Authors: Tessa Bailey
Tags: #police, #Romantic Suspense, #brazen, #line of duty, #erotic, #new york, #Contemporary Romance
you no cops…that it had to be on my
terms.” He couldn’t swallow, couldn’t
get a decent breath. “She wouldn’t just
leave. I told her. I told her there was no
going back.”
“You’re not making any sense, man.”
Troy blew out a breath. “Look, I have no
reason to lie. We’ve heard nothing from
her.”
Bowen barely registered Troy’s
assurances over the buzzing in his brain.
She hadn’t called in. She wasn’t here.
He hadn’t kept her safe. Failed. Oh,
God, he’d failed her.
“
Mr. Driscol.
”
Not Troy’s voice. Someone else’s.
Newsom? Based on the impatience in
his tone, he’d been trying to get his
attention for a while. Bowen almost felt
too numb to respond. “What.”
“I have an idea where she might have
gone.”
Sera stared blankly across the empty
field, watching a plastic Ziploc bag float
around in the wind. She pulled up the
hood of her sweatshirt and drew her
knees up to her chest, ignoring the
creaking of the ancient bench beneath
her. She’d come here before, but there
had always been families, teenagers
playing soccer, senior citizens walking
in groups.
That hum of activity had made the park
where Colin had been shot seem less
desolate, more redeemable. Possibly
because of the slight chill in the air, the
only thing inhabiting the field today was
garbage. A forgotten sweatshirt. A
cracked Frisbee. It made the park, the
last place where her brother had drawn
breath, unbearable.
Black spots winked inside her vision,
a product of her lack of sleep. Bowen
had left. Just…left. She had no
recollection of how long she’d sat on his
bed feeling raw and exposed, convinced
he would come back and hold her,
before dragging herself to the guest
room. No. He’d chosen retaliation. The
pipe dream that she could save him had
cracked and flooded her insides.
Eventually, the flood turned to a block of
ice so thick she wasn’t sure it would
ever thaw.
Around three in the morning, Bowen
had crashed into the apartment. She’d
heard him come into her room but
pretended to be asleep, terrified to see
the evidence of what he’d done in her
name. Hours later, she’d heard him
through the door, mumbling her name,
saying it like a curse, a prayer,
accompanied by the disctinct sound of a
glass bottle clinking on the floor. The
healer inside her had still wanted to go
to him. Hold him. By morning, though,
she’d managed to steel herself against
the urge, stepping over him and his
empty liquor bottle in the darkness, and
leaving before she broke down and
indulged the impulse.
No longer.
Her brother would have been twenty-
nine today, and what gift had she given
him? She’d allowed herself to get swept
up in a man and forgotten about his
justice. The future he’d been denied.
Selfish. She’d been selfish. Worse,
she’d been wrong about the man who
caused the lapse. After last night, even
thinking his name hurt. She’d let him
distract her from the needs of her family,
she’d trusted him, given him a part of
herself, and he’d disappointed her.
Honestly, she deserved it. She deserved
to feel as though her chest had been
chiseled into and ripped wide open. Her
uncle hadn’t trusted her to do this job, to
avenge Colin, and she’d proven him
right.
Not anymore. She would do whatever
it took to make up for her lapse in
judgment. With so many eyes on her, it
would be risky, but no other options
existed. She would
not
be the failure her
uncle expected her to be. Her brother’s
death would not be in vain, no matter
what mistakes he’d made or payouts
he’d taken. She had to believe if he were
still alive, he would have corrected his
mistakes. Now she had to do it for him.
Tonight’s waitressing shift at Rush
would be her final chance, and she
wouldn’t waste it.
Right now, she needed to go back to…
Bowen’s, much as it would kill her to be
around him when her feelings still
existed. They
more
than existed, they
crowded her insides, making it hard to
breath. She thought she’d known him,
swore a different man lived beneath the
violent facade, but he’d proved her
wrong. No longer could she trust him or
let herself be sucked in by the magnetic
pull in his direction.
Sera dropped her feet to the ground
and stood, but something kept her from
leaving. Before she knew her own
intention, she began walking through the
park, picking up trash. She tossed an
empty juice box, a candy bar wrapper,
and two paper plates into the garbage
can, then went back for more. A little bit
of pressure that had been building in her
head since last night eased, the routine
giving her purpose, comforting her. Her
brother’s grave had been too far,
considering
she
only
had
public
transport at her disposal, so instead of
leaving flowers, she could do this
instead. She could make this place a
little less miserable.
Every few minutes, Sera scanned the
surrounding area. She was a good
distance away from Bensonhurst and she
still carried the gun Bowen had given
her, but that didn’t mean someone hadn’t
spotted her. After the way Connor had
ignored her as he drove past last night,
she knew he didn’t trust her. Another
person she’d had a positive gut feeling
about that turned out to be wrong. It
called her decision-making ability into
question. A tiny voice in her head
whispered
your uncle is right.
She
quickly buried the recurring thought
when a car roared into the parking lot
behind her, sending her heart into her
throat.
Very slightly, she turned, careful to
keep her face hidden underneath the
hood. The aluminum can she held in her
hand dropped to the ground when she
saw Bowen coming toward her. Warning
bells went off. Not only because of the
wild look in his eye, but the fact that he
was there in the first place. She hadn’t
told him anything about Colin. At least,
nothing that would lead him here.
Unless…
Unless he’d already known her
brother had been killed here.
Sera’s
stomach
bottomed
out,
possibilities whipping through her head.
Flashing images of their exchanges came
back to her with disorienting speed,
refusing to make sense. How had he
known to come here? To this
exact
park
on this
exact
day? Her brother had died
here and he’d known to come. Which
meant…he knew about Colin.
Her
. He
knew
her
identity.
Sera held back a sob. How long had
he known and kept it from her?
Furthermore, did his knowledge of this
place mean he’d been here before?
Oh, God, had he been involved in her
brother’s death?
With that final sickening possibility
coating her brain like molasses, Sera
started to run.
Think, think.
She couldn’t
pull out her gun in broad daylight, not
this close to the street, but she wanted to.
Wanted to point it at him and demand the
truth of what had happened. She let out a
frustrated noise when she realized that
even with all the doubt, all the questions
circling him, the idea of pointing a gun at
him felt abhorrently wrong.
“
Sera
.” Bowen gave chase behind her.
“Don’t you run from me.”
Ignoring him, she sprinted from the
park to the sidewalk across the street.
This neighborhood had been thriving at
one time, but construction developments
had halted only halfway finished thanks
to the weak economy. She ducked inside
one of those empty concrete structures,
jumping over stray cinder blocks,
abandoned tools, and overgrown weeds.
Not far behind, she could hear his feet
hitting the pavement, his constant calling
of her name. As soon as she was out of
view of the street, she drew her gun and
waited for him to enter the building.
Seconds behind her, he entered the
near-darkness and came to an abrupt
halt. His gaze landed on the gun and then
rose to meet hers. She refused to
acknowledge the pain she saw there.
“Ladybug, put the gun down.”
“No. You put
yours
on the ground.”
Without hesitating, he put one hand up,
slowly reaching behind him with the
other to remove the gun at the small of
his back. He laid it down on the ground
and kicked it away, never removing his
steady attention from her. “Now put
yours down so we can talk.”
“How did you know where to find
me?” she asked, horrified to hear her
teeth chattering.
His hesitation hit her like a physical
blow. For the first time since meeting
him, she felt as though she didn’t know
him at all. He was everything his police
file proclaimed him to be.
“
Answer me
,” she shouted, the gun
blurring in front of her. “How did you
know? Were you here that night…did
you—”
“
Jesus
.” His voice packed a raw
punch. “Do it. Pull the trigger right now.
It’ll be better than hearing the rest of
what you were going to say.”
Sera shook her head. “Stop. Just
stop.”
“Stop
what
?”
“Saying things like that to me.
Pretending I mean something to you,
when you’ve been lying to me since the
beginning.” Her extended arm started to
shake. “Haven’t you?”
“No more than you’ve been lying to
me, Seraphina,” he returned, gravely.
Everything inside her seized at the use
of her full name. Confirmation of what
she’d already suspected, that he’d
known her identity since the beginning.
Had he just been humoring her, so secure
in his own criminal immortality that he
hadn’t found her a threat? The idea hurt
worse than she could have imagined.
She thought back to last night, how he’d
waited to exact revenge, instead of doing
it in front of her, so she’d have no way
to prove his guilt. He’d known.
“You still haven’t answered me,” she
said, her voice barely above a whisper.
She needed this final nail in his coffin,
so she could maybe one day put him
behind her. “How did you find me?”
His
jaw
flexed.
“Commissioner
Newsom told me where you were.”
Her arm went limp, the gun dropping
to her side. Every available breath in her
body fled, driven away by confusion.
“What?” she wheezed.
He took a step toward her, cursing
when she backed up. “It’s complicated,
Sera, and I can’t think straight enough to
explain when you’re looking at me like
I’m a monster.”
“Aren’t you?”
Pain blanketed his features. “Only half
of me. The half I never wanted you to
see.”
“Stop talking in code and explain
yourself,”
she
demanded.
The
implications of his words were refusing
to register. Bowen and her uncle. Her
uncle and Bowen.
Bowen dragged agitated hands through
his hair, drawing her attention to the
kaleidoscope of colors coating his
fingers and knuckles. Had he been
painting
inside his bedroom last night?
Such an absurd thing to be curious over
when her world was crumbling around
her, but for some reason it seemed
important.
“Ruby’s boyfriend, Troy,” he said.
“He’s a detective. When you went solo
and dropped out of sight, they pulled him