from a court-martial,â he said, finally turning to face her.
âYou did what you felt you had to do, and what you had said you would do. I did what I could to help. It wasnât up to me, Connor. There were other issues, much bigger ones than you or me.â
âWhatever.â Connor shook his head. âWhy am I here?â he repeated.
âPirates. The same ones you dealt with until you left last year. The situationâs gotten worse in the Gulf of Aden. At this point, the pirates are hitting any ship they want. We have no military support in the regionâpractically everything has been redirected to the Persian Gulf or the western Pacific. Iâm here to get the Yemeni Navy to agree to secure and stabilize the region, including the oil platforms off Socotra. Bill just doesnât have enough assets to do it on his own.â
âSo, get your agreement. Whatâs the problem with the Yemenis?â
âTheyâre stalling. They have all these boats we gave them a few years ago, but they wonât put to sea. We donât know why. And we donât have anyone theyâll work with. Someone with a real working relationship with them . . .â
â . . . which I had when I worked for Bill.â
âYes.â
âWhich is why Iâm here.â
âYes.â
âAnd you think Iâll help you after all thatâs happened?â
She shook her head sadly. âNo. I donât, really.â For a moment she allowed her fatigue and frustration to show.
Stark leaned forward in his chair and felt his shirt stick to his back; the office temperature was approaching that of the outside. âThen why?â he asked. âWhy bring me here?â
âI hoped.â
âHope is overrated.â
âNot when itâs the only option left to you,â she said.
âWhen itâs the only option left, itâs called desperation, not hope.â
âOkay, Iâm desperate. Will you help?â
âI havenât yet heard a reason why I should.â
âFor Bill?â
âBill hasnât asked me.â
âHow about for your country?â
âI think I did enough for my country when I was in uniform.â
âYouâre in uniform now,â she reminded him.
âThis time itâs not by choice.â Stark removed an envelope from his pocket, the same envelope he had gone to his boat to retrieve before the three Somalisattacked him in Ullapool, and held it up. âThis is my general discharge. You want me to help? Change that to an honorable discharge.â
âOk,â she said quietly.
âYou donât have that kind of power.â
âNo? I got you recalled to duty and brought here, didnât I?â
âGood point,â he admitted. âLetâs assume I can do whatever you need me to do. What then?â
âAs soon as I have what I want, you can go back to . . . wherever you want to go.â
He thought about it for a moment. Until a few days ago he had finally been leading a life of peace and contentment, secure in the knowledge that he had disconnected from his past. And then three Somalis had tried to kill him. They had come to his adopted home, the home of his friends, Maggieâs home. Would that threat continue if he made the wrong decision now?
âIâll do this,â he said finally. âAnd if my record is cleared as a result, Iâll accept that. But let me be clearâvery clear: Iâm not doing this for you or your damned president.â Stark caught himself. He hadnât been in uniform twenty-four hours and had already violated Article 88 of the Uniform Code of Military Justiceâcontempt toward officials, namely his commander-in-chief. Fortunately, C. J. was a diplomat and was probably ignorant of the UCMJ. Stark, however, had firsthand experience with it and had violated it in almost every way possible the last time he was in
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