Authors: Tessa Bailey
Tags: #police, #Romantic Suspense, #brazen, #line of duty, #erotic, #new york, #Contemporary Romance
weren’t nearly as severe, his ass showed
up when it was supposed to. He couldn’t
be late if he tried.
Apparently he’d been banished into
the midst of an undercover squad that
didn’t share the same quality.
Connor tapped his fist against his
knee, breathing through the need to look
at the clock again. The blank whiteboard
and the room’s six empty chairs mocked
him. He didn’t like going into meetings
blind. It went against his nature to be
unprepared, but he’d been given no
choice. All he knew was Bowen Driscol
and Seraphina Newsom were on the
squad, sent from New York City to
Chicago in exchange for favors, same as
him. For the first time since his short-
lived stint with the SEALs, he was going
to be on the right side of the law.
Or the wrong side, depending on who
was doing the asking.
He’d be working with cons, criminals
who wanted to stay out of prison. That
was where his knowledge started and
ended, truly pissing him off. If they’d
been given the same options as him,
they’d decided helping the Chicago
Police Department catch criminals such
as themselves was the lesser of two
evils.
Another valuable lesson he’d learned
from the SEALs? If it doesn’t look like a
bomb, it’s probably a bomb.
The door of the conference room flew
open, crashing against the opposite wall.
Connor’s hand flew toward the small of
his back, searching futilely for his gun—
a gun the uniforms had taken away from
him upon arrival
, dammit
. He shot to his
feet instead, focusing on the…threat?
“Relax, Trigger. I like to make an
entrance.”
A girl sauntered into the conference
room, her combat boots jingling with
each step, as if there were bells
attached. She wore a shirt that said
Bitch
Don’t Kill My Vibe
over a pair of
ripped jean shorts that ended just below
her ass. An ass that he’d noticed even
before he registered her bright pink hair.
Who the fuck?
She tossed a frayed canvas bag onto
the table and sprawled into the seat
across from his currently empty one,
head tilting slightly as she regarded him.
Amusement transformed her features
from merely beautiful to interesting
and
beautiful.
From
distracting
to
the
distraction he didn’t need. Like she
fucking needed the extra push.
Since when did he get mad at girls for
being good-looking?
Very slowly, she looked him over.
Connor felt her gaze slide over his
crotch and bit back the urge to adjust
himself, to hide the wood he’d sprung in
honor of a girl who’d been in his
presence for thirty seconds. He didn’t
like this. Didn’t like feeling out of
control of the situation. He let people
see only what he allowed, but somehow
this girl had walked into the room, said
eight words, and thrown him off his
game.
“Well.” She sat back in her chair and
winked at him. “I guess the nickname
Trigger is appropriate in more ways than
one.”
Connor sat back down and dug his
fingers into his knee, forcing himself to
show no outward reaction. He hated the
nickname she’d just christened him with,
but he’d be damned before he let her
know. “Your name, please.”
Her lips twitched. “So formal, aren’t
you, baby?” A flicker of calculation
entered her eyes before disappearing,
but it told him to expect her next move.
She dragged her full lower lip between
her teeth and propped both feet up on the
table, giving him a view of her thighs
that clogged the breath in his throat. She
crossed her feet at the ankles, but not
before he glimpsed where those legs led.
The tiny patch of denim covering her
pussy. “Call me whatever you want. Just
don’t expect me to answer.”
Jesus Christ. If she made him any
harder, he’d have to excuse himself. “I
wouldn’t say your name unless I had a
good reason.”
She swayed her feet back and forth.
“Give me your best one.”
The urge to shift in his seat was
strong. “You’ve already looked right at
it.”
Her feet stilled. He caught a flash of
surprise and uncertainty, confusing the
hell out of him. Had he read her signals
wrong? One minute she was challenging
him, and the next, she looked frozen in
the headlights. Or maybe he’d just called
her bluff? His ability to read people had
been his saving grace more than once
since being dishonorably discharged
from the SEALs two years ago. Working
as a street enforcer in Brooklyn for his
cousin’s underground crime ring, the
skills he’d honed in the Navy had been
utilized on a daily basis. Often in ways
he didn’t like to recall, but forced
himself to anyway. To remember what
he’d been reduced to.
But reading this girl was difficult,
even for him. She’d flashed her thighs at
him as if wanting a reaction, but when
he’d given it to her, she’d clammed up.
Whatever the reason, he refused to show
another ounce of interest. He
wasn’t
interested. This girl couldn’t scream
trouble any louder. He was through with
trouble. Done.
“
So
.” She finally recovered her
entertained expression. “What kind of
piece were you reaching for when I
walked in?”
He simply narrowed his eyes at her.
“Hey, you’re preaching to the choir.
They took my favorite Ruger.” She
pouted. “Has my initials painted in
Wite-Out on the side and everything.”
Oh, I get it now. She’s crazy.
“Why
are you here?”
His abrupt question didn’t faze her.
“Three o’clock meeting, same as you.
Some
people
just
don’t
value
punctuality.”
The way she smirked when she said it
made him think she’d read his mind upon
walking into the room. But that was
impossible. Who the fuck
was
this girl?
A tempting weapons enthusiast who also
happened to be perceptive? He needed
to know more. Just enough to solve the
formula she presented, so he could pack
up his curiosity and store it away. “I
wasn’t asking why you’re in this room.
What landed you on this squad?”
She inspected her fingernails. “Ah.
The
old
what are you in for
conversation. I don’t want to play.” Her
boots abruptly hit the ground. “Just
kidding, I’m in. But you have to go first.”
“Nope.”
“Impasse,” she whispered, walking
her fingers across the table. “I could
guess why you’re here, but you’d dislike
that more than simply telling me.”
Connor said nothing. He
would
dislike
that. Guesswork had always been a
source of irritation for him. He dealt
only in facts. Again, he got the feeling
this girl saw more than most people. The
air of mayhem she wore like a second
skin
probably
made
people
underestimate her. He wouldn’t be one
of them.
“You have a military background. But
you’re not there now, are you?” She
leaned across the table and he caught a
whiff of smoke. Not cigarette smoke.
Like the strike of a match, or the
lingering scent of incense. “It isn’t
difficult math, soldier.”
“Don’t call me that.”
“You don’t like Trigger, baby, or
soldier.” Her tongue lingered against her
top lip. “If you don’t like any of my
nicknames, better tell me your real one.”
Connor almost laughed. Almost. The
nicknames had been her roundabout way
of getting him to spill his name first.
He’d nearly walked right into it. Why
were they waging a battle over
something so minor? When this meeting
started, they would find out each other’s
names anyway.
It was time to let this girl know he
didn’t play games. At least not the kind
that took place while fully clothed. As
he leaned across the table, he watched
her blue eyes widen and knew she had to
be a blonde underneath that pink hair.
Her eyelashes and eyebrows were light,
her coloring fair.
She’d look goddamn
perfect against my black sheets…arms
stretched over her head, unable to free
herself. Not really wanting to get free
at all.
“I never said I didn’t like you calling
me baby.”
Dammit
. Had he said that out loud?
He’d decided not to show her any more
interest. Once he made a decision, he
stuck to it. Every time. He resented her
for being the one to make him deviate. If
she weren’t leaning so close, her small
tits pressing against the front of her shirt,
maybe he’d have kept his resolve. He’d
always liked women with bouncy little
tits, and he’d lay ten to one odds she
wasn’t wearing a bra. “Maybe I just
want to hear you call me that under
different circumstances.”
When her confidence visibly wavered,
Connor
wanted
to
curse.
These
contradicting sides to her were only
increasing his need to know more, and
he
did
not
want to get involved.
Couldn’t afford to. Her chin went up a
notch, and that show of fire amid the
uncertainty turned him on. “What
circumstances would those be?”
Too soon. Too insane. He’d just met
this girl. They’d be working together. He
couldn’t sit here in the light of day and
detail the many activities he’d like to
perform with her. Even if he wanted to,
just to see her reaction. To see if she
wanted him, too. But what would he do
if she did? Drag her onto the conference
room table, tug her shirt up to her neck,
and get a look at those tits? He’d have to
get her back to his apartment if he did
that, damn the meeting.
Change the subject
. “Why do you
smell like smoke?”
Her eyelashes shielded her eyes a
second before they flashed wide, hitting
him square in the chest with the force of
their impact. “I set things on fire.”
Any other time, the expression on the
hot, bearded former-soldier’s face
would have made Erin O’Dea dissolve
into a fit laughter. It wasn’t the usual
response men gave her when she played
the crazy card. Not at all. Maybe that
was why she wasn’t laughing. This guy
wasn’t typical. Didn’t fit her profile of
what men should be like. They all
wanted to get inside her until she
performed her fun little reveal.
Surprise,
sweetheart. I’m a convicted arsonist.
You might be next.
Cue haunted house cackle.
They never asked why she’d done it or
questioned the circumstances, simply
vanishing into a puff of smoke. Exactly
as planned. This guy wasn’t vanishing,
however. He hadn’t flinched, not once,
and the trickle of relief in her chest
pissed her off. The words “proceed with
caution”
flashed
across
her
consciousness, sparking and flaming
around the edges. This man
would
ask
why and question the circumstances.
Having only met him mere minutes ago,
she shouldn’t be so certain of that fact,
but it would be reckless to put him in the
same category as other men who scared
easily. His steady green eyes were so
intent on her, she worried her mask
might slip underneath the weight of them.
She didn’t want him to be the first
person to ask her why. She didn’t want
anyone
to ask her why. Her secrets were
all she had. After you’d lived behind
bars among hundreds of women with
your privacy stripped clean away, you