
Amnesia Stolen His Love
Chapter 2
The enemy checkpoint loomed ahead, a cluster of sandbag bunkers manned by soldiers with automatic weapons. I adjusted my headscarf, pulling it lower over my forehead as I approached, my basket of laundry balanced on my hip—the perfect disguise for a local woman returning from washing clothes in the river.
"Stop," one of the guards barked, raising his rifle.
I lowered my eyes, letting my shoulders slump forward in practiced submission. "Please, sir," I murmured in the regional dialect my father had insisted I learn as a child. "I live in the village beyond the ridge. My children are waiting for these clean clothes."
The guard eyed me suspiciously, but my accent was flawless. After a moment, he waved me through with a dismissive gesture.
I kept my pace measured, my heart hammering against my ribs as I passed through their perimeter. Twenty meters beyond the checkpoint, I veered sharply into a narrow alley, abandoning the laundry basket in a shadowed corner. From there, it was a series of calculated movements through back streets and abandoned buildings, always keeping to the shadows.
By midday, I had established a position in an abandoned apartment building overlooking the enemy commander's compound. The scope of my father's sniper rifle felt familiar in my hands as I surveyed the courtyard below.
---
Nathan's fingers trembled as he picked up the promise ring from his desk, the small diamond catching the early morning light. Beside it lay my note, the words stark against the military stationery.
"I'm fulfilling what you abandoned."
"Amyra," he whispered, his voice breaking as realization crashed over him. He'd been so focused on Luz's vulnerability that he'd completely forgotten what today was supposed to be.
He yanked open his locker, pulling out his combat gear with frantic movements. The mission briefings flashed through his mind—the enemy commander's schedule, the security protocols, the narrow window of opportunity.
"Nathan?" Marcus appeared in the doorway, his expression concerned. "What's going on?"
"Amyra's gone after the target herself," Nathan said, his voice tight with panic. "She's headed to enemy territory alone."
Marcus's eyes widened. "General Torres needs to know immediately."
Nathan nodded, already moving toward the door. But as he stepped into the corridor, a small figure collapsed in front of him with a theatrical sob.
"Nathan!" Luz cried, her eyes brimming with perfectly timed tears. "I had the most terrible nightmare—I was all alone, just like the night my parents died."
Nathan froze, his instincts warring with his urgency to reach Amyra. Luz looked up at him, her lower lip trembling.
"You promised you wouldn't leave me alone again," she whispered. "Not after what happened to your sister."
The mention of his sister sent a wave of guilt through him. He couldn't abandon Luz, not when she needed him most.
---
"Explain yourself, soldier," General Torres's voice cut through the air like a blade as Nathan entered his office.
Nathan straightened his spine, though his hands still shook slightly. "Sir, I—"
"You volunteered for this mission," the General interrupted, his face a mask of cold fury. "You gave your word as an officer."
"I know, sir," Nathan began, "but there were circumstances—"
"My daughter has taken your place," General Torres said, his voice suddenly hollow. "She's crossing enemy lines as we speak."
Nathan's heart stuttered. "Sir, I can still organize a rescue team—"
"Too late," the General said, his eyes fixed on a point beyond Nathan's shoulder. "Amyra has always been braver than any soldier I've commanded."
For the first time, Nathan noticed the slight tremor in the General's hands as he gripped the edge of his desk.
"She's my daughter," Torres continued, his voice barely above a whisper, "and she's doing your job."
---
Three days into my mission, fever burned through my body like wildfire. I huddled in my concealed position, the concrete floor leaching away what little warmth I had left.
"Position secure," I reported into the encrypted radio, forcing steadiness into my voice despite the chattering of my teeth. "Target expected in thirty minutes."
"Copy that," came the response from command. "Status?"
I hesitated, feeling the heat radiating from my skin, the sweat beading on my forehead despite the chill in the abandoned building.
"Optimal condition," I lied, knowing that any admission of weakness would result in mission abortion.
As night fell, I curled tighter around my rifle, trying to conserve body heat. From my pocket, I withdrew the small locket I always carried—the one containing Nathan's photograph.
"I'll finish what you started," I whispered to his image, my fingers tracing the outline of his face through the plastic covering. "I promise."
The fever dreams came in waves—Nathan's face, his hands reaching for me, then turning away toward Luz. In the darkness, I clutched the locket tighter, using the pain of its edges digging into my palm to stay alert.
Somewhere in the distance, artillery rumbled like thunder. I pressed my cheek against the cold stock of my rifle and waited for dawn.
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