Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
have slipped out later. While he showered. Perhaps
while he met with Logan and Crowe at the lawyer’s
office. There was no way to hold Cami if she didn’t
want to be held, and Rafe knew it.
And she was simply too damned scared of what
had happened between them not to run.
Blowing out a hard breath, he looked around the
hotel room, then finally focused on the incriminating
stain on the sheets.
Cami had been a virgin.
His throat tightened at the proof of her innocence,
at the knowledge that he had been the first to touch
her so intimately. That he had been first to possess
the liquid heat and fist-tight depths of her pussy.
The first to hear her cries of completion.
Instantly, furiously, his dick was spike hard, the
head throbbing in renewed hunger. Perhaps it was a
good thing she had slipped out so early, because
fucking her into complete screaming submission had
been all he could have thought of. Logan and Crowe
would have had to drag him from the room.
All these years, along with his cousins, he had
fought to hold on to what was his. Not just the property
their parents had left to them but also the cash that
had been frozen in their accounts since the day the
Callahan brothers and their wives had been killed.
Fourteen years. He and his cousins had been
fighting for their inheritance for twelve years and there
were times he swore it was a battle that wouldn’t be
won until the Corbins, Robertses, and Raffertys were
dead.But, as imperative as this appointment was, as
crucial to their case as it was, still, he didn’t know if he
could have forced himself away from Cami long
enough to have made it on time. She did something
to his brain. He couldn’t help it. She managed to get
under his skin and made it damned impossible to
think of anything but touching her once she had stood
up from that table and he’d seen all the hunger filling
her eyes.
He’d fought it. God knew, he’d been fighting it at
least for the past three years. Each time he’d seen
her since she had turned eighteen, once a year, it had
ended in a kiss. A kiss that had nearly flamed out of
control last year. She was like this fire he couldn’t
resist because when he was with her, he found the
cold that usually encased him becoming heated and
warm.Admitting to it now was a moot point. It was there
like a fire in the night, like a temptation no man could
be expected to resist. That was Cami. His own
personal temptation. The one woman he couldn’t turn
away from no matter how hard he tried.
Rafe was being driven insane by the need to
have her again already. She hadn’t been gone five
minutes and the need throbbing through his body was
like a vicious hunger, impossible to deny.
Pushing his fingers through his hair, Rafe blew
out a hard breath before heading toward the shower.
He had things to do. Things that didn’t include
pacing the floors because Cami had slipped out of
his bed.
And it sure as hell didn’t include chasing after
her, no matter how desperately he wanted to.
Two months later
Fate conspired against her. It laughed at her. The
playful bitch did its best to destroy her, Cami thought
as she stared out the window of the apartment her
sister had once lived in. The one Cami now lived in
herself.
She couldn’t seem to stop crying, sobbing
actually. It had been two months, eight weeks to the
day since she had run into Rafe while in Denver for
educational training. It was the third year they had run
into each other and shared a night of passion.
Her palm was pressed flat against her abdomen,
the realization of the emptiness that existed there
tearing through her again as her breathing hitched
and she cried with all the rage and lost hope that filled
her.
She was aware of her aunt in the kitchen behind
her. Ella had brought Cami from the hospital that
morning and had stayed with her throughout the day.
She had listened to Cami’s sobs silently, and a few
times she thought she had caught her aunt crying as
well.
Cami’s mother wasn’t here.
Margaret Flannigan hadn’t come to the hospital.
She hadn’t called or come to the apartment. Cami’s
father had answered the phone when she had called,
though.
“Your mother’s busy,” he’d informed her when
she asked to speak with Margaret.
“Please, Dad,” Cami remembered whispering
tearfully. “Please let her know I need to talk to her.”
“So you can cry over losing that little bastard he
gave you?” Cami’s father had rasped furiously. “Your
sister is turning over in her grave, Cami. Your
mother’s heart is broken. How could you allow the
monster that stole your sister from us to touch you?
Are you so desperate to take everything your sister
had that you have to take the lover that killed her? The
child she couldn’t have? Maybe we’ll all get lucky and
he’ll kill you next rather than some innocent, helpless
girl.”
Then he’d hung up on her.
Cami had listened numbly to the dial tone in her
ear for long moments before placing the phone back
in its cradle slowly.
At least, for a while, he had made her stop crying.
Shock had driven every emotion she could have felt
so deep inside her that it had taken hours for her to
make sense of what he had said, what he had meant.
“Cami.” Ella stepped to the window seat as Cami
continued to stare onto the street below. “Come to the
house, baby. Eddy’s beside himself worrying about
you, and I don’t want to leave you here alone.”
“I’ll be fine,” she said.
She was lying. She would never be fine again. As
long as she lived, she would never be fine again.
She had lost her baby. The baby she and Rafer
had created the night they had come together two
months before.
It hadn’t been a blizzard. She told herself it had
been a coincidence, nothing more. Just as she told
herself every year and managed to convince herself of
it. There was no way he could have known where she
would be and when. There was no way he could have
been heading to the airport on the same day, at the
same time, to the same city, every year. It couldn’t be
coincidence; that was simply stretching the
explanation further than she could believe.
But what else could it be?
The only other explanation was more than she
could imagine. That it was by design.
“Are you going to call him, Cami?” Ella asked
gently.
Cami shook her head, sobbing again as she
turned her head from her aunt.
Cami ached. Inside, out. To the depths of her
soul, to the last particle of her spirit, she ached until
she wondered if it were possible to die of it.
“He would want to know.”
Ella eased down beside her niece, her heart
breaking for the girl. It was all Ella could do to hold
back her own tears. To keep from sobbing with Cami.
God, how could her mother leave her alone now?
How could Margaret have left this precious, beautiful
child to fend for herself against the cruelties her father
waged against her?
Did Margaret even know the many, many times
Mark had separated them? Had her sister-in-law even
realized, in the Valium haze she existed within, that
her daughter was being tormented by the man who
had sworn to protect her?
“Cami,” Ella whispered as she laid her hand on
the girl’s knee. “You don’t have to go through this
alone. He would want to know.”
She shook her head again.
“Why?”
Cami turned back to her, the gray of her eyes like
storm clouds, swirling with pain, with anger and
desperation. “Hasn’t he had enough taken from him?”
she asked painfully. “I can’t tell him, Ella. I can’t do that
to him.”
No matter how much she needed him.
“Don’t tell him.” Cami suddenly gripped Ella’s
arm, as though she knew the thoughts that hadn’t yet
fully formed in her mind. “Please, Aunt Ella. Don’t do
that to me. Don’t let me be someone else that’s hurt
him. Please.” The last was a sob as more tears fell
from her eyes, joining those that already had soaked
her face.
Ella nodded hesitantly. She didn’t like it. She
hated it. But this was Cami’s choice, and she chose
to bear the burden alone rather than allow that young
man to know that he had lost something so precious
as the child he had created with Cami. She clearly
remembered how he had come to her after getting out
of jail, accused of Jaymi’s murder, his own eyes wet
with tears as he comforted Cami then. He would have
come for her now as well.
Could she blame her niece? Wouldn’t she have
protected Eddy if the situation were the same though?
Would she have done anything different? She knew
she wouldn’t have.
Ella sighed heavily. “How much more are you
going to carry alone, Cami?”
Cami shook her head, those tear-drenched eyes
breaking Ella’s heart. “Don’t,” Cami whispered. “Just
let it go. Just let
me
go, Ella. Please. I can’t talk right
now.”
Ella let her go and understood the request. Cami
had whispered those words to her the first time, nine
years ago, when her sister had been laid in the
ground.
The funeral had been over and everyone had left.
Ella and Eddy had been unable to find Cami until the
funeral director had called.
Cami had stayed at the gravesite, and she was
silently watching as they buried her sister’s coffin. He
was terrified if someone didn’t come for her, then they
might be laying her beside Jaymi soon.
Ella had rushed to Cami’s side, trying to
convince her to return to the house.
“
Let me go, Aunt Ella,
” her voice had echoed
with such pure, deep agony that even Eddy had
grimaced, forced to turn his head away to fight his
tears.
“Let me go, before I hurt you, too.”
Cami had just drifted away then. Ella had
watched her eyes lose emotion, her expression
become distant despite the tears that rained down
her face. Emotionally and spiritually, Cami had drifted
away from them.
That was what she was doing now. Turning back
to the window, she stared out onto the street, and Ella
wondered what Cami saw there. Where did Cami go
when she sat there and stared onto the sun-drenched