Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
remembered sound of the husky quality of his voice
had her heart rate increasing, had it pounding fiercely.
The sexual implications in the deep rasp of his voice
had a burning, soul-deep response tearing through
her system.
Yes, she was the only one who called him Rafer.
Even Jaymi had been amused by the habit Cami
had of calling him by his full name.
It was more intimate. No one else called him
Rafer, just her. It was a part of him that was only hers,
because he refused to allow anyone else to use the
name. And Cami allowed no other man to touch her.
Her experience at being a lover was confined to
the few nights she had spent with Rafe over the past
six years. so infrequent had been the times they had
come together. She had been a virgin that first night,
and she might as well have been a virgin the night she
knocked on his front door.
The phone rang again.
Lifting it from between her breasts, she couldn’t
help but smile despite the trembling of her lips and the
tears that filled her eyes.
Rafer Samuel Callahan
. The caller ID displayed
his name clearly.
With fingers that shook more than her lips did
she added the contact to the cell phone’s address
book the minute the ringing stopped. She was
determined not to answer, not to hear his voice again,
not to weaken and beg him to hold her again.
She was going to hear it enough in her dreams,
and the torment of it would drive her insane for
months.
Or longer.
He was living closer now, she thought. It wasn’t
as though he were half a world away and
inaccessible. He was here, in Corbin County. And he
wanted her.
She could go to him. She could take what she
wanted if she could just be strong enough to forget her
own past mistakes. That was the problem. It wasn’t
shame or fear of the county’s condemnation. It was
her own condemnation she had to worry about. And
she should have proven that beyond a shadow of a
doubt before she left the ranch.
Her family
would
turn their backs on her once
they learned of that kiss or at least her father would.
But he had turned his back on her years before. Her
mother was dying, and if she learned of it, then she
wouldn’t exactly die hating her younger child. Her
mother was able to process very little information
now. Alzheimer’s and a stroke had all but erased the
loving, gentle mother Margaret Flannigan had tried to
be whenever her husband wasn’t around. She was the
only person whose opinion Cami really cared about
anyway, and her mother barely even recognized her
anymore.
If Cami could only figure out why everyone hated
Rafer and his cousins. She could show her father the
injustice of what they had suffered—no, that wouldn’t
happen. There was no compassion left in her father
after Jaymi’s death.
Cami gave her head a hard shake. No, he
wouldn’t care because it would only be an excuse.
What she hadn’t considered while allowing Martin
Eisner to see her kissing Rafer was the fact he would
tell Mark Flannigan as soon as possible. When he
did, Mark would use the excuse to ensure he never
allowed Cami to see her mother again.
* * *
“Something’s wrong,” Rafe said quietly as he, Logan,
and Crowe sat in the black SUV he had driven into
town to check up on Cami and make certain she had
gotten home. He hadn’t been able to shake that
foreboding or his need for her.
It was probably that returning hunger continuing to
spark the warning he needed to check on her.
“No one’s in there,” Logan said from the seat as
Cami closed the heavy curtains covering her
bedroom window. “You can see straight through that
house until she closes the curtains. Besides she’s
acting too calm.”
It was the truth. The two-story home was open
and inviting, and clearly visible through the pristine,
sparkling windows.
Who had windows that clean? It was damned
scary. And as he said, Cami appeared too calm and
comfortable to be frightened of anything.
“I didn’t say someone was in there; I said
something is wrong,” he reminded his cousin.
“There’s a difference, Crowe.”
“Let it go, Rafe,” Crowe stated softly. “Let’s head
back to the ranch and see about installing the last of
those cameras before we head up the mountain
tomorrow to take care of mine. Logan’s is next and I’d
like to have this finished and tied into the DVR on the
master control before we head to that lawyers’
meeting in Colorado Springs next week.”
They had been installing the cameras at night,
when it would be harder for anyone to watch what they
were doing or to pinpoint the hiding places they had
chosen for the electronics.
Rafe blew out a rough breath as he slid the
vehicle into gear and pulled out onto the street. He
should have gone to the door, but he knew that
pushing Cami wasn’t going to get him what he
wanted. Besides, he wanted her to come to him for a
change. Just once. Just a single instance where she
accepted her need for him and made the first move. A
move other than allowing her car to slide into a ditch
at the entrance of his property.
He needed her, too—willingly, deliberately,
without any excuses—to reach out for him. He wanted
her to admit it to herself. Because he’d be damned if
he would allow her to hide from it much longer. And he
sure as hell wasn’t going to allow her to return to a few
stolen nights here and there because they couldn’t
fight the need any longer.
He had grown damned tired of having his lovers
hide their relationship with him twelve years before.
He’d had enough of it with Jaymi and the lovers he’d
had before her in Sweetrock. And these stolen nights
with Cami had eaten at him, because he was certain
she had slipped out at dawn out of shame.
He’d be damned if he’d let himself be treated like
a dirty little secret by Cami.
“Are we sure we want to go through with all this?”
Logan asked lazily from his seat in the back. “You
know if we go through with these plans it’s going to
cause a hell of a battle with the barons.”
Rafer couldn’t help but grin at the comment. How
many times had some of the larger resorts attempted
to come in and buy the land around Crowe’s
mountain? The deep white water that branched off
from the Colorado River and ran through streams and
tributaries until it began flowing through the deep
boulder-strewn ravines through the mountains was
perfect for white water rafting.
The mountain itself with its natural breaks and
paths was perfect for skiing. The land was filled with
wildlife and could easily support any hunting activities
required.
That had been their parents’ dream. The three
couples had spent years planning for the day the
wives came into their trusts at their thirtieth birthday. It
was then Crowe’s Mountain and the adjoining
Breaker Valley and Rafferty River Run area would
have become Callahan Holdings. From there Crowe
Mountain Resort would have been born.
Just the thought of the pure rage the barons
would have was enough to almost bring a grin to
Rafe’s lips. Damn, the explosion would be heard in
China when they learned that the grandsons they had
disowned would carry out their parents’ dreams.
“Now’s the time to back out if you don’t want to
be a part of it, Logan,” Crowe warned him.
Logan snorted mockingly. “Are you dreaming,
cuz? I just think we all need to be aware of what’s
going to happen when we file the papers. Because
the shit is going to hit the fan.” The anticipation in
Logan’s voice was contagious. That or just the sheer
pleasure at the thought of yet another triumph against
their grandparents.
The first had been the court battle for the land that
Crowe’s mother’s trust left to him. The final appeal the
barons had made would be heard in a month before
the state supreme court. And Rafe had no doubt he
and his cousins would win that one, too.
Breaker Valley, the land Rafer’s mother had held,
was now fully his. That land had once been the
Callahan Ranch, and had belonged to his
grandparents. Just as Crowe Mountain and part of the
land called Rafferty River Run had. Crowe stated,
“We’re not going to have an easy time doing this,
even after the property is out of the courts. I’d like to
keep things as simple as possible.”
And as quiet as possible to ensure the barons
didn’t guess what was coming.
“She’ll mess your head up, I can already see it
coming.”
“And you need to get fucked.” Rafe snorted as he
slid his cousin a hard look. “That’s not happening, so
you may as well simply shut the hell up about it and let
it go Crowe.”
“She’s going to get your ass killed,” Crowe
griped, his disapproval obvious.
“And you’re going to get your ass kicked if you
don’t shut the hell up,” Rafe growled as he headed the
vehicle out of town. “I don’t need the lectures and I
sure as hell don’t need your advice where Cami’s
concerned.”
“No, you need to stay away from her,” Crowe
repeated between furiously clenched teeth. “Both of
you need to remember exactly how dangerous it is to
fuck with Corbin County women.”
Rafe ignored him. Crowe enjoyed playing the big
brother, and he enjoyed trying to order Rafe and
Logan around. Not that they ever let Crowe get away
with it.
Especially now.
Rafe wasn’t staying away from Cami.
She’d admitted to being his occasional fuck, and
he was going to make damned sure the occasions
became real frequent from here on out. Once he
managed to convince her to make that first move,
then she was his. Totally. Completely.
He had no intentions of allowing Cami off the
hook or out of his bed for long. If Crowe thought he
could convince him otherwise, then he might need to
think again.
CHAPTER 10
The mid-April morning glistened across the Colorado
mountains with a wave of warmth that gave rise to the
hope that the snow would melt soon. Everyone in town
was crossing their fingers that the weather would
definitely cooperate in time for the Spring Fling
Social, the first night of weekend socials hosted by
the county every Friday through Sunday evening.