Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
deep as possible, feeling her pussy began to
convulse, to spasm around the rapidly throbbing cock
head until they both began to come. Simultaneously,
his head buried against her neck as he groaned her
name, his seed pumping inside her, filling her,
marking her.
He’d never given another woman the intimacy of
coming inside her, of feeling his seed spurting hot
and hard in the blistering heat of her vagina.
Not until Cami. He trusted her that first time when
she had said she was protected. But even more, Rafe
knew if she wasn’t, if she conceived his child, then it
would only bind her to him. It would ensure she never
ran from him again. That she never left him again.
Buried as deep inside her as possible. Holding
her as close to him as possible, he felt a steady glow
radiate in the pit of his stomach that he’d only felt with
Cami.
CHAPTER 5
She slept peacefully, deeply, her head resting against
his heart as her deep, even breaths feathered over
the light dusting of hair on his chest.
Rafe kept his arm curled around her shoulders,
kept her as close to his body as he could get her,
allowing his fingers to stroke the silk of her hair every
so often.
He’d waited years to get her here, and now that
she was, rather than sleeping as peacefully as he had
that first time with her, Rafe was left staring into the
darkness of the bedroom.
He was damned wary about going to sleep and
he fully admitted why. Every time he had done so, he
had wakened to a missing Cami and an empty bed.
Not even so much as a letter or a short
good-bye
written in lipstick on the hotel mirror.
If she ran out on him again in such a way, he’d
end up doing more than busting a hole in a hotel wall
with his fist. Rafe would go looking for her, and that
might be the worst idea he’d had in years. He could
just imagine the shock, the fear, and the suspicion
that would fill her neighbors’ faces if he did such a
thing.She would probably have every male within three
blocks in front of her home within minutes, and every
one of them would be armed. Every one of them
would have murder in his heart and hatred in his gaze,
and Rafe had never fully understood that. Because it
had begun long before the year six young women had
died at the hands of a brutal rapist and torturing
murderer.
Cami’s older sister, Jaymi, had been one of the
victims.
For a second, he heard her screams as clearly
as he, Logan, and Crowe had heard them that hot
summer night they had been quietly fishing on the
bank of Sweetrock Lake, in the densely covered
forest outside of town.
He didn’t want to remember that night. He’d
spent too many years trying to forget it. But the facts
were that the Callahans had been ostracized far
sooner than that year. They’d been ostracized
decades before that, and there had been no
explanation why.
There had only been that barely disguised
distrust and wariness, as well the thinly veiled dislike.
There had been days Rafer had existed in such a
state of rage during his teenage years that even his
Uncle Clyde had been wary of him. Hell, even his
cousins had steered a wide path around him in those
days. He reminded himself that he hadn’t allowed their
opinions to bother him since then though and he
wouldn’t allow them to matter now. Never again would
he allow such destructive fury to rise inside of him
because of such pettiness and never again would he
run from it.
But it would matter to Cami and he couldn’t even
blame her for it. There were times when he had been
able to view the situation logically. Had he believed a
man responsible for such heinous crimes, he then too
would have gone out of his way to make his life hell.
And even before the murders, the years he and
his cousins had endured the scorn of the citizens of
Corbin County, he’d understood, sort of, why they had
done so.
The barons of Corbin County were a powerful
force in not just the county, but also in the state of
Colorado. Their anger could have far-reaching
consequences.
No doubt Cami knew exactly what those
consequences could be. She had seen the many jobs
her sister had gone through and knew what Rafe had
only suspected, that Jaymi had lost those jobs
because of him.
She was a teacher; her job depended on the
goodwill of the other teachers, the school board, and
the parents. No parent in Sweetrock would want a
teacher instructing their children who was sleeping
with the man suspected of having murdered her sister
twelve years ago. A man suspected of conspiring with
his two cousins to rape, torture, and murder five other
young women between Sweetrock and Aspen,
Colorado, during that same time period as well.
Rafe had learned years before not to worry about
what the good people of Sweetrock might believe.
His mind was invariably set on shocking and scaring
any adult who dared to offend him. Hell, they didn’t
have to offend him. He was ready to shock, piss off,
or frighten any adult who found the courage to confront
him in any manner. The inheritance left to him by his
mother might have still been tied up in the court
system, but the interest from it was not. He was
financially secure enough that he didn’t need the
barons’ goodwill to survive. Hell, he didn’t even need
their ignorance of his existence to make it in Corbin
County. All he needed was the military check he
received and the considerable interest payment he
received each month. After that he could piss off or
nearly frighten anyone who attempted to foolishly
confront him.
And he didn’t care a bit to do so.
There were even times he had even gained a hint
of morbid satisfaction in doing so.
He couldn’t do it to Cami, though. It wasn’t her
fault the school board was filled with the high-minded,
panty-starched little prudes. The bastards had
seemed to actually enjoy each punishment they had
dealt out to him during the few years he had attended
the high school.
But he’d seen in the shamed, regretful gazes of a
few of them that they hadn’t agreed with it. He could
find no respect for them, but there was a part of him
that could understand it.
Thankfully, he’d managed to graduate early. By
the first semester of the final year he had had the
credits needed to bypass attendance for the rest of
the year.
The school board had been more than willing to
allow him to simply return home until the end of the
school year. What they hadn’t told him? Unless he
was in attendance a required number of days he
would lose that year and the credits he had
accumulated. Had it not been for the recruiting officer
who’d been shadowing Rafe during those last months
of high school, then he would have never managed to
graduate. He would have been forced to get a GED
rather than the diploma he had busted his ass for and
had suffered at the local high school to attain.
He’d been determined to have that diploma,
even if getting it had been hell. It had been a fight that
both he, and the soldier who had befriended him,
grew frustrated with.
But Rafe had learned why that soldier had been
there. Why he had befriended the three outcast
cousins and drawn them into the armed forces, and
away from Corbin County. Because he, too, was a
Callahan. Given up for adoption by his parents when
he was barely six months old, the only knowledge he
had of his birth family was what his adopted parents
had given him.
When he’d arrived in Corbin County, first during
Rafe’s final year of high school and again six months
before Jaymi had been killed, he had seen the hell his
nephews had endured. It had been on that trip to see
them that he had convinced them to join the Marines.
Rafe looked down at the woman in his arms and
felt that familiar dark anger from his youth rising inside
him. He knew that any moment she could bolt and run,
then she would be gone. And the thought of it
infuriated him.
He was too damned restless to sleep now. It was
one of the reasons he had been drinking himself into
a drunk when she showed up on his doorstep. So he
could sleep. So he could escape the restlessness
and the wary sense of foreboding that had haunted
most of his life. Well, at least that part of his life spent
in Corbin County. Twelve years in the Marines and
eight of those years spent as a sniper, and not once
had he felt that same dark foreboding mission. Step
his ass into Corbin County with the intent to stay,
though, and once again it became a near daily
companion.
Easing from the bed, he felt his heart clench at
her disappointed little murmur when his warmth eased
away from her. She shifted on the bed, searching for
him for a moment before settling back to sleep with
an unconscious little pout to her lips.
She would walk away, he warned himself again.
As easily as, perhaps more easily than, she had
walked into his life once again.
It was better that neither one of them grew used
to sleeping with the other. Better that he simply let her
go. If he could. He had a feeling that letting her go
again would be impossible.
Moving to the dresser on the other side of the
room, Rafe pulled on jeans and a heavy flannel shirt
before sliding his feet into a pair of comfortable
sneakers. He collected one of the slim, fragrant cigars
he preferred, a lighter, and moved to the balcony
doors.
Slipping quietly onto the balcony and easing the
door closed Rafe let the night settle around him.
The acrid, spicy sweet taste mixed with the
smoke had the immediate effect of easing the worse
of the tension that had begun to fill him.
This wasn’t the same warning, or foreboding as
his recruiting officer had called it, that had served
Rafe so well in the Marines. This was something he
had only felt when heading into the most dangerous of
the missions he’d undertaken. This wasn’t just a
foreboding, it was a straight-up fucking warning.
From the moment Cami’s firm little knock had
sounded on his door, those inner sirens had begun
going off. And now, staring into the night, he
wondered at the sense of danger he could feel edging