"I need money, Greg." His gaze jumped from his laptop screen to my face. Surprise brightened his face. He blinked a few times. "How the hell did you get in here?" I flashed the house key he'd given me a few months ago. "I rang the doorbell, like, five times but you didn't answer." "Sorry." He sighed loudly, sat back and wiped a hand down his face "I've been mentally replaying the call from this afternoon and checking the transcripts." I stepped into his home office and noticed he still wore his all-black uniform. The harsh-looking material and military style lent an intimidating air to Greg. Apparently his latest SWAT shift hadn't gone well. I'd learned to recognize that haggard, pained look on his face as the one he often wore when calls went south. It wasn't an easy job, that's for sure. "Bad call?" I walked behind his desk and leaned back against it. I didn't miss the way his gaze zeroed in on my bare legs and the taut, slim-fitting cut of my too-short skirt. He didn't answer the question. Instead, he frowned and gestured to my skirt. "That's too short, Nez." "I don't like it any more than you do but it's the uniform all the waitresses wear." "I don't like you working at that place. It's dangerous and the clientele is low-rent." My lips twitched with amusement. Greg had been looking out for me since I was thirteen. He'd made the mistake of dating my nutjob mother for a couple of weeks. She'd tried to pull her usual con on him but he'd been too smart. One morning a few weeks after they'd stopped seeing one another, I'd woken up in our crappy little apartment to discover she'd split. Next thing I knew I was in Houston's foster care system. Not exactly a great place to be but not as bad as living with my erratic mother, all things considered. Greg had made a point of getting to know my social worker and had kept an eye on me as I bounced from house to house and group home to group home. I'd taken heart in the knowledge that I always had someone to trust and turn to if things got ugly. He'd never failed me. That's why I'd come to him tonight. "Well you don't have to worry about me working there anymore." I rubbed the back of my neck and sighed. "I got fired tonight." His brow furrowed. "Fired? For what?" "For punching some jackass who thought it was okay to stick his hand up my skirt," I explained matter- of-factly. "What?" Rage filled his voice. "One of those low-life scum bags touched you?" "Only once," I replied. "Believe me. He paid for it." Greg's gaze fell to my left hand. He picked it up and gazed at my swollen, bruised knuckles. "You need to ice this." "I did on the bus." I waited for him to start in on me riding the bus this late at night but he didn't. He surprised me by lightly tracing the bruised ridges of my hand. The soft touch made my belly flutter. I'd tried to convince myself that my attraction to Greg was some kind of hero worship but deep down inside I knew it was so much more than that. But he was nearly forty years old and I was just nineteen. He was a decorated SWAT cop. I was an art student. We were two different people in two different worlds. We could be friends but I couldn't see how it could ever be more than that. Greg's gaze slid