Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
her fist as she laughed back at him. The love between
them was apparent, though. It was actually so
apparent that the gossipmongers loved attempting to
cast suspicion on it.
“Come on in,” Cami invited, still confused at the
visit. “There’s fresh coffee and store bought cinnamon
rolls.”
Cami led the way into the kitchen after closing
and locking the door securely behind them.
She admitted she had become paranoid in the
past weeks. The phone calls might have stopped, but
that feeling of being watched had her wary. Perhaps
her caller had grown tired of calling and decided to
act.
She couldn’t tell if the caller knew about the last
night Rafe had been at the house or not. The
suspense was making her as nervous as hell, though.
“I thought it best to stop in and talk to you, versus
the phone,” Jack stated as she poured the coffee and
set cups in front of both Jack and his wife at the
kitchen table. “Some conversations you simply don’t
trust to normal channels of communication.”
The last comment had her tensing.
“Jack’s paranoid,” Jeannie admitted. “We’ve
received a few calls warning him about consorting
with Callahans.” She rolled her eyes. “I swear, you’d
think we were involved in political intrigue or
something. Or perhaps a return to the Middle Ages?
Tell me, Cami, are the Callahans traitors perhaps?
Did they steal national secrets? Attempt to
assassinate the president?”
Consorting with Callahans. “No,” Cami said
softly, her gaze meeting Jack’s. “But I’ve been getting
similar phone calls.”
Cami quickly related news of the calls she had
been receiving to Jack and watched the couple
exchange a worried look. She omitted the visit by
Marshal Roberts, but over the weeks she had been
surprised that no one else had mentioned it. Whoever
had seen Rafe’s grandfather here evidently wasn’t
telling anyone else.
“Hell.” Jack plowed his fingers through his dark
hair as he sat back in the chair slowly. “Did you tell the
sheriff?”
Cami shook her head.
“I’d suggest it,” Jack warned her. “I called Archer
first thing, not that we’ve been able to trace the calls;
they don’t last long enough. But at least I have a paper
trail if I have to cap someone’s ass for messing with
what’s mine.” He shot his wife a quick look, the
possessiveness and concern touching.
“The thing is,” he continued, “I was worried
enough I called Dad and Taggert. Dad acted so
damned strange that Jeannie and I went to Denver
over the weekend to talk to him. They had some very
interesting information. Some things I had forgotten
over the years and a few things I didn’t know about.”
As Jack continued talking, with Jeannie injecting
information where she remembered a few things,
Cami began remembering things she had forgotten
as a girl as well.
The Corbins’ attempts to take Crowe Mountain
just after Crowe’s parents’ deaths were well known.
What Cami hadn’t heard was the Corbins’ attempts to
destroy the Ramsey ranch after Clyde Ramsey,
Rafe’s uncle, had taken all three boys in.
Corbin hadn’t managed to destroy the property,
but he had managed to affect it financially for several
years.
Then there had been the acts of vandalism, cattle
missing or poisoned, equipment sabotaged, and
several pastures salted.
As the Corbins were targeting Crowe, Logan’s
grandparents, Saul and Tandy, had gone after
Logan’s inheritance: the two-story house in town that
was listed as one of the first houses built in the county,
as well as a cash inheritance that at the time had
come to more than a million dollars.
Crowe’s trust fund was larger, the inherited
account coming from the trust his mother had
inherited from her grandparents as well as the
property and cash her parents had added to it. She
had died only days after coming into the inheritance
and within hours of signing the will that made her only
son her beneficiary.
Then there were the bits of information that
seemed more sinister. The night the three couples
had been killed, the sheriff had closed the accident
site completely off. Only the coroner and a young
attorney Wayne Sorenson had been allowed onto the
site for hours.
Even Clyde Ramsey, Marshal Roberts’s brotherin-
law, had been barred from the site. In those earlymorning
hours he received a call from a ranch hand in
the area who suspected Clyde’s niece and her
husband had been in the accident along with the
Raffertys’ daughter and son-in-law, and in the
Corbins’ case, their daughter and son-in-law as well
as the newborn infant daughter—the only child her
parents had taken with them to Denver that day while
supposedly visiting friends.
It had been learned later that it hadn’t been
friends they were visiting. Rather, it had been a lawyer
and a well-known resort developer. The sons of JR
and Eileen Callahan, the first Callahans to have
considered turning their property into a resort, had
passed that dream on to their sons.
Nothing had been mentioned about the sons
passing the legacy on to their sons. Or why the
daughters of the barons who had married the
Callahan sons would have considered something
their families would have found so heinous.
The bodies had been burned beyond
recognition, and only DNA had confirmed the
identities of the dead. The coroner had quickly
identified the three couples and the infant before the
burials had been hastily arranged.
That was when the campaign to ostracize the
cousins began, Jack told Cami, though it had been
there even before the parents’ deaths. So much so
that the three couples were looking at selling Crowe
Mountain and the Rafferty house in town and
gathering together the inheritances of the three
women and buying a ranch farther west. There had
even been talk that Clyde Ramsey had discussed
selling his property as well and following them.
Kimberly Anna Corbin Callahan had been so
enraged with her parents and brother that she had
told several people that despite her brother’s affection
for her daughter, she would never allow any of them
around her. Anna was done with her parents as well
as the brother she had once idolized. She had even
had them removed as secondary beneficiaries on her
will. The papers had actually been signed with an
attorney in Denver that day. Clyde had been named
as that beneficiary barring any children Crowe or her
daughter might have had.
Her daughter hadn’t had a chance to see her first
birthday, let alone reach maturity and the chance to
conceive. She had barely been three months old at
her death.
Then there had been the confrontation at the
funerals. With only one funeral home, the three
couples had been there together. Shockingly, the
wives had been placed in another room and
separated from their husbands. At first. Until Clyde
had threatened to sue the funeral home, the director,
and the families involved. Then, when Crowe and
Logan had attempted to go in to attend their parents’
funerals, their way had been blocked by their
grandfathers and, in Crowe’s case, by his uncle as
well.
The entire county had attended those funerals
and had seen the families’ treatment of the cousins.
Most of the county worked the Corbin and Rafferty
ranches or in some other way benefited from their
business. They hadn’t been able to afford backing the
boys and hurting their own finances or positions.
The result had been the steady unearned
condemnation of an entire community toward three
young, grief-stricken boys.
Clyde Ramsey had done the best he could by
taking not just his own nephew in but also the others
and raising them himself. His own grief at losing his
treasured niece, and his inability to understand the
hatred directed at their children had nearly destroyed
him.
Clyde had suffered from the decision, though.
Ranch hands quit on him, accidents happened around
the ranch, and he was constantly warned to leave the
county. But stubbornness had been set in his bones
and he had refused to go, even as he advised the
boys to fight against them. That this was their parents’
home, they owned part of it, and they should never
forget that fact.
As Cami fixed more coffee, Jack broached
another subject she hadn’t expected.
“Did you know about the phone calls Jaymi got
before she was killed?” he asked gently.
Cami remained silent for long moments, finished
the coffee, then turned back with the pot to refill the
cups. She needed time to gather the strength to talk
about Jaymi. No one mentioned her anymore, and
Cami found it hurt more with each passing year.
She gave a brief nod as she sat down again. “I
was here when she got a few of them. They were
similar to the ones I’m receiving, except Jaymi figured
out who her caller was a few nights before Thomas
Jones—” She couldn’t say it. She had relived that part
of the past too much in the last few weeks the way it
was. “I know that voice, too though,” she said fiercely.
“I know it; I just haven’t been able to place it.”
She described the voice. The regret. The hint of
tears.Jack nodded. “I remember that though Jaymi
didn’t say anything about realizing who the caller was,
she left the social early that night, and she appeared
angry.”
“She was angry when she came back to the
apartment too.” Cami swallowed tightly. “When she
answered the call that night she went to the bedroom.
I’m not sure, but I think I heard her say something
about her knowing why her caller hated ‘him’ so bad.
Though I don’t know who the ‘him’ was, and she
wouldn’t tell me. I always suspected it was Rafe they
were discussing.”
Jack and Jeannie exchanged a frown, though
Cami didn’t see a sense of recognition in their gazes
either. When Jack turned back to her, he leaned forward
intently, his gaze somber. “Dad was managing the
garage then. But do you remember the accident
Jaymi had about a month before she was killed?”
Cami nodded warily. “She nearly went over one
of the mountain cliffs that day.”
It had terrified her, and Cami knew Jaymi had
been shaken by it. Her brakes had failed on one of