Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
rather than sitting in front of a fire in the house?” Rafe
shot him a disgruntled look. “Didn’t we just spend
three days opening the house and moving you in?”
And it had sucked, too. Every day neighbors had
glared at them from porches or through their windows.
Old men had shot them the finger while teenage boys
steered a wide path around them. It was more than
apparent they weren’t welcome and they sure as hell
weren’t wanted.
“I was bored.” Logan shrugged, his expression
smoothing out to cool disregard.
“Try again,” Rafe snorted. “Why are you here?”
Sure, he was bored, but his cousin had ridden
over thirty miles in a blizzard on a snowmobile. The
fact that Crowe had tinkered enough with the engine
to make the vehicle capable of it didn’t mean it wasn’t
still a damned dumb decision.
Logan leaned back against the inside of the bar
counter, crossed his arms over his chest, and stared
back at Rafe quietly. Behind him, the darkened living
room reflected the fiery red glow of the coals in the
fireplace and the large oil portrait of Rafe and his
mother when he had been three, standing at her knee.
With long blond hair, dark blue eyes, and
porcelain, delicate skin his mother had been Corbin
County’s homecoming queen her senior year in high
school, voted most likely to succeed, and was
considered one of the most beautiful young women in
the county.
Her father had commissioned the portrait when
she was eighteen. It had taken three years for the
artist to get to it. When she’d insisted on including her
son, he’d refused to complete payment. Her mother’s
older brother Clyde had paid for it instead and hung it
over the fireplace.
As she was elegant, considerate, and
compassionate, it was often hard to imagine she was
actually a part of the cutthroat, icy-eyed Roberts clan.
Sometimes, Rafe had heard his father joke, he
believed his mother-in-law must have had a lover who
fathered Ann Roberts Callahan, because there was
no way in hell the heartless Marshal Roberts could
have fathered a child so beautiful and warm-hearted.
But Rafe had always heard how Marshal had spoiled
and adored his daughter. And how he’d fallen into a
drunken rage the night she eloped with Sam
Callahan.
Logan shifted, drawing Rafe’s attention back to
him. “I tried to call, but the phones aren’t getting
reception and the land lines are down somewhere
between here and town. I thought I’d head out and
check on you.” He made it sound as though he had
done Rafe a favor.
“In a blizzard?” Rafe arched his brow quizzically.
That wasn’t like his cousin. “What happened Logan?”
Rafe could feel the suspicion building inside him
stronger now. He knew Logan, and he knew that was
bullshit.
“You heard from Crowe lately?” his cousin asked
rather than answering the question.
“This morning. He met me out at one of the line
shacks to check the condition of it. He seemed fine
and didn’t mention any problems. Do we have any
problems?” They sure as hell didn’t need any.
Logan shook his head. “Probably just my
paranoia,” he finally sighed. “Or the fact I’m the one in
town and easier to access.”
“No doubt it’s ‘not’ your paranoia,” Rafe growled.
“What was it?”
He grimaced. “Someone was in the house while I
was out at the grocery this morning. When I returned,
the tape placed at the top of the door had been
moved and replaced and the strand of hair in the lock
was gone.”
“That doesn’t sound like paranoia to me, Logan,”
Rafe growled. “What makes you think it could be?”
Logan’s lips thinned. “Because nothing was on
the security camera but the neighbor kid knocking. If
he was messing with my locks at the same time, I
might have to kill him.”
Rafe hid a smile. The boy, Logan’s neighbor’s
brother, had decided to torment Logan however
possible.
“Maybe he’s bored,” Rafe suggested with
mocking sobriety.
“Yeah, fucking bored,” Logan grunted with a roll
of his eyes. “Or maybe he has a death wish I could
accommodate.”
Rafe stilled his laughter as he watched the
irritation that settled in his cousin’s expression.
“Do you have any idea what he wanted?” Rafe
asked as he fixed his cousin’s coffee and slid it
across the counter.
“No, to aggravate the hell out of me, maybe?
Neighbors are damned sassy, though. All but the kid’s
sister that lives next to me. Fucking night owl.” Logan
almost grinned.
Evidently that fucking night owl had managed to
entertain his cousin in some way.
“Why would the kid care enough to try to pick
your lock?”
“For the hell of it? Because he’s a damned
teenager?” Logan grunted after sipping at the coffee,
then turned and moved to the table.
Before sitting down, Logan stared at the wood
table top for a long, thoughtful moment. “You fucked
her on the table, didn’t you, cuz?” There was an edge
of irritated resignation that Rafe sensed stemmed
from the neighbor kid’s sister.
Rafe merely lifted his cup and sipped at his
second cup of strong coffee that night. If this kept up,
then he was going to start drinking decaf. No wonder
his chest was tight with a sense of foreboding.
“Drink your coffee, Logan.” Rafe almost allowed
himself to grin. “You can sleep in the downstairs guest
room tonight. We’ll check out the house in the
morning.” Hell, he’d hoped to get out of letting Cami
know about the snowmobile.
Logan stared back at him mockingly. “Storm is
supposed to last three days, with a healthy helping of
four to maybe six more feet before it’s over, and up to
three days to dig out if the temperature stays in the
teens as they’re predicting. You really want to lose
your houseguest that soon?” Logan’s smile was
knowing as he continued.
“I’m fairly certain she doesn’t know about your
snowmobile, or she wouldn’t be upstairs in your bed.
You’d be on the road trying to navigate the storm and
your lust.”
Sucked when someone knew you as well as he
and his cousins knew each other.
Rafe sipped at his coffee again, refusing to
comment as Logan sat back in his chair and watched
him with silent amusement.
“What are you getting yourself into, Rafe?” he
finally asked him again the amusement dissipating.
“Have you thought about this? Have you thought about
how old she is? The same age as Jaymi—”
“Enough, Logan.” He glared back at his cousin. “I
won’t think about Jaymi. Not tonight.”
Logan rubbed his hand over his face wearily.
“She’s the wrong woman,” he finally growled. “Her
father will come after you shooting when he finds out.
Are you going to shoot back? Could you shoot back if
she were watching?”
“There will be no shooting,” Rafe promised him.
“Her father’s in Aspen and he doesn’t come back to
Sweetrock very often. Her mother’s health isn’t that
good any longer.”
Not that Mark Flannigan had ever taken much
interest in his younger daughter. It had been Jaymi
that he had shown his love to, and only Jaymi.
Logan shook his head. He was aware of the lack
of concern Mark had always shown Cami, especially
the summer Jaymi had died. “If she were my
daughter, there’s no way in hell I’d sit still while she
was in possible danger. Flannigan could end up
fooling us.”
“Yeah, and I believe in fairy tales, too,” Rafe
drawled cynically. “Trust me, Flannigan’s not going to
go to the trouble.”
“And I’m telling you, fucking her is going to rain
hell down on you.”
Logan warned him. “For God’s sake, Rafe—”
“Let it go, Logan. As you said, once the storm is
over she’ll be gone and she’ll pretend it never
happened, just as she has every other time.”
“And the next time the two of you have five
minutes alone you’re ripping each other’s clothes off
and fucking like minks on top of the kitchen table,”
Logan reminded him. “Does that tell you anything?”
“I was too drunk to ignore my hard dick?” Rafe
shot back.
“Or too damned stupid to ignore it.” Logan
finished his coffee before rising to his feet. Moving to
the heavy winter wear he’d taken off after entering the
house he told Rafe, “I’m heading to Crowe’s. I doubt
very seriously he has a woman in his bed tonight. It
would surprise the hell out of me to even learn he’d
stayed in the county. That boy ain’t happy to be back.
And here he’s the one that talked us into coming
back.”
“Why did we come back?” Rafe asked, refusing
to stand, knowing how Logan could be. He could get
ready to leave fifty times before ever making it out of
the door. Knowing Logan as well as Rafe did how and
much colder the mountains were as one moved
higher into them, he knew damned good and well
Logan had probably regretted heading out no sooner
than he passed the city limits. Logan was hell for
doing his job, no matter how hot or how cold. He was
a one-man tracking/killing machine. But he liked his
creature comforts and didn’t leave them unless he
simply didn’t have a choice.
In his mind, he’d had no choice. He couldn’t
reach Rafe by phone and he was determined to
ensure his safety. But now he knew his cousin was
safe, he’d be damned slow about leaving.
“Why don’t you drop the damned coat and stay
here tonight,” Rafe growled as Logan looked outside
at the snow and gave a heavy sigh. “If Cami sees you
or the snowmobile, then just tell her you’re on your way
to Crowe’s and not heading back to town until
everything melts enough to drive in.”
That would keep her here without her anger
affecting Rafe’s pleasure. And he did intend to have
his pleasure until he couldn’t keep her there another
second longer.
“That will work.” Logan dropped the coat, but he
wasn’t making a move to leave the kitchen.
“What now?” Rafe asked him.
Logan stared back at him, his eyes so hard, so
cold, that Rafe wondered if his cousin ever felt warm
inside anymore. He definitely didn’t act as though he
did.
“You in love with her?” Logan finally asked before
giving his head a hard negative jerk as he grimaced.
“Yeah, you are,” he answered his own question. “You
have been since that first night you spent with her.”