Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
Rafe rose from his chair, finished his coffee, then
moved to the sink and set the cup inside it.
“I’m not in love with her.” He turned back to his
cousin, confident he wasn’t in love, he couldn’t be in
love, he refused to feel anything as futile as love for
Cambria Flannigan. She’d run out on him one time
too many for him to allow himself to touch that
particular fairy tale.
“She’s just a fuck then?”
Rafe’s jaw tightened at the description, some
furious, unknown denial raging inside him, demanding
he voice the refusal. He held it inside, convincing
himself it was simply the too-explicit description his
cousin used that bothered him.
“Keep convincing yourself of that,” Logan stated
with a mocking smile as he collected his coat, boots,
and cold-weather paraphernalia and moved for the
living room entrance. “You keep convincing yourself,
I’ll keep reminding you, and maybe, when she helps
the fine folks of Corbin County decide to try to bury us
six feet under and then some, you won’t find that part
of your soul shattered.”
As he had before, Rafe wondered as he watched
his cousin move through the darkened living room and
into the hall that led to the downstairs guest room.
Rafe and Crowe had discussed their cousin often,
wondering what had happened the year Logan had
disappeared from contact completely during a
mission he’d been sent on.
Marine snipers were often sent to hotspots that
had them out of contact for months at a time. For a
year, Logan had been sent on a mission that neither
Crowe nor Rafe had been given any information on.
Only their uncle and commanding officer, Ryan
Calvert, had been aware of what was going on and
whether Logan was alive or dead.
When he had returned, he hadn’t been the same
man who had left. Logan had been so hard and so
cold that for a while Rafe had wondered if his cousin
had returned or only his ghost.
Giving his head a hard shake, Rafe checked the
locks, checked the lower part of the house, the
windows, the latches to the iron window covers, and
then moved back upstairs where he repeated the lock
check.
Satisfied the house was secure and the alarm
system operating fully, he moved back to the
bedroom and the woman sleeping in his bed.
She hadn’t moved other than to gather his pillow
closer beneath her as though searching for him.
No, she wasn’t searching for him, he told himself.
He couldn’t let himself think it or believe it. She was
going to walk out of his life the minute the roads were
open to afford her escape. And once she left, she
wouldn’t return unless she simply had no other choice,
as she had had no choice tonight.
Shedding his clothes, Rafe slid back into the
bed, eased his pillow away from her, then in surprise
felt her moving against him until she settled over his
chest once again.
Her head rested on his shoulder, her arm was
thrown over his abdomen, one slender, silky warm leg
tucked between his, she whispered a discontented
little sigh and nudged against him once again.
Pulling the blankets carefully around them, Rafe
wrapped his arms around her and held her snug
against him. Her next sigh was one of satisfaction, of
contentment.
What had he gotten himself into here? he
wondered, because holding her felt as natural as
breathing and just as imperative. But hell, every time
they had come together it had felt like finding home. In
his life, nothing had ever felt as warm or as natural as
her body against him or the warmth of her sinking into
him.
Would she try to leave without waking him if he
somehow managed to sleep deep enough to miss
her slipping from the bed? In all the years since his
training in the military, nothing had ever slipped by
him in his sleep as easily as Cami had slipped from
his bed that first night.
He’d awakened before she’d finished dressing
that morning. For a while he had watched her from
beneath his lashes as she hurried and dressed. And
he’d let her leave. He had refused to hold her to him
and he’d refused to confront her.
It wasn’t a mistake he would make again.
He stared down at her for long moments.
Hell, there was no way he could be certain that he
would even awaken this time. It had been three years
since the last time she had slipped out of the bed on
him. She’d almost been gone before he’d missed her
warmth.
Rafe hoped, in the past five years his senses had
grown sharper, stronger, and he would know when
and if she tried to do it again.
To be sure, he set that mental alarm he’d
developed. One hour. He’d check on her in one hour.
An hour in this kind of weather wouldn’t get her far;
he’d at least have a chance of catching up with her
before she froze to death.
And if she did try to leave?
Well then, he’d paddle her ass, before he fucked
it until she swore, until she knew, believed, and had
cemented in her head forever the idea that she would
never, ever, run from him again.
CHAPTER 6
It was overcast, bitterly freezing cold, and as white
outside as Cami was certain she had ever seen it.
Even dressed, she wrapped her arms around
herself, and a shiver still raced through her at the sight
of it. Jeans, wool socks, and fur-lined boots simply
weren’t enough covering for more than a few minutes
in weather such as what she was facing now.
Standing on Rafer’s porch and staring into the
heavy, dark clouds still bearing down as they swept
around the mountain, she couldn’t help but breathe out
roughly.
The blizzard was only waiting to hit with its
second round of downy snow to catch the unwary as
they foolishly left the warmth of their homes.
She’d listened to the weather after awakening
and watched the reports on the satellite before the
gathering clouds had completely obliterated the line of
sight between satellite and dish.
It may not have been snowing furiously at the
ranch at the moment, but it was hitting Aspen and
spitting on Sweetrock with a vengence.
And from the looks of it, it would be dumping on
the Rafe’s ranch once again as well.
Cami didn’t dare move from the porch. The drifts
were piled high around it, on it, and against it as
though there were simply no other place to store the
icy fluff.
For the first time in her life, she found the snow to
be an inconvenience and she was wishing it away
with everything inside her. The longer she stayed
here, the more likely destruction was apt to build
around her.
What had possessed her to ever take this much
longer route home? To ever risk something like this
happening?
Just to see if she could glimpse signs of life in
the Ramsey ranch house. To see if the rumors that
Clyde Ramsey’s nephew, Rafer Callahan, had
returned were true.
She hadn’t expected it to begin snowing. When it
had begun just after she made the turn from Aspen,
she had convinced herself it was nothing. It would
flurry awhile, then go away just as it had done several
times in the past weeks.
By the time her car had slid into an icy drift at the
mouth of his driveway she was certain fate was
laughing its ass off at her. This was what she got for
tempting it, for all those dark, lonely nights that she
had wished things were different and she was in his
arms rather than sleeping alone.
How silly she had been to have slipped away
from him the few nights they’d had together. She
should have just stayed with him while he was in and
gotten the hunger out of her system rather than
running. Leaving as she had, had left so many things
unanswered and incomplete. And it had left so many
desires still raging inside her, tempting her,
tormenting her—
She rubbed at the chill in her arms as a wave of
inner heat swept through her womb to settle in her
pussy and wrap around her clit.
She was growing wet again, but she was also
wishing, remembering—wishing things had been
different and remembering the fantasies, not so much
of sex or the wild, impossibly heated pleasure that
could flare between them. It was the dreams that
slipped into her mind once she slept that really tore at
her.
The dreams of his arms around her, his laughter
at her ear. The sound of his voice, low, deep, as he
just whispered her name. The sound of something
more—she pushed the thought away. It was those
thoughts, those dreams, that slipped up on her and
weakened her. That created moments like now. When
the nightmares slipped out as well and threatened the
fragile peace she had found.
She couldn’t have him and she knew it.
There was too much Rafe was unaware of, and
too much pain tearing at her to allow it.
Too much pain, fear, and the knowledge of what
would happen to her soul if she lost him to death. If
somehow, someone decided to try to harm him, and,
God forbid, succeeded.
And still she was torn in her needs and in her
anger. She fought not just herself and her own needs
but also his desires and the return of reality.
A reality that could destroy her and her own
needs.
This wasn’t a good thing. She couldn’t be stuck
here until the roads were cleared. Once her car was
found, then the first place state workers would search
for her was at the ranch. Her uncle Eddy Flannigan
worked on the state road crew. She couldn’t imagine
the worry, and possibly the fear that she was about to
repeat the past, if he found her there. Especially if he
realized where she had slept.
In Rafer Callahan’s bed and in his arms. Of
course he wouldn’t have to realize anything. He knew
her and he would know where she had slept.
She leaned against the support post and stared
at the ground where more than four feet of snow had
fallen, and the drifts against the house were even
higher. In places, they were at least five feet deep or
more. The news said to expect two or more feet as
well, coming that day or into the evening, and possibly
another six to twelve inches before dawn.
It was the blizzard that had threatened to roll
across the mountains all winter.
There wasn’t a chance of escaping the icy
sanctuary she had found or the emotional abyss she