Authors: Tessa Bailey
Tags: #police, #Romantic Suspense, #brazen, #line of duty, #erotic, #new york, #Contemporary Romance
of persistence? Or was she the patron
saint of arthritis?
Focus, Sera.
Since Troy had been the one at her
side during the mad rush to bring her
new plan to fruition this afternoon, the
one who would fix the problems her
silence had created, he would be the one
addressing Bowen and Connor. Right on
cue, the interrogation room door opened
and shut, Troy walking in and taking a
seat across from the two men. Bowen
didn’t make any move to acknowledge
him. Connor tipped his chin up once and
crossed his arms over his big chest, as if
to say
about time
.
Troy cleared his throat and flipped
open the file he’d been carrying.
“You’ve probably assumed by now that
we intercepted the stolen equipment,
along with several of your accomplices,
including Wayne Gibbs. Trevor Hogan
has already lawyered up. It shouldn’t
surprise you to know they’ve implicated
you both, in addition to themselves. So
much for taking one for the team, huh?”
Connor split a look between Troy and
Bowen. “Come on, man. You some kind
of masochist or something? Put the guy
out of his misery.”
Troy closed the file with a sigh.
“Bowen, you awake? I’m not going
through this twice.”
Bowen held up his middle finger.
“Great. Thanks for joining us.” Troy
nodded toward Connor. “We brought in
Mr. Bannon this afternoon and made him
an offer. I’ve been given permission by
the newly appointed commissioner to
make you the same one.”
Confusion flared in Bowen’s eyes.
“All this song and dance better have a
point.”
“Let me start from the beginning,”
Troy said. “Through the information
Sera collected in Hogan’s office, she
discovered that her brother had been
taking payouts from Hogan before his
death. Her uncle was aware of it and
covered it up. Hogan had a financial
paper trail to back that up.”
“
What?
” Bowen sat up straighter in
his chair as if he’d been reanimated.
Sera watched as the wheels started
turning in his head. “Are you telling me
he knew Sera was going to put herself in
danger? Hoping she’d find what he
needed?”
“Yes.” Troy shot to his feet at the
same time Bowen did, holding up a hand
to ward him off. “
We
weren’t told the
truth. Newsom had already destroyed the
ledger Sera retrieved by the time we
found out. Luckily, Sera had recovered a
hard drive off Hogan’s laptop and kept it
to herself, instead of turning it over. It
forced Newsom to make a full
confession and as of an hour ago, he has
been relieved of his position.” Troy
paused. “He had already confessed to
Sera last night. It’s why she wouldn’t go
with him. And rightly so since he was
willing to protect himself at all costs.”
“I…” Bowen’s jaw clenched. His
fists shook at his sides. Even without
those visible signs of rage, Sera could
tell how much effort it cost him to
remain in control. “I tied her up and left
her for you. For
him
. You’re telling me I
left her…unsafe?”
Troy hedged. “She was technically
never in danger. As soon as you left her
with Ruby, they called me and told me
everything. I contacted the deputy
commissioner
immediately.”
He
lowered himself back into his chair.
“We brought in Mr. Bannon and asked
him to cooperate. It’s a good thing we
did or we never would have known the
shipment date had been moved. Sera had
originally told us May ninth.”
Bowen flinched and Sera felt an
answering pang in her chest. He still
thought she’d set him up. She consoled
herself with the reminder he wouldn’t
think that for much longer.
“What does he mean by cooperated?”
Bowen asked Connor dully.
“They offered me a way out of this
place and I took it.” Connor looked
uncomfortable, the first time Sera had
ever seen him anything but confident,
apart from the night he’d been shot. “I’ve
got people to look after besides myself,
and the way things were headed, I
wouldn’t have been around much longer
to do it.”
“Way out?” Bowen asked.
Troy
nodded.
“It
took
some
convincing, but between Sera and me,
we managed to persuade the deputy
commissioner.” He flipped the file back
open. “I have a contact back in Chicago.
My old lieutenant. Derek Tyler. He’s a
captain now with the Chicago PD and he
needs men like you and Mr. Bannon. I’ve
spoken to him, informed him of your
backgrounds, and he thinks you’re
exactly what he’s looking for. He’s
rarely wrong about anything.”
Bowen raised a single eyebrow. “You
just arrested us for transporting stolen
goods, probably breaking at least twenty
different laws, and you’re deputizing us?
What am I missing?”
“Nothing. But I’d refrain from
repeating that little recap outside of this
room,” Troy said drily. “This is why you
two were a package deal. You’re all
heart, Bowen. Connor’s the thinker. If
you can work together, you’ll do well.”
Connor threw an arm over the back of
his chair. “They’re forming a new squad,
from what I understand. They need
us
because we think like criminals.” A
muscle jumped in his cheek, obviously
disliking that description of himself. “At
first, I said no deal. But they made me an
offer I couldn’t turn down. Guess I’m a
Cubs fan now.”
“Chicago,” Bowen mouthed. “What’s
my other option?”
“Prison time.”
“Go Cubs.”
A smile tilted one end of Troy’s
mouth. “Don’t act so grateful. I might
blush.”
Bowen sat back down, looking far
less satisfied than he should have been at
receiving his get out of jail free card.
“Thanks,
man,”
he
said
quietly.
“Although we both know if you put me in
prison, Ruby would have had your ass.”
“That played a part. It always does.
But it was mostly Sera. As of now, the
brass has managed to keep this quiet.
They’ve sent Newsom out as if he’s
resigned for health concerns. But she
raised hell, threatening to go to the
media
about
corruption
in
the
department, unless they gave you a
chance. They can’t afford the scrutiny.”
Troy paused, watching him closely. “She
was something else.”
Bowen didn’t speak for a long time.
Sera could see he wanted to believe it,
but was still not ready. When he seemed
to realize both men were waiting for a
response, he tossed an absent glance at
Connor. “So which one of us gets to be
Batman and who’s stuck playing
Robin?”
“I’m Batman,” Connor said.
“You wish.”
“Actually,” Troy started slowly.
“You’ll be traveling with a third. She’s
not exactly a criminal, but she’s had
some experience living among them. I
guess you could call her Batgirl.”
Sera watched as Bowen went so still,
he didn’t even appear to be breathing.
That was her cue to go in, but she
couldn’t judge his expression and it
made her nervous. What if he couldn’t
forgive her? What if he didn’t want her
in Chicago? With a deep breath for
courage, she left the observation area
and joined the three men in the room.
Bowen locked eyes on her the second
she walked through the door, intense as
always, but unreadable.
Troy and Connor stood abruptly, both
appearing all too eager to flee the
awkward situation. On the way out,
Connor laid a comforting hand on her
shoulder. It caused Bowen to tense, his
fingers to curl against his thighs. That
telltale sign he still felt possessive
toward her boosted her confidence in a
much-needed way.
When the door closed behind Troy
and Connor, she didn’t bother sitting.
This was her chance to explain
everything and she wouldn’t waste a
moment, wouldn’t risk him tuning her out
again. “I asked my uncle to pick you up
to keep you safe. That night in Marco’s, I
overheard a discussion about everything
changing on the ninth. That you wouldn’t
be around for much longer after the
score.” She wet her lips. “That’s why I
went outside…to call him. I didn’t know
any other way that wouldn’t blow my
cover. And I’m only sorry because my
uncle turned out to be someone
untrustworthy. Not that I did it, though. I
would have done anything to keep you
from being hurt.”
His face remained impassive.
“I should have told you everything.
About what my brother did, how my
uncle hid it. Everything that happened
while I was undercover. I’m sorry I
didn’t. It put us both in danger and I’ll
never forgive myself.” She swallowed
hard. “I don’t have an excuse, except
I’ve never had anyone to confide in
before. It felt like a failure and I didn’t
want to face it. Didn’t want you to know
I’d failed.”
“It wouldn’t have made a damn
difference.”
Bowen’s rusty voice made her insides
jump.
Wouldn’t have.
Past tense? “You
told me once that you started falling for
me before we met. From just a
photograph.” Her voice dropped to a
near-whisper. “It happened that way for
me, too, in a way. Before I found out
your
name,
you
were
already
overwhelming me. I saw
you
. It was
already too late for me when I realized
who you were.”
Still he said nothing, the picture of
stillness in his metal chair, watching her.
“And you are
not
your name. You’re
more. So much more. To me, you’re
everything.” She drew in a deep breath.
“I need the mural artist, the fighter, the
man who might have lost his way for a
while, but still remained good where it
counted. I want the man who loves one
minute and rages the next. The man who
suffers through church and makes me egg
sandwiches. The man who touches me so
perfectly.” His lack of response made
her want to scream and cry. “I’m coming
to Chicago. If you don’t want me there,
too bad. I’m going to be right there,
every day, standing beside you, because
standing anywhere else doesn’t feel right
anymore. I love you. No, I’ve
loved
you.
And I’m not saying take it or leave it.
I’m saying
take
it.” Tears blurred her
vision. “Please, take it?” she finished
shakily.
Every second that passed where he
didn’t move or speak felt like broken
glass raking over her heart, her exposed
skin. He didn’t want her. Okay, okay…
she would just have to work harder.
She’d earn his trust back in Chicago and
eventually he’d come around. What they
had didn’t just go away overnight. Did
it?
She swiped a hand over her damp
eyes and turned for the door, everything
moving in slow motion around her. As
soon as her hand touched the knob, she
heard the metal chair scrape against the
floor and go flying, colliding with the
opposite wall. Bowen’s body heat
suddenly surrounded her, wrenching a
sob from her throat. His arms banded
around her from behind, molding her to
his chest, warm, rapid breaths in her ear.
“Jesus Christ, Sera,” he rasped. “You
just handed me everything I’ve ever
wanted in this world. I needed a minute
to believe it was real.” The tension in
her body evaporated with his words, but
Bowen simply held her tighter so she
wouldn’t fall into a heap. “I love you. So
fucking much I’m not sure I have room