Her Wild Hero - Paige Tyler Page 0,3

other people like him.

“These other shifters—they work for you?”

Loughlin stood and walked over to the small fridge. He opened it and took out another bottle of water. “You mind? That walk out here didn’t look so bad on my GPS.”

When Declan shook his head, Loughlin took a long swallow, then went back to his seat.

“Yes, these shifters work for me, along with other less unique, but no less valuable people. We partner them up in small teams that accentuate the strengths and skills of each member, then have them carry out missions that best suit those skills.”

The idea of being able to work with a team of people who wouldn’t view him as a monster when they discovered his secret was damn enticing.

“Okay, you have my attention,” he told Loughlin. “What kind of work would I be doing? I mean, I might be one of these shifters you’re talking about, but I don’t have any special skills that I know of.”

Not unless you counted being able to throw someone through a wall.

“You have more skills than you realize—you simply need training to bring them out,” Loughlin said. “We won’t ask you to do anything that’s beyond your capability. Or outside the boundary of your moral compass.”

“I’m still listening,” Declan said.

“Good. Because I have a new team I’m putting together. You would be working with three other men that I consider to be some of the finest people I’ve ever had the privilege of meeting.” He shook his head. “I won’t sugarcoat it. This team will have a very difficult job. You’ll be responsible for tracking down and capturing—or killing if necessary—some of the worst predators in the world. Killers, rapists, terrorists, and worse. Some will be everyday, run-of-the-mill psychopaths. But others will be shifters who have gone rogue.”

Damn. “Does that happen a lot?”

“Not too often, but when it does, the average cop, federal agent, or soldier isn’t prepared to handle it. That’s where you and your team will come in.”

Declan shifted on the stool. “I’m not sure I could kill someone—shifter or otherwise—no matter what they’ve done.”

Loughlin regarded him thoughtfully. “I know what happened the night Marissa left you, Declan. You exposed yourself to protect her, even though you knew it might cost you.”

Declan didn’t say anything.

“Something tells me you would have done the same thing if it hadn’t been Marissa—if it’d just been some random stranger,” Loughlin said. “Am I right?”

Declan didn’t even have to think about it. “Yes.”

“That’s all I’ll ever ask you to do—save a person you might not even know, regardless of what it might cost you.”

When Loughlin put it that way, the job didn’t sound half-bad. And maybe helping people would be a way to atone for what he’d done that night when he’d protected Marissa. He weighed the pros and cons of the job offer, going back and forth between them while Loughlin patiently sat there drinking his water. This was a big decision and he should sleep on it for a couple days, but it wasn’t the kind of choice that could be made with his head. He had to go with his gut, and it was telling him that this was the right thing to do.

“Okay,” he finally said. “I’m in.”

Loughlin smiled. “And I didn’t even have to mention benefits and pay—both of which are damn good, by the way.”

Neither of those things had even occurred to Declan.

Loughlin walked over and held out his hand. “Welcome to the Department of Covert Operations, Mr. MacBride.”

Chapter 1

Seven Years Later

After ten years of writing performance reviews, training schedules, and after-action reports, Kendra Carlsen was finally going on a mission. She was so excited, she was practically bouncing in her chair. But getting all geeked up wasn’t going to get the work on her desk done—and she had a ton to do before she left.

She was just finishing up the semiannual performance evaluation on Trevor Maxwell’s team—outstanding as usual—when intel specialist Evan Lloyd stuck his head in her office.

“Some of us are heading out for lunch. Want to come?”

Kendra was sorely tempted, but she was heading to the airport in—she looked at her watch—three hours. Yikes!

She shook her head as she kept typing. “Thanks for the invite, but I can’t. I have way too much to do before I leave.”

Evan frowned. “You going on vacation?”

Kendra had a hard time keeping the silly grin off her face. “Mission in Costa Rica.”

His eyes went wide. “Seriously?”

“Uh-huh. John wants me to evaluate a big international, interagency training exercise down