Annie emerged and sat down the sofa. My mom brought out old photo albums and decided to embarrass the shit out of me.

“Here’s Pat with his favorite teddy bear.”

Annie loved the old pictures. I just sat back and watched her bond with my mom. If I’d taken that reward money her dad offered, I could’ve bought my mom a new house. But she’d never accept it from me. I wished I could take care of her.

“So what was Pat like as a kid?”

This was fun.

“Pat was very sweet and sensitive. Very attached to me. Loved trains and dogs. Always tried to protect me.”

“So pretty much exactly how he is now.”

I laughed. “I’m hardly sweet.”

“You are too. And super romantic. He remembers everything I say, though he usually doesn’t react. But then months later, boom. All my dreams come true.”

My mom was eating this up. I barely had time to see her anymore so I think getting a glimpse into my life was fascinating to her.

After humiliating me a bit more, we finally went to bed. Had to wake up early the next morning and hit the road.

“Well Annie, it’s been a pleasure. Please, you’re welcome in my home anytime. When Pat deploys, I hope you will come up here and visit me. I want to get to know you.”

“I’d love that.”

They hugged. Then my mom turned to me.

“I love you, Patrick. Stay safe. I’m so proud of you.”

“Love you, too.”

Annie and I went to my childhood room and snuggled up in bed. My little league awards were still on the shelves, a cheesy poster of a topless Britney Spears wearing nothing but white cotton panties trimmed with pink lace hung on the wall. Exactly as I had remembered.

Annie glanced around the room. Probably wondering why my room was stuck in a time warp and hers had been turned into a museum. “I love your mom. She’s so different from mine. Sweet and warm.”

This was my opportunity. I had to tell her. But I just couldn’t. She seemed so happy and I didn't want to ruin it.

“She’s your family now. When I’m gone, she means it, if you get lonely, fly up here. She’ll take care of you. I need you to promise me that you’ll come see her.”

“Of course, I will.” She kissed me. “I’m worried about telling my parents we eloped. You’re coming with me, right?”

Damn straight. She wasn’t setting foot in that house without me. And if my talk with her father went as I expected it would, I doubted that she’d ever see them again. “You can count on it.”

She drifted to sleep in my arms. Before I met Annie, my only goal in life was to survive and protect my fellow men. But now, my attention was split. I felt torn by my desire to protect her and loyalty to my Team. Maybe this is why I’d always felt that the Navy didn’t want the SEALs to have wives or families, despite what they said about the importance of a support system. Because if I had to choose between my Team and Annie, without a doubt I’d choose her.

27.

After we left my mom’s house, we spent a day in Marin County and then took scenic Highway 1 along the coast back to San Diego. I couldn’t wait to come back from deployment, plan a real honeymoon with Annie. No Caribbean cruise, that was for sure. We talked about spending time in Carmel-by-the-Sea, Half Moon Bay, Big Sur, and Santa Barbara.

Annie wanted to go straight to her parents’ house. I debated convincing her to wait a few days, but I’m sure she’d fight with me. That was fine. I wanted to get this over with.

I dropped Trigger off at my house. Annie called and told her parents that we were going to be stopping by for her to pick up the rest of her stuff.

My mind raced. I had to be smart and watch what I said. I’d given Matt my word. I was leaving in a few weeks and I wanted to make sure that her father was out of her life. Before I met Annie, I’d planned to apply to the world famous SEAL Team Six, as known as DEVGRU. They were stationed in Virginia Beach and it would be great to put distance between Annie and her dad. I’d just become eligible—they required five years of stellar service in the Teams and the selection process took six to eight months. But those SEALs were the real badasses, the ones that took down Bin Laden during Operation Neptune Spear. It would mean even more time training, even less time with Annie. But it was a career goal of mine. I would make my decision once I came back from this next deployment, and I knew that Annie would support my decision one hundred percent.

The gate opened to Annie’s parents’ house. Last time I came here, I was nervous. This time I came here, I was pissed. Let’s roll.

We walked up the stairs to the front door. Before Annie could get out her key, the door opened. Her dad stood in front of us, with his nostrils flaring.

“What are you doing here, Annie? I told you not to set foot again in this house as long as you were seeing him.”

What the fuck? I glared at Annie. She’d only seen them once since she started staying with me, when she went over the first night to pick up her clothes. She’d told me they’d warned her about me but she’d never mentioned that they’d forbid her to see me or given her an ultimatum. I guess we both kept our secrets to protect each other.

“I’m not seeing him, Dad. I’m married to him. He’s my husband.”

Annie’s mom popped around the corner. “Annie, baby, how could you elope?”

I still couldn’t figure her out—did she know that her husband found her and left her there to die? She was cold also, redecorating her room. My impression is that she cared more about her image than her own daughter, but I could be off base.

“Mr. Walsh, I’d like a word with you.”

“My pleasure.” I’d like a word with him also. I’d also like to put a bullet in his head.

Mr. Hamilton took me into his office this time. I’m sure he had a gun under his mahogany desk. Not worried, my weapon was concealed and accessible.

He sat in his black leather chair, poured himself a shot of whiskey from the bottle on his desk.

He bared his teeth at me. “I thought I told you to stay away from Annie. You trying to get more money out of me boy? Name your price. Then you can tell Annie you made a mistake and get an annulment.”

“I don’t have a price, motherfucker.”

“Fine, you leave me no other choice than to accidently leak your involvement of her rescue to the press. You’re career will be ruined and I’ll make damn sure you’re kicked out of the Teams.”

I cocked my head. This guy not only left his daughter to live in hell, but wanted to ruin any chances she had of happiness. But I wasn’t threatened. “No you won’t. Because I’m not the only one with a secret. I know everything about your, uhm how shall I put it, how hard you tried to save Annie. Do the words Neptune Group mean anything to you?”

His hands shook the whisky glass and I was certain it was going to break. “How dare you, you cocky son of a bitch? Come into my house and threaten me? No one would believe you.”

I laughed. “Try me.”

His posture slumped and he ran his hands through his hair. “I don’t know what you think you know but you’re wrong. I tried everything to save her, they couldn’t find her, that’s the God’s honest truth.”

“You can lie to me all you want. But you left her there to die. I’m not an idiot, something didn’t sit right with me. We have eyes everywhere, remember that.”

“What do you want, Walsh?”

“Simple, won’t cost you a penny. Stay the fuck away from Annie. If I hear that you so much as text her, I’ll come after you. I’m not sure if your wife is in on this, but if she reaches out to Annie, that’s fine. I’m making this easy on you. Tell her that you can never accept me as her husband and make her chose between you and me. She’ll chose me. The only reason I’m not telling Annie the truth is to protect her, not you. It would crush her, and she’s been through enough and I refuse to add to her pain. I’m deploying soon, but Annie will be safe here with my buddies. If I find out you try to hurt her in any way, you won’t live to regret it. Understood?”

He nodded but wisely remained silent.

“Good talk.” I walked out of the room. Annie’s mom was talking to her about throwing a wedding reception.

“Come on, Annie. Let’s go.”

“Already? I haven’t packed my stuff.”

“I’ll buy you new stuff.”

Annie’s dad walked out of his office. I gave him a stern look.

“He’s right, Annie. Leave. We don’t want to see you again. I can never accept Pat into this family. You made your choice when you married him. You’re dead to us.”

Bastard had probably been waiting to officially declare her dead.

Annie bit her lip, but she didn’t break down. It was almost as if she expected this.

“I love Pat and if you can’t accept him, I don’t care. I learned to live without you once, I’ll do it again. Sometimes I think you both wish I never came back. I was worth more to you dead than alive. Pat’s the only one who loves me. Don’t ever contact me again.”

She clutched on to me and we walked out the front door. I hoped we never had to see them again.

We got into my truck and cruised down to my place. She looked out the window. I didn’t know what to say.

“I’m sorry, Annie.”

“It’s not your fault. I meant what I said in there. I love you and I don't care what they think. He'll never accept you and I don't really care."

I placed my hand on her thigh. I was all she had now. I wasn’t one of these men who wanted to isolate his woman from her family and friends. I wished Annie’s family were decent people and I was fine if she wanted to maintain contact with Chris. But as long as I lived, no one would ever hurt Annie again.