Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
Moving through the crowd was Clyde Ramsey,
Rafe’s uncle on his mother’s side. A hard scowl
covered Clyde’s face as he strode the distance in a
bowlegged walk that bespoke his years on the little
ranch he owned between Sweetrock and Aspen,
Colorado, well away from the family his sister had
married into.
Clyde had raised Rafe and his cousins when no
one else would have them. Would he disown them
now as well?
“Well, let’s go,” he growled as he stopped in front
of them. “I have cattle to feed and horse stalls to
clean. I don’t have time to waste.”
He’d come for them. When everyone else stood
glaring at them, as usual, Clyde was there to protect
them in his own gruff way.
“I have to make a stop first,” Rafe said quietly.
Clyde’s scowl deepened as he blew out a hard
breath. “Course you do,” he harrumphed. “Let’s get it
done so we can get home and figure this one out.” He
shook his graying head. “Saving the three of you is
turning into a mission in life, Rafe. And I’m an old
man. Find a way to fix this.”
He didn’t give them time to answer. He turned on
his heel and strode to his truck, expecting them to
follow.
“Go on; we’ll be behind you,” Ryan told him. “And
hurry with that stop you have to make. We have a long
day ahead of us if we’re going to figure this out, as
you say.”
They had more than a hard day ahead of them,
Rafe thought. There would also be a hard life because
he, Logan and Crowe would be back. He knew his
cousins, he knew himself, and he knew there wasn’t a
chance in hell he was going to let the barons get rid of
him this easy.
There wasn’t a doubt in his mind that the security
footage would be enough to prove their innocence.
They were never stupid, and they never let anyone
know their plans. They’d learned better than that as
young teenagers when they were accused of stealing
cars, cash, and a variety of other items.
No one, not even Clyde, had known they were
camping out at the lake that weekend. Most
weekends they spent alone at the ranch after the
ranch hands left, working on fences or equipment.
Killing Jaymi that close to their campsite was a
clear attempt to frame them. Rafe was beginning to
wonder if the murders the FBI had put down to a serial
killer weren’t an attempt to frame the Callahan
cousins instead.
“Here. The keys to the street and trail.” Logan
stepped in front of him as they neared the vehicles
parked on the other side of the town square. “You’re
going to check on Cami, aren’t you?”
He gave a brief nod.
“We’ll follow behind you. Listen to me, Rafe,” he
snarled as Rafe moved to shake his hand. “This town
is crazy right now, man, and you know it. Let me call
Jack and Tobias. They’ll come get her and make sure
someone takes care of her. You can’t protect her right
now. It’s going to take all we can do to protect
ourselves.”
And he was right. Too damned right.
“Give me a few minutes to make sure she’s in the
apartment,” Rafe told him. “If she’s not there, then
she’s at her parents’. I just want to be sure.”
After stopping behind the apartments long
enough to quickly change into the fresh jeans and Tshirt
his uncle had thought to bring him, Rafe headed
upstairs to Jaymi’s apartment.
He still had the key. She had never asked for it
back. Unlocking the door, he stepped inside before
closing it securely behind him and staring around
silently.
If he hadn’t known Jaymi was dead, then he
would have expected it the minute he entered the
apartment. Her presence had always been there
when she was alive.
It was gone now, replaced with the heavy weight
of grief that wrapped around him and seemed to
permeate the entire room.
He had hoped Cami would be at her parents’.
That was where he had expected her to be. He
damned sure didn’t expect her to be there alone. As
he stepped to the open bedroom door, he saw how
wrong he was. She was here alone, huddled in the
bed, exhaustion marking her sleeping face.
But at least she had her medicine and beside the
bed was a glass of chilled water. Someone had been
checking up on her at least.
Breathing out roughly, he sat on the side of the
bed and tucked her blanket around her shoulders
gently.
Instantly, feather-soft lashes lifted, and soft, blueringed
dove gray eyes filled with an overload of tears.
“Rafe.” Her breathing hitched as the tears
overflowed.
“Come here, Cami-girl.” He opened his arms to
her, his throat tightening as she threw herself against
his chest, the sobs tearing from her as he closed his
eyes and fought against his own pain.
“Go ahead and cry, sweetheart,” he whispered
gently as he laid his cheek against the top of her head
and ignored the trail of liquid warmth he felt ease from
his eyes. “Cry for both of us.”
He’d lost his best friend, and he was damned if
he knew how to handle it. He hadn’t been able to
protect her as he’d sworn to Tye he would do. He had
broken the only promise the man who had called him
brother had ever asked of him.
As he held Cami, rocked her, and felt the grief
that tore through her, he wondered why Jaymi had
thought to entrust him with her sister’s protection when
he’d just failed to protect Jaymi.
How could he even trust himself now to protect
this little waif who had managed to worm her way into
his heart?
He’d promised. He’d find a way to do it.
Jaymi couldn’t have known what she was asking.
She had no idea he and his cousins were signed to
go into the military. They’d all chosen the Marines.
And who did that leave to look after Cami?
“Oh my God!”
The frightened squeak had his head jerking
around to see Ella Flannigan, Cami’s father’s sisterin-
law as she stood poised just inside the doorway.
She looked like she was ready to run screaming.
“Rafer Callahan, you just scared the shit out of
me.” Her expression turned chastising rather than
terrified as she noticed the way her niece held on to
him as though he were a lifeline.
Compassion and sorrow filled her eyes.
“I promised Jaymi.” He swallowed tightly as
Cami’s sobs began to ease as exhaustion seemed to
tax her weakened body. “I promised to look after her.”
She blinked quickly before nodding. “I’ll be in the
living room with Eddy.”
Her husband hadn’t been here when Rafe
entered the apartment and he hadn’t heard anyone
come in. Ella looked as though she had just woken
up, so he sincerely doubted her husband was here.
But he would be here quickly enough considering their
small house was only blocks away.
He nodded, his hand stroking down the back of
Cami’s head as he felt her relaxing marginally.
She would be asleep in a minute, he thought. The
bronchitis medication was obviously keeping her
sedated enough to allow her to rest.
“I miss her, Rafe,” she whispered, her weary and
tear-thickened voice slicing across his heart.
“So do I, sweetheart,” he whispered. “Go to sleep
now. Get better for me, okay?”
He couldn’t leave while she was still ill, and the
second he and his cousins were cleared, he was out
of there. For a while.
“Don’t leave me, Rafe.” Misery filled her voice.
“Please, don’t you leave me, too.”
“I’ll be here, Cami,” he promised. “For as long as
possible, I’ll be here.”
He wouldn’t upset her more by telling her he
would have to leave soon.
It eased her enough to allow her to drift back into
sleep, though, and when he laid her back in the bed
and pulled the covers over her, he wiped his hand
down his face tiredly.
He wondered if he would ever sleep again. If
there was any way in the world to sleep at all after
Jaymi’s death.
Moving to the living room to face her aunt and the
smart-assed sarcasm her uncle Eddy had in
abundance, Rafe found himself unwilling to listen to
any further insults.
Mark and Eddy hadn’t been outside the jail when
they were released, despite the fact that he had more
than expected Mark Flannigan to cause a public
scene.
For once, Eddy Flannigan was quiet when Rafe
walked into the room.
Ella stood next to the kitchen, leaning against the
door frame while Eddy stood looking through the
large picture window.
“Jaymi’s lease is paid through the next three
months,” Ella said heavily. “Her father wants her to
stay away for a while. And her mother isn’t doing well.”
Eddy turned around, and he and his wife shared
a look that had Rafe’s gaze narrowing. “They don’t
want their own daughter now, after losing their eldest.”
Eddy’s expression was tight and hard as Ella’s
eyes filled with tears again.
“It’s a complicated situation, Rafe,” Ella finally
stated. “But we’ll take care of Cami the best we can.”
“Let me know if she needs anything,” he bit out
roughly. “I’ll take care of it.”
“She’s not your responsibility,” Eddy growled
then. “We will take care of her.”
“Let me know,” he repeated softly, watching as
Ella slowly nodded. “I have to leave now, but if you
don’t mind, after—” He swallowed, the movement tight
and mixed with fury and pain. “Once we’re cleared,
we have to leave.”
“Surprise,” Eddy grunted.
Rafe ignored him as his wife sliced a
disapproving look his way.
“We’ll take care of her, Rafe, and if she needs
anything we can’t provide, we’ll contact you,” Ella
promised.
It was far more than he had imagined he would
get from the two.
“Thank you, Ella.”
There was nothing more he could do, and no
other way to look after Cami as he’d promised her
sister he would do.
He left the apartment without saying anything
more, and as he closed the door behind him, he could
have sworn he heard Cami cry out his name.
Rather than turning back, he forced himself to
walk down the hall and down the steps to the lobby
before exiting the building at the back once again.
His cousins, two uncles, and the two military
police personnel were still waiting on him. Moving to
the motorbike, he kicked the ignition and hit the gas
the minute the motor throbbed to life. Tearing from the