Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
“He always was a fool, Cami-girl.”
Her head did lift then. Eddy stood a few feet from
the bed, his gaze gentle. She’d rarely seen Eddy with
that expression. That was his funeral face and his
new-baby face. And now, it was his feel-sorry-for-
Cami face.
“Rafer didn’t hurt Jaymi,” Cami said, feeling
numb, wooden. “He wouldn’t have called her and
warned her against himself. Just like the calls I’m
getting.”
Eddy sighed heavily as he shoved his large,
scarred, and beaten hands into his pant pockets.
“Well, a man gets suspicious and he gets paranoid,”
he said. “I’m not going to say he did do it anymore.
But I won’t say he didn’t. You’re our girl, Cam. Nothin’
ain’t gonna change that and nothin’ ain’t gonna make
us stop worryin’ ’bout you. Especially now.” Somber
and filled with brusque emotion, Eddy sniffed
uncomfortably before glancing away from her.
“A benefit of a doubt then?” she asked wearily.
He nodded slowly. “For you, girl. I know you. I
know you’re damned smart, and you’re a damned
good girl. That’s how Jaymi raised you but I ain’t
never called you a fool. And I never called Jaymi one.
And she always defended those Callahan boys. I’m
not going to turn on my second-best girl just because
no one else wants to agree with her.”
His second-best girl. She glanced to her aunt,
dressed in her nursing scrubs, her expression somber
but her gaze loving as she watched her husband. Ella
was his best girl, he always said, and bemoaned
often the fact that she hadn’t been able to conceive
the daughter he wanted. A baby girl who looked just
like his best girl.
Cami swallowed tightly. If she wasn’t careful, she
was going to end up crying. No, she wouldn’t just cry,
she would be sobbing, and she couldn’t afford to sob.
She hated crying. It pissed her off and made her eyes
sore. And her head was sore enough. She felt
overwhelmed by Eddy and Ella’s anger at Mark, and
the way they glanced at her, their sorrow for her
aching inside them. She couldn’t seem to make them
understand that it really didn’t matter anymore. She
was used to her father’s disregard, as well as his
judgmental hatred where her past with Rafer was
concerned.
She had actually needed him when she had lost
her child. Him and her mother, but that had been
years before. She had learned a long time ago not to
let it hurt, not to let it bother her. That was just the way
it was.
“It’s okay, Uncle Eddy,” she assured him, trying to
smile, but her head just hurt too bad to attempt it.
At least her face wasn’t too bruised. Thankfully,
the bastard hadn’t managed to hit her but once in the
face. He’d split her lip, turned one side of her face a
lovely shade of blue and red. No, the majority of the
damage had been the bruises caused by those heavy
fists at the side of the head and the concussion the
doctor had diagnosed.
Her temple was so tender that any tug at the skin
there sent pulses of pain radiating through her head.
“It’s not okay.” He shook his head. “But there’s no
changing him anyway.”
“Has he ever been a father to you?” Ella asked
knowing he hadn’t been, as she turned away to
secure the blood she had taken earlier in the small
tote she carried.
Cami really didn’t want to talk about this now, and
she definitely didn’t want to deal with it. She just
shrugged.
“Cami knows he never was.”
Cami’s head jerked up, a whimper almost
escaping as the movement sent a lance of agony
twisting through her skull.
Rafe moved around her uncle, his leanly
muscled, long-legged stride covering the distance
until he was standing beside her, his fingers beneath
her chin to lift her face.
She didn’t fight him. She didn’t have the strength.
She just stared up at him, miserably aware of what he
was seeing.
Her makeup was smeared, the right side of her
head swollen, her face darkened with the bruise, and
her lip split. She looked like she boxed for a living.
“School board contacted Archer as we drove into
the hospital parking lot,” Rafe told her. “Until this is
resolved, and your attacker caught, you’re on a
medical leave of absence.”
In other words, they didn’t want the gossip or the
small chance of danger that came with her attack.
She understood the concern, somewhat. But she
hadn’t been attacked at school. She knew her
students, though; they were curious and full of
questions at even the busiest time of the school day.
Right now, she didn’t need the questions or the
knowledge that the answers would be spread among
the general public.
It was the right decision for her, at this time. It just
sucked to have the decision made for her.
“She needs to rest,” her aunt Ella spoke up then,
her tone confrontational as she glared from Rafe to
her niece. “And she’s refusing to stay here.”
Rafe slid his fingers back, allowing Cami to turn
her gaze from his, thankfully. She swore she was
staring death in the eye. There was such latent
violence swirling in his gaze that she had to suppress
a shiver.
“I’ll be fine, Aunt Ella,” she assured her.
“You’re not going home by yourself,” Cami’s
uncle protested, though this time he had that tone
normally reserved for his son.
“I’ll be fine.” She had no other place to run to, and
she wasn’t going to her aunt and uncle’s. Cami loved
them, but the thought of living with them terrified her.
“I’ll take care of her.” Rafe’s tone brooked no
refusal, and as she slid him a quick look beneath her
lashes she realized she was hesitating to argue back
as well.
The tension that rose in the room was
unmistakable.
“I said I’ll be fine—,” she began to protest again.
“Like you were this time?” Rafe growled.
“Because you were too damned stubborn and
ashamed to let anyone know what was going on.”
“Ashamed? Me?” She stared back at him in
surprise. “I’m not ashamed, Rafe. I’m practical.
Something you don’t seem to be. And I did tell you.”
“Really? You didn’t adequately explain” he
argued sardonically as he crossed his arms over his
chest and stared down at her with irritating arrogance.
“Practical is hiding the fact you’re getting threatening
phone calls until someone actually tried to rape and
murder you in your own home. Right?”
She winced before glancing quickly at her aunt
and uncle. Cami swore Eddy paled before he
swallowed tightly to regain his equilibrium.
“That was uncalled for.”
“It was the truth. Now, you can stay here, in this
nice, sterile little room, or you can stop arguing with
me and I’ll take you home. Those are your choices.
Now pick one before I pick it for you.”
She so did not like being ordered around like
this. If it weren’t for the headache, as well as the
exhaustion, she would have argued with him.
“I want to sleep in my own bed.”
There was no way she was going to be able to
sleep in a hospital bed. She loved her aunt Ella, but
each time Cami had dozed off Ella had been there for
blood or some other nursing reason.
Rafe gave a sharp nod of his head.
“She shouldn’t be leaving, Rafe,” Ella spoke up
then. “The doctor wants her to remain until tomorrow
morning for observation. A concussion is nothing to
mess with, and he suspects she may have some
cranial bruising.”
“Don’t listen to her,” Cami told him mutinously.
“She gets paranoid.”
Ella rolled her eyes before turning back to Rafe.
“Are you paying attention to me, Rafer Callahan?”
Rafe’s brows arched as Cami glanced at him,
though he seemed more amused than angry.
“Yes, ma’am, I am,” he assured her. “In this case,
you may have to settle for a Marine medic, though.”
Ella propped one hand on her lush hip and stared
back at him, suspicious. “You’re a medic?”
“No, ma’am, but I have one.” He grinned back at
her. He had no intentions of telling them who the
medic was or that Logan had had training that could
have gotten him a job in any hospital as a physician’s
assistant.
“You two just are not going to listen to reason, are
you?” Ella finally griped.
“Maybe it’s a good thing, Ella,” Eddy spoke up. “I
just want her safe. And this is a public hospital. If her
attacker’s determined, he’ll not have too hard a time
getting to her.”
Cami could see what he wasn’t saying, though.
What if they were wrong and Rafe and his cousins
had been the ones to have killed Jaymi and, as many
believed, framed Thomas Jones?
It was in Ella’s and Eddy’s eyes and in their
voices each time they spoke and in their gazes as
they shared one of those speaking looks that only true
soul mates shared.
Eddy was rough talking, loud, and confrontational
whenever his petite wife wasn’t around. But once she
was there, he went from growling lion to tame little
house cat.
“Are you ready to go?” Rafe asked then. “Logan
and Crowe are waiting in the hall for us.”
Cami lifted her gaze to her aunt.
“Callahan, I wanna talk to you first. You and I can
walk out in the hall while Ella helps her finish getting
ready and gets her signed out.” Her uncle wasn’t
growling, but he wasn’t exactly the tame pussycat
either. Rafe stared across Cami’s head at the older
man, seeing more than simply the command in his
gaze. Eddy Flannigan was pissed off, but he wasn’t
pissed off with Cami or even with Rafe this time.
Rafe gave a sharp nod before bending his head,
his lips pressing the top of Cami’s head. “Be good,”
he warned her. “Don’t try to run on me.”
“Rafe, if I had to run for my life right now then I
think I’d probably have to just go ahead and die.”
He doubted that. According to the doctor Rafe
had talked to, she had put up one hell of a fight.
“I’ll be right outside then.” He let his fingertips
caress down her back before he moved away and
returned to the hall, the normally verbally abusive,
smart-assed Eddy following behind him.
As the door closed behind them, Eddy held up
his hand quickly as both Logan and Crowe
straightened from their positions on each side of the
door and glared at him fiercely.
“I’m not interested in fighting you boys, yet,” he
warned them.
Rafer crossed his arms over his chest and stared