New York's Finest Rebel. Trish Wylie
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу New York's Finest Rebel - Trish Wylie страница 8
‘Flowers.’
The conversation swayed back towards wedding plans as they left the bakery and made their way past the public library to the nearest subway station. Jess glanced at the steps in front of the large Grecian columns where several men in helmets and bulletproof vests were gathered around one of the stone lions.
‘Isn’t that Danny?’
Oh, come on.
Reluctantly—as Olivia and Jess headed towards him and she lagged a step behind—Jo had to admit the uniform was sexy in a badass/mess-with-me-and-die kind of way. But then she’d always known Daniel had an edge to him. While he could attract women with a smile, he could make grown men cower with just a look. She had seen that look once. When was it? Tyler’s thirtieth, which his younger brother deigned to make an appearance at? Yes, she thought that was it. A giant with a brain the size of a pea was foolish enough to manhandle his girlfriend within Daniel’s line of sight. All it had taken was that look and a quietly spoken ‘show the lady some respect’ and he’d backed down with a string of mumbled apologies. When it was over Daniel had simply continued what he was doing as if nothing had happened.
Jo wondered why it had taken seeing him in uniform for her to remember she’d been impressed by that.
‘Ladies.’ He nodded once in greeting.
Gathering herself together, she stepped forward and gave the answer everyone expected. ‘Officer Moron.’
‘Really?’ he questioned with a deadpan expression. ‘When I’m holding a gun?’
‘What can I say?’ She shrugged. ‘Guess I must like living on the edge.’
While she cocked her head in challenge, he shot a brief downward glance at what she was wearing. It lasted less than a heartbeat, was immediately followed by a cursory blink and then his intense gaze locked with hers, leaving her feeling suddenly … exposed. Whether it was because she’d never noticed him looking at her before or because she was more aware of when he did, she didn’t know. But neither option sat well with her. Particularly when she suspected the momentary sense of vulnerability she’d experienced stemmed from the sensation he knew she was remembering things she’d chosen to forget.
Jess chuckled at the interaction. ‘Hey, Danny.’
He turned on the charm with the flick of an invisible switch. ‘Hey, gorgeous.’
Jo inwardly rolled her eyes at her friend’s reaction to his infamous smile before allowing her gaze to roam over the crowd. If she focused on something else, with any luck, she could try and pretend he wasn’t there. All she needed was something to take her mind off—
Her stomach dropped to the soles of her strappy heels. ‘I’ve got to go.’
‘I thought we were going to look at flowers?’
Looking into Liv’s eyes, she used the tone that translated into a hidden message. ‘I’ll call you later.’
‘Okay.’
She didn’t look at Daniel as she left, but Jo could sense his gaze on her as she merged into the crowd. How it made her feel helped explain the secret she kept from his sister. Only someone with a shadowy secret of their own could understand what it meant to bring it into the cold light of day. Gaze fixed on the figure she could see moving into the park, she shut down emotionally in preparation.
It was the only way she could deal with it.
The dream began a handful of hours before dawn. New faces—a different scenario—but the outcome was always the same. As he jerked back into reality, pulse racing and heart pounding, Daniel wondered why he was surprised at the latest additions. There was nothing the damn thing loved more than new material.
At times he swore he could hear scaly little demon hands being rubbed together with glee.
Grabbing the sweatpants on the end of his rack, he hauled them on and swore when he stubbed his toe on a box on his way to the kitchen. As he reached for a light switch he froze. The second he yanked open the door to the hall she jumped and dropped her keys.
‘Damn it, Daniel!’ Jo exclaimed.
Leaning a shoulder against the door frame, he folded his arms across his chest. ‘Late night or early start?’
It was a question that didn’t require an answer; the outfit she had been wearing outside the library said it all. With considerable effort, he dragged his gaze away from the perfect rear poured into tight black trousers that ended halfway down her calves.
‘Who made you the hall monitor?’ Keys in hand, she stood up tall and turned to face him.
‘I’m a light sleeper.’
A brief frown crossed her face before her gaze landed squarely in the centre of his naked chest. The former should have bugged him more than the latter, especially when it was dangerously close to the kind of look that had forced him to move apartments over the years. Instead he was more bothered by the jolt of electricity travelling through his body from the point of impact. The fact she continued staring didn’t help. If anything it aided the flow of blood that rushed to his groin in response.
‘Isn’t it usually the guy who sneaks home after the deed is done?’ he asked as if bringing up the subject of her sex life again would distract his misbehaving body. When her gaze lifted sharply, he changed the subject. ‘Didn’t occur to you that having a cop for a neighbour might involve him greeting you with his service weapon if he hears you creeping around in the dark?’
‘The lights are on,’ she argued.
‘It’s the middle of the night.’
‘I don’t have to answer to you.’
‘Do you have any idea how much paperwork I’ll have to fill out if I accidentally shoot you?’
She arched a brow. ‘Accidentally?’
‘That’s what I’ll call it.’
A lump appeared in her cheek as her gaze searched the air. ‘That’s twice in twenty-four hours you’ve threatened to shoot me. I wonder if that’s enough for a restraining order. Remind me to ask your sister.’
‘He tossed you out of his apartment, didn’t he?’
‘What is it with this sudden obsession with my sex life?’ She looked into his eyes. ‘If I didn’t know any better I might think it’s been a while for you.’
Longer than he cared to admit, but it wasn’t as if he could share a bed with a woman for long. He could guarantee his complete and undivided attention while he was there; took a great deal of pride in that fact. But when it came to leaving them satisfied, there was just as much emphasis on the word leaving. Preferably before he was dumb enough to fall asleep and risk making a fool of himself.
‘Worried I might be lonely, babe?’
She scowled. ‘Don’t call me babe.’
‘If the