awful urgency that felt truer than any sexual craving sheâd ever had before. Like steel to a magnet, the force of attraction was undeniable.
It was as if sheâd been waiting all her life for this moment, even if it was a total lie and he probably was everything he seemed, bad-news-dangerous, and then some. But she was just drunk enough to want to find out. She had reached up on tiptoe and kissed him.
A few more kisses and a couple of slow turns on the tiny space that served as a makeshift dance floor, and sheâd left with him. She never looked back.
âEarth to Cole.â
Cole glanced up.
âWhere did you go?â Becca had her serious face on. âAnd why are you blushing? âOh. My. God. You still have a thing for the bastard. Youâre thinking that if you spent time together you might patch things up? Youâre an idiot!â
Several nearby park visitors glanced their way.
âUniform, Becca.â Cole said the words quietly.
Beccaâs turn to blush. âIâm sorry. I forgot. Respect for the badge.â
She turned to the people looking their way. âSheâs my sister. We fight. Get over it.â She looked back at Cole. âBetter?â
Cole pulled her sister to a nearby bench and made her sit. âI know this wonât make any sense to you but I need something from Scott. Maybe just to hear his side of the story of what went wrong.â
âHow can there be another side to what you saw with your own two eyes?â
âI donât know.â Cole closed her eyes for a moment. âBut I never heard what he had to say. I ran away.â
Becca stared at her for a long time then nodded slowly. âYou need closure.â
âI hate that expression. But, yeah, I guess thatâs what it is.â Cole took a deep breath. âItâs been two years. I have to do something. You, more than anyone, know I havenât been able to move on.â
Becca brushed a stray hair from her sisterâs cheek. âPromise me you wonât let him hurt you again.â
âIâm armed, Becca.â She grinned as her sister eyed with alarm the pistol she wore. âThatâs not what I meant. I have Hugo.â
Becca smiled. âHow is that bruiser of yours?â
âAt home alone, probably ready to chew my upholstery. He hates days when Iâm called in for desk duty.â
They rose and hugged. âYou be careful. And tell your ex if he so much as makes you tear up, heâll have to deal with your newly edgy hormonal big sister.â
Cole laughed and hugged her sister. âLove you, too.â
As she walked back to her cruiser, Cole realized the decision was made. She was going to do this.
She had made only one other rash decision in her life, and it had cost her, emotionally, everything she had. At least this time, she knew what to expect.
Trouble.
As she slid behind the wheel her cell phone beeped with a text.
Fool me once, shame on you.
Fool me twice, shame on me.
Cole laughed. Becca could so read her mind.
Â
CHAPTER FIVE
Scott pulled into the driveway of a modest-sized two-story Colonial house on Eastern Avenue in New Brunswick, New Jersey. There were no other cars parked there yet. He was early. That didnât help his state of mind. Going home was like taking a dive headfirst into murky waters with unknown hazards. Showing up early only meant heâd have more time to think about that dive.
When fellow D.C. law enforcement officers found out he was originally from New Jersey they teased him about being âconnectedâ Ã la The Sopranos. That, or that his life growing up must have been a version of Jersey Shore. Neither could be further from the truth. His parents were scholarly professionals. His dad was a professor of political science at Rutgers University. His mother was a judge in family court. Today, his fatherâs sixtieth birthday, marked the first time heâd been home in
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