Authors: Tessa Bailey
Tags: #police, #Romantic Suspense, #brazen, #line of duty, #erotic, #new york, #Contemporary Romance
Hogan’s operation down square on its
head.
As soon as she’d felt confident enough
that gaining possession of the ledger
would be the key to outing Colin’s
murderer, she’d taken a personal week
off of work, citing the upcoming three-
year anniversary of her brother’s death
as the reason. And she’d gone
undercover without a direct order from
her uncle.
When this was over, she’d never again
wear a badge. But she’d have bagged a
murderer.
And then she would disappear.
Sera set down both plates of meat loaf
in front of two burly male customers
whose earlier loud conversation had
devolved into subdued undertones with
Hogan’s appearance, never letting
Hogan out of her peripheral vision. Ever
since he’d arrived, Dooly’s lively buzz
had been switched off like a lightbulb,
customers poking at their meals absently.
Apparently unconcerned about the pall
he’d cast over the crowd, Hogan sat
with one arm draped over his chair,
focusing on the UFC match raging on the
ancient television.
Hogan’s four-man crew stomped into
the bar, making the sixth sense that ran in
her family
ping
. Hogan leaned against
the bar, gesturing animatedly as he spoke
to the bartender. His friends laughed on
cue and some of the customers began to
relax. Hogan, his youthfulness beginning
to fade along with his good looks, tossed
back a shot of whiskey. He turned as he
plunked the glass down on the bar,
catching her eye across the dining room
floor. Instead of cringing under his
interest, Sera smiled back and sailed
toward the kitchen, conscious of his hard
gaze on her.
Everything happened quickly after
that. There was a loud crack as Dooly’s
front door was kicked open. A man
walked in, sweatshirt hood pulled low
over his face, gun raised and pointed at
Hogan. Every patron in the bar hit the
floor as if it were a middle-school
earthquake drill. Sera reached toward
her hip for a weapon that wasn’t there.
Hogan threw himself behind one of the
four men who’d joined him, just in time
for the man to take the bullet in his stead.
The wounded man fell with a shocked
curse, still shielding Hogan, who
followed him to the wooden floor,
scrambling for his gun. Hogan’s other
men wasted no time removing their own
weapons, issuing threats at the already-
retreating gunman, who managed to make
it out the door before they could fire a
single shot.
What had she just witnessed? An
assassination attempt on Hogan? For a
moment, she felt frozen to the spot,
reeling at the fact that Hogan’s life had
almost been stolen from her. Justice for
Colin did not include such an easy way
out.
No,
it
would
have
been
unacceptable. Years
of
heartache,
months of work…all for nothing. It had
been so close. Too close.
The sight of blood broke Sera out of
her
stupor.
It
was
everywhere.
Splattered on the mirror behind the bar,
the ground, the man who lay on his back
clutching his upper chest. Before her
conscious mind processed her actions,
Sera moved toward the man, shoving
aside the group of useless bystanders.
She might have quit nursing to become a
cop, but the oath she’d taken wouldn’t
allow her to stand by while someone
died. Not when she could prevent it.
“Get me the first aid kit from behind the
bar.” As she knelt down beside the
bleeding man, she noticed no one had
moved. “
Now.
And call an ambulance
.
”
Feet shuffled around Sera, telling her
someone had actually listened. Briefly,
her eyes landed on the face of the
wounded man. Young, dark, startlingly
handsome despite the fact that his teeth
were gritted from the obvious pain. She
didn’t recognize him from the case file,
nor had she expected his type among this
crew. Hardened, yes, but he didn’t
appear as if he’d slipped beyond
redemption like the rest of them. With
brisk efficiency, she pried his hand away
from the wound, pushed open his leather
jacket and ripped his white T-shirt open
from collar to hem.
The first aid kit clattered down beside
her on the floor. “At least buy him dinner
first.”
Hogan. She’d deal with him later.
Relief moved through her when she saw
that the wound had missed the man’s
heart by about two inches. Still, it could
have hit his subclavian artery. She could
keep him alive long enough for help to
arrive, but it would need to be soon. As
gently as possible, she eased her hand
beneath his shoulder, relieved when she
felt an exit wound. At least the bullet had
gone clear through. She ripped off her
apron, balled up the starchy material and
pressed it against the wound. It had to
hurt like hell, but the man barely winced.
She glanced up, meeting Hogan’s
eyes. “Did you call the ambulance?”
He leaned against the bar, chewing a
cocktail straw. The utter lack of concern
on his face reminded Sera she was in the
presence of a monster. Her brother’s
murderer. Hogan shrugged, setting her
teeth on edge. “You’re doing a bang-up
job all on your own. No need to involve
uniforms.”
Sera failed to hide her horror. “He
could die without medical attention.
Look at how much blood he’s already
lost.” She wiped her bloody palm across
her uniform shirt, unwittingly making her
point.
Eyes narrow, he pointed at her with
his cocktail straw. “Why don’t you ask
him what he wants?”
She looked back down at the injured
man. “No ambulance,” he managed
through gritted teeth, face paling with the
effort. “I’d rather bleed out.”
Hogan’s face lit up with amusement.
“And there you go.” He signaled the
bartender for another drink. “You got a
name, Florence Nightingale?”
He’s colder than I could have
imagined.
Sera took a deep breath and focused
on his question. She’d planned her false
identity down to the last detail. The
name and cover story she would use if
she ever got close enough to Hogan to
actually employ it. She’d never expected
to use it this soon, though, especially in
this kind of situation.
“Sera.”
He threw back the shot of whiskey.
“Can you fix him up, Sera? He’s my
cousin. If he dies, it’ll piss off my
mother.”
Yes. She might be able to save him.
No, she
would
save him. Despite the
wounded man’s vast difference from her
brother, she wouldn’t let another person
die because of Hogan’s presence in his
life. Call it irrational, but in a way,
saving this man might in small measure
make up for her being two hundred miles
away as her brother died on the cold
sidewalk. None of this could be
portrayed to Hogan, however. Or she
risked her own neck. “Fix him?” She
gave a disbelieving laugh. “He needs
doctors…a hospital. I’m a waitress.”
“Yeah? You don’t talk like no
waitress.”
“You want to hear the specials or
something?”
Hogan’s laugh boomed through the
bar, but he sobered just as quickly. He
regarded her closely for a moment, then
nodded to his cohorts. “Load Connor
into the backseat. And for God’s sake,
put a fucking towel down first.” Almost
as an afterthought, he added, “She’s
coming with us.”
CHAPTER TWO
Bowen Driscol kept the lit cigarette
clamped between his lips as two police
officers jerked his hands behind his back
and shoved him forward onto the hood
of their squad car. A group of
neighborhood girls passing on the
sidewalk stopped to gawk, giggling
when he threw them a wink. The
officer’s hand between his shoulder
blades kept him in place, cold metal
clinking when the other uniform removed
the piece he’d had tucked into his
waistband and cuffed him. When the
hand on his back pushed a little too hard,
Bowen gave in with a sigh and spat the
cigarette onto the curb.
“Look, I like it rough as much as the
next guy, but we hardly know each
other.”
“Shut it, Driscol.”
“You going to explain why I’m being
arrested?” He swallowed a growl as the
cuffs bit into his skin. “Or is this just
how you get all your dates?”
“Your mother didn’t seem to mind.”
The officer heaved him off the hood and
stuffed him into the backseat, oblivious
to the sore spot he’d just poked with his
casual insult. “As for why I’m taking you
in?” With a shrug, he slammed the door.
“Pick something,” he called through the
glass.
Bowen
kept
his
unconcerned
expression firmly in place as the officers
drove through the streets of Bensonhurst
where he’d been raised. Where he’d
likely die. He knew every corner, every
alleyway, and the name of every shop
owner. This was his home. He hated it
as much as he loved it. Loved it for the
familiarity, hated it for the prison it had
become since he reluctantly accepted his
legacy.
Even though it was torture being
trapped in the back of a police car
without the use of his hands, he couldn’t
deny a sense of relief. Had they finally
caught him? Finally gathered enough
information to put him away? God, a big
part of him hoped they had, even if he
would die before admitting it to these
smug assholes. He was tired of looking
over his goddamn shoulder when he
walked down the street, wondering if
today would be the day someone tried to
end his reign as boss. He’d never
wanted the job, but with his father
awaiting trial at Rikers Island, it had
landed on his shoulders like a ton of
bricks. Yeah, he’d never been a saint to
begin with, but now people feared him
for reasons that had nothing to do with
his penchant for street fights. Now they
worried about their legs being broken
over unpaid debts. Turned tail and ran
when they saw him as if he were Death
himself.
He racked his brain trying to figure out
what had gotten him pinched. Sure they
were required to tell him, but the NYPD
never played by the rules. Not with him.
They knew he ran South Brooklyn, they
just hadn’t been able to trace any crime
back to him—a fact that pissed them off
in a big way. It warmed his heart exactly
how much. Would that all change today?
Their silence was unusual, to say the
least. Any other day, they wouldn’t
waste a chance to rib him.
Bowen frowned when they bypassed
the turn for the local precinct and
proceeded toward Manhattan. “Where
we headed, boys?”
“Don’t worry about it,” said the one
driving.
“Never said I was worried.” He
wished for a cigarette. “I’m just
wondering
if
I
need
to
make
arrangements for someone to water my
houseplants.”
The cops exchanged a glance. “
You
have plants.”
“What? I don’t strike you as the
nurturing type?”
Bowen caught sight of himself in the
rearview mirror and had to laugh. With a
purple-black eye and a cut bottom lip, he
looked like the opposite of nurturing. In
fact, he looked like shit run over twice.
Nothing new. He couldn’t remember
seeing himself reflected back without
some sort of injury on his face. The utter
exhaustion in his eyes, though…that was
new. Quickly, he looked out the window