Authors: Tessa Bailey
Tags: #police, #Romantic Suspense, #brazen, #line of duty, #erotic, #new york, #Contemporary Romance
of others’ loss would be over.
Bowen’s face appeared in her mind,
bringing with it stinging pain where the
relief should have been. No, that
couldn’t be it. She wouldn’t allow him
to be the reason this accomplishment felt
so hollow. So…nothing. This was her
brother’s murderer, and she had the tool
with which to bring him down.
At the base of the stairs, she came to a
dead stop. Using the dim bulb above her
for light, she flipped open to the page
where she’d seen her brother’s name, the
notations that indicated he’d been taking
payouts. Taking a deep breath, she sat
down on the bottom step and stared hard
at the numbers, something she hadn’t had
the opportunity to do before. Colin had
taken three thousand dollars a week for
six months. A lot of money to a rookie
cop. She could imagine him being
tempted, but not actually taking it. But he
had, for six whole months. Sera squinted
down at the messy handwriting. At six
months, the payments had stopped,
indicated by a series of zeroes. She
checked the dates. He’d stopped taking
the payouts two months before he’d been
killed.
Hope fluttered to life in her chest. Had
he seen the error of his ways and
changed course? It appeared so.
Furthermore, it gave Hogan the motive to
take out her brother. It wasn’t much, but
it gave her a jumping-off point.
Finally, she felt something akin to
victory come to life inside her, but not as
strongly as it should have. Bowen sat at
the bar, right above her head. Now that
the moment had arrived to walk away
from him, she had no choice but to admit
it felt horribly, painfully wrong. As if
she would be leaving a piece of herself
behind when she walked into that alley.
The same alley where they’d listened to
Mrs. Petricelli sing opera that first night.
Right before he’d kissed her.
Digging deep, she found the will to
secure the ledger book into the
waistband of her skirt, tucking her shirt
in over it. As she dragged herself up the
stairs, her legs felt like they weighed a
thousand pounds. She spotted the car as
soon as she walked outside, down at the
end of the alley, out of view of the
residential buildings. As she made her
way over at a quick jog, the tall, familiar
figure huddled beside it brought her up
short.
“Uncle?”
“Sera.” His smile was brisk, but his
eyes warmed. “Did you get what you
were looking for?”
She nodded once, still reeling that he
was the one to come get her. As a highly
recognizable figure, he’d taken a huge,
unnecessary risk. Why? A shiver moved
up her spine as she continued toward the
black sedan. “Yes, I got it.”
“Good. Let me have it.”
The ledger disappeared into the inside
pocket of his overcoat the second she
handed it over. For some odd reason she
couldn’t explain, she held on to the hard
drive in her back pocket, some inner
warning telling her not to give it up just
yet.
He indicated the passenger side door.
“Let’s go home.”
“Home?” Sera shook her head. “Don’t
you mean the precinct? It’s protocol to
debrief me immediately after—”
“It can wait until the morning.” He
shot a look down the alley. “Sera, it’s
very important you don’t mention this
book to anyone. Not until I’ve had a
chance to look at it.”
No, this was all wrong. They had to
do this by the book or none of the
evidence would be admissible in court.
Not to mention, his edgy behavior was
so unlike him. He shouldn’t have come
on his own when his niece had been
involved in the investigation. How could
he be objective? Nothing about this felt
right.
The answer hit her with the force of a
battering ram.
“You knew.” Her voice rang in her
ears. “About Colin. Are you trying to
cover it up?” She sucked in a breath. “Is
that why you refused to reopen the
official investigation? You didn’t want
anyone to find out?”
He started to deny it, but whatever he
read on her face prevented him. “We
will talk about this later when I get you
somewhere safe.”
“I’ve been safe my whole life,” she
shot back. “So he took a few payouts. I
didn’t expect it of him, but he stopped.
We could have kept it quiet.”
“No. No, we couldn’t.” He sighed
long and loud, pinching the bridge of his
nose. “Those payouts trace back to me,
Sera. This book…they’re proof Hogan
has been holding over my head for years.
The information contained in here is the
leverage I need to keep him from
blackmailing me, again and again.”
Her mind reeled. “Why take payouts?
You don’t need the money. I don’t
understand.”
“Your brother kept the money, but I
looked the other way. His partner came
to me with a complaint and I swept it
under the mat. Even found a way to get
your brother’s partner reassigned.” Her
uncle’s face looked suddenly ancient,
etched with regret. “Everything came to
Colin too easy. He didn’t understand the
concept of consequences, and it finally
caught up with him. I was wrong about
which of you two was the cop in the
family. I’m sorry, Sera.”
Sera wanted to dwell on the apology,
wanted to bask in her uncle’s rare
approval. It had been so damn long in
coming, from him, from
anyone
. But she
couldn’t. Her brain had zeroed in on one
thing he’d said, and with it the
implications made her vision waver.
It
finally caught up with him.
“The trial,”
she rasped. “Did you get him off because
he had dirt on you? Evidence that you
knew about the payouts?”
His silence was the only answer she
needed. Sera staggered back from the
car, feeling as if the fabric of her
existence had been ripped in half. The
standards she’d held herself to her entire
life were suddenly meaningless, a
crumbled foundation. Her uncle only
watched her, hands propped on hips,
looking ashamed. She’d never seen that
look on her uncle’s face before. It
brought another horrible realization to
the forefront of her mind.
“Did you…” she started in a small
voice. “Did you
know
I was going
undercover? Did you…
let
me so I’d do
your dirty work for you?”
Again, he couldn’t look directly at her.
Coffin? Meet nail. “Get in the car. We’ll
talk about this at home.” He jerked open
the driver’s side door. “Tomorrow
we’ll debrief you, then take you to a safe
house. You’ll stay there until this blows
over, then we’ll discuss more options.”
Her life was once again being planned
out for her, by a man she didn’t even
know. A man who’d let her brother’s
killer go free to save his own job, his
own reputation. A man who would
reassign an innocent officer to God-
knew-where instead of doing the right
thing. Worst of all, a man who would
use his niece to further his own ends.
No, she wasn’t going anywhere with
him. And suddenly, there was only one
place in the world she wanted to be. At
the thought of returning to Bowen, her
heart starting beating for what felt like
the first time that day. She’d judged him
on a scale her uncle had created. A
black-and-white scale that allowed for
no gray area, but her uncle lived in the
gray, just like Bowen. Only, one of them
did it by choice, one had never been
given a choice. Or a chance.
“Go without me. I’m not leaving.”
He snorted. “That’s not funny.”
“Good. It wasn’t a joke.” She started
walking backward toward Rush. “Leave
before someone sees you.”
“I’m not leaving without you.
Get in
the car
.” She kept walking, drawing a
vile curse she’d never expected to hear
from him. “It’s
him
, isn’t it? Sera, you
can’t be serious. He’s scum.”
She paused her footsteps. “And yet
you sent him in to babysit your niece?”
When he had no answer, she laughed
without humor. “That scum has taught me
more about myself since I met him than
you even bothered to do. You never gave
me a home. But I think he might have.”
He started to come after her, but
jumped back into the shadows when a
light came on in the apartment building,
illuminating the alley. No way could the
police commissioner be seen here,
talking to her. Anyone with a television
set would recognize him. With a final
disgusted look in her direction, he
tugged his jacket collar up around his
neck. “This isn’t over, Sera. I won’t let
you ruin your life like this. I owe your
father better than that.”
“I owe him better than to turn out a
liar.” This was it. No going back. “My
badge is at my apartment on my bedside
table. You can shove it up your ass.”
She had the satisfaction of watching
his face pale. “You’ll regret this.”
“I only regret one thing tonight.”
Leaving Bowen
. “You want my silence,
Uncle? Let me go. Let Bowen go.” She
was taking a gamble that Bowen would
want to disappear with her, but prayed
he would. “You won’t hear from us
again.”
He said nothing. Just clenched his jaw
and ducked into the car.
Hidden in the shadows, Sera watched
him drive down the alley and turn onto
the street, red taillights disappearing
around the corner. There should have
been more of a sense of apprehension, or
loss. She’d just chosen Bowen over
family. Over potential safety. She could
figure out the rest. They’d do it together.
I love him. Oh, God, I love him so
much.
When the kitchen door slammed open
and Bowen charged out, hands in his
hair, looking in every direction with raw
agony on his face, she knew she’d made
the right call. Her entire being gravitated
toward him
. Soothe him. Make him
better
.
She ran toward him.
CHAPTER
TWENTY-ONE
She’s really gone.
When Connor left the club, he thought
he might have had a chance to catch her.
What would he have said? Please stay?
I’m sorry I couldn’t be what you need?
He didn’t know, hadn’t been able to
formulate a plan beyond seeing her one
more time. But he hadn’t made it. The
alley was empty, except for a few stray
patches of light. Feeling the world sway
beneath his feet, he started to slide down
the brick wall, wondering when he’d
ever get the strength to stand again once
he hit the ground.
“Bowen.”
His heart lurched when Sera came into
view, white light falling around her
beautiful form, making him question if
she was real or just a figment of his
imagination.
Is this it? Insanity? If so, I could stay
here.
No, she was running toward him, her
mouth moving, saying his name. Standing
very slowly in case sudden movements
might send her away, he waited for her
to get closer before he allowed himself
to hope. Then she threw herself against
him. His back hit the brick wall in the
most welcome assurance of reality he
could remember. When her mouth made
contact with his, it brought everything
into sharp focus.
Sera is here, kissing
me. Make it last.
He reversed their positions, trapping
her against the wall with his hips, getting
as close to her as humanly possible,
groaning as her thighs wrapped around
his waist where they belonged. “I
thought
you’d
left
already,”
he
whispered at her lips. “I didn’t think