Authors: Tessa Bailey
Tags: #police, #Romantic Suspense, #brazen, #line of duty, #erotic, #new york, #Contemporary Romance
come back. Leave behind everything
she’s worked for. But I don’t think that’s
what you want.” With a curse, Troy
threw the photograph down onto the
table. Resolutely, Bowen kept his eyes
up, refusing to look. Troy pointed down
at the picture. “This is your chance to
make up for the shit you’ve done. A
chance to do something good. Ruby sees
the good in you. Are you going to prove
her wrong?”
“
Fuck you
,” Bowen said through his
teeth, hating Troy with every cell in his
body for using his weakness against him.
He didn’t care about many things in this
world, but he cared about his sister.
Which is why he’d completely cut her
out of his life. “And while we’re on the
subject, keep her the hell away from me.
I don’t want to see her in the
neighborhood.”
“Still protecting her?” Troy asked
quietly. “We both know that’s my job
now.”
“Then do it. Keep her out of
Brooklyn.”
Troy
nodded
thoughtfully,
still
watching him closely. Wanting to escape
that observation, Bowen glanced away,
his gaze accidentally landing on the
photograph.
Everything inside him went still. He’d
scooped up the picture to get a closer
look before his brain registered the
action. “Who is this?”
“That’s the officer we’ve lost contact
with. Going on a week now.” Troy
lowered his voice, putting his back
toward the two-way glass. “She’s
investigating Trevor Hogan.”
Bowen couldn’t hide his astonishment.
“This girl? This girl with the freckles
and the rosary beads around her neck?
She’s undercover with Hogan’s crew?”
When Troy simply nodded, Bowen
cursed under his breath. He didn’t
understand the reaction he was having to
the photograph, but he couldn’t deny the
unwelcome surge of protectiveness. A
pretty brunette smiled up at him,
squinting into the sunshine, hand closed
around the cross at her chest. She didn’t
belong anywhere near the ruthless
Hogan, the man who had recently taken
over North Brooklyn. If he suspected her
for one second, she would be killed
without hesitation.
Bowen knew something Troy didn’t,
though. He and Hogan had an upcoming
deal, set to take place on May ninth.
Little over a week away. A shipment of
stolen computer hardware would land in
neutral territory, thanks to a Brooklyn
defector who had taken his theft
operation overseas. At their contact’s
request, he and Hogan were going to
split the hardware down the middle as a
gesture of goodwill between North and
South Brooklyn, since warring over the
goods would up his chances of being
caught. If Bowen wanted to cooperate
with the police, he had a perfect opening
to do it.
If
he cooperated? Jesus, was he
actually considering this? Absently, his
finger smoothed over the picture.
“What’s her name?”
“Seraphina.” Troy cleared his throat.
“Hogan killed her brother and walked.
Seems to me you can relate to wanting
what’s best for a sibling. Only she didn’t
get that chance.”
A wave of sympathy moved through
him. Could he do this? Turn…informant?
By going in and protecting this girl—
Seraphina—he kept himself out of prison
and let his sister keep her shiny new life.
And dammit,
someone
needed to bring
this impulsive rookie cop home, right?
This might be an old photo, but if she’d
retained an ounce of that innocence,
Hogan would have her for breakfast.
Who the hell was he kidding? There
was no choice.
“How long do I have to get her out?”
“The sooner the better. No more than
one week.”
Perfect timing
. “You have to tell me
what she’s looking for. I’m not going
into this blind.”
Troy lowered his voice. “Financial
records. A ledger.” He crossed his arms
over his chest. “Men have gone
undercover with Hogan before. They…
didn’t
last
long,
but
were
in
communication long enough to confirm
he keeps track of business by hand.”
Bowen decided it wouldn’t be wise to
mention he’d seen the damn thing
himself. He reached into his jeans again
for his packet of cigarettes. “Let’s get
this over with. I hate paperwork.”
CHAPTER THREE
Sera hated the man on sight.
But since hating another person was a
sin, she decided to
strongly
dislike him
instead. He’d walked into Rush,
Hogan’s nightclub, five minutes ago and
hadn’t taken his eyes off her once.
Nursing a glass of whiskey at the bar, he
somehow fit in and stood out at the same
time. He was in possession of a wicked
black eye, yet he’d walked through the
door with the confidence of a man who
doled them out, not received them. Tall
and broad-shouldered with the cut
muscles of a working man, he caught the
attention of women and men alike,
drawing looks of appreciation as well as
apprehension. The way he moved said
do not fuck with me
, louder than if he’d
shouted the statement. His dark blond
hair had been tousled in a way that
looked purposeful, like a woman had
just been holding on to it for dear life.
Sera shook herself, realizing she’d
been openly scowling at him. These
were not the type of thoughts she
normally had. She shouldn’t be picturing
a woman in the throes of ecstasy with
her fingers clutching some stranger’s
hair.
With
a
muttered
admonishment
directed at herself, she picked up her
tray and turned, resolving to ignore the
stranger. She’d been waitressing at
Hogan’s nightclub for two weeks and
she’d gotten no closer to incriminating
him. He’d given her a room upstairs and
ordered her to heal his cousin, whose
condition began to decline, much to her
alarm. She’d wondered if the man even
wanted to survive. She’d begged Hogan
to take him to a hospital, knowing the
action would ruin her chances of
bringing him down. No matter how hard
she’d pleaded, Hogan had refused to
pursue medical attention and against all
odds, she’d managed to stabilize the
patient after several days.
Once she’d made him reasonably
comfortable and he appeared to be out of
the woods, she’d thought Hogan would
send her packing. He’d thrown her an
apron instead. Whether he’d decided her
healing skills might come in useful in the
future or he simply didn’t know what to
do with her, she couldn’t decide. Not
having answers had begun to wear thin,
making her jumpy. She’d even requested
to be allowed to leave and return home
several times so she wouldn’t appear
eager to stick around, but he continued to
put her off, using his injured cousin as an
excuse to keep her there. Sera had caught
him watching her on a few occasions, a
thoughtful expression on his face, as if
he were deciding her fate. That cold
calculation unnerved her, and his
wariness hadn’t exactly been conducive
to her investigation, but she’d gotten a
glimpse of the ledger book early
yesterday morning. She refused to give
up her chance at him.
Hopefully, all of her time-biding
would come to an end tomorrow. She’d
overheard Hogan on the phone yesterday
as he sat at one of the tables in her
section. He was going out of town for a
week to check on operations at another
nightclub he owned at the Jersey shore.
If he let her remain behind to care for his
cousin, she would finally have her
chance to access the office downstairs
he always kept locked.
Against her will, her gaze landed on
the man at the bar again. Something
about him was familiar, but she couldn’t
place the reason for such a feeling.
Before he’d been appraising as he
watched her; now he simply looked
angry. Talk about confusing.
“Sweetheart, I’m dying of thirst over
here.”
Sera turned with a pasted-on smile
and cleared away the three men’s empty
pint glasses. “Same round again?”
Grunts served as her answer. With a
nod, Sera slipped through the rows of
tables to retrieve their order from the
bar.
At early evening on a Friday, Rush
had started to fill up, and she knew from
even limited experience the regulars
were demanding. Rush lacked any
similarity to the nightclubs she’d been
to, which was admittedly very few. No
frilly, overpriced drinks or coolly
sophisticated customers. Here, they
were
rough
and
suspicious
of
newcomers, herself included. After a
few shifts, they seemed to accept her
only because she was with Hogan.
Sera propped her elbows on the
wooden bar hatch until the bartender
scanned her through bloodshot eyes.
“Two bottles of Bud, one Carlsberg.”
“You got it, honey.” As he shuffled
toward the other end of the bar to drag
her beers out of the ice, Sera felt the
staring man move closer. It annoyed her,
the way her skin prickled as he
sauntered toward her, taking his sweet
time. She didn’t want to talk to him and
silently urged the weary bartender to
hurry up with her order. No such luck,
though. She’d be willing to bet he’d
never hurried to do a single thing in his
life.
“You know, if I were working for tips,
I might smile more.”
The words were spoken so close to
her neck, the small hairs at her nape
shifted, sending a wicked shiver down
her back. An unusual stirring took place
in her belly before exploding through her
veins, hot and liquid-like. Her lips
parted on a small gasp. At his audacity?
At her reaction to this stranger? She
didn’t know.
Pull it together. Play your part.
Allowing her lips to curve up at the
ends, she turned to give him a playful
retort, but the words died on her lips.
She’d just looked up into the most
strikingly handsome male face she’d
ever seen. His gray eyes were
noticeably tired, but intensely focused on
her, mouth tilted in a smirk. From a
distance, he’d been attractive, even with
the painful-looking black eye. Up
close…he affected her. A lot. Something
she definitely couldn’t afford while
needing to keep her game face intact.
Sera took a step away from him. “I
have a hard time smiling when I’m being
stared at.”
“Then you must not smile much,
because you’re a fucking stunner.”
Whoa. Huh?
The long pull of sexual
attraction in her stomach came as a
shock. That line had actually worked on
her? She’d never had a thing for
Brooklyn accents before, but the way he
pronounced stunner like
stunna
did
funny things to her insides. Or maybe the
sincerity in his voice had done it. He’d
said it like he
meant
it. Coupled with the
steady manner in which he watched her
now, the effect was potent. It figured that
the first man she’d felt a physical pull
toward would show up while she was
undercover.
Can’t do anything about it here. Put
him off.
She wanted to kiss the bartender when
he set her beers down on the bar.
“Excuse me. I’m trying to work here. I
have customers who need drinks.”
“Yeah?” He took a slug of whiskey,
throat muscles working. “Now I need
one, too.”
“You’re not in my section.”
Too late, Sera realized she’d said the
wrong thing. Setting his empty glass on
the bar, he swaggered past her toward