Authors: Tessa Bailey
Tags: #police, #Romantic Suspense, #brazen, #line of duty, #erotic, #new york, #Contemporary Romance
his reflexes dulled, so he suffered
through a long pull. His hand tightened
on the glass when she dropped off a
round of drinks to a table full of men
who, in their inebriated state, couldn’t
help sending her appreciative looks.
She would make her move soon. He’d
seen the glances she’d been throwing
around the club to judge how much
longer she should wait to head
downstairs. As it got later, the music got
louder and people stopped noticing how
long she spent out of the dining room.
Except for him. He noticed every single
movement she made. Every breath, every
hesitation, every gesture.
The torturous afternoon he’d spent
painting so he wouldn’t lose the battle
with his urge to just fucking seduce her
already, she’d spent plotting in the guest
room. Knowing she was so close had
wreaked havoc on his senses for five
unbearable hours. He’d wanted that
voice in his ear, begging him to fuck her
faster, deeper. He still wanted it with a
vengeance, but at this point he would
settle for her simply talking to him,
sharing her plans. After the shower that
had resulted in this century’s worst case
of blue balls, they’d retreated to their
corners and hadn’t spoken since, except
to decide what time he’d take her to
work.
There was an unspoken agreement that
tonight
she
would
finish
her
investigation come hell or high water,
but she obviously had no intention of
involving him. So he was involving
himself. He’d sit at the bar drinking
shitty nonalcoholic beer until she needed
him. A dozen different emotions battled
for supremacy in his chest. Desire for
her to succeed and prove herself in a
way he’d never gotten the chance to
experience. Self-disgust over a small
hope that she didn’t succeed and had to
stay with him longer. Rage that she
wouldn’t involve him. Fear that she’d
get hurt.
Not that he would allow that
nightmarish outcome willingly, but what
if she got caught in a cross fire? He bit
his bottom lip to avoid asking the
bartender for something stronger, to
drown out the image of Sera in pain. In
fifty years, even if he never saw her
again after the dust settled, he knew that
outcome would remain his worst
nightmare. He’d told her as much this
morning, ripped open his bleeding chest
and let her see his bones. And she’d
rejected him. It didn’t matter that she
still wanted him physically. Women had
wanted him as long as he could
remember. That didn’t help him now, not
with someone like Sera, who needed
something more. Some
one
more.
As if she’d heard his thoughts from
across the dining room, she slowly
straightened from the table she served
and looked at him. Just…looked. At
first, he didn’t know what she was trying
to communicate to him, but it slowly
dawned on him. Good-bye? This was
her good-bye? It plowed through his
chest like a freight train, sucked the
oxygen from his lungs. He slipped off the
stool, wanting,
needing
, to go to her, but
she shook her head subtly, halting him in
his tracks.
No, no.
No
. It couldn’t end like this.
What he’d said to her in the bathroom
couldn’t be how he left things. He
couldn’t live with that. Couldn’t live
with the memory of her cowering from
his touch, as if he’d ever lift a finger to
hurt her. But he had; he’d been hurting
her by throwing their mutual attraction in
her face. Challenging her to say no, even
though he’d known it was the right thing
for her to do.
He shook his head, trying to
communicate his need to say a decent
good-bye. Remind her that she’d live
inside his head forever. But she broke
their eye contact and disappeared into
the kitchen. Bowen stood there frozen,
torn between the need to go after her and
common sense, which told him someone
would notice if he followed her. A
minute passed, maybe two, and he could
already feel insanity creeping in. As if
she’d dragged the light out along with
her, leaving him standing in an awful red
glow that felt more like a horror flick
than real life.
“Driscol.”
His last name being spoken behind
him permeated the red fog. He wanted to
turn and take a swing at whoever stood
there, like a wounded animal. Then the
voice registered and his blood ran cold.
Connor. What were the odds that he
would arrive just as Sera disappeared
downstairs? He didn’t have time to think
about it, only knew he had to keep the
man there. The chance he’d been waiting
for to help Sera had presented itself. It
would also prevent him from ever seeing
her again. The irony of that made him
want to bang his head against the bar.
“Connor.” His voice sounded rusty.
“Shouldn’t you be hiding shirtless in the
shadows somewhere?”
The other man eyed him suspiciously.
“Union break.”
Bowen nodded to the empty stool
beside his own and gestured to the
bartender. “You allowed to drink on the
job?”
“Who gives a fuck?”
“Point taken.”
They stayed silent as the bartender
pulled a pint of beer for Connor and set
it in front of him. Tension lay thick
between them, but both were waiting for
the other to acknowledge it. Bowen
understood this dynamic. He had it with
Wayne
and
his
father.
Passive-
aggressive bullshit that passed for being
friendly in Bensonhurst. But he’d never
dealt with Connor before, a man who
actually had something more than greed
going on behind his eyes. He just didn’t
know what it was.
“Heard about what happened last night
outside of Marco’s,” Connor said, taking
a sip of his beer. “Also heard you let
him off with a couple broken bones.”
Remembering the sound those bones
made as they broke, nausea rolled in
Bowen’s stomach. “What’s it to you?”
Connor shrugged. “It’s not like you to
be
so
benevolent.
That
Sera’s
influence?”
Never going to see her again. Never
again.
“I don’t like you saying her
name.”
“I don’t care.”
Bowen’s fists started to shake, so he
hid them under the bar. He didn’t get
challenged very often and he shouldn’t
let it stand, but he had Sera to think
about. On top of it, there was something
in Connor’s tone that stopped his words
from being a taunt. Almost as if he were
amused. At least someone was. But he
didn’t like this asshole throwing him off
guard, so he decide to surprise him.
“Speaking of benevolent, I hear you
starting working for your cousin, Hogan,
just so he’d help pay off your mother’s
medical bills.”
The beer paused halfway to Connor’s
mouth. “Mind telling me where you
heard that?”
“I don’t kiss and tell.”
Connor’s lips twitched, but Bowen
could see murder in his eyes. “All right,
you don’t want to tell me who’s been
running their mouth, that’s fine. I’ll find
out on my own.” A tense pause ensued.
“What about the nonalcoholic beer? You
turning over a new leaf?”
“Just watching my waistline.”
“Where’s Sera?”
Gone. She’s gone to me.
The
sickening thought rattled around his skull
like dice, but he managed a casual laugh.
“She’s working, otherwise I wouldn’t be
here. The atmosphere isn’t exactly
captivating.”
“I mean, where is she
now
?”
Bowen held the man’s steady gaze. As
far as he could tell, Connor hadn’t
glanced once at the dining room since
walking into Rush. “If you have
something to say to her, you’ll say it to
me first.”
A muscle jumped in Connor’s cheek.
“My cousin will be back in the morning,
a day ahead of schedule. He asked me to
talk to you personally.” He leaned in and
lowered his voice. “Our contact
overseas got in touch with Hogan. The
shipment has been rescheduled for
tomorrow night. It’s risky, but he wants
to stay the course. Same plan, different
night. He wants to make sure you’re still
in. If not, we call it off and wait another
month. We need your manpower.”
The back of Bowen’s neck tingled. It
didn’t sound right. “I’m just supposed to
trust the word of this contact who I
didn’t speak to directly?”
Connor nodded, before pulling a slip
of paper from his jacket and sliding it
across the bar. “I told Hogan you’d ask,
so here’s his phone number. Do
whatever you have to do and get back to
me by tomorrow afternoon.”
Bowen shoved the paper into his jeans
pocket. Tomorrow. He almost laughed.
Tonight was a difficult enough concept
to wrap his mind around. Tomorrow
sounded like a far-off place when his
present had just walked away from him
without a backward glance.
“Driscol,” Connor said, drawing him
back before he could be sucked in
permanently by the red fog. He jerked
his head toward the dining room, where
Sera had vanished from five minutes
prior. “If you haven’t already, I’d
suggest handling this little matter before
it’s taken out of your hands.”
Sera closed the drawer of Hogan’s desk
quietly, just in case anyone stood at the
top of the staircase. When it jammed, she
set down her flashlight on the desk to
jiggle it carefully, not wanting to break
anything that would be visible the first
time Hogan came back. A piece of loose
wood at the base of the drawer snagged
the skin of her palm and she hissed. With
a frown, she grabbed the flashlight and
shone it on the source of her injury. The
slat had come loose in one corner of the
drawer. Something black and hard was
visible through the crack.
She crouched down and gently pried
the bottom away, eyebrows shooting up
when a slim laptop slid free into her
hands. A hidden laptop. Valuable
information. There was no more time.
Sitting down and searching through the
device wasn’t an option. Thinking
quickly, she snatched a letter opener off
the desk and used it to pry the cover off
the underside of the laptop and remove
the hard drive. With one more nervous
glance at her watch, she shoved it into
her back pocket and pulled out her cell
phone.
A terse voice answered midway
through the first ring.
“This is Officer Seraphina Newsom
requesting my pickup. I’m—”
The line went dead before she could
relate her exact location.
Ignoring an odd foreboding in her
stomach, Sera made sure nothing
appeared out of order on Hogan’s desk.
She tucked the ledger book under her
arm and turned to leave. Okay. She
simply needed to walk up the stairs,
through the kitchen and out into the alley.
They’d hung up because they already
knew where she was. That had to be it.
Someone would be there within minutes
for her in an unmarked vehicle. An
officer who would take her to police
headquarters
and
out
of
this
neighborhood. Forever.
Her steps faltered when relief didn’t
come flooding in as expected. Not an
ounce of triumph or pride came with
finally having secured Hogan’s list of
financial transactions. Names, dates,
locations that she’d now seen with her
own eyes. It had the potential to crumble
not only Hogan’s enterprise from the
inside, but other Brooklyn operations as
well. Her uncle would finally be proud.
The injustice of watching Hogan profit