The desert was cold that night, the moon casting long shadows over the barren landscape. Lady Jaye crouched behind a jagged outcrop of rock, her earpiece buzzing faintly with static. The mission had come through suddenly: a distress signal from GI Joe himself. He was holed up in a makeshift shelter deep in enemy territory, too sick to move, and in dire need of extraction.
Lady Jaye had volunteered without hesitation.
“Valentine’s Day, Jaye?” Flint had teased her as she geared up.
“This isn’t a day off for heroes,” she had replied, loading her crossbow.
But she hadn’t told Flint the real reason she insisted on going. Joe wasn’t just her comrade. Over the years, she’d come to admire his strength, his quiet resilience. If anyone deserved saving, it was him.
The Symptoms of War
When Lady Jaye found Joe, he was slumped against a crumbling wall inside the ruins of an old warehouse. His normally sharp blue eyes were dull, his face pale and damp with sweat.
“Lady Jaye,” he croaked, trying to sit up, but she was at his side in an instant.
“Don’t you dare move,” she said, her voice firm but gentle. She ran a quick assessment. His hands trembled, and his breathing was shallow. He’d lost weight, and his skin carried a strange grayish pallor.
“Gulf War Syndrome,” he murmured, as if reading her thoughts. “The vaccines… the uranium dust… it’s all catching up with me.”
Her heart twisted. She’d heard about soldiers suffering from the mysterious illness—aching joints, chronic fatigue, and worse. For Joe, who had always been a pillar of strength, this was a cruel twist of fate.
“Save your breath,” she said, slinging his arm over her shoulder. “I’m getting you out of here.”
The Escape
Getting Joe to the extraction point was no easy task. Enemy patrols combed the area, and the sound of distant engines roared through the night. Joe, despite his condition, did his best to keep up, his weight leaning heavily on Jaye.
“You should’ve let someone else come,” he rasped.
“And let them screw it up? Not a chance,” she shot back, scanning the horizon for movement.
At one point, Joe stumbled, collapsing into the sand. Jaye knelt beside him, gripping his shoulders.
“Don’t give up on me, Joe. Not today.”
“Why today?” he asked, his voice barely audible.
She hesitated, then smiled. “Because it’s Valentine’s Day. And I don’t want to spend it losing you.”
Joe blinked, a flicker of a smile playing at his lips. “You’ve got a funny way of celebrating.”
A Heartbeat Away
As dawn broke, they reached the extraction point. The chopper descended, kicking up a storm of sand and grit. Lady Jaye helped Joe climb aboard, then collapsed beside him, her energy drained but her determination unshaken.
The medics immediately tended to Joe, hooking him up to oxygen and IV fluids. Jaye sat nearby, watching quietly as his color began to return.
“You’re not rid of me yet,” Joe said, his voice stronger now.
“Good,” she replied, squeezing his hand. “Because Valentine’s Day isn’t over.”
As the helicopter soared into the sky, carrying them both to safety, Lady Jaye realized something. She wasn’t just rescuing a teammate; she was saving a man who had always been a quiet hero to her—a man worth fighting for.
And maybe, just maybe, that was the best Valentine’s Day gift of all.