Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
back at him curiously. “Then what do you want?”
“Did she tell you about the phone calls she was
getting?”
Had she told Eddy?
“The sheriff did,” Rafe
informed the other man. “Cami hadn’t mentioned the
full extent of it.”
Eddy’s shoulders sagged a little as he rubbed at
the back of his neck in irritation. “Likely he heard it
from the same place I did: Jack Townsend?”
Rafe nodded.
Eddy shook his head at the response or
whatever thought Rafe could see darkening his gaze.
“Her aunt just got off the phone with her father,”
Eddy told them then. “Normally, this ain’t no business
but Flannigans’, but I saw her face, and her daddy did
nothing to keep his voice low enough that it didn’t
carry on the phone.” He quickly went through the
conversation, ending with the final insult to Cami when
Mark had called her Callahan trash.
Rafe could feel the anger building inside him
now.
“What the hell happened to him?” he sighed.
“Mark Flannigan was a good man once.”
Eddy snorted at that. “No, my brother, unlike me,
likes to hide his faults and appear perfect in public.
Me, now this is what you have.” He held his arms out
to his sides as anger filled his voice. “You’re stuck
with me exactly how I am. Mark, he likes to have all
those pretty words said about him; he always did. And
don’t get me wrong; he loved Jaymi something fierce.
Her death killed a part of him, I think. But Mark was
never loving with Cami, Rafe. He was never a father
to her. He resented her birth and he resented every
time he had to balance buying for her with buying for
Jaymi. Every time Jaymi had to share something, or
couldn’t have something, he blamed Cami’s birth. The
day of Jaymi’s funeral he stated it was unfair that his
Jaymi was gone, that she had suffered. If one of them
had to die like that—” Eddy seemed to shudder as he
blinked back a sudden moisture in his eyes. “He said
it should have been Cami.” Eddy lifted his gaze as
Rafe fought to hide the horror that a father could ever
say or do anything so atrocious. “And she overheard
him.” He cleared his throat uncomfortably. “Like I said,
this should stay Flannigan business.” He glared at
Rafe as though it were his fault the story was coming
out. “But that girl has enough on her shoulders right
now; hearing her daddy call her trash wasn’t
something she needed. One of these days, she’s
going to accept to her soul that she doesn’t have a
daddy, and when she does, if you’re there—” He
broke off as though uncomfortable.
“There’s no if about it,” Rafe assured him. “I’ll be
there, and I’ll take care of her.”
Eddy nodded sharply.
“Tell me something, Eddy. All these years you’ve
poked and prodded and sliced at us with that smartassed
mouth of yours, and not even for a minute did
you believe we hurt Jaymi. Why did you do it?”
“Who says I didn’t?” Eddy frowned, his gaze
fierce and confrontational as he stared back at them.
“Because you would have never told me any of
that if you thought for a moment one of us hurt her
sister,” Rafe snarled back at, Eddy, his voice low but
the fury raging in it loud and clear.
“And I would have never treated you any different
even if your names hadn’t come up in her death.”
Eddy was in Rafe’s face, glaring, his entire demeanor
one of defensive anger. “You were arrogant little shits
as kids who slapped away every helping hand
extended to you. You only slap my hand once,
Callahan. And count yourself lucky, because of that
girl in there.” Eddy’s finger stabbed toward the
hospital room door. “Because of that girl, you’re
getting another chance. See if you can be
appreciative this time.”
The man had lost his mind. “When did you ever
extend a hand to any of us?” Rafe bit out in disbelief.
“You stood with the rest of this county every damned
time they wanted to accuse us of something.”
“And you made it so damned easy, didn’t you?”
Eddy settled back on his heels with a tough, mocking
smile. Like a banty rooster standing in challenge. “You
little shits. You were ten.” He looked at Rafe. “Twelve.”
His gaze met Logan’s. “And thirteen.” He inclined his
head to Crowe. “And that damned chip on your
shoulder was bigger than each of you were. I offered
you a ride to school one morning.” He stared at Rafe
expectantly, his look withering.
It was Crowe who nodded slowly. “It was snowing
and damned cold,” he murmured, his golden-brown
eyes sharp, intent. “You were driving that beat-up old
four-wheel drive of your brother’s.”
And Rafe remembered it then.
“You saw me, not Mark,” Eddy growled, his gaze
suddenly brooding rather than confrontational.
Crowe shook his head. “I saw Mark Flannigan,
and I saw the day before as he came around that
curve you drove around that morning. He came
around it so fast that if Logan hadn’t jumped for the
ditch he would have run him over. And he didn’t even
stop to make sure he was okay.”
“That was the winter after our parents died,”
Logan said quietly. “I don’t remember much of that
year. Except that lawyer Rafe’s uncle got us to keep
the Raffertys and the Corbins from stealing the
inheritances our mothers left us.”
For a second, abject regret filled Eddy’s eyes.
Remorse and shame flashed in his gaze before he
hurriedly jerked his eyes away. When he turned back,
it was with a sense of resignation and acceptance,
though the remorse was still a heavy presence in his
expression.
Eddy backed down. “Hell, I’m who I am,” he
stated, obviously making the connection that what he
had seen as childish arrogance had been lingering
shock and grief. “An asshole on a good day, but I’m
not stupid.” He turned to Rafe. “Jaymi and Cami both
have defended you, against everything and everyone.
When you were arrested for Jaymi’s murder, Cami
just about went crazy. She swore every day you didn’t
do it. She would sit up at night forming arguments for
your lawyer, she said.” He shook his head and sighed
heavily. “God help me if I’m wrong.” He turned his
head, his gaze tormented now. “But that’s mine and
Ella’s girl. We’ve done what we can to teach her to be
smart, and to know her own mind. And she’s damned
certain you’re a good man. And I’m damned certain I
know every crime you’ve been accused of you weren’t
anywhere around when it happened, except Jaymi’s
death. And she wasn’t the only innocent young woman
that died that summer.”
It didn’t make up for the years of the man’s
confrontational insults and jeering attitude. But one
thing Rafe could say in Eddy’s defense: he was one
of the few who hadn’t called the cousins rapists and
murderers to their faces, or behind their backs as far
as Rafe knew.
Eddy was mocking, snide, sarcastic, and those
were his good days, but he wasn’t cruel, and he had
never gone out of his way to be mocking, snide, and
sarcastic either. It was simply what you found when
you found Eddy.
The sound of the door opening drew all their
attention, and Rafe had to force back a growl of fury at
the timid, cautious pace of each step and the proof
that the blows to Cami’s body hadn’t been made as a
warning. The attack had been meant to be deadly.
“Get a wheelchair!” he snapped to Logan,
turning, only to see Crowe jerking one from the
nurses’ station and wheeling it to her.
“Sit, baby.” It was an order, cloaked in silk, she
thought as she hid a smile and sat down gingerly in
the chair.
The bruise on her hip from stumbling on the stairs
was actually the worst of the it. Well, except for the
bruise the doctor said her skull might have.
It wasn’t so bruised that she wasn’t well aware of
the fact that Rafe was in command mode.
Which was really rather amusing. Why bother to
hide it now with that dark, husky male tenderness? It
was like throwing a tablecloth over the elephant in the
living room, she thought, struggling not to grin.
“I see that grin tugging at your lips,” he told her as
he moved behind her and leaned close, his lips at her
ear. “What’s so funny?”
She wasn’t touching that one with a ten-foot pole.
“So much for saving you from any more trouble,”
she sighed instead. “I was hoping to avoid this for
you, Rafe.”
“Trying to protect me, were you?” he asked as he
knelt beside the chair, reached up, and brushed her
hair back from her cheek.
Cami was tempted to close her eyes at the
stroke of pleasure against her flesh, the warmth and
calloused rasp of his fingertips against her skin.
“Maybe I was trying to protect us both.”
“Cami, I’ll be at the house this evening with your
prescriptions and to check you out.” Ella moved from
the room, her voice brisk and no-nonsense, her
expression fierce as she moved in front of Cami.
Ella was all but glaring at Rafe as he came to his
feet. “I
will
be keeping a check on her, Rafe Callahan.”
Cami watched her aunt in confusion. She had
never known her aunt and uncle to be so protective.
Well, perhaps that wasn’t particularly true. Since her
parents’ move to Aspen four years ago, Cami’s aunt
and uncle had seemed to take more of an interest by
the month in her.
“I understand, Aunt Ella,” she promised.
Ella’s gaze flicked to Rafe. “You take care of her,
or you’ll deal with me and Eddy, young man.”
“Yes, ma’am.” He nodded. “We should go now.
I’d like to get her home and get her settled in.”
Ella leaned down, hugged her gently. “Call me if
you need me,” she whispered.
“I will. I promise.”
As Ella moved back, Cami’s uncle took her
place. He touched the side of her gently, a facsimile
of his normal firm grip, and kissed the top of her head.
“I’ll be by with Ella,” he promised. “Just let me know if
you need me.”
“I’m going to be fine. You two act like I’m going
away forever or something,” she chided them both
softly. They invited her to dinner, to the movies, to their
Sunday drives when they were both off work together.
And it was something Cami realized she sometimes
forgot.
She wasn’t totally alone; she never had been.
She had always had Eddy and Ella.
But they weren’t her parents; they had their own
family. Cami always felt on the outside looking in, and