by Lynette Mae
The sound of the zipper closing was the only response Devon got. She watched Jillian silently move around the rest of the room, opening drawers and lockers, checking to ensure she had everything. Devon closed the distance but stopped a foot away.
Jillian always loved the way Devon looked in the morning. Her blond curls messy and her eyes still hazy from sleep. She ran her eyes over the length of that gorgeous form, knowing the strength and softness beneath the faded t-shirt and shorts. A smile pulled at her lips remembering the first time they met and Devon had changed into a nearly identical outfit. She knew right then she loved her. Right now, the sight of that love reflecting in her blue eyes was enough to tear her heart to shreds.
Jillian shook her head to push away the thoughts. No. She knew what she had to do. She sidestepped past Devon to close her other bag. "They'll be here in five minutes."
"Five minutes?" The fear in Devon's voice was like a dagger in Jillian's heart. "Who? What are you talking about, Jill?" Jillian couldn't look at her.
"Martin's man will be here. After I fill out the paperwork, they'll take me to the airport later on."
Devon tasted bile in her throat as she began to realize what was going on. Still, she needed to hear it. It was like a train wreck; she couldn't look away from the impending impact.
"Tell me."
Jillian raised her eyes to meet Devon's and the sight of her blue eyes swimming in tears made her voice catch in her throat, "It's over, Dev. I can't do this anymore."
Images of wet urgent kisses, cries of pleasure, the feel of Jillian's body moving against hers through the night tumbled across Devon's mind. "But…last night…I…you knew?"
Jillian dropped her eyes to her shoes and nodded. "I know I'm an ass," she shrugged, "I just wanted one more night."
Devon couldn't believe what she was hearing. "So, last night was what…a goodbye fuck? And then you were going to leave today without a word?"
Jillian didn't respond. Suddenly Devon was standing in front of her. Jillian raised her eyes again to look at her. She owed her that, at least. Devon's face was inches away. Kissing close. Her lips were still swollen from their passionate night. The blue eyes blazing into hers with intensity that she knew she would never forget.
"Tell me you don't want me and I'll step back." Devon whispered.
Jillian quivered inside with the effort it took not to sweep Devon into her arms and hold onto her forever. She clenched her fists at her sides. Her eyes dropped to that perfect mouth a breath away. She knew Devon could see her fighting for control.
Bam, Bam, Bam Sharp banging on the door made both women jump. Jillian knew she should move, but her legs didn't seem to want to obey her mind.
Without warning Devon drove her hands into Jillian's hair, pulling her in for a desperate kiss that made Jillian's knees weak. Bam, Bam, Bam. It was louder this time.
"Coming!" Jillian shouted. She gripped Devon in one last tight embrace. When she forced herself to step away her mask was back in place. She grabbed her bags and strode to the door. An MP was on the other side when she opened it. Devon stood shell-shocked watching her go.
Jillian thought her legs would buckle but she resolutely walked out, certain if she didn't keep going she would lose her nerve. At the end of the hall, Jillian turned around one last time. "Goodbye Devon." With that, she was gone.
Chapter 14
April, 1983
Devon stepped out of the terminal of the Baltimore-Washington International Airport, her duffle bag balanced on her right shoulder, another black duffle she carried by the handles in her left hand. Dropping the smaller bag, she waved for a taxi, which pulled to the curb in front of her. The driver exited and placed her bags in the trunk, opening the rear passenger door for the lieutenant to enter. It was unseasonably cold and a steady drizzle was coming down, making the day feel even chillier than the actual temperature.
"Where to, Miss?"
"Ft. Meade. Is it very far?" she inquired.
"No, Miss, only about twenty minutes." The driver replied.
Nodding, Devon stared out the window at the passing landscape. She rode in silence alone in her thoughts until they reached their destination. The yellow cab stopped at the MP guard shack at the base entrance. Devon handed her orders to the young man on duty, who snapped a smart salute upon recognizing the First Lieutenant bars on her collar. She had graduated at the top of her class and was rewarded with the increase in rank, and with the plum assignment she was now undertaking.
"Good evening, Ma'am."
She nodded to the soldier, returning the salute.
"You'll be in the M.I. officer building, ma'am," speaking to the driver, he continued, "Follow the road around to the east a mile and a half, past the First Army buildings, make your first right, and the buildings you want will be at the end of the road." With that, he saluted the lieutenant as the taxi drove on.
The driver pulled up in front of the brick building labeled 'single officer's quarters'. Devon exited the cab, settled the bill and retrieved her bags from the trunk. After stopping at the desk for her room assignment, she climbed the stairs and located her door. Dropping the black bag to insert the key into the lock, Devon couldn't help but think of the last time she arrived at her duty station, meeting Jillian as she made her first clumsy entry to the room. The memory made her smile.
Alas, this time, the room was private, empty. Dropping her bags on the floor just inside, she closed the door behind her before walking to the bed nearest the door and flopping onto her back. It had been four months and she had only spoken to Jill once on the phone. Jillian had insisted that she not call again because it was too dangerous. Devon sent letters every day, careful to mail them off post, but she had no idea if she was getting them. She had no other address but her parent's. She stared at the ceiling in the silence, feeling lonelier than she ever had in her life, wondering where Jillian was and praying she was okay.
#
Rising at 0500, so that she could go for her morning run, Devon laced up her sneakers and headed out. It was a cool, crisp morning and her breath was visible in the pale illumination from the lamp posts that lined the sidewalks. The sun was not yet on the horizon as she began stretching in preparation for her jog. She felt worn out mentally from battling her emotions, but looking forward to the first day, knowing that she needed to work in order to keep her mind occupied.
As she ran her mind drifted to the last phone conversation with Jillian.
"Hello?" The sweet melodic tone of Jillian's voice washed into Devon's consciousness like a gentle ocean wave lapping at the shore. For a moment she was unable to speak, her emotion closing her throat.
"Hello?" Jillian's voice had a slight edge as she asked again.
"Hi baby," Devon could barely get the words around the lump in her throat.
"Hey," Jillian couldn't hide her affection, "how are ya?"
"Good," she heard the softness in Jill's voice, revealing the feelings she was trying to hide.
"Are you okay?"
Jillian took in a shaky breath. "I'm fine…you don't have to worry."
"I still do, I told you it comes with the territory when you love someone." Devon's voice was low and heavy with feeling.
She heard Jillian draw in a deep breath and exhale loudly, then almost inaudibly, "Shit."
"Jill?"
Jillian wiped the back of her hand over her cheek, where silent tears flowed from her eyes. She gathered her emotions before speaking, trying not to give herself away. "You shouldn't be saying things like that." She finally managed, knowing it was entirely possible that her phone was tapped. CID could be listening to them right now and Devon should not be taking chances.
"Things like what, the truth?" Devon countered.
"You know what I'm talking about, Dev."
"Yeah, well, where you're concerned, I don't think very rationally,
I'm afraid."
"Are you doing well? How soon is graduation?" Jillian steered the conversation back to neutral round.
"Six weeks. The major says I'll get my next assignment orders soon." Devon replied.
Although she knew Jillian didn't want her to, she had to ask, "Jill, what about us? I've never felt so lost, I'm dying without you."
The words tore holes in Jillian's soul, but she resolutely maintained her composure, knowing that she had to release Devon. She spoke the hardest words of her life, "Devon, listen to me. There is no us, not anymore."
"Jill, don't-"
Jillian interrupted her, "You know it's true." Devon was silent now. "Devon, seriously I made my choice, the military just isn't the place for me anymore. I thought I believed in all the honor and everything, but…now…," she searched for words, "I want the best for you, Dev, I really do, but our lives are moving in different directions."
Devon felt the words slicing her heart like a knife through butter. Her tears began flowing. "Please, Jillian," she begged.
Devon's pain was killing her. Jillian stopped to steady her breathing again, and sat because her knees felt as though they would give out.
"Please don't call here again, Devon. Do yourself a favor and start fresh at your new assignment. Move on." It felt like somebody else was saying the words. She could hear Devon crying on the other end of the line. Jillian felt physically sick. "I'm gonna go now."
"I'm not hanging up." Devon choked. "Please Jillian, don't do this. I know you love me-" she heard a click and then a dial tone.
Devon held the phone in front of her face, staring at the buzzing receiver for a moment. Then she pressed it to her forehead as the tears flowed down her cheeks. Primal sobs escaped her throat until drained and exhausted she returned the phone to the cradle. Pushing her hands into the front pockets of her jeans, she walked blindly back to her room. Inside she stripped off her clothes, climbed naked into the cold, lonely bed and cried herself to sleep.
That call had been two months ago. After landing in Baltimore the night before Devon took a chance and called Jillian's parent's house from a payphone at the airport. A recording said the number had been disconnected with no forwarding number listed. Move on.
Now, working on her third mile, her thoughts wildly racing, Devon still couldn't quite believe how everything had collapsed so suddenly. One day they were talking about their next assignments and their futures, and the next day CID was interrogating Jillian. Devon had heard that once they started investigating someone, it never really ended, unless you agreed to a discharge or worked a deal. Not until they got a confession or a guilty verdict in a court martial trial. Devon supposed that everything had just been too much for her. So she just left.
But then again, maybe Julie was right, maybe Jillian had never loved her, maybe she was just another in a long list of conquests that was expendable once the challenge was over. That might explain how she could just walk away from what they had that easily. Julie's words echoed in her head, you don't know her like I do. Maybe that was the brutal truth. The thought made Devon's chest ache wondering how she could have been so wrong.
Unfortunately, the goodbye left Devon alone to deal with her own pain and unanswered questions. At first Devon thought she would never recover, but as time went on she was feeling stronger. Most importantly, the experience had given Devon a new understanding of the realities of life.
The painful lesson of Jillian Gray was one Devon James would carry forever. As Jillian always said, 'Love makes you weak and careless.' Devon couldn't agree more. That trusting naïve little virgin was gone. She was in a new city where no one knew her, with a new job that was the envy of every officer in her job classification. It was time to quit worrying about what she couldn't change.
Fuck it. Devon broke into a sprint, pushing her legs relentlessly for the last hundred yards of her five mile run, hoping to purge the final remains of the frustration and pain from her body.
Chapter 15
After showering and putting on her dress greens, Devon checked her look one last time in the mirror. Satisfied that her uniform was perfect, she snugged her beret over her wavy hair and headed outside in to the bright sunlight. It was 0615 as she rounded the bend in the sidewalk about 400 yards from the housing building, getting her first glimpse of her destination. The A framed main structure and large operations tower in the middle gave the appearance of every other drab run of the mill government building. But she knew better. This was the Vatican of military intelligence, The National Security Agency NSA. So, this is the puzzle palace. Devon had never seen such a huge complex and she wondered if she'd every find her way around in there.
The entrance in the main foyer bustled with activity. Just inside the massive glass double doors, in the middle of the entryway floor was a huge rendering of the unit insignia of the NSA. She shivered with excitement. Devon remembered the major telling her that this assignment was special but until this moment, she didn't really appreciate what special meant. Approaching what appeared to be an information window; Devon pulled a copy of her orders from her briefcase and slid them through the opening at the bottom of the glass partition to the serious looking ensign behind the counter.
"ID, please?" the young man said flatly.
Devon pushed her ID through the slot. He nodded and turned away from her, punching information into a computer terminal. A few moments later he returned to the window to slide her documents back through. In addition Devon saw several new ones which were stamped with today's date. He pointed to his right.
"Go to the next door and give these to the person at that window, they'll get your picture taken and set you up with your security badge, lieutenant." Smiling now, he added, "Have a nice day."
Devon returned his smile, "You too."
Thirty minutes later she had completed the process and was attempting to make sense of the maze of hallways to find her work area. She found a marine guard who regarded her seriously dropping his eyes to her picture ID and then raising them back to her face. Apparently satisfied, he asked, "My I help you, ma'am?"
"Yes, I'm looking for the signal ops center?"
Tilting his head in the direction beyond her, he said, "Halfway down the hall you'll find another security desk on your right, they'll direct you from there, ma'am."
Halfway down the hall was a bit overwhelming. The main hallway in the NSA building was the longest single indoor hallway anywhere, a full 980 feet in length. The combined headquarters and operations buildings spanned a total of 1,912,000 square feet. As described, Devon located the entrance to the operations building at the midpoint of the massive hallway. After being issued additional security badges, Devon made her way up three flights of stairs and finally arrived at her destination. She buzzed and a female came to the small window. Devon held her photo ID under her chin and waited until she heard the click of a lock disengaging and the door opened for her.
"Good morning, Lieutenant James, we've been expecting you," the woman looked at her watch and laughed, "Not quite this early, though."
"I like to start early," Devon returned.
"Good, I expect the major will like that. I'm Shirley," she said as she continued to walk. "I won't be working directly with you, but I'll be around enough to give you a little help until you get adjusted around here."
"Thanks."
"The code for the keypad on that door I just let you in gets changed monthly," They reached another door, "and so does this one." Shirley punched the keypad and they entered a small office area with two desks.
"That's your desk," she indicated the one on the left, "the other is Petty Officer Baxter's. She comes in at seven, so I'm sure she's around here somewhere. She'll take care of you. So, pull up a chair and relax. Welcome." With that she disappeared back through the door. Devon checked her watch. 0710.
She stepped from the bright
ly lit outer office into the subdued lighting of the operation center. Six military personnel from multiple branches of the service sat pouring over data or closely watching computer monitors.
"Lieutenant on deck!" someone called out curtly as they all stood. Making a quick visual assessment of the people in the room, she observed an Army sergeant and a specialist, a Navy seaman, and an Air Force airman first class. Immediately, she waved them back to their seats.
"As you were, carry on." She surveyed the dimly lit, windowless room with a low drop ceiling, observing the computer and radar type equipment that lined the walls. A printer in the corner spat out a continuous stream of connected paper. Every few moments, she heard a tone which caused everyone to snap around to their monitor and pull their headsets back onto their ears. After typing and reading the monitors for a few minutes, they all took off the headsets and resumed their circle in the center of the room chatting and laughing.