Authors: Tessa Bailey
Tags: #police, #Romantic Suspense, #brazen, #line of duty, #erotic, #new york, #Contemporary Romance
what she’d learned from her uncle in the
alley, her brain couldn’t process any
more. Months of preparation, years of
pain, had been funneled into this mission
to avenge her brother, and in the end, the
whole thing had only been part of a
cover-up to protect a corrupt man. A
man she’d obviously never known. It had
been one big illusion, a relationship
she’d created with the charismatic man
on television.
“Hey.” Bowen tipped her chin up, a
frown marring his brow. “What are you
thinking about?”
“I’m thinking I’m hungry.”
He focused on a spot past her
shoulder.
“You’re
not…you
don’t
already regret—”
“No.” She shook her head, laying a
hand over his. “I just want to be here
with you tonight. I don’t want to think
about anything else. Can we do that?”
Oh, boy. He wanted to argue. She
could see it. Sera had no doubt that if he
could pin her to the floor and demand to
know every thought in her head, he
would do it. Bowen didn’t sit back and
wait for explanations, and this was new
to him. Instead of pressing, though, he
squared his jaw and nodded. “I haven’t
been to the store in a while. Been a little
distracted.” He winked at her on the way
to the refrigerator. “Egg sandwich? Or I
can order something…”
“Egg sandwich, please.” She leaned
on the counter, utterly delighted to watch
this rough-hewn man with visible battle
scars cracking eggs into a bowl with
enough masculine grace to flush her skin.
As he performed the task, he threw her
somber glances over his shoulder.
Expecting her to disappear? How could
she blame him? Her plan all along had
been to disappear. Still was. Only now,
she would ask him to find her worthy
enough to follow. If he didn’t, the
loneliness would be vastly harder than
before because she knew what it felt
like, being with him.
“Ladybug.” Sera jumped when she
realized Bowen was leaning across the
counter, face inches from hers. “I can get
on board with your no-thinking rule, but
you have to cooperate.”
She
picked
up
the
sandwich.
“Cooperating.”
Bowen tucked into his own sandwich.
“So I guess your waitressing career is
over,” he said between bites. “Good
thing you have those law enforcement
skills to fall back on.” One end of his
mouth ticked up, but his eyes were
serious. His not-so-subtle way of asking
if she intended to remain on the force?
“Something tells me you won’t get a
good reference from Rush.”
“Are you saying I’m not a good
waitress?” she evaded.
“No. I’m saying you’re a terrible
one.”
Determined to keep the mood light,
she threw a balled-up napkin at him.
“It’s harder than it looks. I’ve had
patients come into the ER less concerned
about a broken leg than some customers
in Rush are about their chicken wings.”
“Wings are no joke.”
“Hmm.” She downed the last of her
sandwich, feeling even more relaxed
now that she had something in her
stomach. “Anyway, you were my most
belligerent customer and you didn’t even
order anything to eat.”
“I wanted to. I wanted to watch you
bring me dinner. Still do.” He scrubbed
a hand over his hair. “Jesus, that didn’t
sound so fucking crazy in my head.”
“I’ll make you dinner someday,” she
rushed to say, wanting to erase the
sudden insecurity in his face. “I owe you
for the egg sandwich.”
“You never owe me for anything.
Never.” He took her plate and set it in
the sink, along with his own. When he
turned back to face her, he looked
thoughtful. “Actually, there’s one thing
you can do for me. Come on.”
She had no time to prepare before he
dragged her toward his bedroom.
“Subtlety isn’t really your thing, you
know that?” Not that she minded in the
slightest. Already, goose bumps were
forming on every inch of her skin, heavy
heat trickling into her lower belly.
Would she ever get used to him, the way
he controlled the reactions of her body?
He stopped at his bedroom door and
turned to her with a chastising look. “Get
your head out of the gutter, baby. You
Catholic girls and your filthy minds.”
Her mouth dropped open, then
snapped shut as he pulled her inside and
flipped on the light. His murals were…
gone. All of them. His walls had been
painted a startling white, the evidence of
his work strewn across the floor in the
form of paint cans and spattered drop
cloths. It looked like a tornado had
whipped through the room and ripped all
the color from the walls. No, not all the
color. As Bowen moved farther into the
room, she saw it. On the far wall, he’d
painted a woman.
Her? It was…
her
.
Even though painted Sera was missing
a mouth, it captured her eyes, her hair,
with perfect detail. When she looked at
it, she might as well have been looking
in a mirror on her absolute best day. The
way he saw her…it heightened what she
knew actually existed. He’d painted her
eyes as if they were weighed down with
love, her hair floating out around her
like a cloud.
Sera’s throat tightened painfully. She
could feel Bowen watching her,
awaiting some sort of reaction, but she
didn’t know how to put her feelings into
words. For his sake, she tried anyway.
“It’s beautiful. I wish you hadn’t gotten
rid of all the others, but it’s so
beautiful.”
He ran his gaze along the bare walls,
horror marring his features. “I couldn’t
have any of those things around you.
They had to go.”
“Oh.” She wondered what he would
do if she curled up on the floor and
basked in those words for a while.
“When did you do this?”
His booted feet made the floor creak
as he closed the distance between them.
“The night I…left you here. I came back
and found you sleeping under your halo.
But I couldn’t sleep afterward, so I
painted.” He brushed a thumb over her
bottom lip. “I should never have left that
night. I’m so sorry.”
Sera nodded, unable to speak for a
moment. “It’s okay. I’m starting to
understand why you did.” She leaned
into his touch. “But next time you won’t.
You won’t have to get that far before you
realize you’re better than that.”
“Is it wrong if I let you go on thinking
that?” he murmured. “Probably, but I’m
going to anyway. Whatever will keep
you here the longest.”
If he continued speaking in such a
manner, she would turn into a puddle.
“Why don’t I have a mouth? My painting,
I mean.”
“Huh?” It took his eyes a moment to
refocus. “Oh, right. That’s what I need
your help with. I couldn’t get your mouth
right.” He tugged her toward the wall.
“Pose for me?”
She laughed as he bent his knees to
study her lips. “How’d you get my eyes
to look so accurate and you couldn’t
remember my mouth?”
“It’s not that I can’t remember it,
Ladybug. I just…” He groaned in his
throat. “When I look at your mouth, I
want it
on
me. I’m not thinking about the
gentle swell of your upper lip.” His gray
eyes twinkled, looking momentarily
blue. “Disappointed you didn’t hook up
with a poet?
“No,” she answered, trying not to
smile. “Poets are too tortured. Artists
are much more well-adjusted.”
“Ah, and I hooked up with a wiseass.”
He gripped her chin and tilted her head,
still studying her mouth. It unnerved her,
in a breathless, anticipatory kind of way.
“You think maybe we could, I don’t
know, balance each other out?”
His gaze finally met hers with an
intensity that shook her to the soles of
her feet. She swallowed the knot in her
throat. “Do we have a choice?”
“I don’t.” He released her chin and
picked up a clean paintbrush. She
watched as he mixed together red and
beige on a wooden palette, so much
concentration going into the task it felt
necessary to remain silent. When he
spoke again, his deep, husky tone
breaking through the quiet of the
bedroom actually startled her. “The first
time we met, I thought you were wearing
lipstick. But when I kissed you, it stayed
on. No type of lipstick could have stayed
on through that kiss.” He sucked his
bottom lip through his teeth. “They’re
pink, your lips. I’ve never seen that
shade before, like maybe you just got
finished sucking on some candy. Fuck, is
that why they make me hot? I can’t look
at them without thinking of sucking?”
“I don’t know.” The words came out
in a whoosh. She leaned back against the
wall to the right of the painting, afraid
whatever he said next might finally
topple her. “I’m more of a savory girl.
Like, you know, egg sandwiches…”
Oh,
please, please shut up now.
He dabbed the paintbrush into the
paint, amusement tipping the edges of his
sensual mouth. “Are you actually
flustered, Ladybug? After I’ve made you
come in a stairwell, a photo booth, an
alleyway—”
“Point made. Just paint my mouth.”
She watched his hand move, leaving a
rosy shade of paint on the wall. Every
few seconds, his gaze would flash to her
mouth and each time felt like a bolt of
lightning to her overwhelmed system.
She found herself wanting him to look at
her mouth, felt it parting of its own
accord, her tongue slipping out to
dampen her lips. A pulse beat at the base
of her neck and the sound multiplied
itself in her ears.
Finally, Bowen stopped looking away,
obviously sensing the change in her.
“Can you try not to look so goddamn
fuckable for a second while I finish this?
It’s important to me, Sera.”
The frustration in his tone cut through
her haze of lust. “Why is it so
important?”
With a curse, he dropped the palette
and paintbrush, before planting his fists
on either side of her head. He brought
his face close enough to kiss her, then
stopped. “I need something to prove you
were here, all right? Are you happy?”
“No.”
His
flinch
sent
her
backtracking. “Being here with you
makes me happy, Bowen. But I’m not
happy you’re so worried about me
leaving.”
He scoffed. “How can I be anything
else when you won’t talk to me? When
you want to play this no-talking game?”
His head dropped onto her shoulder.
“You’re here and I’m so fucking grateful
for that, but I don’t know
why
or what
led to it. If I don’t know those things,
how can I make sure I keep doing them?
You’re making me crazy, Sera.”
“I’m sorry. I don’t mean to,” she
whispered, shaken by his passionate
speech. The events of the night were
right on the tip of her tongue. She’d been
played,
used
, by her only remaining
family. Her brother, the sibling she’d
always looked up to, had been flawed in
a way she’d never imagined. Nothing
felt concrete except Bowen against her,
and she wanted to lose herself in him.
Forget everything, just for one night.
Tomorrow, she’d find a way to trust
again and tell him everything, but right
now? Her insides felt raw.
She ducked under his arm and picked
up the wet paintbrush, making sure
enough rose-colored paint coated the
end. Then she turned toward the wall
and wrote, in giant letters, SERA WAS HERE.
She started to set the brush back down,
but changed her mind. Beneath it she