”

“Oh, John,” she whispered, awakening horror on her

face.

He went on and told her the grim story. They’d been

talking, doing some warm-up exercises while they

waited for the other team to arrive. He’d turned, aware

of the approach of a woman in the dark, enveloping robe

and burqa. The sense—articulated too late—that something wasn’t right. The “Oh God, what have I done?”

moment.

The warning, never uttered.

He told it as unemotionally as he could, trying not

to be graphic about the sights that had met his eyes

when he’d lifted his head afterward and peered through

the blood that bathed his face. Even so, she had one

hand pressed to her chest and the other to her stomach,

as if to quell both horror and nausea.

“Children,” she whispered once.

“Object lessons,” he repeated. “Do not consort with

the enemy.”

“I don’t know how you survived.”

He knew she didn’t mean physically. He still wasn’t

altogether sure he had survived emotionally. But

maybe…maybe he would make it. Because of her.

“I was able to visit the survivors in the hospital.

Except for one. He, uh… It was touch and go. I guess

he did make it. I don’t know if that’s such a good thing.

He lost his eyes, and his face is just…” God. He was

touching his scar again.

“Oh, John,” she whispered again, and this time she

took his hand.

“I screwed up bad. I was so full of myself that I

didn’t listen to warnings.”

“You were trying to do something very, very good.”

“Was I?” he asked out of anguish and a painful need

Tags: Janice Kay Johnson Billionaire Romance
Source: readsnovelonline.net
readsnovelonline.net Copyright 2016 - 2024