stop so he could build them this shelter.
The very first thought that popped into Tasha’s head in giddy response was: We’re finally gonna have sex!
Her stupid imagination had immediately concocted a glorious story—she and Thomas, clinging together for warmth in a far less tick-slash-spider-filled shelter than this one. Whispered talking would lead to banter would lead to heated glances, which would lead to a kiss and then many more kisses... which eventually would lead to them both shedding their clothes, orgasming wildly, and then proclaiming their undying, endless, and epic love.
She knew it was ridiculous, and yet...
They’d both survived a fiery, explosive death today. So even if the proclaiming-undying-love thing was admittedly a stretch, the idea of two healthy, grateful people having whoop-whoop, we’re both alive sex didn’t seem all that far-fetched.
Except for the fact that one of them was her and the other was Thomas King.
Back when they’d first stopped walking, Thomas had given her a long list of very non-we-gotta-have-sex reasons why they couldn’t push on to the ski lodge; why they had to stop for the night even though it was still daylight. As they continued, the incline would get far more steep and at times even treacherous. They’d have to use their hands—and hers were still cuffed. No way was he willing to attempt that blind.
Because out here, he’d grimly told her, when it got dark, it got dark.
“Not a lot of kidding is gonna be coming out of my mouth between now and tomorrow morning,” Thomas informed her now as he checked the temperature of one of the large rocks he’d placed along the bottom of the fire pit. Apparently, instead of snuggling together for warmth, they’d each get cozy with a rock or two, like a caveman’s version of a bed-warmer, “when we extract via Uncle Navy’s rescue helo.”
“You weren’t kidding is just an expression, Thomas. Jeez,” Tasha countered, more irritated at him than she had the right to be. Except, no. She’d escaped death today, too. “No need to clutch your pearls and go all Navy SEAL on me.”
He laughed at that. “And now I’m wondering—hard—about the dress code for the Ustanzian special forces. Pearls?”
“You know what I mean,” she said, instead of shouting, For God’s sake, stop treating me like I’m your little sister!
Because even though he’d started this with his whole Not a lot of kidding thing, she’d purposely said clutch your pearls to get the laugh that she’d wanted. And gotten. He’d obliged.
It was a game they’d played back when she was much younger, back when Thomas had babysat for her, twice, sometimes three times a week, and then later, when they’d just hung out, watching movies. He’d intentionally take whatever she said literally. It had always made them laugh themselves silly, but revisiting it here and now just made her feel sad and tired.
Of course, maybe she was just sad and tired. It had been a truly stupid day.
I do love you. You’re my little sister.
“You always hated camping,” she said to break the silence that was stretching on a little too long.
“Still do,” Thomas said evenly. “This isn’t camping. It’s SERE, with an emphasis on the S and the Es, and right now I happen to love it very much.”
SERE—as every family member of a Navy SEAL knew—was a military acronym for survival, evasion, resistance, and escape. Back when Thomas first realized that he aspired to be a SEAL, he recognized that although his San Diego-born-and-raised background gave him the swimming and boating skills required, his mountain-man type living-off-the-land abilities were lacking. He talked the SEALs in Team Ten into giving him a crash course in SERE training—and hated every minute of it.
Not that he’d complained to Bobby or Wes or Captain Catalanotto. But he’d shared his pain with Tasha, who’d giggled both at his stories and the fun he’d poked at his own despair. And then, it started to snow became their laughter-infused callback to any situation that went from bad to worse.
“You sure you don’t have, like, a pin or a pen or anything metal?” he asked her now, clearly hoping for some way to get these handcuffs off her.
She sighed heavily. “I’m still, sadly, not a time traveler from the early 1900s, so my supply of hatpins remains zero.”
Back after he’d started to rub two sticks together and she’d countered by pulling out Ted’s cigarette lighter, they’d done a quick inventory of the contents of her jacket’s pockets: a few folded tissues, two quarters and