Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
Though all his victims hadn’t had lovers.
And only Jaymi’s pillow hadn’t had a ribbon tied
around it.
There had been nothing that the FBI or local law
enforcement could find to tie the women together or to
explain why he had chosen the women he chose to kill
twelve years before.
“We definitely have a problem,” Archer admitted.
“More so than you know. Did she tell you about the
phone calls she’s been getting? The ones threatening
her if she’s sleeping with you?”
He was going to paddle her ass. As God was his
witness, he was going to paddle that creamy little ass
until it glowed. “She told me. I thought Marshal
Roberts was fucking with her. He used to do that. All
three of the barons used to do that, Archer.”
They would call suspected friends, lovers,
associates, and threaten them anonymously.
Archer cursed under his breath. “Jack Townsend
contacted me this morning as soon as he heard what
happened. He talked to her yesterday. She told him
she was getting phone calls similar to those her sister
received before she was killed. Calls warning her to
stay away from you or she would regret it.”
Rafe looked over at Archer slowly, mechanically.
“Jaymi didn’t mention phone calls to me before she
died. Cami was the only one who mentioned them.”
“To no one else either except Jack apparently.”
Archer grimaced. “I checked. If Jack hadn’t told me
about it this morning, then I wouldn’t have known.
Evidently, though, Cami’s been getting them for a
while now. At least since she was snowbound at the
ranch with you. The calls have been warning her to
stay away from you, and the caller is threatening to
hurt her and you if she doesn’t keep you out of her
bed. The same phone calls Jaymi was getting before
she was killed.”
Murder raged through Rafe’s mind.
He couldn’t accept that Jaymi had been in
danger simply because she had been sleeping with
him months before the serial killer Thomas Jones
targeted her.
“I hadn’t seen Jaymi for nearly two days before
Jones killed her,” Rafe stated. “We’d talked on the
phone a few times, but that was all.”
And she hadn’t seemed the least bit worried or
concerned.
“And you and your cousin had no connection to
the other women,” Archer asked as Rafe lied with the
short shake of his head. “But here’s a connection
between Jaymi’s and Cami’s attacks. Those phone
calls.” There was another woman who shared a
connection to one of the Callahan cousins. One of the
victims from twelve years back whom neither Archer
nor any other law enforcement official was aware of.
Turning back to watch the road in front of them,
Rafe remained silent.
Six women had died twelve years before. Each
one had had a yellow ribbon tied around one of her
pillows, except Jaymi. And Thomas Jones had raped,
tortured, and stabbed each one of them to death
during that bloody, horrendous summer that had
nearly destroyed Rafe’s and his cousins’ lives.
For Jaymi, he, Logan, and Crowe had almost
been there in time. They had almost heard her
screams soon enough from their fishing spot to go
racing for her.
Almost.
It didn’t count when it came to a knife and a
young woman’s lifeblood.
Jaymi had taken her last breath in Rafe’s arms,
and hours later he and his cousins had been sitting in
a jail cell. They had been arrested for her and five
others’ murders.
He would not allow that to happen to Cami now
that he knew she was a target of what had to be a
copycat killer. Someone determined to frame the
Callahan cousins.
“She’ll be safe,” Rafe promised Archer. And he
would make certain of it. Him, Logan, and Crowe.
“Did you dust the house for prints?”
“Personally,” Archer told him. “I wasn’t trusting
that to anyone else. I also called the FBI, Rafe. If
Thomas had a partner, as the profile suggested
twelve years ago, then he’s getting in the game again,
and I want help on this.”
Rafe didn’t care who Archer called in as long as
Cami was protected. The more the merrier as far as
her safety was concerned.
“Look, Rafe, you know how this county is,” Archer
began after a long moment’s silence.
“Yeah, everyone and his brother is going to be
looking at us, believing the Callahan cousins did it.
Because after all, there was no crime before we
returned,” Rafe sneered.
He knew exactly how it worked.
“You’re being targeted, Rafe,” Archer snapped
back at him. “The calls were a warning over you, and
the attack was for the same reason, I believe. This
isn’t something we can keep under our hats while we
search for him. And it’s damned sure not because of
whatever the hell you did in the military. This goes
straight back to twelve years before.”
“I’m a fucking Marine, Archer; what the hell do
you think I did?” he snarled. “For God’s sake, would
you just pick up some speed here so I can get to her?
Sometime this year would be exceptionally nice. You
can question me later.”
If he didn’t get there soon, if he didn’t see for
himself that Cami was safe and breathing on her own,
then he was going to end up losing his sanity.
Rage was like an animal inside him, twisting and
clawing in its desperation for freedom.
He shouldn’t have left her, he thought again. He
should have heeded that warning itch at his back as
he drove back to the ranch. The urge to turn back and
slip into her house and into her bed had been nearly
overwhelming.
He’d not ignore it again. Never again would he
ignore that instinctive voice and blame it on his lust
rather than that kernel of knowledge that something
wasn’t just right. That his instincts had picked up
something his conscious mind had missed.
Better yet, she was coming to the ranch, where
he could make certain she was protected, ensure that
no one ever got to her again, ever harmed her again.
“You were just a Marine, huh?” Archer snorted as
Rafe flicked him a brooding look. “You know, Rafe, for
‘just a Marine’ your records are all but inaccessible.”
“And why would you want them to be accessible,
Archer?” he asked smoothly.
“Let’s say there was a time or two the mayor was
curious about your whereabouts,” Archer sighed. “I
checked and all I could get was that you were a
Marine. After that, forget it.”
The mayor was curious, his ass. Most likely,
there was another crime they’d wanted to pin on
Crowe and his cousins and they wanted to be certain
where the cousins were.
“And you can forget it now,” Rafe assured the
sheriff as he gripped the armrest of the door and all
but tore it off in frustration. “Can’t you drive any
faster?”
Rafe could have driven these mountain roads
faster with a blindfold for a handicap.
“Rafe, I’m going to tell you now, you, Logan, and
Crowe stay out of this,” Archer warned him as they
neared the city limits and the hospital where Cami
had been taken. “Take care of Cami and let me
handle the rest.”
Yeah, that was what Archer’s father, Randal, had
warned them of twelve years before, as the sheriff,
when the first girl had been found in Corbin County at
the base of Crowe Mountain.
Rafe, Logan, and Crowe had just so happened to
have been in Denver with Ryan Calvert that week
meeting several recruiting officers and staying on the
military base there with Ryan’s family. If they hadn’t
been, they would have been arrested then and they
would have never been able to clear themselves.
Archer wasn’t stupid, though. The Callahan
cousins weren’t little more than boys anymore. They
were adult men, military trained, and they didn’t take
orders worth shit from civilians.
It was one of their best traits, Crowe liked to say.
But even more, they knew how to protect
themselves.
“Do you hear me, Rafe?” Archer snapped.
Rafe turned his head and stared back at Archer
as determination flowed through him.
The determination to kill whoever had dared to
touch Cami. Whoever had dared to bruise her,
frighten her, or target her because of who her lover
was.
Whoever did this would pay for it.
The bastard was a dead man walking; the
Callahan cousins would see to it.
CHAPTER 16
Cami listened from her hospital bed, dry-eyed,
resigned, to the sound of her father’s high, shrill voice
on the other end of her aunt’s phone.
She’d warned Ella, Eddy’s wife, not to call. Cami
had warned Ella that Mark could be nasty and that
since moving to Aspen he had rarely wanted to speak
to his daughter, let alone see her. Unless he needed
her for some reason, as he had the month before, to
help get her mother settled in the nursing home.
That, or to pay her mother’s bills.
She stared up at the pristine white ceiling and
wondered why that searing pain was no longer there.
Once, it had broken her heart that he hadn’t cared,
that he refused to allow her mother to care.
But perhaps, even more painful was the fact that
her mother would opt to medicate rather than stand up
for the child who needed her.
“I’ll not have that damned Callahan trash dirtying
my home or endangering her mother. Poor Jaymi,
she’d be turning over in her grave to know the sister
she thought so much of was still fucking the man that
raped and murdered her.”
Cami flinched.
There was such hatred, such bitterness in his
voice. Did he truly hate her so desperately for not
being the child that died? For surviving when his
favorite hadn’t?
Parents weren’t supposed to acknowledge
favorites. If they preferred one child over the other, it
was supposed to be a carefully hidden secret.
Mark had no remorse at all showing his
preference for the child that died, and his belief that
the wrong child had died. That he believed Cami
didn’t deserve to live when Jaymi had been taken
away from him.
“Mark, you’re a bastard,” Ella snapped at that
point. “How Margaret ever managed to stay with you
all these years I don’t know.”
She flipped the phone closed.
Cami didn’t lift her head; she couldn’t. If she had
to look at the pity in her aunt’s gaze then she might not
be able to bear it.