Authors: Tessa Bailey
Tags: #police, #Romantic Suspense, #brazen, #line of duty, #erotic, #new york, #Contemporary Romance
for it all.”
She let her head fall back against his
shoulder, incredible relief making her
movements languid. “Make room. I’m
not going anywhere.”
He pointed a shaking finger at the
doorknob. “That’s the last time you make
me watch you walk away. Never again.
I’m
keeping
you, dammit.”
“I’ll never walk away again. I’m
keeping you, too.”
“Thank God for that.” Bowen turned
her around. She looked up at his
beautiful face, running her thumb over a
cut under his right eye. He leaned into
the contact with a quick release of breath
and laid a fist over his heart. “Sera, I’ll
be dead in the ground before an ounce of
this goes away. There’s nothing you can
do to make it lighter and if you could, I
wouldn’t let you. I want to be heavy with
loving you, baby. Don’t question it
again, okay?”
“Okay.” She nodded vigorously,
sending tears falling down her cheeks.
“Okay.”
He used his lips to brush away her
tears. “Are you sure you don’t want to
work as a nurse in Chicago? Something
safer? I’m not above begging.”
“And miss out on all the action?”
He pinned her against the wall with a
low growl. “You’ll be getting enough
action at home.”
“Home,” she repeated breathlessly. “I
like you saying that.”
Their lips met for a lingering kiss.
“You’re my home, Sera. The only one
I’ve ever had. I want to be yours, too.
Let me.”
Love expanded in her chest. “You’re
the only home I’ll ever need, Bowen.”
EPILOGUE
With a muttered curse, Bowen dragged
Sera off the sidewalk and into a
shadowed doorway to kiss her. At first,
she laughed at his spontaneous gesture,
but as soon as his tongue stroked over
hers, her amusement disappeared along
with his sanity. Cool fingers slid into his
hair, tugging a little the way he liked. He
pressed his palms high against the door,
knowing if he touched her, they would
need to find somewhere to finish each
other off. Too bad they were already late
for their first meeting with the Chicago
PD. The meeting to which his wickedly
hot girlfriend had decided to wear a tight
skirt, probably to drive him crazy until
they could get back to the brand new
king-size bed he’d insisted needed to be
rechristened several times a day. The
bed they’d bought together, in a furniture
store, holding hands and making
decisions like a couple. Bowen had
decided
that
day was the best one he’d
ever lived through. Until the next day
with Sera had started. And the next.
Now every new day with her became his
new favorite.
Sera looped her fingers around his
belt and tugged his body closer. Her
curves meshed with his harder form, her
sexy little moan blanketing his brain in a
sensual fog. Against his better judgment,
one hand dropped from the door and
smoothed over her ass. He’d seen her
tug on a red thong while they were
dressing to leave and now all he could
think of was massaging her pussy
through the material. Would be thinking
about it straight through this meeting and
the entire way home until he got her
alone.
Since they’d moved to Chicago last
week, he’d been doing this kind of thing
with growing frequency. Reminding
himself that the one-bedroom apartment
he shared with Sera was real by painting
her on every wall. Reminding himself
that she was real by kissing her sweet
mouth every chance he got. These
reminders always ended with her legs
wrapped around his head, neck, or hips,
screaming for mercy. Part of him hoped
the need for confirmation of his dreams
coming
true
never
went
away
completely. If they did, he might forget
what a lucky bastard he was for a
second. That wouldn’t work for him. He
never wanted to take a single second for
granted with his girl. His Sera.
Her hips started to move, which gave
him no choice but to push his hardening
cock against all that hot friction. She
broke the kiss with a whimper, and then
the brown eyes that ruled his dreams
were locked on his. Bright, excited,
lusty. Trusting. Fuck, what had he
started? Recognizing the point of no
return, Bowen forced himself to rein in
the urge to reach a hand under her skirt
and give her relief. Instead, he stepped
back and adjusted himself.
“Unfair,” she breathed.
He brushed her hair back over her
shoulder. “I’m sorry, Ladybug. I needed
a reminder and got carried away.”
Her eyes went soft. “You still need
them?”
She really had no idea. Not even a
clue how thoroughly she owned his
thoughts. At first, he counted it as a
blessing. If she knew the depth of his
obsession with her, she might freak out a
little. The more time went on, though, he
felt hope bloom that she wouldn’t even
flinch if she knew. That she might be a
little obsessed with him as well. God, he
fucking well hoped so.
He twined their fingers together and
reluctantly pulled her from the doorway.
“What’s wrong? You don’t like my
reminders?”
“I love them.” She tucked into his
side. “You take them as often as you
want. No complaints from this corner.”
“I’ve created a monster.”
She growled playfully, but he could
still see the need in her eyes. He’d make
it up to her later. Several times. His
blood went hot just thinking about it.
“Is Connor meeting us there?”
“Yeah.” They stopped at the corner
and waited for traffic to pass. “He’s
helping his mother get settled in. Said
he’d head to the station afterward.”
Bowen hadn’t found out until the day
they left New York what the NYPD had
offered Connor to turn informant on his
cousin. His mother’s declining health
had been the driving force behind his
decision. The driving force behind
every
one of the guy’s decisions, really.
Bowen still didn’t know how the man he
now considered a friend got himself
booted from the navy, but he wouldn’t
press for more information. He was glad
his instincts had been on point where
Connor was concerned, though. Like
him, Connor had been in a bad situation
with no easy way out. If it weren’t for
Sera, and okay, Troy, he’d still be
treading water, just waiting for the day
when he would finally sink.
Not anymore. He looked over to find
Sera smiling up at him, the Chicago
wind lifting the hair from her shoulders
to brush across her still-swollen mouth.
If he lived to be a hundred years old, he
couldn’t repay what he owed her. She’d
given him a life worth living, helped him
begin to bury the past. Before they left
New York, she’d gone with him to see
Pamela, his mother. He’d listened to her
explanation for leaving, thanks to her
fear of Lenny. She claimed she’d thought
of him every single day. There wouldn’t
be any family vacations or Thanksgiving
dinners in the near future, but he couldn’t
deny feeling a sense of peace that night.
News about Newsom’s corruption had
leaked and the NYPD had been given no
choice but to come clean about what had
taken place behind the scenes. Newsom
had been indicted on several charges
including conspiracy, misappropriation
of funds, and bribery. It seemed as if
each day brought a new confession, a
new crime he’d committed within the
department.
The
NYPD
hadn’t
succeeded
in
keeping
the
media
uninformed
completely,
and
he
suspected Sera didn’t like seeing her
family name dragged through the mud on
the evening news. He sure as hell didn’t
like it either, but as long as her identity
stayed protected, he could sleep at night.
She’d had a harder time coming to
terms with her brother’s dishonesty, but
in the end, she’d seemed to realize that
shades of gray existed everywhere, just
as they did with him. That her happy
memories of Colin didn’t need to go
away. They could stay along with the
bad ones. Bowen had done his part to
help her heal by scouring the Chicago
pawnshops looking for a Nintendo
console. Wouldn’t you know it? The
owner had unearthed an ancient Tetris
cartridge from the back room. If having
Sera in his life hadn’t already proved his
luck had changed, that would have done
it. Their tournament had started the same
night.
When they reached the precinct,
Bowen felt a prickle of unease at the
officers staring at them curiously; some
even eyed him with open hostility.
Wisely, none of them turned it on Sera or
they would have been much later for the
meeting.
Bowen held open the door for Sera,
following her into the bustling front
office. Phones rang loudly; men in navy
blue uniforms shouted to one another
across the space. He might never get
used to this, working with cops, going to
work at a fucking
police station
every
day. Especially knowing these people
planned on putting his girl in danger. It
pissed him off royally, even though he
knew how capable she was. As if
sensing his discomfort, Sera squeezed
his hand. It was the only reminder that he
needed. He’d go to work on an oil rig in
the middle of the Atlantic if it meant
sleeping beside her at night.
And come hell or high water, he’s
protect her through it all.
A tired-looking receptionist whistled
at them. “You here for the meeting with
Captain Tyler?” Bowen nodded once
and the woman pointed to a closed door.
“In there. You’re late.”
He traded an amused glance with Sera
and led her toward the door. When he
pushed it open, they both came up short.
Around a giant conference room table
sat five people, all staring back at them.
Well, almost all of them. Connor was
busy glaring across the table at a gum-
chewing half-blond, half-pink-haired
girl who wore a T-shirt that said
Bitch
Don’t Kill My Vibe
. Beside Connor, an
ancient man in a newsboy cap looked
absolutely
delighted
with
himself.
Closest to the door, a black-haired girl
twirled her hair with nervous fingers,
back ramrod straight, obviously agitated
by her surroundings.
Who the hell were these misfits?
Bowen didn’t have much time to think
about it, because the fifth person at the
table stood and blocked his line of
vision. In a suit and tie, badge clipped to
his belt, the guy had such an air of
command, Bowen immediately stepped
into his space to let him know he
wouldn’t be following orders from just
anyone. To his surprise, the guy nodded
as if he approved. After the stories Troy
had told him, he knew this had to be
Captain Derek Tyler.
“Nice of you to show up. Now sit
down. We’ve got work to do.”
KEEP READING FOR A SNEAK
PEEK OF
UP IN SMOKE
BOOK TWO IN THE
CROSSING THE LINE
SERIES
UP IN SMOKE
You can take the man out of the
SEALs…
Connor Bannon stared across the
empty conference room at the clock,
watching the second hand tick past 3:00
p.m. Impatience prickled the back of his
neck. He hated being late. Hated
other
people’s being late. If the Navy had
taught him one thing, it was how to show
up on time. Even now, when his military
career wasn’t even visible in the
rearview mirror and the consequences