Part 2: The Crash and the Connection
The adrenaline didn’t drain; it soured. The third guy, still trembling, was desperately trying to pull his groaning friend with the shattered nose toward their truck. The one I’d incapacitated on the ground was spitting blood and cursing weakly, curled around his shattered ribs.
My body was humming, but my mind was in chaos. I should have felt the thrill of victory, the satisfaction of defending myself against three larger men. But I felt only nausea. I could still hear the crunch of cartilage, feel the yield of muscle. And I wanted more. That was the terrifying truth.
As they finally stumbled into their beat-up pickup and sped away, I leaned against my truck, gasping. My hands were shaking, not with fear, but with the aftershocks of lethal intent.
The silent Oregon night was suddenly louder. Every insect chirp was amplified, every rustle of the wind a potential threat. I needed a distraction. I needed Andrew.
Driving to Andrew’s garage was a blur. The dark landscape seemed to rush past, blurring into a runway. I kept checking my mirrors, my eyes darting, looking for shadows that weren’t there. When I pulled up to the large, corrugated metal garage, the smell of old oil and welding smoke was strangely comforting.
Andrew was up, a mug of cold coffee on his desk, working on a transmission. He looked up, his face etched with concern as I stumbled in. “Gia. What happened?“
I just held out my hands. They were raw, the knuckles on my right hand bruised and splitting. “I… I crashed.“
He didn’t ask what I meant. He just nodded, his medic-trained eyes scanning for other injuries. ” Sit.” He led me to a worn-out office chair and immediately started washing his hands.
As he began cleaning the cuts on my knuckles, the words spilled out—not the detailed military report, but the fragmented, terrifying reality of what I had almost done. “There were three. At the gas station. They wanted the truck. I gave them warnings. But Andrew, when the leader lunged… something else took over.“
I was hyper-focused, Andrew. Every detail was sharp. The crunch of his nose. The way the second one’s body crumpled. And the worst part… I didn’t just want to stop them. I wanted to destroy them. The third guy, he was shaking, and I almost—I almost didn’t stop.“
Andrew paused, looking at me with intense understanding. He understood what it meant to carry Fallujah in your mind, to have the smell of dust and cordite overwrite the peaceful present. “I know.“
He finished bandaging my hand, taping it with precise, confident movements. “You know, Gia, when you’re up there, in the cockpit, you’re not just flying. You’re part of a machine. You are programmed to respond to every threat with maximum force. Your survival depends on that reaction time, on that devastating efficiency.“
He sighed, sitting back. “The problem is, when you come home, the world doesn’t have a tactical manual. You’re a pilot who suddenly lost her war, but your brain is still wired for that survival response. The programming is still active, waiting for the trigger. And you found it.“
The truth of his words landed with physical force. I had spent years perfecting the art of combat, of responding with swift, lethal force. It was an instinct, as natural as breathing. And now, in this civilian life, it was a danger. I was a danger.
The twist wasn’t that I had almost gone too far. The twist was realizing the danger wasn’t just these thugs. The real enemy was the training I couldn’t unlearn, the warrior inside I couldn’t dismiss.
Just as the silence was starting to return, the familiar rumble of a heavy engine approached the garage. We both turned toward the door. The reflection of Sheriff Teddy Brody’s patrol car flashed on the walls.
My heart hammered again. This is it, I thought. They’re here. I looked at Andrew, a silent plea in my eyes. But before he could speak, the door opened, and Teddy Brody, an old friend of my family, walked in, his expression grave.
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Part 3: The Hard Landing
Teddy stood in the doorway, the light from the office emphasizing the lines of weariness on his face. He didn’t approach immediately, his gaze moving from me to my bandaged hand and back. It was a look I knew—the Sheriff’s look, but underneath it, there was concern for the little girl he’d watched grow up.
“Gia,” he said, his voice unusually soft. “Andrew.“
“Teddy,” Andrew acknowledged, stepping aside but keeping a protective closeness to me.
“We got a call from the ER in Lakeview. Three gentlemen arrived with a broken nose, several fractured ribs, and some significant bruising. They described a ‘crazy woman’ and a white Ford F-150.” He paused, letting the implication settle.
“They’re not pressing charges,” he continued, a faint smile touching his lips. “It seems they were in possession of some stolen equipment in their truck. They’d rather take the beatings than the felony. And based on what I know about you, Gia, and what I just saw on my way over… I suspect you were just protecting what was yours.“
The tension in my shoulders began to ease. I had expected handcuffs, not information. But the relief was instantly replaced by a heavier weight.
Teddy stepped further into the room, his voice becoming stern. “But this ends tonight, Gia. Those three guys are trash, but you almost crossed a line you can’t come back from. You and I both know you have specific training. You’re not just some angry woman. You’re a weapon. And tonight, that weapon almost fired without consideration for anything but its target.“
His words echoed Andrew’s. The internal enemy.
“The war’s over, Gia,” Teddy said, his voice dropping an octave, filled with sincerity. “You cannot keep fighting it out here. You need to find a way to switch off the warfighter mode before you hurt someone innocent—or yourself. You need an anchor. Something to hold you steady when the echoes start.“
He looked at me for a long moment, then turned to Andrew. “Andrew, make sure she gets home. And Gia, find that anchor.” With a nod, he left, the heavy rumble of his truck a fading reminder of the world’s judgment.
Andrew shut the door and turned back to me. The silence in the garage was profound, but this time, it wasn’t threatening. The light was just beginning to change outside, the deep blue of early morning giving way to the first hints of orange and pink.
“Andrew,” I started, my voice shaky. “I don’t know how to turn it off.“
Andrew walked over to the vintage car he had been working on, a beautiful, polished cherry red Mustang. He didn’t speak for a long moment, just traced the curve of the fender. Then, he looked at me. “You’re always flying, Gia. Even when you’re driving your truck, when you’re sitting in your living room, you’re up there, anticipating the next enemy.“
He gave me a wry smile. “But even the best pilots have to land. You can’t fly indefinitely; you’ll run out of fuel or make a mistake that brings you down hard. Ejecting—the reaction you had tonight—is the emergency procedure, the last resort. It’s effective, but it’s destructive.“
I thought of the imagery: ejecting, the devastating impact of the physical violence, the chaos it left behind.
“Landing is different,” Andrew continued. “It requires control, patience, and acceptance of the ground. It requires trust that the ground will hold you.” He paused, letting the metaphor sink in. “Stop evading. Stop fighting the ground. It’s time to land the plane.“
He walked over to the office coffee pot and poured the remaining cold liquid into two mugs, handed me one. “You don’t have to do it all at once. Just accept that you are here, on this ground, with me. The sky isn’t falling. The threats aren’t real, not right now.“
I took the mug, the cold coffee grounding me in the present. I looked out the garage door at the rising sun. For the first time in what felt like years, I wasn’t assessing tactical vectors. I wasn’t looking for hidden enemies. I was just Gia Jennings, standing in Andrew Patterson’s garage, drinking cold coffee, and watching the sunrise over Oregon.
The realization washed over me like a calm tide. I couldn’t erase the training, but I could choose how and when to use it. The warrior inside me wasn’t going anywhere, but it didn’t have to be the pilot in control of every moment. I needed to learn to exist in the peace, even with the scars. I needed to trust the ground.
The sound of the birds, the warmth of the coffee, the soft light of dawn—they weren’t warnings. They were just part of the world I was now living in. A world where I didn’t have to be fighting a war that had ended.
I took a deep breath, and for the first time, my mind wasn’t in chaos. The noise was settling, the tactical data streams fading, replaced by the simple reality of the morning.
The plane was down. It was a rough landing, a Controlled Flight into Terrain that I’d managed to recover, but I was on the ground. And as I watched the sun fully crest the horizon, I knew I was going to be okay.
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