
Ditched for the Skies
Chapter 2
The silence in my childhood bedroom felt different now—not empty, but expectant. I folded my last sweater into the duffel bag, the same one Uncle Marcus had used during his deployment years ago. The faded green canvas carried the scent of distant places and bigger dreams.
"You sure about this, kiddo?" Uncle Marcus leaned against my doorframe, his weathered hands wrapped around a steaming coffee mug. Even at six in the morning, he looked alert, military precision still governing his movements after all these years.
I zipped the bag closed with a sharp tug. "More sure than I've ever been about anything."
He stepped into the room, and I noticed something glinting in his palm. Dog tags. His dog tags—the ones I'd seen him touch absently during thunderstorms, when memories made his jaw tighten and his eyes grow distant.
"These got me through the worst times," he said, holding them out to me. The metal felt warm against my skin, heavier than I'd expected. "When everything felt impossible, I'd remember why I was there. What I was fighting for."
My throat constricted. "Uncle Marcus, I can't—"
"You can." His voice carried that quiet authority I'd always admired. "You're braver than you know, Lacey. Takes real courage to walk away from what's killing you, even when it looks like love."
I slipped the chain over my neck, tucking the tags beneath my shirt. They clinked softly against my heart, a rhythm I could already feel syncing with my pulse.
My phone buzzed for the fifteenth time that morning. Ryan's name lit up the screen, followed by another desperate message I didn't bother reading. I'd seen enough variations of "please call me" and "we need to talk" to know he still didn't understand. Still believed this was just another fight that would blow over like all the others.
Uncle Marcus glanced at my phone, then back at my face. "You blocked him yet?"
"After I get to Colorado." I shouldered my bag, surprised by how light it felt despite carrying everything I needed for a new life. "I don't want him knowing where I'm going."
"Smart girl." He pulled me into a hug that smelled like coffee and Old Spice and safety. "Make me proud, pilot."
The word sent electricity through my veins. Pilot. Not girlfriend, not doormat, not second choice. Pilot.
---
Colorado Springs hit me like a physical force—thin air that made my lungs work harder, mountains that stretched toward clouds, and everywhere the sharp scent of pine and possibility. The Air Force Academy sprawled before me like something from a movie, all clean lines and purposeful architecture under the endless western sky.
My phone had buzzed constantly during the flight. Ryan's calls, his texts, even a voicemail from his mother asking if I was "feeling alright." As if choosing myself over their dysfunction was a symptom of illness.
I powered down the phone and slipped it into my bag's deepest pocket.
"Dean, Lacey!" A voice sharp as winter wind cut across the processing area.
I snapped to attention, muscle memory from months of secret preparation kicking in. "Yes, ma'am!"
Captain Sarah Mitchell looked like she could bench press a fighter jet and still have energy for a five-mile run. Her silver hair was pulled back in a regulation bun, but her eyes held warmth beneath the military steel.
"Welcome to hell week, cadet. You ready to find out what you're made of?"
"Yes, ma'am!" The words came out stronger than I felt, but something in my chest expanded with each syllable.
The next seventy-two hours blurred into a symphony of shouted commands, burning muscles, and the sweet exhaustion of being pushed beyond every limit I thought I had. Push-ups until my arms screamed. Obstacle courses that left me muddy and triumphant. Academic sessions where aviation theory filled the spaces in my brain that used to hold Ryan's preferences and Marina's manufactured crises.
For the first time in years, I slept dreamlessly.
---
Back in Seattle, Ryan Hamilton stared at his laptop screen in growing disbelief. The University of Washington's student portal showed no record of Lacey Dean's enrollment. None. Not in any program, not for any semester.
His fingers flew across the keyboard, refreshing the page again and again as if repetition might change reality. This had to be a mistake. A glitch in the system. Lacey had talked about college constantly—her backup plan, she'd called it. Her safe choice.
Safe. Like him.
He grabbed his phone and called the admissions office, pacing his dorm room like a caged animal. "I'm looking for information about a student named Lacey Dean. She should be enrolled for fall semester—"
"I'm sorry, sir, but we can't release information about students to unauthorized parties."
"I'm her boyfriend!" The words came out sharper than intended.
"I understand, but our privacy policies—"
Ryan hung up and immediately dialed again, this time claiming to be her brother. Then her cousin. Each call met the same polite stonewalling that made his chest tighten with something approaching panic.
He opened Instagram, scrolling to Lacey's profile with the muscle memory of obsession. Account not found. Facebook—same message. Even her old Snapchat had vanished into digital void.
It was as if she'd never existed at all.
Ryan's hands shook as he scrolled through their old text messages, searching for clues he'd missed. Air Force Academy. The words jumped out at him from their coffee shop fight, but he'd dismissed them as another dramatic gesture. Lacey didn't have the backbone for military service. She was soft, accommodating, safe.
Wasn't she?
His phone rang. Marcus—Lacey's uncle.
"Ryan." The voice carried arctic temperatures. "Stop calling my niece."
"Where is she? Marcus, please, I just need to know she's okay—"
"She's better than okay. She's free."
The line went dead, leaving Ryan staring at his phone as his carefully constructed world crumbled around him.
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