Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
was beginning to stare into.
There was a reason she had run from Rafe each
time they had spent the night together. Slipping from
his hotel room before he awoke and catching a ride to
the nearest airport or car rental.
She had run because sleeping with him had
opened something inside her that she hadn’t been
able to face. It had thrown her back into the past with
a suddenness that had left her crying for days. The
memories were going to destroy her. She could feel it
coming. They were right there, fighting to rush in and
destroy her control, and there wasn’t a lot of control
left some days. Some days the unnamed restless
pain that never seemed to dissipate seemed to grow.
To overtake that part of her with a hunger that
threatened to destroy her.
The first time she had seen him the summer she
had turned thirteen, she had sworn she had fallen in
love with the man her sister called her best friend,
Rafer Callahan. The man Cami had known
instinctively that her sister was sleeping with.
Cami had loved his name. She had loved his
fierce blue eyes, the laughter in them, the way he
walked with such cocky confidence, and the way he
had smiled at her.
For months she had haunted her sister’s
apartment, even though he had moved out. Cami had
watched for him, searched for him. He had never
been far from her mind on any given day.
She had promised herself she wouldn’t do this
again. Irritation and frustration were rising inside her
now. She had sworn she wouldn’t allow herself to ever
come this close to losing her soul as she had the last
time she and Rafer had been together. Yet here she
was doing just that. She was losing the control it took
to keep him at arm’s length and to control the
emotions that swirled inside her like a violent storm.
Turning, Cami moved back into the warmth of the
kitchen, watching as Rafe cleaned up the dishes from
the simple dinner of pork roast, red potatoes, gravy,
and rolls she had prepared from the supplies he had
on hand.
He’d watched her cook as though no one had
ever cooked for him. Silently, his sapphire gaze had
tracked every move she made, hunger gleaming in
his eyes.
“Coffee?” He looked at her expectantly, one
black brow arching quizzically.
He was too damned good-looking for her peace
of mind. Six feet, three inches, broad, muscular—if
there was an ounce of fat on his flesh, then she hadn’t
found it yet.
His thick, silky black hair fell around his face,
giving the savage features a sexy, sensuous cast that
immediately drew female eyes. It always looked a bit
mussed, as though a woman had just run her fingers
through it and enjoyed the soft, cool feel of it.
Dressed in jeans, sneakers and a flannel shirt,
the long sleeves rolled to his elbows, he looked like a
lazy tiger prowling his lair. Biding his time before he
took his mate.
She almost didn’t control the jerk of shock that hit
her at the thought. She wasn’t a mate; she wasn’t a
lover. This was where she invariably managed to get
herself in trouble when it came to Rafer.
Rafe,
she reminded herself. She was going to
have to begin calling him Rafe, or she would draw
more attention to herself than she wanted. Everyone
called him Rafe. No one ever called him Rafer except
her. And she just couldn’t seem to break the habit.
“Daydreaming or fantasizing, Cambria?” That
silky drawl, so wicked in its sensuality, had her gaze
jerking from his chest to his face.
“Excuse me?” She blinked back at him,
wondering if he could see into those fantasies and
daydreams.
He gave a light chuckle as he moved to the
coffeepot. “Have a seat; I’ll make the coffee.”
She stepped warily to the table, only just barely
controlling her flush of embarrassment at what had
taken place on that table the night before.
His head between her thighs, his tongue dancing
wickedly over and inside her pussy. His hands on her
breasts, her nipples. Her own hands there—
She clasped her hands in her lap tightly and
pressed her thighs together with a firm admonishment
that she was not going to get wet. She would not get
wet. She wasn’t wearing panties and she simply
couldn’t afford to have her juices gathering and
easing—
Her teeth clenched in anger at herself.
There it was. The slow, easy glide of her juices
from her vagina. At this rate, her jeans were going to
be wet and she didn’t have anything else to wear.
“You slept deep last night.” He spoke quietly as
he set the coffee in front of her. “I think we could have
had a bomb going off outside the bedroom and it
wouldn’t have shaken you.”
His smile was a slight quirk.
How long had it been since he had smiled?
Had he gotten over Jaymi’s death? Did he even
think of the death of his lover in his arms as anything
other than the event that had nearly destroyed his life?
“I need to make a few phone calls,” she said.
Rather than asking the questions raging through her,
she went for something more mundane, something
simple. She needed to get in touch with her aunt and
uncle and let them know she was safe. No doubt Aunt
Ella was beside herself, pacing the floors by now.
“Phones are down; cell-phone reception is lousy
at best,” he told her. “There’s a chance you’ll get a text
out if you stand on the balcony outside the bedroom.”
Her aunt and uncle were no doubt worried to
death.
“There was about a forty-minute lag time on mine
to Crowe,” he told her. “He’s in the cabin.” He nodded
toward the mountains rising behind the house.
Crowe Callahan’s cabin was so far up that
mountain that when the cousins had disappeared
after the judge released them twelve years before, it
had taken days for the sheriff to find them again when
he’d been forced to return their belongings.
She nodded. If she was lucky, her aunt and uncle
would at least know she was safe and warm until the
storm was over. She’d simply stated she was with a
friend. Would they suspect who that friend was, she
wondered? Perhaps not at first, but her aunt’s intuition
could be amazingly precise.
Sliding the cup of coffee across the table minutes
later, Rafe took the opposite chair and lounged back
in it lazily.
“So what’s your story?” he asked.
Her cup halfway to her lips, Cami looked up at
him slowly, knowing exactly what he was talking about
simply from the hint of underlying anger in his voice.
What would her excuse be for being at the Triple
R Ranch during a blizzard with Rafer Callahan? And
in his eyes she could see a demand for a reason why
she would need an excuse.
“The truth usually works.” She sighed. “The car
slid into a snowdrift and I had to stay here.”
“And where did you sleep?” The hard curve of his
lips didn’t even resemble a smile. “I need to know
what to say when the good folks of Sweetrock decide
to decimate me again because I slept with one of
their favorite daughters.”
“Like I tell the kids at school, don’t borrow trouble
and you won’t have as many problems,” she told him.
“If they ask, do what you’ve always done before and
shoot them that arrogant look before turning and
walking away. Change the way you act and you give
them more to talk about.”
And what the hell was
she
going to say? The
question was bound to come up. Any woman seen in
the company of a Callahan eventually faced the third
degree. Then, there was always the series of lectures,
and enough harassment that they’d walk away from
the Callahan simply out of frustration.
But it was rumored Rafe never really gave a
damn. If a lady left before he did, then
oh well,
was the
attitude he seemed to take. That was the impression
he had always given, but Cami remembered Jaymi’s
comment once that Tye had told her about the times
Rafer had often retreated within himself afterwards.
Tye had sworn that those rejections and opposition
were destroying Rafe. Cami couldn’t imagine that he
had endured them without serious internal scars.
“So, we’re on the sly here then.” He gave a slow
nod. “Did I give up my bed for you? Or was I my
normal cruel self and forced you to sleep on the
couch?”
“Don’t, Rafe.” Cami wrapped her hands around
the cup as she stared back at him directly. “Things
can’t be any different and you know it. What
happened to Jaymi changed everything.”
He snorted. “You were only thirteen then, Cami. I
had no thoughts at all of you, sexually. But later—” He
shook his head. “You want me until it’s all you can do
to sit still in that damned chair and you’ll still deny it,
won’t you?”
He leaned forward, pushing the cup slowly out of
his way as he braced his arms on the table and
glared back at her. “Tell me, Cami, when will it stop
mattering to you what the people think?”
“When my job no longer depends on it?” she
suggested, feeling his tension, his anger, licking at
her now. “When my parents don’t stare at my sister’s
picture with such grief and my mother isn’t sobbing
because she lost her daughter and the men she
believes killed her have gone unpunished.”
Her lips thinned as she breathed out roughly.
Cami’s hand jerked up, covered her lips.
God, she hadn’t wanted to say that; She hadn’t
wanted to hurt either of them with the truth he should
know by now couldn’t be avoided.
His eyes narrowed back at her as mockery filled
his expression. “Yeah, that was real dumb,” he
drawled. “We both know there’s no way the Callahan
cousins can defend themselves against what the
good people of Sweetrock think.” He gave a short
bark of laughter at the thought. “Or should I say, what
the barons tell them to think?”
Cami could only shake her head at the comment.
“You know how they are, Rafe. The barons, for
whatever reason, want the three of you out of
Sweetrock forever. You’ve had twelve years to try to
convince everyone differently and you haven’t even
made the attempt. You return home every so often,
stare down your nose at them, and pretend they don’t
matter. When you know that if you want to stay here,
then it does matter.”
“What matters, Cami? Their opinion?” Rafe