It was weird because Freyaneverhugged.
“You did this.” Kira’s father’s words held sharp accusation.
“Dr. Hanson, we had no way of knowing?—”
It was strange seeing Freya—a badass former CIA operative in her late thirties—take a deferential role, but it made sense given her history with Hanson.
She was saved by a man in medical scrubs who greeted Hanson with a handshake, then pulled him aside for a private conversation before escorting him into the secured corridor to Kira’s hospital room.
Rand understood the reasons for HIPAA, but at that moment, he wasn’t a fan.
Freya dropped into a chair in the corner of the waiting room and rested her head in her hands. Her husband, Cal, rubbed her back and murmured consoling words.
He understood Freya felt horrible for putting Kira in the crosshairs, but Rand was the one who’d dropped her off at her apartment without a thought for her security.
He’d seen the guy’s eyes yesterday. Rand knew what it looked like when a man was capable of true evil, and he’d seen it directed at Kira. But instead of considering her safety, he’d focused on getting a date with her.
Freya leaned against Cal. “I never should have asked for her help.”
“She’s going to be fine,” Cal said.
“Physically, maybe. I should have seen this coming.”
If anyone deserved Kira’s father’s hate, it wasn’t Freya Lange. Rand was the one who should shoulder that blame. It was small consolation that the man who’d orchestrated her abduction would die in prison for his other crimes.
He couldn’t sit still and resumed pacing the room. Finally, Kira’s father reappeared. Everyone turned to him expectantly.
“All of you need to leave.” His gaze fixed on Rand. “Especially you.”
Rand did the only thing he could. He left.
ChapterOne
Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Fort Story
Virginia Beach, Virginia
June
Six Months Later
Teaching a bunch of soldiers, sailors, and marines nearly half her age that it was a bad idea to loot the countries they were deployed to wasnothow Kira Hanson had expected to spend the last Tuesday in June. She was supposed to be heading to the airport, embarking on her first-ever trip overseas. This kind of gig usually went to an in-house Army or Navy archaeologist. After all, the Cultural Heritage Monitoring Lab was only a few hours away from JEB Little Creek-Fort Story, but CHML didn’t have anyone to send at the last minute when Dr. Diana Edwards, who had a contract to conduct these trainings through Friday Morning Valkyries, had been hospitalized with appendicitis requiring emergency surgery yesterday.
Kira owed Diana her life, so when the archaeologist needed a pinch hit, Kira would always step up to bat. Even if she had to bump her flight a day. Thank you, changeable tickets.
Now here she was. She’d driven down from DC in the wee hours of the morning to give herself time to review the presentation materials before she faced her first classroom of fifty or so students. Three sessions today—one in the morning, two in the afternoon, and she’d be done. Then the long drive home. She’d catch her rescheduled and rerouted flight to Malta at seven a.m. tomorrow.
Six hours of teaching. She could do this. Or, given her anxiety, she might vomit on her shoes and spend her lunch break crying in a closet somewhere.
She’d liked teaching when she was in grad school. But that was at a university where, in theory, at least, students wanted to be there. They took art history courses because they liked the subject, or they thought it would be an easy A, which it wasn’t.
She had a feeling these students wouldn’t be so keen on the subject, but at least there was no tuition, no tests, and no grades. Kira was way more nervous than her students would be.
She took several deep breaths as she sat behind the steering wheel and stared at the building. She’d made it through Pass and ID with the help of a civilian Navy employee who’d met her at the gate. She’d cleared the first hurdle.
Social anxiety was nothing new for her, but she usually managed it with careful planning. It helped that work was one thing she had confidence in. She was a recognized expert in her field. But this wasn’t her usual environment, and there’d been little time to brace herself for standing in front of a room and teaching 150 total strangers for six hours.
It was an equation for an anxiety attack.