Bear (SEAL Team Alpha # 24)

Bear (SEAL Team Alpha # 24)

By Zoe Dawson

Chapter 1

He found a pocket of cover beneath a tangle of roots and vines, eased their CIA liaison Bailee Thunderhawk down with him, and sank to one knee, shielding her with his body.

Her dark hair had slipped loose, spilling like ink over his arm, strands catching against the rough weave of his shirt.

High cheekbones, lashes thick and black against skin burnished from the sun, Bailee had always looked untouchable, sharp-edged, and composed.

Even now, unconscious, she carried that fierce grace, as if she’d simply chosen to rest rather than surrender to it.

Bear closed his eyes and pressed his palm to the ground, drawing in the scent of loam and green, letting the jungle itself fill his lungs until his heartbeat steadied.

Normally, the earth steadied him without effort.

Tonight, that grounding slipped, thrown off by the fragile weight of Bailee in his arms. It wasn’t the weight of her body that rattled him.

It was everything she carried now. Everything Rio had carved into her.

She hadn’t been the same since that mission. Guarded now, her body, her eyes, her heart, were all shuttered against him. It hurt in ways he didn’t have the words for.

Yet sometimes he caught it, the slip. The way her gaze flicked to his torso, the quick shadow crossing eyes that usually burned like steel, the unsettled way she looked at him.

As if she were still back there, remembering the gun battle, the blood she tried to stem with her hands, the moment he’d nearly bled out in her arms.

Even here, with enemies closing in, cover barely holding, men hunting them through the jungle, she occupied far too much of his mind.

“LT,” he whispered into the radio, the high-grade mic able to catch even the breath of his words. “Everything went to shit. We ran into a patrol. Firefight. Bailee’s down. Head wound. She’s breathing, but unconscious.”

“Are you secure?” Lieutenant Elias “Joker” Jackman’s voice came back at once.

Bear swept the undergrowth with a practiced glance. Cover, but not enough. “Negative. Pursuit is active. Position’s iffy.”

The static wavered, then Joker ordered, “Stay put. We’re coming to you.”

Mateo “Zorro” Martinez’s voice cut in, steadier, the medic in him already calculating. “Bear, check her pupils.”

Every instinct screamed against it. He didn’t want to set her down. Didn’t want to take his eyes off her for a second. But Zorro needed the information. Bear eased her in his arms, her head lolling as he shifted her weight. Her black hair caressed his skin, making him shiver.

He lifted her lids one by one. Silver-blue eyes stared back, her pupils steady. Normal. Relief burned through him. “Equal and reactive.”

“Good. Most likely a concussion,” Zorro murmured, the quiet note of reassurance grounding him, affection and concern threading through his voice. “You hang on. We’ve got you, brother.”

Bear drew a long breath, the first one that felt like air in his lungs since the firefight.

He should’ve stopped there. Should’ve gone still and waited.

But his hand betrayed him, brushing over the high line of her cheekbone, savoring the heat of her skin.

It felt forbidden, risky, like something he’d been hungry for longer than he could remember.

For a heartbeat, nothing else existed, just the jungle’s hum, Flint’s steady watch, the faint rise and fall of Bailee’s chest. He held on to that rhythm, praying she would open her eyes.

Her lashes fluttered. A low sound escaped her throat.

“Bailee?” His voice stayed low, steady. “Easy now. You’re safe.”

Her gaze swam at first, then sharpened with sudden, fierce clarity. “Safe? With you? Unlikely.” Her hand pressed weakly at his chest, the effort more instinct than strength.

The faint pressure sent a rush through him, ridiculous given the firefight still ringing in his ears.

Even half-conscious, she found a way to put distance between them, to remind him that Rio had complicated everything.

She had never said anything aloud about what had been building between them, but it had been there, clear as daylight.

He had saved her life twice, and she had shown up at the hospital for him, shaken and fierce, her guard cracked in ways she probably wished he hadn’t seen.

Maybe he had read too much into all of it.

Fuck, was he a burden in her world, something that pressed down on her conscience, some kind of misplaced guilt he didn’t want to carry? She braided my hair like a warrior deserved. Like a fool, I let her. Neither of them could take that back. Both of them seemed to be trying.

Her touch lingered, fingers curled against his shirt as though she couldn’t finish the push.

“Safe,” he repeated, voice low and firm, his mouth close to her temple.

Her lashes dipped, her hand faltering, but the retort never came.

For a breath, she simply leaned into him, her warmth seeping through, her scent tangling with sweat and jungle.

His chest ached with the need to hold her tighter, to press her face against his shoulder and keep her there, safe, until the world went quiet.

Her breath caught, a faint tremor against his throat.

For a heartbeat he thought her guard had cracked, thought maybe she leaned into him because she wanted more than his strength.

But the weight of her body told another truth.

She wasn’t seeking comfort. She was hurt, disoriented, too weak to fight him off.

Bear swallowed hard, the memory of her hands in his hair tangling with the reality in his arms. He wanted it to mean something—that she trusted him, that she needed him, but he knew better.

After knowing her in the field for so long, he’d seen it firsthand.

Bailee kept a tight leash on her control.

She wouldn’t admit weakness if it bit her in the ass.

“You have no idea how dangerous you are. Let me go,” she whispered, but the words faltered, her fingers still curled weakly in his shirt. She couldn’t fight him. Not really.

What the hell was that supposed to mean?

She was confused, and irrational. He would never hurt her, not with his hands, not with his silence, not with the blood he’d already spilled to keep her safe.

The thought that she saw him that way, that he threatened her in some place deeper than the battlefield, cut sharper than any blade.

He’d die before he became someone who cost her too much.

Not that they had anything going, she’d made that clear, but the thought of her spending even one moment regretting having him on her team hit like a hard punch to the nads.

His stomach turned, a raw, sick twist that burned worse than the firefight, because it was her.

His grip gentled, his voice rough in her ear. “I’m not the danger, Bailee. I’m the one between you and it.”

Her lashes lowered again, a flicker of emotion tightening her mouth. Something unspoken. Something he didn’t know how to name.

“You have no idea. Do you? No idea.” Her gaze drifted over his face, lingering on his mouth, her own lips parting as if a confession trembled there.

Then the brush snapped nearby, bootsteps crunching through the green, and the moment shattered beneath the weight of the hunt.

“Shh. Stay quiet.”

But Bailee was already shifting, her instincts firing before her mind could catch up. She tried to sit up, groaning as her hand went to her head. Flint’s ears snapped forward, a sharp warning rumble in his chest.

Bear’s gut clenched. Too late. More furtive noise, faint voices threading through the jungle. Pursuit had closed the distance.

“Dammit,” he muttered, dragging her close again, pressing her against the earth. “You just lit us up.”

Her lips curved in a grimace, hissing, “I’m not going to lay here like a weak link.”

Leaves rustled, bootsteps too close now. Bear tightened his hold on her, his hand closing around his suppressed rifle. Flint trembled with the need to strike.

“LT,” Bear whispered into the mic, his tone sharp. “Contact imminent.”

Joker’s voice crackled back, urgent. “Hold your ground. We’re five minutes out.”

Five? They wouldn’t last two with Bailee half-conscious and an enemy patrol fanning the brush. Bear’s jaw locked. He wasn’t letting them take her. Not while he drew breath.

The first shadow broke the tree line. Bear steadied his rifle one-handed, the other locked tight around Bailee’s waist as she tried to push up again.

“Stay down.”

Her eyes snapped to his, unfocused but blazing underneath. “Not on your life. I won’t watch you bleed out again. I see it enough in my nightmares.”

Her hand shook, but her grip was sure as she dragged the sidearm from her thigh holster. The sight of her, half-conscious and still ready to kill for him, hit Bear harder than the enemy bearing down.

Bear’s teeth clenched. Even concussed, she had fight. Great Spirit help him, he respected the hell out of her.

Three more figures ghosted through the brush. Flint’s snarl ripped the air, low and savage, vibrating against Bear’s leg.

“Wait,” Bear ordered softly. “Hold.”

But Bailee didn’t wait. She raised the pistol and fired. The shot cracked through the green, the recoil jolting her arm as one man dropped back with a curse.

“Dammit, Bailee,” Bear hissed, pivoting to cover their flank. The jungle erupted: shouts, gunfire, chaos.

Flint launched, a black streak of fury, slamming into a hostile before he could bring his weapon to bear. The man screamed, blood spraying as Flint’s jaws locked on his forearm, dragging him down into the brush.

Bear fired twice, controlled bursts, dropping another attacker. He shifted his body to shield Bailee as she lined up another shot, her arms trembling but her will steady.

“Two minutes out!” Joker’s voice cut through the comms.

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