Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
command now. “You’ll shut up or I can make sure you
lose this nice cushy job of yours.” It was that edge of
worry that had suspicion rising inside him.
“Too late to shut him up, Arch,” Eddy came back
quietly. “Martin and I will discuss it later, though.”
Martin’s mocking laughter came back. “Your
asshole mayor didn’t hire me, Archer, and neither did
you. Neither one of you can fire me either.”
“I guess you were right, Crowe.” Rafe turned to
his cousin, anger churning hard and deep inside him.
“Selling out is the last fucking thing we need to do.
They can just live with us.”
He caught Cami’s look of surprise, as well as the
worry that edged it. His lips twisted sardonically.
Yeah, if he stayed around, that just upped the chances
that everyone might figure out she’d been doing the
nasty with him, wouldn’t it?
Fuck her.
Was she
ashamed to admit that she allowed him to touch her?
Of course she was. He’d suspected it before and now
he was convinced of it.
He glared down at her. “Don’t worry, Cami. No
one will suspect for a second that we spent the
weekend fucking like minks, and I’ll damned well
make sure of it. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to
try to attempt to make sure they don’t destroy the
fucking place while they’re trying to rescue you.”
Cami stared up at him, her lips thinning. She
knew the same thing he, Logan, and Crowe knew now
just as well Sherriff Tobias and Eddy Flannigan knew.
Obviously one of the barons had hired Eisner.
Cami shook her head slowly. “Martin’s James
Corbin’s second cousin,” she said quietly as the radio
seemed to go quiet.
“Well now, doesn’t that just figure. Guess
Grandpop is making sure he has his eyes and ears
where he needs them,” Crowe drawled mockingly.
“Martin is a pain in Archer’s ass,” she said softly.
“Ignore it. Archer will take care of it.”
Rafe gave a hard laugh. “Do you think he’s going
to destroy my property and get away with it?”
“Archer won’t let him get away with,” Cami
argued.
“You’re asking me to let it go?” he asked her
coolly.
“Eisner isn’t worth going after, Rafe,” she told him
firmly as she propped her hands on her hips in
determination.
“Why?” he asked her again. “Afraid you’ll have to
testify?”
“I’m not afraid of anything,” she assured him
tightly, but he knew better. He could see the concern
in her eyes, in her expression.
Pushing away from her, he stalked to the door,
slamming out of the house and moving to the porch as
he watched the plow slowly making its way up the
lane.
Pulling one of the slim cigars from the pocket of
his shirt, Rafe dug the lighter out of his jeans pocket
and lit up before leaning casually against the porch
post.
That was just fine, he thought as one of the plows
took out another length of the new fence and barely
missed taking out the corner of the old shed that
housed Clyde Ramsey’s pride and joy, his shiny darkgreen
tractor and all its attachments, still covered and
looking all but new. No doubt that was the plow
Deputy Eisner was operating.
Rafe could see the other man, in the glassenclosed
cab seconds later as he used the plow to
carelessly push the snow from the driveway. It wasn’t
easy going for Eddy. The heavy, wet snow had the
motor straining as Eddy pushed it harder than he
should have, evidently simply intent on checking on
his niece and getting out of there. Eisner, though, he
was making it count. Amused mockery filled the
deputy’s face as another fence post met the force of
the edge of the plow.
Rafe glanced to Eddy Flannigan again and
watched as the older man shook his head and ran his
hand over his face at the next post Eisner tore out.
Fury tightened Eddy’s expression as he shook his
head angrily a second later.
Looking up, Eddy caught Rafe watching, grinned,
and shot him the finger. That was Eddy Flannigan.
Bastard.
Rafe was considerate, he returned the gesture.
Then a frown creased the man’s face as Rafe
heard the door open, then close behind him. All eyes
were watching now. Her uncle’s, Eisner’s, and Sheriff
Archer Tobias’. And Rafe knew why.
Cami.
He could feel her, smell the sweet, clean scent of
her.
Rafe didn’t move other than to lift the cigar to his
lips and inhale slowly as he grinned back at the other
man.
Eddy wasn’t a Callahan fan, but neither was he
an enemy. At least he didn’t poke his nose in their
business. At least he hadn’t before now. And he sure
as hell wouldn’t be once Rafe filed his lawsuit. His
lawyer would be contacting the town soon, Rafe
promised himself, because that fence was too far
from the center of the lane for it to have been an
accident.
“I’m so sorry,” Cami whispered behind him. “I’m
so very sorry, Rafe.”
And she was. He could hear it in her voice, in the
low, husky tone of regret, and the echo of sadness.
“Sorry’s not going to replace my fence.” He
shrugged as though he really didn’t care about the
fucking fence, and he didn’t, it was the intent behind it
that pissed him off. “Why don’t you just get on out
there and let her uncle and boyfriend know you’re safe
so that crew can get the hell off my land before they
finish destroying it?”
“My boyfriend?” Outrage filled her voice. “Just to
start with, Rafer Callahan, I do not do boys. And
second of which, there’s no one here that I’m seeing.”
“And you haven’t been going out with Archer?”
He finally threw the accusation at her, amazed he had
held it in this long.
Her eyes narrowed back at him, the soft gray of
her eyes beginning to flicker in anger.
“Archer and I are friends, Rafe—”
“So were Jaymi and I,” he reminded her harshly.
“Or did you forget that?”
“Oh, trust me, I’m reminded of it often.” The
bitterness that flashed in her eyes surprised him.
“What do you mean by that?” he growled, careful
to keep his tone of voice low, his demeanor
controlled.
“Exactly what I said.” She wasn’t nearly as careful
about her demeanor. She was all but straight up in his
face. The only thing that kept her from going nose to
nose with him was the fact that she was half-pint-sized
and not nearly tall enough. “Every time I turn around,
every time I hear your name, I’m reminded in detail
exactly how close you were.”
It wasn’t anger glittering in her gaze, it was pain.
A sense of loss, and if he wasn’t mistaken, guilt.
“Why would it matter, Cami?” he questioned her
roughly. “You knew Jaymi and I were sleeping
together at the time. I never lied to you.”
She wanted to turn away from him, she wanted to
rage at him, but she was far too aware of the fact that
her uncle, Archer Tobias, and his deputy were still
working their way to the driveway.
“At least Jaymi was honest enough to have her
relationship in public,” he continued as she glared up
at him, her fists clenching at her sides.
“What the hell are you talking about? Are you
trying to accuse me of something, Rafer?” she
questioned through gritted teeth.
“Why, yes, kitten, I guess that’s exactly what I’m
doing,” he informed her bitterly. “At least Jaymi wasn’t
ashamed of me. And she sure as hell wasn’t
ashamed of being my lover.”
“You think I’m ashamed of you?” He could see
the anger now, it was glittering in her eyes, flushing
her cheeks. “You think I’m not agreeing to your
demands because of shame?”
“What other reason could you have?” he
demanded. “Come on, Cami, you acted as though we
barely knew each other at Clyde’s funeral and you cut
me off three years ago. What else could it have been
if not shame?”
“Oh, I don’t know, perhaps it could have been the
fact that there are other things I’m not willing to deal
with besides whether or not anyone knows what the
hell I’m doing?”
“Oh, yeah. What?” he snarled, feeling the anger
and the lust suddenly rising, pounding through his
veins, engorging his dick and burning through his
veins.She was almost shaking now. “Fuck you, Rafer!”
His lips twisted with mocking anger. “Go home,
Cami. I have better things to do than deal with your
shame or your fear.”
“My anger or fear.” She stepped closer. “Just let
me show you my shame and fear.”
Rafe didn’t think he had ever been as surprised
by a woman as he was by Cami in that moment. She
was against him in a second, on her tiptoes, the
fingers of one hand fisted in his hair as she pulled his
head down, bringing his lips to hers.
In that second, he lost the anger, the accusations,
and his common sense.
Rafe jerked her against him, his lips slanting over
hers as he pulled her against him and poured every
ounce of the hunger and need burning inside him, into
her impulsive kiss. He took control of it. He stole it,
and fought to bind whatever part of her that he could
to him, whether it be shame, lust, or fear.
His tongue stroked against her lips, pushed
forward and caressed her tongue, fought with it, and
drew the hunger from whatever depths she pushed it
to whenever she needed to hide it.
No, this wasn’t shame, but he was damned if he
knew what it was, or what she was trying to prove. He
knew something raged inside her, something dark
and angry that the pleasure he gave her seemed to
tempt, even as pleasure seemed to burn through
those emotions.
When he pulled back, releasing her slowly, he
watched as her eyes fluttered open, and her gaze
seemed rife with regret and a pain that went so deep
he froze in shock.
“Cami-girl?” he whispered. Sweet Lord, who put
that agony inside her?
“It’s not shame, Rafer.” She stepped away slowly.
“But that doesn’t mean it’s anyone else’s business
either.”
Turning, she moved quickly away from him and
all but ran to where Archer’s black, official SUV finally
pulled into the small parking area close to the
snowmobiles Logan and Crowe had driven earlier.
She jumped into the vehicle, slammed the door,
then turned her head, obviously avoiding looking at
him now. As though she had pulled a cloak of ice
around her emotions, one that went clear to the core,