Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
closer.
He had hoped he could return home, slip in
without too much of a ripple, keep to himself, and find
the life he’d searched for around the world.
And God knew he’d searched for that place in
the world where he could, at the very least, be content.
He wasn’t asking for happiness. He’d learned long
ago that was far too much to ask for. Contentment,
though, hadn’t seemed too high a price to charge for
the years he had spent defending his country. After all,
he’d also been defending this little corner of America
that had decided he and his cousins had no place in
their midst.
Or perhaps those other places just weren’t the
place whose proud mountains sustained them. That
place where their fathers, their grandfather, and his
father before him had planted Callahan roots. Those
other “places” hadn’t been home.
Logan and Crowe too had found that
contentment eluding them. Crowe had actually
resigned from the Marines the year before Rafe and
Logan had and spent those months alone searching
for a place he could call home. Crowe had traveled
around for a while, but as he’d written in his last e-mail
before they’d returned, evidently there really was no
place like home.
For Crowe no place like the cabin his mother had
left him that overlooked the sheltered valley below.
For Rafe it was the small ranch his Uncle Clyde had
owned. The one that his grandmother had been
raised on before marrying JR Callahan.
For Logan it had been the house his mother had
owned before her death. The one she and his father
had lived on. The one he had been born in. It was flat
in the middle of Sweetrock. A two-story traditional
American with a wide porch surrounding all sides. In
the back was the roomy yard he and his cousins had
played in as toddlers. Next to it was the garage where
his father had allowed him to “help” work on the family
car.
The house was surrounded by other similar
houses. Once, long, long ago, before his mother had
given in and married the father of her child, Logan had
played with the neighborhood children there. He had
been accepted, and had known a childhood
happiness that Rafe only barely remembered while
Logan refused to discuss. And none of them could
pinpoint why it had changed. Why had their
grandfathers, their entire families, turned on the
children left behind? What had made them suddenly
hate and despise the sons that cherished daughters
had given birth to? And why didn’t anyone seem to
have the answers to those questions?
Rafe puffed on the cigar again, frowning into the
swirling snow and listening to the moan of the wind.
Rafe knew it had begun with the daughters marrying
the Callahan brothers. Still though, that animosity
hadn’t grown against their children until after their
deaths.
A grimace tightened his face as he forced
himself away from the maze he was beginning to step
into. Questions without answers, they could pile up
into a mess inside his brain if he let them. There was
simply no way to figure out why the families that he
and his cousins should have been able to turn to had
turned their backs on them instead.
They were the sons of the daughters those three
men were known to have once cherished and adored,
until the night they had eloped with the three brothers.
Three brothers who had spent every day since their
return from the military accusing the barons of having
murdered their parents, JR and Eileen Callahan.
After twenty-two years of asking “Why”? and of all
but begging the good people of Corbin County to just
explain what sin they felt their parents had committed,
Rafe, Logan, and Crowe had simply stopped caring.
They’d had enough of it the three days they’d sat
in that tiny jail cell, frozen with shock and horror,
accused of killing a woman all three of them
considered their best friend.
It had taken three days for Uncle Calvert, a
Marine recruiter, and the lawyer he had hired, to get
their release.
Then for another three days Rafe and his cousins
had lived in silent shock beneath the care of the man
who had raised them and the uncle they hadn’t known
still lived.
If it hadn’t been for Ryan, they would have rotted
in prison. If they had lived that long. Before Ryan had
made it to the jail with the lawyer, all three of them had
been beaten so badly by the sheriff and his deputies
that it had taken all they had to walk out of the jail.
The evidence at the scene of the crime had been
conclusive, the judge had decided. The DNA testing
on the blood indicating an older male had gone along
with the FBI’s profile of the serial murderer. A profile
the FBI stated the Callahans in no way matched. The
judge had further concluded that as much as he would
love to see Rafe, Logan, and Crowe Callahan locked
up for the rest of their natural-born days, he couldn’t in
all conscience bring them to trial for a crime he was
certain they hadn’t committed.
A man who didn’t know them and hadn’t taken
the time to learn anything about them would have
loved to see the three of them locked up for the rest of
their natural-born days.
Son of a bitch, that memory still had the power to
amaze him, and never failed to confuse him.
Leaning against the balcony railing, Rafe flicked
the cigar ash over the edge of the railing and
narrowed his eyes against the snow.
Their fathers hadn’t been scions of society, but
neither had they been the dregs of humanity. And for
not the first time in Rafe’s life he was beginning to
wonder exactly what three cherished daughters could
have done to their families to ricochet back on those
daughters’ children? And once again he was asking
questions he couldn’t answer.
Now, here Rafe was, right back where he had
started, and wondering what the fuck he had come
back for. What had made him, Logan, and Crowe
hunger for this particular little place in the world?
Because insanity must run on the Callahan side
of their genetics, he decided as he puffed the cigar
once again and relished the aromatic burn that filled
his senses.
He’d be damned if he knew where to go from
here, though. He could rebuild the ranch; it had been
damned profitable before Clyde Ramsey had died.
Rafe, Logan, and Crowe had had plans for the
ranch. They’d been certain the climate would have to
be different when they returned and living there
wouldn’t be the hardship it had once been. He’d be
damned but they couldn’t have been more wrong.
The quiet musings and his enjoyment of the cigar
were disrupted by the sound of a powerful
snowmobile motor cutting its way through the heavy
windswept snow falling from the sky as well as that
layered on the ground.
Strong LED lights cut through the white walls of
fluff falling around them and traversed at least two feet
of heavy, wet snow as the powerful machine made the
precarious turn between snow-hidden fences.
Logan or Crowe. The new snowmobiles were
unmistakable, and only they were insane enough to
be riding through a blizzard for whatever it was they
wanted. It could be as simple as sharing a cup of
coffee or as complicated as heading back out for
whatever wild-assed idea one of them had.
They were bored. He’d sensed it weeks before.
And things could get dangerous, especially for Rafe,
when Logan and Crowe were bored.
There were times Rafe felt as though he was the
adult and his cousins were no more than wayward
overgrown children. Very dark, very cynical, but
nonetheless as wild as hell and without the normal
cautious attitudes most adults displayed at their age.
Hell, their time in the Marines as snipers should have
fucking matured them. At least by a few more years
than it appeared it had.
Sighing heavily, he turned, tamped the cigar out
in the small ashtray kept on a ledge by the door, then
slipped back into the bedroom.
Cami was still sleeping peacefully, sprawled out
on her stomach, her pretty rounded ass emphasized
by the silk sheet lying over it.
He pulled the comforter over her body then
tucked it to her shoulders before moving for the door.
Opening it he headed to the kitchen his steps quick
and silent as he moved down the wood stairs.
He’d forgotten about the clothing left tossed on
the floor until he stepped into the brightly lit kitchen to
see Logan twirling a pair of tiny violet panties on one
finger while he held up a matching lace and silk bra
with the other. He looked from one to the other with
curious moss-green eyes. As though trying to
determine exactly what it was or why it was there.
Glancing at Rafe, he dropped the lingerie on the
table, then picked up the sweatshirt and read the front
of it. Rafe watched as his cousin visibly tensed before
turning the sweat shirt and reading the back.
Flannigan #12, Corbin Co. Teachers Softball
League
.
“Cami Flannigan,” Logan mused softly as Rafe
began picking up the clothes, folding them
haphazardly, and laying them on the counter. “Did you
lose your mind sometime between the agreement we
made about Corbin County beauties and whenever
you picked her up at?”
The agreement? They weren’t to fuck any woman
within a hundred miles of Sweetrock.
“Don’t start, Logan,” Rafe warned him quietly,
unwilling to start an argument with Logan that could
end up waking Cami.
“You don’t think her father caused us enough
trouble after Jaymi was killed? Come on, Rafe, he
bombarded your commanding officer with e-mails
about us for years. Even Clyde wasn’t safe from Mark
Flannigan’s vindictiveness. Do you really want to give
him another shot at us? What the hell do you think
he’s going to do when he learns you’re fucking his
baby girl?”
Mark Flannigan wouldn’t give a damn one way or
the other Rafe knew. From what Rafe had learned
over the years, Cami’s relationship with her father had
only grown colder. The only reason Cami’s father
would even pretend to care would be if he could
destroy the Callahan cousins with it.
“What I think is that this is my business,” Rafe
informed him as he moved to the other side of the
kitchen and began making more coffee. “Now, tell me
why the hell you’re here in the middle of a blizzard