Authors: Tessa Bailey
Tags: #police, #Romantic Suspense, #brazen, #line of duty, #erotic, #new york, #Contemporary Romance
He’d only meant to let the guy get one
good shot at him, but it felt so damn
good to feel something other than loss.
There is no us
.
She would leave as soon as this
investigation wrapped, leaving him with
the knowledge of her and no way to
achieve the contentment she provided
ever again. In his mind, she might as
well have already walked out the door.
It made him feel sick and raw and
frantic. Made him want to beg her to turn
the car around so he could seek out more
of the reality-blurring pain.
Sera took a left, steering the car
toward his block. “Why didn’t you tell
me you were working with the police?”
Her question dragged him back from
his helpless rage, but didn’t detract from
it. Too much of it existed. He could feel
it gathering, expanding, multiplying
inside him.
She’s leaving. She’s as good
as gone
. “Why would I do that, huh? So
you’d know you’re safe with one of the
good guys?” He pulled at his hair,
bitterness lacing his tone. “I’m not a
good guy. I might not be the guy who
killed your brother, but I’m closer to
their kind than I am to yours.”
When she flinched beside him, he
wanted to throw himself out of the
moving vehicle, but managed to remain
in his seat. After a heavy silence, she
spoke quietly. “Is that the only reason?
This could have been much easier if I’d
known you were on my side.”
No way would Bowen tell her what
his other orders had been. Remove the
ledger from her possession, take it to the
commissioner. He couldn’t do it,
anyway. Couldn’t take away her chance
to prove herself. More importantly, the
ledger was her ticket out. The ticket he’d
never been given, but always wanted.
She’d be gone from him, but at least
she’d be safe.
He breathed through the agony of
knowing he’d be without her soon. When
she saw his name among the other
criminals in Hogan’s ledger book, she’d
be thankful. “Keeping it to myself wasn’t
a suggestion, it was an order. They
threatened me if I did otherwise. Didn’t
think you would appreciate the help and
would do something rash.” He stared at
her until she gave him her attention.
“You won’t be, by the way. Doing
something rash.”
“You don’t get to tell me what to do. If
you’d been honest in the beginning,
things might have been different.” She
drifted to a stop outside his building and
put the car in park. “It’s up to me to fail
or succeed. Not you.”
Frustration burned in his gut. At Sera,
for not realizing the kind of danger that
surrounded her. At himself, for hearing
the truth in her words and wishing he’d
come clean on day one. She’d deserved
that much from him. “Fail or succeed,”
he scoffed. “You realize what failure
means? They’re not going to let you
waltz out of Brooklyn. Not after how
close you were. Not after what—” He
cut himself off, remembering she knew
none of this. Knowing it would drive an
even bigger wedge between them.
“After what?”
His jaw flexed. “You overheard
something important. A date.” He
watched the wheels turning behind her
eyes, waited to see if she would pretend
ignorance and prove she still didn’t trust
him.
She tugged the keys out of the ignition
and handed them over. “I don’t
remember hearing anything about a date.
Who told you I did?”
Based on her expression, she already
knew, but wanted to hear him say it.
“Connor. You’re marked, Sera. Hogan
doesn’t like loose ends.”
“Connor.” A touch of hurt flashed
over her features. “I wonder why he
didn’t just take care of me last night and
be done with it.”
Bowen went still. “Last night?”
She glanced at him warily. “He was
outside
Marco’s,
right
before…it
happened.”
Two
threats against her. Not one. He’d
been inside with Wayne, discussing the
offer
of
protection
for
a
new
neighborhood business, while she’d
been outside exposed to two chances of
death. His fists shook in his lap with the
need to break something. Not trusting
himself to speak, he climbed out of the
car. As he walked to her side, he
scanned the street for anything unusual
before helping her stiff form from the
driver’s side. He thought he saw regret
in her brown eyes as they looked over
his battered face, then decided he’d
imagined it.
A minute later, they were locked
safely inside his apartment. He watched
her from the kitchen as she paced,
looking as though she were at a loss how
to behave with him now that her identity
was out in the open. Finally, she
removed her sweatshirt and went into
the guest bedroom.
He followed her, terrified he would
round the corner to find her packing.
Instead, he found her lying on the bed,
staring up at the scales of justice. His
body ached with the urge to crawl on top
of her, kiss her body all over until she
had no choice but to respond. “So
what’s the call, Sera? Let me help you or
shut me out? I’m not going anywhere, so
I’d suggest option two.”
Just when he gave up on getting an
answer, her voice broke the deafening
silence. “When I was seven years old,
about a year before my father died, my
brother got to do a ride-along with him.
He was ten at the time.” She cleared the
rust from her throat. “That morning, I
begged to come along. I cried and
pleaded until he finally gave in. I can
still remember being so excited, so
stunned he actually agreed.” Slowly, she
sat up, clasped her hands between her
knees. “Then he left me with the
dispatchers. All day. While my brother
did the ride-along. They braided my
hair.”
His heart clenched thinking of her at
seven. Left behind. While his childhood
had been the exact opposite, he still
understood the feeling of not belonging.
“I’m sorry, Ladybug.”
“Are you? I feel the same way right
now as I did back then.” She laughed
under her breath. “When he came back, I
told him I wanted to be a cop. That I
would be the
best
cop. He told me he
liked my braid.”
How can I not touch her when she
looks so sad? This is killing me.
Everything hurts.
“I wish I wasn’t a part
of making you feel this way. You have
no idea how bad I wish for that. But I
can’t pretend I don’t understand that
need to protect you.”
“Help me understand.” Her gaze
pleaded with him. “Do I come across so
helpless?”
“Not helpless, baby.” The right words
eluded him, so he just told the truth. “I
don’t know how to explain it. I want to
walk beside you everywhere and absorb
anything bad, so it won’t touch you.
Won’t change you, make you like me.”
He saw moisture in her eyes and
wondered if he would ever stop putting
it there. When she stood and came
toward him, he held his breath, praying
she would touch him. Just before their
bodies met, she stopped, taking in the
injuries to his face. “This isn’t the first
time you’ve done this to yourself, is it?”
She reached up to test his eye, but he
leaned into her palm instead. “You told
me you never lose a fight, so I wondered
why you were always banged up. Tell
me why you do this.”
Bowen swallowed heavily, afraid if
he moved, her touch would go away. “I
don’t know. I do it so I don’t feel numb
like the rest of them. I do it to feel. I do
it
not
to feel. Take your pick.”
She couldn’t hide her distress. “There
are other ways to feel, Bowen.”
“Yeah?” He knew she hadn’t meant it
to sound sexual, but he’d never been
able to resist going down that road in his
mind with her. Especially when she
stood so close, worrying about him.
Touching him. Acting on its own, his
hand settled on her hip, massaging
circles into the sensitive area with his
thumb. “You want to help me feel,
Sera?”
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Sera’s pulse danced, every muscle
below her waist pulling taut. Logic
shouted in her ear to step back, away
from
this
man.
This
damaged
complication of a man whose world she
could never live in. Nor could he ever
live in hers. She needed to
listen
this
time. Her body had been making too
many decisions lately, and while the
need to soothe his pain was a living,
breathing demand inside her, she
couldn’t give in. Oh, but she desperately
wanted to. He could be her lifeboat as
the storm of emotions raged around her,
through her. Grief for her brother on his
birthday, anger at her uncle for not
believing
in
her,
tempered
with
embarrassment she hated feeling. Fear of
what the night would bring. Bowen
would demand all her concentration and
for a while, it would be perfect.
Amazing. Until it ended and things were
twice as knotted as when they began.
With a near-paralyzing case of
reluctance, Sera stepped out of his
reach, dislodging the hand on her hip.
“You should go wash off that blood.”
“You should come help me.”
His thickened voice was so full of
intention it made her stomach flutter.
“No, Bowen.”
She noticed an immediate change in
his demeanor. He went from seductive
bad boy to self-assured ladies’ man
before she could blink. He’d seen the
evidence on her face that she still
desired him. The confidence that
knowledge provided combined with the
sting of her rejection was responsible
for his attitude change, she knew that for
certain. She felt a frisson of alarm,
wondering how he would use the
attraction. Right now, he just looked
downright irritable, but there was also
intention in the hard set of his jaw.
“We don’t have to fuck, Sera. But
you’re coming to shower with me.”
When she stared at him in openmouthed
shock, he gave her a tight smile. “I told
you. Nothing rash. Since you haven’t
agreed to let me help you, you’re not
leaving my sight. I’m not coming out of
the bathroom and finding you gone.”
“I’m not showering with you,” she
scoffed.
He shrugged. “Then the blood stays.”
Without another word, he walked out of
her bedroom. A second later, she heard
the unmistakable sound of him lighting a
match, the smell of cigarette smoke
permeating the air. After the morning
she’d had, the blatant challenge he
presented proved too much to resist.
Doing her best to look casual, she
followed him out into the kitchen and
picked up his pack of cigarettes where it
sat on the counter. As he watched her
suspiciously, she flicked on one of the
stove burners and lit the end, lifted the
cigarette to her lips, and took a deep pull
before it could go out. The smoke felt
like fire pouring down her throat, but
somehow she managed not to cough.
Instead, she blew a steady exhale of
smoke in his direction.
“What the hell are you doing?” he
demanded angrily. “Put that out.”
“Why?”
“It’s bad for you.” When she took
another puff, he growled. “Knock it off,
Sera.”
“No. Every time you smoke a
cigarette, I’m going to smoke one, too.”
Sera knew this little act of rebellion was
childish, but God, it felt fantastic. She’d
been protected her whole life, learning