Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
Jaymi had taken Cami to her new home regularly, and
when her husband had been killed in the military it had
been Cami who Jaymi had wanted to stay with her for
a while.
And her father had never seemed to understand
why Jaymi wanted Cami with her. He had never
understood why her older sister seemed to love her. If
her mother had felt the same way, Cami had never
sensed it. But neither could she discount the
suspicion. Because there was no way her father could
have resented her and her mother not know it.
There were times Cami and Jaymi swore
Margaret Flannigan had eyes in the back of her head,
because they couldn’t seem to get anything past her
when they were children. She would have known,
despite the sedatives she took. Margaret would have
seen that her husband cared nothing for his younger
daughter.
So why hadn’t Margaret Flannery done
something about it? Why hadn’t her mother left Mark
Flannigan, or at least made the effort to let Cami
know that she accepted her?
Was she so unlovable to the father she had
adored as a child that loving her was impossible?
She wondered as she stared around the house for
long minutes. Was she truly so bad that as her father
said, he had been forced to take her mother away to
Aspen to alleviate Cami’s influence?
Or had he simply found the only way to punish her
for not being the daughter who had died? Because
taking her mother away from Cami truly was the only
way he could have hurt her at that point.
She stood silently for a moment, staring around
the shadowed house, feeling the loneliness that
wrapped around her. That sense of suddenly having
nothing to hold on to and no one to warm her. There
were no parents, no siblings, where once there had at
least been a sister and a mother.
Now there was simply no one but her aunt and
uncle.And Rafe.
When Cami allowed herself to have him.
Yet even he hadn’t come back to the house with
her. He hadn’t followed her, and he wasn’t at her back
door now.
He had given her a choice, and now he was
sticking to it. She could call him. She could come to
him. But he wasn’t going to allow her to excuse her
choice with the excuse that he hadn’t given her a
choice.
With a hard jerk of her head she forced that
thought, that need, back. Moving through the house,
she checked the locks on the doors, checked the
windows, and double-checked the alarm.
She felt restless, on edge. As though a
foreboding followed her, an instinctive warning to
beware that she couldn’t seem to shake. The feeling
had begun at the social, tingled around her on her way
home, and now it had settled into her senses like a
subtle scent she couldn’t shake and yet couldn’t
identify.
She wished she hadn’t danced with Rafe.
Wished she had asked him to follow her home. She
wished he were there with her, and she should know
by now the folly of wishing for things that weren’t
meant to be hers.
Rafe hadn’t followed her home, though; he hadn’t
spoken to her after he had left her back in that little
grotto. And he hadn’t mentioned that claim on her.
Even though Cami knew he had made it.
Even though Rafe was very well aware of the fact
that he had a claim on her and they both knew it it was
a claim she couldn’t shake or deny.
And as his gaze had followed her throughout the
night, she had felt that knowledge. Just as everyone
else at the dance had. Even Emma had been reticent
to say anything about it, or to tease Cami over it. And
normally, Emma was the one to joke about anything.
She had felt his eyes on her nearly every second,
especially if another man had dared to approach her.
As though Rafe’s warning had kept her from
dancing with anyone else. That had nothing to do with
her decision, because she realized he wouldn’t have
really made a scene.
He would be madder than hell. He would hate
every second of it. He would have most likely waylaid
her in private again at first chance. But there wouldn’t
have been a confrontation. Rafer Callahan had more
pride than that.
The truth was, she hadn’t wanted to dance with
anyone else. She hadn’t danced with another man,
slept with another man, or engaged in a serious
flirtation with another man since the first night she had
slept with Rafer. Well, they hadn’t done much sleeping
that night.
The most she had done in the past was to go out
to dinner a few times with other men, hoping each
time that there would be at least the faintest spark of
attraction.
But there hadn’t been.
Breathing out roughly, she trailed her fingers over
the banister of the stairs as she moved to the the
master suite.
The room that somehow hadn’t had even the
faintest mark of her parents on it when she had
bought it.
She’d redecorated after buying the house from
her parents anyway.
She almost smiled at the thought of that
purchase. Her father had actually priced the house at
the highest appraisal given, and that was the price
she had had to pay for it. At twenty two, that hadn’t
been easy.
Thankfully, tourism hadn’t really kicked off in
Sweetrock yet, so housing prices weren’t as high as
they could have been otherwise. And her uncle had
co-signed
She had bought the house the week after she
had lost their child.
She hadn’t been prepared for such loss, in more
ways than one. When her period had been late, she
had been certain—and she had been wrong.
Perhaps she had made her mistake in
attempting to forget that night and every other time
she had met him or deliberately run into him over the
years until the miscarriage. It hadn’t been hard to
learn where he would be or when until his uncle Clyde
Ramsey had died.
After that, Cami hadn’t heard anything else about
Rafer until his arrival in town more than three years
later.
Reaching the second floor, she turned at the
landing and took the several steps to the suite she’d
completely redecorated. Merging the master
bedroom with the guest room, she’d created a
sanctuary within her home.
All of the rooms, in some ways, were an oasis, a
sanctuary that fulfilled whatever varied mood she
could have without reminding her of her father in any
way.
But tonight, tonight her mood was unlike any she
had had before.
It was interesting.
Stepping into her bedroom, she closed the door
behind her, her hand still gripping the doorknob as
she leaned back against the door. Staring up at the
ceiling, she inhaled slowly, deeply, and blinked back
the tears.
She didn’t want to be here alone—
A shadow moved in the corner of the room.
Quick, fast, like a blur of darkness it barreled toward
her.
“Oh God!” Terror washed through her at the sight,
at the instinctive knowledge of what it was.
Dressed in black from head to toe, a dark hood
pulled over his face, nothing showing but dark,
malevolent eyes.
Screaming, Cami jerked open the door and
raced out of it, thanking God she had taken off the
high heels, as she tore down the stairs to the front
door and the security alarm control.
She knew she didn’t have a chance of releasing
the locks before her attacker caught her. She couldn’t
chance the back door, where there was no alarm
control.
She was just there. Her hand slapped it, her
fingers reaching for the panic button, when a hard,
violent blow was delivered to the side of her head.
Her cheek slammed into the wall. Bells seemed
to clamor in her head as her stomach pitched
sickeningly with the pain and dizziness that suddenly
attacked her.
Vicious, hard fingers suddenly caught at her hair,
jerking her back and throwing her into the stairs. As
though in slow motion, she felt herself hurtling across
the space, unable to stop the fall she knew was
coming.
She caught herself against the banister as she
stumbled back, hitting a step with her hip as her head
cracked against the banister railing. For a second,
dizziness washed over her as a wave of raw pain
swept through her head again.
Another blow cracked the side of her face.
His fist?
The agony was like nothing she had ever known
before. It resounded through her skull, sliced through
her brain, and seemed to rip her senses from their
moorings. She was trying to scream, but she didn’t
know if she was. The wailing clash of sound in her
head was so loud.
“You fucking whore!” Snarling, furious, the harsh
male voice cracked around her a second before he
jerked her up by the hair on her head.
Her hands pulled his wrists, her nails digging at
them, searching for bare flesh as she fought to be
free.
A second later he threw her against the door as
she screamed again, her fingers curling into claws as
she aimed for his face.
She was inches from his eyes when harsh hands
grabbed her wrists, jerked them over her head, and
ripped her gown down the front.
Bucking, her screams mixing with the piercing
wail of the siren echoing through the head, Cami
fought desperately to be free. Hard, cruel fingers
wrapped around the mound of one breast, squeezing
harshly as she felt the screaming pain of merciless
fingers twisting her nipple.
“I’ll fuck you first, then cut your fucking throat like I
should have cut your diseased sister’s.”
Low, vicious laughter sounded at Cami’s ear as
she fought, kicking, screaming, until finally her knee
struck its target and slammed into the vulnerable balls
between his thighs as he moved to shift his weight.
The high, piercing cry tore from him. His suddenly
lax grip gave her the chance she needed to throw
herself away from him, reaching for the umbrella
holder and jerking one of the folded instruments from
the opening.
As a weapon it was pitiful, but her dazed mind
could only comprehend the point, the curved handle,
and the distance it would put between her and her
attacker.
She whirled around in just enough time to see the
front door jerking open and the black-clad figure