Authors: Christy Reece
was an emergency room doctor in the largest hospital in London and worked
nights, Lucas told himself it was a kindness to invite his friend for dinner.
A troubling thing about Jared was that he had an uncanny ability to
read Lucas's mind, so he wasn't surprised when the question came. "So when
are you going after her?"
Lucas nodded his thanks to Conrad, his butler, who, formal as ever,
pulled out a chair at the dining table for him.
After taking a sip of his favorite cabernet, he answered, "I'm not."
Jared pulled out his own chair before Conrad could get to him,
causing poor Conrad to look insulted and Jared to grin. He looked at Lucas
as his words registered. "What do you mean, you don't plan to go after her?"
"Just that. Next move is hers."
He hadn't told Jared anything other than he'd seen her again. What he
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and McKenna had shared was between them. But he could understand
Jared's surprise. Lucas wasn't one to sit back and wait.
Ignoring the concerned look on his friend's face, Lucas dove into his
meal. Just because he sounded calm and sure that McKenna had to make the
next move didn't mean he liked it or was even sure she'd come to him. She
was teaching him patience. If he had pressured her or continued his pursuit,
she would disappear and he'd have to start looking all over again. He hadn't
found her the first time; she'd come to him. And he hoped she would again.
Waiting might not be comfortable, but he damn well couldn't risk spooking
her and having her run from him again.
That one kiss had almost blown his head off and destroyed his plan.
More than anything, he'd wanted to pull her back into his suite and show her
how good they could be together. If he had, she might have stayed for a
while, even let him make love to her. But he'd seen the look in her eyes. She
wasn't ready for what he wanted from her. Until she was, he'd pursue her
from another country.
Some people might call him either delusional or overly optimistic.
Lucas knew it was sheer determination and nothing more. They had
something. He recognized it; at some point, McKenna would, too. He just
hoped it didn't take her too much longer to realize it.
McKenna waited for Noah to arrive. She felt emptied out, almost
clean. She'd poured her guts out for an hour. Samara had listened and
nodded occasionally, and never once did McKenna see judgment.
Compassion hadn't been a part of McKenna's life in years. Hell, after what
she'd caused, she had never felt she deserved it. But she had wanted justice,
not for herself but for her family. That had been denied her.
Now Noah was due in to talk with her. She trusted Samara not to tell
him about her past. But McKenna had already made the decision to tell him
herself. If she came on permanently as an LCR operative, he deserved to
know her damage. She knew enough about LCR operatives to have seen that
most of them were wounded in some way. Having experienced hell gave
extra incentive to rescue those who were in the midst of their own.
She stood and turned when McCall came through the door. Since
Samara had only left a few moments before, she doubted they'd had much of
a conversation. Would he be surprised she had changed her mind? Probably
not. Noah McCall saw more than most people--more than most people were
comfortable with, too.
"McKenna, thanks for staying." He stalked over to the bar, took a
couple of water bottles out of the fridge, handed her one, and then sat in his
chair at his desk.
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Dropping back into her chair, she blurted the words out before he
could speak. "I screwed up the op in Marseille."
He didn't say anything for the longest time, just looked at her with
those piercing black eyes. She met his gaze head-on. Taking responsibility
for her actions had come at a high price. She'd once blamed everyone else
for her problems. No longer. She knew exactly when she fucked up and she
didn't back away.
McCall nodded. "You're right. You did. The girls could have been
killed. You and Dylan, too."
"I know."
"Is it going to happen again?"
"No."
"Good. You ready to come on board as an operative?"
"You're sure you want me?"
"You've proved yourself over and over again, McKenna. I don't
expect perfection from my operatives. You learn from your mistakes and
you move on."
"Then yes, I'll come on board."
"Good." He stood. "Stop by and see Angela before you leave. I know
we usually send your payments to an account. Let her know if you want to
continue with the same arrangement."
"And that's it?"
"You got something else to say?"
She took a breath. "I'd like to tell you what I told Samara."
"You know that's not necessary, don't you?"
And that was one of the biggest reasons she was going to talk. She
had trusted few people in her adult life, had trusted the wrong people as a
teen. It was time to spread her wings, and that meant trusting her instincts.
Noah and Samara had given her their word and their trust. She could do no
less.
"I was raised in Traylor City, Nebraska. It's a little town, maybe seven
thousand people then. About twenty miles outside of Omaha. My parents
were part-time farmers and had a hardware store in town. I had a little sister,
two years younger than me."
She took a breath. Telling it the second time was no easier than the
first. "When I was sixteen, I met a good-looking guy at a movie theater. He
was older, told me he was nineteen. I had only just been given permission to
date, so to my parents, a nineteen-year-old was too old. I didn't know until
much later that he was actually twenty-three. Anyway, they didn't approve
of me dating him, told me I couldn't. I ignored them, didn't listen to
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them...thought they were too old, too backward to know what they were
talking about."
Noah leaned back into his chair and watched McKenna open herself
up. After seeing Samara briefly before he came in, he knew whatever
McKenna had gone through was bad. He hadn't expected her to share it with
him, and as she talked, he was somewhat surprised that she was. As a
teenager, she'd made a horrendous mistake in judgment; she and her family
had paid the highest price possible. What boiled his blood even more was
the way McKenna had been treated after the fact. No wonder she trusted so
few. The very people she should have been able to depend upon had
betrayed her.
Dylan had told him the circumstances of the operation and how
McKenna had reacted. The man hadn't liked sharing that information but
knew it had to be done. Knowing his operatives' weaknesses and fears was
just as important as knowing their strengths. When a victim's life is on the
line, having an operative unable to function can cost lives. Noah had needed
to know.
After hearing the details, he'd made a decision. McKenna needed LCR
as much as LCR needed her. No employee of Last Chance Rescue was
infallible and few operations went off without some kind of glitch. Noah
himself had made some terrible decisions during operations. Perfection
wasn't expected. Guts, determination, and the fierce desire to help others
were. McKenna had those characteristics and then some.
Breath shuddered through her as she finished her heartbreaking story.
She'd shed no tears, but her deathly pale face and the dark hell in her eyes
told him how haunted she continued to be.
"Where's Damon Hughes now?"
"I haven't heard from him in a couple of years. After he killed my
neighbor, Mrs. Winston, I left Memphis. I managed to hook up with a good
counterfeiter before I left. I got a new name, new social security
number...new everything. I changed my appearance as much as possible.
Came to Paris." She shrugged. "The rest you know."
"Where did you get your training?"
A hard look crossed her face for an instant. "I was staying at a shelter
in Baltimore. A couple of guys roughed me up...tried to rape me. I fought
back, but it wasn't enough. Just before they got started, a man interrupted
them. Beat both of them to a pulp, then turned on me. Yelling and screaming
at me for being such a stupid idiot." Her mouth twisted. "He was right. I was
stupid...and untrained. Having him yell at me was the right thing to do. If
he'd been nice, I probably would've just melted in a puddle. Instead I got
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pissed."
"And he's the one who trained you?"
"Yes, he and two others. They own a private gym called Three
Brothers. Two of them were former Special Forces. The other one, the one
who saved me, had been in and out of jail for various things in his youth.
He'd turned his life around and was the one who opened the gym."
"They did a good job. How long did you train with them?"
"For about a year. They gave me a job there. I got an
apartment...things were going well."
"What happened?"
"Damon's people came. My friends gave them the ass-kicking of a
lifetime, but I knew if I didn't get out of there, Damon would find a way to
hurt them. I disappeared the next day." She shrugged. "It's best that I don't
form attachments."
"Do you plan to confront him at some point?"
"Yes."
"Are you actively looking for him?"
She clenched her jaw, and he saw the fear behind the bravado she
always showed. "Not yet."
She would at some point. Each person had their own timetable in
facing their demons. She would decide when the time was right. Right now
it was easier for her to have no life than to deliberately take another. He
could understand that mentality, but at some point she would come to the
end of her rope.
"If he ever finds you, will you allow us to help?"
A stubborn expression, one he'd seen too many times to count, crossed
her face. Often when it came to confronting their demons, people wanted to
do it on their own. He couldn't fault her for that. He understood it, too, better
than most. But she needed to remember she was part of a community of
people who'd been to hell and back in their own right. Not only were LCR
operatives committed to rescuing victims, they were damn good at banding
together to help one another.
She gave a slight nod. "If I think you can help, I'll let you know."
He would let himself be satisfied with that. If he pushed, she'd push
back. He'd have to trust her to make the right decision. McKenna needed to
learn to trust, and one of the best ways was for her to know that she was
trusted.
Noah stood and held out his hand. "Welcome to LCR officially,
McKenna."
Her hand felt delicate and small in his, and Noah had to remind
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himself that she might look like she was too young, too fragile, but physical
appearances were often deceptive and rarely had anything to do with
courage. Samara was even smaller than McKenna and was one of the
gutsiest people he knew.
"Thank you for your trust, Noah. I won't let you down again."
Noah nodded and watched as, head held high, she walked out the
door. After she closed the door behind her, he slumped back into his chair.
Lucas Kane had his work cut out for him. She'd given her trust to
LCR, but giving her trust to another man would be even more difficult for
her. A smile played at his lips. Actually, Kane might be the one man who
was up to the challenge.
But there was still the worry of this Damon character. Noah could
only hope she'd give LCR an opportunity to help when the time came. The
man was well past insane. From the sound of it, once he found McKenna
again, he'd never let her go, not even if he had to kill her to keep her.
Palm Beach
The call woke him from a restless sleep. Since learning McKenna
might have been found, he hadn't been able to rest well or concentrate. His
business would soon suffer. Since there were few people he trusted, he was a
hands-on businessman. People were less likely to screw you over when they
knew they were being watched. In his early days, he'd had to eliminate some
of his people to show them how things were to be done. It'd been years since
he'd had to kill anyone for business reasons, but his people knew he would
have no qualms if it became necessary. Keeping your employees on their
toes and scared as hell had gotten him where he was. He couldn't slack off.
But McKenna was more important to him than any business venture.
He had the wealth, but he needed the woman to share it with him. The only
woman who mattered.
The phone rang again. Groggy and pissed, he kicked the woman
beside him. "Get out."
She mumbled but didn't move. He grabbed the phone and barked,
"What?"
"Sir, I have more news."
"Hold on." Damon rolled over. Inches from the woman's face, he
shouted, "Get the fuck out of my bed!"
Sleep disappeared from her face as her eyes went wide with fear. She
slipped from the bed and slunk out of the room.
Stupid bitch
. He'd get rid of