Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
And Rafe couldn’t get the memory of it out of his
head. The sight of that smile, so filled with love as she
whispered Tye had come for her. It sent a chill up his
spine, even now. The sense that she had only been
waiting, always been watching for him to come for her
had swept over him.
Jaymi had made Rafe swear he would protect
Cami. She was sick, alone in Jaymi’s apartment,
according to Jaymi’s friend and neighbor. Cami cried
continually. She was begging for Jaymi, and Cami’s
aunt and uncle were considering having her
hospitalized due to the severity of the bronchitis.
Rafe could still hear Ryan screaming about a
vagrant who had been found with Crowe’s knife in his
side, his pants undone, and Jaymi’s blood on him.
Ryan was yelling furiously about taking his own
samples to a Denver lawyer and having them
analyzed. He was demanding the sheriff release his
nephews now, by God, before he sued the county for
an illegal arrest. “That fucking security tape is all you
dumb shits need,” he raged. “Now let them the hell out
now.”
Rafe shook his head.
He and his cousins knew Ryan Calvert was a
Callahan, but no one else had, until now. Their
grandparents had given Ryan up for adoption, when
they couldn’t afford to feed their children any longer,
long before Samuel, Benjamin, and David had really
been old enough to understand their baby brother was
gone. Rafe didn’t know the whole story; he’d only just
learned that the recruiter who had come to Sweetrock
was actually the youngest Callahan son. Ryan’s
search for his birth family had spanned more than ten
years. His commitment to his nephews only grew
stronger with the knowledge that his parents, as well
as his brothers, were gone.
When his brothers returned, it was learned the
child their parents had had so late in life, was dead, or
so they believed, and their ranch supposedly sold and
split between the Corbins, Raffertys, and Robertses.
Their entire lives had been torn apart and all anyone
cared about was convincing them to leave Corbin
County and accept the losses.
And now that Callahan son was back and raising
hell.
Ryan was screaming something about DNA,
vagrants, serial murders, and alibis, and Rafe was
wondering why he gave a damn.
Standing up, Rafe moved to the door, his hands
shoved in the pockets of his jeans, his gaze focused
on the night Jaymi died rather than at the stone wall
across from him.
How was Cami? He had promised Jaymi he
would look after her.
But how was he supposed to take care of her?
He’d promised, but he had signed up for the Marines
last week. He, Logan, and Crowe. They’d had enough
of Corbin County for a while, they’d decided. Like
their fathers before them, they thought the military
seemed the best option.
For the same reason, perhaps. Because they
were tired of the bullshit.
And it all went back to the three families who
ruled Corbin County like their own personal little
fiefdom.
Generations before, James Randal Callahan had
acquired eight hundred acres of prime ranch land
from the government as had his three partners James
Corbin the First, Andrew Roberts, and Jason Rafferty.
At the time, the four men had been the best of
friends as well as business partners. They had
acquired the land they needed, the cattle and the
horses, then they’d found wives.
They’d settled the land tucked between the rising
mountains and proceeded to build a dynasty. But
somewhere in those first years, something had
happened to change those friendships and the wealth
that first James Randal Callahan had brought with
him. While the others had thrived, the Callahan family
had slowly begun to wither away until Rafe’s
grandfather had nearly died of some lung infection.
Hospitalized, weak and fighting for his life, he
hadn’t even been aware that the world believed his
youngest son was dead. In fact, his wife, Eileen
Callahan had contacted acquaintances that she had
known were desperate for a child. She’d sold her
baby for the money needed to save the rest of her
family and the ranch that amounted to everything they
possessed.
Until the morning of their deaths, they had been
worth a fortune. For some reason, that morning they
had withdrawn every cent they had at the bank, and
accepted a paltry couple of hundred thousand for a
ranch that was worth three times as much in stock
alone.
That night, they had been racing toward
Colorado Springs along the curving mountain road
with its sheer drops and spectacular cliffs. Somehow,
JR Callahan, the great-great-grandson of James
Randal Callahan, had lost control of the truck and
plunged down one of those cliffs.
Their vehicle had exploded on impact with such
force that the explosion had been heard across the
mountains. It was the next day, though, before anyone
had seen the faint tendrils of smoke rising from the
canyon below.
And how strange that years later, their three sons
and the women they had married had died in the
same manner when their SUV had gone over a cliff as
they drove from Denver. The coincidence was simply
too great. The deaths too similar.
“Ryan’s stopped blasting their eardrums,” Logan
stated quietly as he and Crowe stood up from the cots
they had been sitting on.
When the metal doors at the other end of the cell
area opened, Gunnery Sgt. Ryan Callahan Calvert, of
the Boston, Massachusetts, Calverts, strode in,
followed by two military police personnel and the
lawyer he’d brought from Denver the day before.
Ryan was scowling. His strong, weathered face
was stone hard, his blue eyes like chips of ice, as he
followed the sheriff, Randal Tobias, to the cell Rafe
and his cousins had been confined in.
The fact that Ryan wasn’t happy was only
eclipsed by the fact that Sheriff Tobias was glaring at
the cousins with pure, vicious hatred.
“The little bastards fucking well better keep their
asses in the county.” He shoved the key in each cell
door, twisted it furiously, and slammed the iron doors
open. “Fuck up and I’ll put a bullet in your heads
myself.”
Rafe sneered. “Only if the barons give you
permission,” he drawled, using the mocking nickname
given to the patriarchs of the three families.
In the next second, Tobias buried his fist in
Rafe’s ribs, stealing Rafe’s breath for a second and
shoving him into the metal bars. Fury surged through
Rafe in the next instant, pounding through his veins
and throwing him forward after the sheriff, when
Logan, Crowe, and Ryan suddenly grabbed him.
“Let it go, son,” Ryan snarled in his ear. “You
should have kept your mouth shut or prepared for it.”
He was right. Rafe knew he was right. But still,
Rafe wanted to take the bastard apart with his bare
hands.
The sheriff sneered back at him.
Funny, Rafe thought distantly, the sheriff’s son,
Archer, seemed to have a streak of honor and had
been one of the few people in the county to come
forward and object to the treatment Rafe and his
cousins had suffered in the past few days. That was
one of the reasons Tobias was so furious now.
Having his son defend the three cousins couldn’t have
gone over well with the barons who told Tobias when
to breathe, when to fuck, and when to piss.
Rafe let his lip curl in the sheriff’s direction.
“That’s okay, sir,” Rafe drawled. “You’re right: I should
have been prepared. But I think the sheriff is very well
aware of the price he’s paying for the orders he
follows.”
He’d lost his son. Archer Tobias had stood in his
father’s face the day before and told the other man he
couldn’t believe they were related and that he prayed
stupidity wasn’t hereditary.
“You little fucker,” Tobias snarled. “You’ll be back.
When you do Archer will see you for the murdering
fuck you are.”
Rafe shook his head. “Naw, he’ll see you and the
barons for the manipulative monsters you are. That’s
too bad, too, because I think Archer is tired of
defending your eagerness to jump when they tell you
to jump.”
“Get him out of here, Calvert,” the sheriff ordered.
“Before I save the county the money to prosecute him
and shoot him myself.”
Two military police laid their hands purposely on
the butts of their weapons. The action didn’t go
unnoticed.
“Let’s go,” Ryan ordered. “You all have a meeting
with your lawyer, then you’re going to settle in
somewhere until we can take care of this.”
“I have to take care of something else,” Rafe
stated as they headed for the door.
“The hell you do,” Ryan growled as he followed
close behind Rafe. “Don’t argue with me, Rafe. Not
here.” Rafe waited until they were outside. Turning back
to his uncle, Rafe stared the other man in the eye,
determination tightening his body and burning through
his veins. “I promised Jaymi.” His fists clenched at the
thought of what he had to do. “I’ll meet you wherever
you need me to, but I have to take care of something
first.”
“And what the hell could be more important than
your freedom?” Ryan snarled as he gripped Rafe’s
arm and pulled him around again.
“A promise,” Rafe snapped as he jerked his arm
back. “And I don’t break my fucking promises.”
Cami was sick; Jack and Archer both had told
Rafe she was alone at Jaymi’s apartment, and she
hadn’t gotten her medicine. It was confiscated as
evidence when it was found outside the pharmacy,
and Rafe didn’t know if anyone had even cared to
check on her.
He’d never imagined his life could come to this.
At twenty, he thought he had the world by the tail, and
despite the problems he and his cousins had faced in
Corbin County, he’d believed it would all right itself in
the end.
He couldn’t have imagine this could happen, not
even in his worst nightmares.
That Jaymi could die in his arms. That he could
have been arrested for her murder when he’d done
everything he could to save her.
And as he stepped out into the bright summer
light to the sight of nearly two dozen of Sweetrock’s
residents glaring at him in accusation, he thought that
perhaps he should have expected it.