Authors: Tessa Bailey
Tags: #police, #Romantic Suspense, #brazen, #line of duty, #erotic, #new york, #Contemporary Romance
entire life. He tried to focus on Sera’s
image to eradicate the doubt, but he only
managed to temporarily subdue it. There
were far too many uncertainties between
them still, blanks she refused to fill in.
His father might be an asshole, a
criminal to the bone, but there was truth
in his voice. Leftover pain, even, from
what Pamela had put him through.
“I see I finally made an impact.”
The smugness in Lenny’s tone pulled
Bowen from his disturbing thoughts.
“Are we done here? I’ve got better
things to do.”
His father gestured toward the door.
“Don’t be a stranger.”
Bowen walked back out of the
infirmary through the security check he’d
passed through on the way in, raising his
arms so they could pat him down again.
He wondered fleetingly which one of the
employees Lenny had called in the favor
on, but his thoughts immediately went
back to Sera. What his father had said…
he wouldn’t let it apply to Sera and him.
The connection between them was real.
It made him feel whole. If he could
believe her, it made
her
feel whole, too.
Dammit.
If
he could believe her?
No
,
Lenny wouldn’t have power over his
mind like this. He wouldn’t let him. A
vision of Sera’s smiling face burrowing
into his pillow drifted though his head.
Once he saw her, touched her, the doubt
would cease to exist. He just had to have
faith.
As he exited the facility, the phone in
his pocket vibrated. He continued
walking as he drew it out, needing to
bring Sera into view where she sat in his
car. When he saw her pretty face smiling
back at him through the windshield, a
sense of calm settled over him.
Everything would be all right. She was
here with him now and he should be
ashamed of himself for questioning her.
For letting Lenny get the upper hand.
He held up his finger to let her know
he’d be a minute and answered the
phone. “Yeah.”
“Mr. Driscol.” Newsom. “Is Sera
with you?”
“Yes,”
he
answered
without
hesitation. “She’s safe for now. But we
need—”
“
I’ll
tell you what we need.”
Summoning patience he didn’t have,
Bowen slid a hand through his hair.
“You know, I have to be honest,
Commissioner. I’ve had about enough of
that for one morning.”
“She wants you arrested, Driscol.”
Unexpected pain twisted in his chest.
Careful to keep his features schooled,
Bowen peered through the windshield at
Sera. She looked back at him curiously,
not an ounce of guile on her face. Could
he believe it? He tried to keep the dam
from bursting, but it gave way and the
doubt rushed in, pulling him under.
“Why?”
“She found out about the shipment
you’re waiting on, Hogan’s involvement,
all of it. She called me and told me to
get your worthless ass off the street.”
Some papers shifted in the background.
“You know Sera well enough by now to
know she wouldn’t leave this unfinished.
Why else would my own niece refuse to
be picked up last night?”
Niece
. His body went numb, as if his
broken heart had sent him into blessed
shock. Everything clicked in his head,
making perfect sense. This was why she
hadn’t confided anything in him. Why
she’d come back last night. Not because
she wanted to be with him. She’d just
been biding her time until they could get
him into handcuffs. He made eye contact
with her through the glass and felt her
suck the last of his soul away. In a way,
he felt relieved. No soul, no way to hurt.
He couldn’t survive this with any part of
himself intact.
Very quietly, but very potently, the
numbness turned ugly. He craved the
ugly, wanted it to stomp out all the
beauty he’d stupidly allowed himself to
believe in.
“Why are you calling to warn me?”
“I owe you for keeping her safe until
we could wrap it up properly.” Newsom
paused. “I need you to get her to the
precinct immediately. Drop Sera off and
go on your way. Even exchange. Her for
your freedom.”
Bowen almost laughed out loud.
Freedom. From what? “Then tomorrow
you’ll pinch Hogan at the shipment and
it’ll all be over, huh? Your
niece
gets
her man and everyone goes home
happy?”
Newsom was quiet a moment. “If
you’re thinking about tipping them off,
I’d reconsider.”
“You have my word. No tip-offs.”
He wouldn’t have to. They’d moved
the shipment to tonight.
CHAPTER
TWENTY-FOUR
Something was terribly wrong.
Bowen hadn’t spoken to her since
leaving the infirmary. She’d chalked his
silence up to his father’s condition, but
instinct told her she was missing
something. Whereas Bowen normally
radiated energy, always jiggling a leg,
tapping a finger, or harassing his hair,
now he appeared…vacant. The man
who’d jogged back to the car twice to
kiss her before entering the infirmary
had vanished and been replaced by a
shell. For all she knew his father hadn’t
made it and he just needed time to
process it before talking to her. Having
lost her brother and working as an ER
nurse, she knew better than most that
everyone processed grief differently.
She took a deep breath and laid her
hand on top of his where it rested on his
thigh. Cold. Unmoving. He made no
move to hold her hand, didn’t even
acknowledge her touch. After the night
they’d shared, touching each other
without cease, his lack of recognition set
off alarm bells.
A glance out the window had her
doing a double take. Why were they in
Manhattan? Yellow cabs zipped past,
bicycle deliverymen weaved through the
steady traffic, skyscrapers towered over
them on either side of the street. After
being in Brooklyn so long, it felt like
she’d been transported to a different
planet. She’d been so focused on Bowen
and his odd behavior that she hadn’t
realized they weren’t driving back
toward Bensonhurst.
“Is everything all right?”
A muscle ticked in his cheek. “Fine. I
just thought we’d go for a drive. Get out
of Brooklyn for a while.”
His flat, emotionless voice made her
want to tug her hand away, but she kept
it there determinedly. “Whatever you
need. We can go somewhere and talk—”
He laughed, but it sounded nothing
like his usual amused chuckle. Harsh,
sarcastic. “Now she wants to talk. How
about we just pull over and fuck,
instead, baby? You seem to prefer that to
talking.”
She ripped her hand away and
watched his cold hand curl into a fist.
“What is wrong with you?” When he
said
nothing,
she
pressed.
“Did
something happen to your father?”
“Lenny is the picture of health.” He
whipped the wheel for a right turn,
making the tires squeal. “In fact, I might
go see him more often. Can’t put a price
tag
on
fatherly
advice.
Right,
Seraphina?”
She flinched at the way he said her
name, like a curse. Bowen’s detachment
was slowly dissipating, being replaced
by something darker. His eyes were
glassy and unfocused, his voice sounding
unnaturally strained. This change in
attitude might have something to do with
his father, but something else was in
play. That phone call. It had to be the
phone call he’d taken just before he’d
gotten into the car. A pit formed in her
stomach.
“Who were you on the phone with?”
He ignored her question. “It must have
pissed you off. Knowing what I am and
wanting me anyway.” His hands flexed
on the steering wheel. “You weren’t
faking it in bed, I know that much. You
were too wet for it.”
“Stop it,” she shouted. “Bowen,
whatever you’re thinking about me, it’s
wrong. You just have to talk to me.
We’ll figure this out.”
“Talk to me, talk to me.” He took
another hard corner. “My, how the tables
have turned.”
The resignation in his voice reached
across the car to slap her. Before she
could recover, he’d thrown the car into
park. She only had a moment to register
the industrial-type commercial store
before he opened the passenger-side
door and pulled her out. Taken off guard,
she clutched his shoulders for balance,
bringing their faces close. His angry
countenance slipped for a split second
and she glimpsed utter misery behind his
gray eyes. It cut through every raging
emotion in her chest, made her ache to
take away his pain. She reached up to
cup his cheek, but he caught her wrist
before she could make contact.
“
Don’t
.”
Sera’s knees almost buckled under the
weight of that single word. “You’re
scaring me,” she whispered. “This isn’t
you.”
“Oh, God, please just drop the act.”
His head dropped forward, hair
obscuring his face. “I can’t take
anymore.”
“W-what act?” Her mind whirled at
the implication of that statement. When
he wouldn’t answer her, she had no
choice but to follow him in a daze as he
led her to a metal door, located in an
alcove on the side of what looked to be
some kind converted factory. Confusion
and panic assailed her. This man was
unrecognizable to her, and his tight grip
on her wrist did nothing to alleviate her
worry. He hadn’t told her where they
were going. A wild card was in play that
he wouldn’t share with her. She couldn’t
just walk in there with him. Not with so
many unknowns lying between them. Not
until he calmed down enough to listen.
Bowen pounded on the metal door
with his fist. Seeing he was momentarily
distracted, she tried to wrench her hand
free. Midmorning in Manhattan, people
were rushing to work around them,
ignoring everything but the sidewalk in
front of them and their cell phones.
Bowen’s eyes shot wide, as if he
couldn’t believe she was trying to get
away from him, but he didn’t release her
wrist. Instead, he yanked her back up
against him.
“Let me go,” she demanded.
He searched her face. “Why? What
are you worried about?”
When she tried to free herself with a
twist of her arm, she watched something
inside him break. It made her go
completely still, breath trapped in her
lungs. An answering rupture in her own
body occurred, swift and painful.
Looking
wild,
he
gripped
her
shoulders and shook her. “
You think I
could hurt you?
” His voice had risen to
a shout, bringing people to a stop on the
sidewalk around them. “I fucking
love
you, Sera. You can do anything to me.
Anything
. Lie to me, lock me up, treat
me like a monster, and I will still
fucking love you. And you’re
killing
me.”
Her body went limp, his words on
repeat in her head.
I love you. I love
you.
It was all she could hear, her heart
rejoicing and breaking at the same time.
Finding out he loved her shouldn’t feel
like a tragedy, but it did. And she still
had no idea
why
, dammit. Oh, God, she
loved him back. If she could still feel
this overwhelming, consuming pull
toward him when he stood in front of
her, stripped bare, with all his faults in
plain view, these feelings would never,
ever go away.
A throat cleared in the doorway and
Sera turned to find a familiar girl