Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
didn’t bring their own. The community center, also
facing the square, remained open the full weekend.
From Friday afternoon through Sunday evening
teenagers as well as young children joined the
weekend slumber parties.
If Rafe remembered correctly, the teenagers
brought their own sleeping bags or pillows, supplies
were donated for pizza making, chips and drinks
were brought by the sponsors and chaperones. In
holding the weekend events a place was provided to
keep the kids off the streets and entertained through
the summer months, keeping them from running wild.
It was a pretty cool little setup. And to give the
county credit, there hadn’t been a single time that he
and his cousins had been turned away when they
were younger. Despite the fact that Clyde Ramsey
used the weekend activity as a babysitter while he
went to Aspen for what he called his adult fun.
Never had the Callahans been turned away from
a weekend social or ostracized during one, unless it
was their peers ostracizing them. Which it usally was.
And that was enough for the cousins. As soon as
they were old enough, Rafe, Logan, and Crowe had
begun camping out on the weekends Clyde was
gone. He hadn’t totally trusted any of them.
Blood will
tell,
he was known to mutter as he locked up the
house and drove them into town. He didn’t want
anything stolen out of his house.
Not that the cousins had ever stolen a damned
thing in their lives. They hadn’t. And they hadn’t been
able to find a single time when anyone had been
certain their fathers had stolen anything. It was all
supposition and suspicion.
The cousins might not have been ostracized from
the socials as teenagers, but as adults it was another
story. Standing together in their dress blacks,
combed and polished, they were well aware of the
looks they were receiving and from which direction.
The citizens of the county who had been there
when the Callahan cousins were growing up watched
them suspiciously while the new residents, those who
had come in since, watched them curiously. And more
of the single women than not at least glanced their
way in appreciation.
There had been a time Rafe and his cousins
would have shown this county exactly how their fathers
had managed to catch and marry the boys’ mothers,
heiresses though they were. There were several
Corbin County moneyed daughters as well as a few
he recognized from the social pages from Denver,
Grand Junction, and Aspen. And if he wasn’t
mistaken— He allowed his lips quirk into a grin as
one of those moneyed daughters arched her brow in
invitation.
At any other time he would have taken her up on
the silent invitation, especially here, in front of every
bastard who had ever turned his nose up at a
Callahan.
But then Cami had happened.
He was damned if he would mess up a chance to
experience the pleasure he found in the sleek, hot
depths of the sweetest pussy he’d ever known. And
he knew beyond a shadow of a doubt, if he so much
as considered taking another woman to his bed, then
he would never so much as glimpse Cami’s bed
again. Rafe’s gaze slid to her once again, watched as
she stood talking to one of the other teachers at the
elementary school where she taught.
The bouncy little redhead was full of vivacious
laughter, and her gaze kept straying to him, then back
to Cami. As though she knew more than she had
seen the night before. More than Martin Eisner had
told.
Though, honestly, Eisner hadn’t told near as
much as Rafe had expected him to. For a damned
gossip, he’d been amazingly reticent so far.
“Tell me why we’re here again?” Logan muttered
behind Rafe, just loud enough to reach both his and
Crowe’s ears.
Logan wasn’t happy to be here either, evidently.
But, just as he had done when they were younger,
Crowe had all but forced them out of the house and
into town.
“Because we’re not hiding anymore,” Crowe
answered firmly, not bothering to lower his tone any
more than necessary. He wasn’t trying to keep
anyone from hearing him, but neither was he trying to
tell everyone around them either.
“I wasn’t aware we were hiding before,” Rafe
snorted. “Simply uninterested. I’m still not interested.”
And that was a lie of major proportions. The
more he watched Cami, the more interested he
became in the Sweetrock Saturday night social. He
could see where and why the event could come in
handy. At least he had a legitimate excuse for being
in the same vicinity she was in. If he had his way, he’d
have a hell of an excuse for holding her in his arms
and staking a silent, though very clear claim on the
woman he was considered his own. That sense of
possession was growing stronger by the day.
“Well, I am,” Crowe drawled. “If you two want to
leave, then find your own ride. Personally, I intend to
have a little fun.”
Rafe looked back at him wryly. “I knew riding in
with you was a bad decision.”
And it had been all Crowe’s idea. Hell, he should
have just brought the Harley, but the mountain air was
still colder than hell.
Crowe shrugged, the perfect fit of the black silk
evening jacket he wore barely shifting over the broad
width of his shoulders. “Sucks to be you boys, then
don’t it?”
His cousin was scanning the crowd again, as
though searching for someone. As though he knew
why he was there and who he was there to see.
Just why was Crowe so interested in being
there?
There had to be more to this than simply wanting
to force Corbin County to accept them. Because none
of them really gave a damn if Corbin County accepted
them or not. If they followed through with their plans,
then the county would have to accept them anyway.
Attending a damned social wasn’t going to make a
difference.
Rafe glanced over at Logan. He was staring
above them at the brightly strung lights in the newly
budding trees overhead.
The white- and peach-colored lights weren’t that
interesting. Rafe had always considered them rather
bland and boring himself. Peach wasn’t exactly his
favorite color.
“You boys are boring me,” Rafe muttered as he
lifted the glass of beer he had bought earlier and took
a hard drink of the warming liquid as he kept his eyes
on Cami.
It was a damned good thing he liked the taste of
beer, because it wasn’t at its best after it warmed.
“Well, by all means, don’t let us hold you back,”
Crowe grunted. “You’re not chained to us, you know.”
“Hmm.” He all but ignored his cousin as he
watched Cami lift her hand, her graceful fingers
pushing back a strand of gold-and-walnut-streaked
hair back from her cheek as a man,
another man
,
walked up to her, smiled, and handed her a flute of
champagne.
And she dared to smile at him?
Her lips curved with charm and graciousness,
and was she flirting with the bastard? Were her
lashes lowering over her eyes deliberately, giving that
son of a bitch a sleepy, sexy, take-me-to-bed look?
Rafe straightened slowly from where he’d been
leaning against the post of the pergola he and his
cousins were standing beneath.
This wasn’t going to happen.
He glared over at her, as though the force of his
look alone would send the son of a bitch running.
Cami’s admirer leaned closer and whispered
something in her ear as she leaned in to him.
Fucker! Whoever the hell he was, he was risking
his life.
Then, the other man’s hand reached up, his
fingers curling around her upper arm.
Another man was touching what was Rafe’s? He
could feel his jaw clenching.
Were those his teeth grinding?
He’d be damned if he would have this.
He set the empty beer glass down slowly,
unaware of even having finished the warming brew
before shoving his hands in the pockets of his slacks
and clenching his fists.
Mine!
“Did you say something, Rafe?” Crowe asked
behind him.
He didn’t say a damned thing. Not out loud at
least. Had he?
Then the man standing with her gestured to the
dance floor, where another slow song was beginning
to fill the night air.
It was an invitation, and it was an invitation that
just might get the bastard into more trouble than he
could have imagined.
“Ah fuck, don’t do it, Cami,” he muttered.
He practically felt the blood beginning to boil in
his veins as a surge of some impossibly possessive
urge tore through his senses.
He felt like an animal.
He wanted nothing more than to snarl in primal
rage that some son of a bitch thought he could claim,
for even a moment, what Rafe had already tried to
mark as his own.
Oh, if he hadn’t marked her yet, then he would.
Tonight.
Tonight, he’d show her exactly how he could
mark her. How he could take that collection of erotic
toys in her bedside drawer and turn her little world
inside out. She would be convinced he lived under her
skin when he was finished with her.
She would know who that lush, graceful little body
belonged to.
She would know exactly who claimed not just her
kisses and her juicy little pussy but also every fucking
dance she was willing to give away.
He took a step forward.
“Ah, Rafe, wait just a minute.” Logan caught
Rafe’s arm, bringing him to a stop only because of the
warning in his cousin’s voice. “Are you sure you want
to do this here?”
He turned to the other man slowly, his head
lowered, his gaze boring into his cousin’s with a fury
Logan didn’t know how to handle.
“Do what?” he asked between clenched teeth.
“Dance? Why, I’m quite certain I do.”
And he knew exactly who he intended to dance
with. Exactly who he intended to show this entire
fucking town belonged to him. Rafer Callahan wasn’t
just a kid they considered as from the wrong side of
the tracks. He wasn’t just the son of the bastard who
had stolen Ann Ramsey from the marriage pool and
impregnated her. Hell no, Rafe was also Cambria
Flannigan’s lover and before the night was over the
world would fucking know it whether she liked it or not.