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‘Haven’t figured that out yet.’ He paused. ‘Somewhere quiet.’

‘That’s what this place was supposed to be.’

‘Exactly. So I’ll try again.’

Dirk nodded. King noticed Kate standing off to the side, staring at the both of them, dumbfounded.

‘Aren’t you in the military?’ she said to Dirk.

‘Yes, ma’am. On vacation. If you can call it that.’

‘And you’re just going to let him walk away from all this?’

He exchanged a knowing smile with King. ‘I see you two haven’t known each other long enough. Kate, when Jason King tells you he’s going to do something, there’s really not much you can do to stop it.’

‘I wish I had the friends you do,’ she said to King.

King smiled again. ‘No you don’t. Because you need to go to hell and back to get the type of friends I have.’

The soft jangle of a mobile phone sounded from Dirk’s pocket. He withdrew a slim smartphone. He made a shrugging gesture, as if to say I have to take this. King nodded and the man stepped away, speaking in a hushed whisper to whoever was on the other end of the line.

Probably his employers, wanting him back from Australia.

Kate stood across from King. Now the two of them were alone. They let the silence hang for a moment longer.

‘So, what now?’ Kate said.

‘You said you didn’t want to up and leave.’

She nodded. ‘Haven’t changed my mind on that. But doesn’t this feel a little… off?’

He rested a hand on her shoulder. ‘You’re a great girl, Kate. Truly. But you don’t want to spend any more time with me than this. I quit the Force to be alone for a while. I don’t know… I guess I wanted time to digest everything I’ve done in my career. I haven’t had a chance to yet. In fact, this has probably added to the baggage. But it’s going to take its time to resolve. Honestly, I’m not sure if it ever will.’

‘I understand,’ she said. ‘I don’t think I ever thought something permanent would come of it. But we helped each other get through everything.’

‘We did.’

She leant on her tiptoes and pressed her lips to his. He felt the soft touch and pulled her in, savouring their last moments together. When they parted she had a smile on her face.

‘Well, you know where to find me,’ she said. ‘If you ever happen to be passing through again.’

‘Let’s hope when that time comes it turns out less eventful than the first.’

‘Goodbye, Jason. Thank you for everything.’

They hugged a final time. He felt her warmth and held onto that feeling, knowing it might be a long time before he found another girl like her.

Then he turned and approached Dirk, who was finishing up his phone call. The man slid his phone back into his pocket and faced him.

‘Just explained what went down to the boss,’ Dirk said. ‘He wants me to stay. See the whole investigation process out.’

‘They’ll be flying out their best.’

‘I don’t doubt it. The conspirator is one of our own. That means the whole process will be messy.’

‘And lengthy.’

Dirk nodded.

‘I hope you don’t blame me for not sticking around,’ King said.

‘Not at all. It was good to see you again, brother. Even if the reunion was short.’

‘You understand why I need to leave, right?’

Dirk nodded. ‘When they whisked you out of the Delta Force for some secret project, I knew you’d end up either dead or scarred. I can’t imagine the shit you’ve been through.’

‘I came here to heal. Didn’t do much of that.’

‘Go find some secluded corner of the globe and bury your head in the sand. Can’t be too hard, can it?’

‘Knowing my luck… it will be.’ He shot a glance at the Ducati motorcycle, gleaming in the late afternoon sun. ‘Yours?’

Dirk nodded. ‘I shipped it over here a couple of weeks ago. Planned to road trip around the country. Guess that’s not happening anymore. Great bike, she is.’

‘I think I might buy one. Down the line.’

‘How are you getting out of here?’

‘I’m yet to work that out,’ King said. ‘Probably hitch a ride. Someone lent their car to me but I trashed it.’

‘Sounds like you.’

Then Dirk did something that King did not anticipate. He reached into his leather jacket and came out with a small set of keys. He tossed them. King caught the bunch one-handed and shot his friend a quizzical glance. ‘What are you doing?’

‘You need wheels.’ Dirk gestured to the Ducati. ‘There they are.’

‘I appreciate it, but I’ll manage,’ King said. ‘I only need to get to the airport.’

‘First you need to get to a hospital, as fast as possible.’

‘How much do you want for it?’

Dirk shook his head. ‘Remember Mogadishu?’

King flashed back to an earlier time, filled with sand and firefights. He remembered pulling a man from a burning wreckage, seconds away from being burnt alive. He looked across at the same man.

‘I remember.’

‘So you know I don’t want a cent.’

King nodded and held a hand outstretched. ‘Thank you, brother.’

Dirk shook it. ‘I really hope you find your peace, King. Give me a call when you’ve settled down.’

‘To be honest,’ he said. ‘I’m finding it hard to believe that will ever happen.’

King threw one leg over the leather seat of the motorcycle and fired it up. He knew how to ride. Before the military, before the special operations, before any of the chaos of the last ten years, he’d spent an uneventful childhood in the small town of Green Bay, Wisconsin. A beat-up Suzuki dirt-bike had been his only method of transportation.

Those were simpler days.

He looked back at Dirk and Kate one last time. Two people he would always remember. He waved. They waved back. Then he rolled onto the asphalt and gunned the Ducati past stores that had just closed and motels that would stay open all night and through to endless rows of forest, thick with vegetation and undergrowth and dark spaces. He left the madness far behind, pressing on through the countryside, passing the low sprawling bar where he’d first had a drink three days before. He recalled what the bartender had said.

Sometimes you need to put all the shit behind you.

He accelerated past the building without giving it a second glance.

Moving.

Always moving.

The only thing he’d ever known.