Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
voice, pitched low and filled with danger that had a
chill racing up Cami’s spine.
There were rumors he, along with Rafe and
Crowe, had trained as snipers in the Marines. That
they were three of the military’s sharpest, coldest
killers.
She could believe it. The lives they had lived
hadn’t exactly been easy in Corbin County. That dark
bitterness could have easily transferred into a rage
that would see Rafe going after more than one target.
“Let’s go,” Rafe said, his voice carefully low. “I
want to give Crowe time to meet the agent from our
security company in Aspen to pick up some
equipment we need.”
“And I want to make damned sure if she slips into
the house that I’m there to greet her.” There was
nothing welcoming in Crowe’s voice as he turned and
began leading the way to the SUV they had driven to
the ruined garage in.
“This is getting out of hand,” Cami protested as
the fear still crawled through her system like a
potentially killing virus. “What are they hoping to
accomplish? Why do you and your cousins’ presence
threaten them to the extent that they would go to these
lengths?”
“We remind them of the past,” Crowe stated
quietly. “And of a loss they don’t want to accept.”
“And you accept that?” she asked, more
surprised than she would have thought she would be.
“That’s not a good enough reason, Crowe, and it’s
gone far enough.”
“Evidently it hasn’t gone far enough,” Rafe
answered her, his voice cool. “They’re still pushing,
Cami, and I have no intentions of leaving this county
again. They’ll find out fast enough, they can’t run us off
now any more than they could do it twelve years ago.
The Callahans are home to stay.”
CHAPTER 22
Cami stood at the wide bay window of the breakfast
nook just off the kitchen and stared into the backyard
that night, her arms crossed over her breasts, her
fingers curved over the balls of her shoulders.
And she waited.
Darkness had finally rolled in. That pure pitch
dark that only came when winter was putting up its
final battle before acceding to the coming spring
warmth.
The back porch light was turned off. The house
lights were out and Rafe, Logan, and Crowe were
sitting at the breakfast table, their voices low, barely
discernible amid the static pouring from the AM radio
sitting in the center of the table.
Static, Rafe had explained, would cover their
voices if they had somehow missed the bug that
might have been placed within the house. Or not.
Either way, he explained, it was insurance.
Her lips thinned. Insurance. Insurance against
their conversation being overheard as they discussed
the past and the possible reason why?
Why did the Corbins, the Raffertys, and the
Robertses want the Callahans out of town so
desperately?
Why did the citizens of Corbin County follow
three families who had turned on their own
grandchildren? Even more important, at the time they
were the only grandchildren those families had.
Clyde Ramsey, Rafe’s uncle, had taken all three
boys in. He had called each of them his boy and
would stand in any man’s face, or woman’s for that
matter, red faced, his gray eyes bulging, his heavy
nose twitching, as he defended each of “his boys”
against the dictates of crazy old men—Saul Rafferty
and James Corbin—who thought they had to attack
children for the fact that their daughters had had
minds of their own and hearts of their own.
Clyde had been known to say often that he hadn’t
approved of his sister’s choice of husband, but by
God, his wife’s parents hadn’t cared much for him
either. But they sure as damned hell, he’d claimed
several times, had not disowned their beautiful little
baby girl.
Saul and Tandy Rafferty, Logan’s grandparents,
had doted on Logan, as long as his mother, Mina, had
been alive. When she had died, Logan’s
grandparents had joined the Corbins in attempting to
take the inheritance that went to Logan on her death,
just as the Corbins attempted to do with Crowe and
Dale and Laura Ramsey had done with Rafe.
It just didn’t seem reason enough, though.
“Clyde knew something,” Rafe murmured. “He
called before the accident, but I was on an operation
and didn’t get back in time to return his call. At the
time, I didn’t think a lot of it, but it was rare for Clyde to
try to get hold of me while I was out of the country.”
Because he knew what Rafe did, Cami
suspected, and knew it would do very little good to try
to get hold of him.
“He could have called one of us,” Crowe
reminded Rafe.
“He didn’t trust us enough to tell us what was
going on,” Logan sighed, the words barely
decipherable above the noise of the generated static.
“Hell, he wouldn’t even allow us to stay at the
house when he wasn’t there.” Rafe’s voice held a
thread of amusement.
Cami could see both Logan’s and Crowe’s
expressions as well as Rafe’s. They all thought Clyde
hadn’t trusted them.
“Perhaps he thought we were going to steal the
silver,” Crowe stated with an irritable breath.
How three supposedly smart men could have
such tunnel vision she wasn’t certain.
“Maybe he didn’t want any of you hurt.” Cami
turned away from the window, keeping her arms in
place as she watched the three men in exasperation.
“Did Clyde ever say he didn’t trust you?”
The three men looked back at her, their
expressions knowing and suspicious.
“He said blood would tell,” Rafe stated somberly.
“He obviously simply didn’t trust Callahans.”
Yet these three men had cared for Rafe’s uncle,
and even more, they’d respected him. But they were
so wrong about Clyde.
“And you’re certain he was talking about you?”
she asked. “Or was he talking about the Corbins,
Robertses, and Raffertys? Three families who have
been known, for generations, to strike out in violence
if needed. Perhaps he was more worried about his
‘boys’ than he was about his silver?”
“And you come up with this how?” Rafe sat back
in the chair, arched his brow inquisitively, and stared
back at her, his eyes so deep, such a dark blue, she
wondered if she could drown in them.
But the question held her attention. She knew the
answer to it, despite the doubt she saw in his eyes.
“Because the year my mother was the assistant
principal when you were in the eighth grade, Rafer,
just before she retired for medical reasons, Clyde
Ramsey had occasion to pay her a visit, and during
that visit he informed her quite frankly, and quite
furiously, that there wasn’t a single one of his ‘boys’
that would steal so much as a drink of water if they
were dying of thirst.”
Rafe’s gaze narrowed on her.
“You remember that, don’t you?” she asked him
softly, careful to keep her voice low, just as she had
from the first word she spoke.
“The principal, Todd Collingsworth, had accused
us of stealing brass from the science lab to sell,” Rafe
remembered, his expression thoughtful.
“I don’t think Clyde ever believed you’d steal. I
think he didn’t want you there alone, because it was
so far from town and anyone could have struck out at
you with no one knowing. But at the town socials, if
you stayed there, or later if you went camping on
those weekends he was out of town, then you were
much safer.”
The three of them watched her. The doubt she
had seen earlier was still there, but there was also the
knowledge that it was possible she was right. They
were considering her argument; that was what
mattered.
“Anything’s possible,” Rafe finally admitted. “It
doesn’t change the fact that he never told us of any of
those battles and there were only a few of the fights
we were aware that he had with the Corbins.”
The fights with the Corbins had been bad, but the
ones he’d had with his father and mother, Rafe’s
grandparents, had been particularly brutal several
times.
“Did you hear of the arguments he had with Dale
and Laura Ramsey?” she asked.
She didn’t call them Rafe’s grandparents. The
disrespect to Clyde and to Rafe was more than she
could bear.
“Let’s say, we caught wind of them,” Rafe sighed.
“Just as we noticed that neither of them were at the
funeral when he died.” Rafe’s voice hardened as his
eyes looked like chips of ice for just a second. “Clyde
never told us about them, though, and he never
admitted to them.”
Of course he couldn’t admit to them, Cami
thought. If the stories her uncle had told over the years
had been true, and Eddy wasn’t prone to lie, then
Clyde had nearly attempted murder the first time his
father and mother showed up in court against Rafe to
claim the inheritance Dale’s daughter had left to her
son.
“He did it to protect you. Jaymi told me of several
times Clyde came to the high school after she began
there as a substitute. The principal was known to run
and hide when his truck was seen pulling into the
parking area.”
Jaymi had always believed Clyde Ramsey had
loved each of his “boys” and had done his best by
them. Cami had always argued that he could have
done so much more.
“None of this answers the question on the table,
though,” Logan pointed out. “Why were you warned
away from Rafe, then attacked when you didn’t obey
the demand carefully enough? And why was Jack
Townsend’s place just blown to hell and back this
morning?”
“Are we sure it began here?” she asked them all.
“Jaymi was receiving the same phone calls. Maybe
we’ve been wrong all these years. Maybe she wasn’t
a random choice by a crazed serial killer. The FBI
said there were two men committing those crimes,
not just one. Maybe Jaymi was targeted for other
reasons? Because she refused to do as she was
told.”
“Why would anyone care to kill the women we
sleep with, Cami?” Crowe asked incredulously. “Why
give a fuck? There are no heiresses left in Corbin
County with the exception of William Corbin’s
daughter, and she’s rarely in Corbin County, let alone
around any of us.”
At that point, Cami’s hands fell from her
shoulders to allow her to rake her fingers through her