Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
Corbin than it is to think for yourself, isn’t it.”
“Cami,” Rafe said her name softly. “Go get ready,
sweetheart. We have things to do today, remember?”
No, that wasn’t what she remembered.
He’d told her last night they had things to clear
up, and that was far different.
“I’m finished with the little tramp—”
Before Cami could process the fact that Rafe
had moved, he had done just that.
His hand was wrapped around Mark’s throat,
holding him pinned to the wall he had thrown him into.
“Leave,” Rafe said softly.
Anything else he said Cami missed while waiting
for her brain to kick into gear once again.
She rushed to the two men, and her fingers
curled around the arm that bulged with strength as he
drew on that power to keep his fingers wrapped
around Mark’s throat.
“That’s enough,” she said softly. “I really don’t
want to have to deal with Archer later, Rafe. And you
know Mark; he would definitely file a complaint if you
leave so much as a single bruise.”
“Oh, he won’t be bruised,” Rafe promised her,
though he released Mark slowly. “But I bet you he
remembers how little I like hearing that trash rolling
out of his mouth to you.”
“And I’m sure he really won’t care once he gets
away from you,” she told him before turning her gaze
back to the man who had thought he could destroy
her.
“Who was my father?” she asked Mark.
“Dead.” He seemed to relish the word. “The
bastard was some cop in Denver when she left me
one summer. She never made that mistake again.
Again,” he reminded Cami.
“Did you kill him?”
Mark chuckled at the question. “I only wish I’d had
the chance. A drug dealer and his tramp did that for
me when he thought he could poke his nose in their
business. His stupidity got him killed.”
If Mark could have set it up, then he would have,
Cami thought.
She could see it in his eyes, in the hatred and
regret that filled his expression.
“I’m going to shower and dress,” she only partially
lied. She’d showered the night before; she only
intended to dress and face whatever issues Rafe
thought they should iron out. Or clear up. He’d said
they had things to clear up, and she had a feeling she
knew exactly what a few of those things were. The fact
that she’d kept secrets from him, that she hadn’t
contacted him when she needed him.
Turning her back on Mark, she moved to the
dresser, collected her clothing, then moved into the
bathroom.
Whatever Mark had thought he would accomplish
by attempting to ambush her, he hadn’t quite
managed it. Had it been ten years before, even five,
then he could have shattered her with that knowledge.
Perhaps a part of her had already accepted, over
the years, that no father could be as cruel as he had
been over the years. He hadn’t laid a hand on her, but
there were times that words could hurt much worse
than a fist.
Moving into the bathroom, she wondered at how
easily Mark had slipped in, though. He’d obviously
been watching her, waiting, stalking her.
At this point, she didn’t give a damn what Rafe
said to Mark. She was beginning to wonder if she
would even care what Rafe did to him. Mark had
made her mother’s life hell, and Cami knew it. A part
of her acknowledged that he was the reason her
mother had turned to the Valium and the wine. He was
the reason she had closed herself off, even from the
child she’d conceived, likely with a man who had
loved her.
Cami dressed quickly, unwilling to leave Rafe
with Mark long enough to actually hurt him. But when
she stepped out into the bedroom, it was to find Rafe
sitting in the large easy chair, lounging back, as he
waited patiently for her.
His expression was slightly mocking, knowing.
“You know, he didn’t come through the front
door,” Rafe told her. “There are several webcams
scattered through the house now. He came through
the basement window, just as your attacker did.”
Cami paused and stared back at Rafe, confused
at the statement.
“But you secured that window.” And she knew he
and his cousins would have done the job right.
“Yes, we did,” he agreed. “And from what I saw
on the camera, he’s damned good at picking a lock,
Cami.”
She rubbed at her temple, uncertain what to
make of that. “He wasn’t the one that attacked me.”
Was he?
If he had been, then that meant he had also been
the one behind Jaymi’s death.
Cami shook her head. “He would have never hurt
Jaymi. Whoever tried to hurt me was behind Thomas
Jones attacking her as well. Mark was devoted to
her.”
“But she was sleeping with me,” Rafe pointed
out.
Cami shook her head again. “He truly loved her,
Rafe. He loved her, and he loved Mother, despite any
infidelity she may have committed. It was me he
hated. It was me he made pay for it; that way he could
could forgive her.”
And Cami believed that to the bottom of her soul.
“Mark’s world began and ended with Mother and
Jaymi. Losing a part of that world was more than he
could bear.”
Rafe watched her for long, considering moments.
“Pack up.” He surprised her with the command. “We’ll
move to the ranch until this is resolved.”
“And what will that solve?” She breathed out with
an edge of weariness. “Running won’t make him
move any faster; it will only delay the inevitable. And
I’m not running. Not yet.”
She hadn’t run from her problems since she was
a child. “That was one of the few lessons Mark has
taught me. Running shows weakness and fear. I’m not
ready to give that impression quite yet.”
“You’re being too damned stubborn,” Rafe
muttered as he came out of the chair and stalked over
to her. “Should I have that put on your gravestone?
‘She Died Stubborn.’”
Her lips almost twitched. “Look at it this way,” she
suggested. “I may die stubborn, but I intend to make
certain that he knows he didn’t get the best of me in
any other way. He’ll know he failed.”
“And that’s so important to you?” Rafe asked
incredulously.
“Important?” she whispered. “Not so much
important, Rafe, as all I have left. Through the years
it’s all I’ve had, Rafe; Mark took everything else. And
what he didn’t take Thomas Jones did when he killed
Jaymi. Besides, what will leaving accomplish?”
“I know my home turf. I can protect it,” Rafe
answered her instantly.
“And he doesn’t. Whoever attacked me won’t
come after me there. He’ll just wait, and he’ll watch,
and the Callahan cousins will have to blink eventually.”
“If I lost you, Cami, it would destroy me.”
She blinked back at him.
He said it so seriously, as though the words were
torn from a place so deep inside himself that he
wasn’t certain where they came from either.
Cami swallowed tightly. “What do you want me to
say?” She was suddenly terrified. Terrified of herself
and the emotions she suddenly felt being torn from
deep inside her.
She’d kept parts of her locked down for as long
as she could remember, definitely since she had lost
their child. But even before that, there were hopes,
dreams, needs, and desires that she’d refused to
allow herself.
“You seem so surprised,” he murmured as he
stopped in front of her. “Why do you think I arranged to
meet you in Denver all those years ago? Why do you
think I tried so hard to give you the time you needed to
make that first move, to come to me, to be sure you
wanted me, Cami? To be sure you’d tasted freedom
and were ready to accept everything I felt for you?
Everything I need to be with you?”
She shook her head, staring up at him, at the
blaze of emotion in his eyes, at the truth of everything
he was saying.
“We can talk about this later,” she forced the
words past her lips.
“Because you’re terrified to hear the words? Tell
me, kitten.” His hands cupped her cheeks, forced her
to keep her gaze locked with his. “Has anyone ever
told you they loved you?”
Had they?
She’d known Jaymi had loved her, but had she
ever said the words?
She hadn’t, Cami realized.
“Mother,” she whispered.
When she had been younger. Before Mark had
decided she was such a threat.
“I love you, Cami.”
She flinched.
Something seemed to shatter in her chest. A
wash of fear, followed by a blaze of heat and an
outpouring of emotion that dragged a sob from her
chest and left her trembling in front of him.
“Don’t lie to me,” she burst out, her voice as
shaky as her knees now. “Please, Rafe. Please don’t
lie to me. I couldn’t survive it.”
“Have I ever lied to you?”
He never had, but that didn’t mean he wouldn’t. It
didn’t mean he couldn’t change his mind later.
“No, you haven’t lied to me,” she whispered as
she felt that first tear ease from her eyes. “I couldn’t
bear it if you lied to me now, Rafe.”
His head lowered, his eyes locked with hers.
“I love you, Cambria Flannigan,” he whispered.
“To the very depths of my soul. You’ve bound my heart
since you were seventeen years old and didn’t have a
date for the prom, and I’ve only grown to love you
more each year.”
Her breathing hitched. Another sob shook her.
“Cami?” he questioned her gently as his lips
touched hers. “We both know you feel it. Aren’t you
going to tell me you love me too?”
Her lips trembled.
“I love you,” she suddenly cried, feeling the tears
as they began to run down her face, the love as it
finally broke free inside her, pouring into the light,
refusing to allow her to ignore it any longer. “Oh God,
Rafe, I love you so much.”
His arms wrapped around her as he jerked her
closer. His lips covered hers, his body surrounded
her, and the warmth and strength that was so much a
part of him encompassed her. She felt warm, heated.
For the first time in her life, Cami felt warm from
the inside out.
CHAPTER 25
The day seemed to fly by.
For the first time in her life, Cami felt as though
she were walking on air. There was no fear that dawn
would come and force her to leave the man she loved.
There was no fear that if she stared into his eyes too