Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
in Corbin County, footloose and fancy-free is all we
have.”
It wasn’t as though a future were going to happen
with any of the fine ladies in Sweetrock or at the
outlying ranches. Too many people knew their pasts.
There were too many of the fine citizens of Corbin
County willing to follow any and every order the
barons gave.
The barons. His grandfather, James Corbin
Rafer, Marshal Roberts, and Logan’s grandfather
Saul Rafferty. The three largest ranch owners and
three of the most powerful financial families to reside
in Colorado. Their ranches were the size of small
countries. Each ranch resided in a different county,
but strangely something tied the three patriarchs of
these families together. A loyalty and friendship that
spanned decades, fluctuating riches, and the
temperaments of three power-hungry men.
Logan sighed. “There’s always Aspen. Lots of
pretty ladies there. Who says we have to pick from
Corbin County anyway? Hell, we might get tired of
footloose and fancy-free.”
There was an edge of regret in Logan’s voice, as
though he’d actually had someone in mind. Someone
he knew he couldn’t have. Hell, Crowe just hoped it
wasn’t who he thought it was. That was just going to
turn into a mess if it was.
“What about your neighbor?” Crowe looked back
at Logan, restraining the knowing mockery in his tone.
“She’s not from Sweetrock.”
Logan’s eyes widened in shock and male
outrage. “That O’Brien girl? Hell no! I watched her tear
that builder Ken Stiles’ ass up one side and back
down the other a few days ago. Accused him for ten
minutes of milking hours on that back porch he was
building for her. She was right in his face, that little
finger shaking like a weapon, and she was ready to
use it.” He gave a mock shudder. “I think I prefer
something a little softer. A little less temperamental.”
Crowe snorted. “You mean a little less able to
kick your ass when you’re acting like an ass?”
Who the hell did Logan think he was fooling?
“That’s cold, man,” Logan sighed. “So cold.” His
eyes twinkled in laughter. “But so fucking true.”
“And this weather is fucking cold.” Crowe couldn’t
feel the cold; the Thinsulate he wore was military
issue and would keep him warm at far colder
temperatures.
Where he felt the chill was in his spine, a sure
sign that things were going to go from sugar to shit
soon. And that chill had the power to send ice
coursing through his veins. The last damned thing they
needed, no sooner than they returned to Corbin
County, was trouble. Especially when women were a
part of that trouble.
“Think we should disturb the little lovebirds?”
Logan suggested. Anticipation filled his voice, as did
amusement. Logan sometimes seemed years
younger than his age.
“I think someone should,” Crowe said as he
turned his gaze back to the house. “This will be over
soon, and when it is, the whole town of Sweetrock will
converge on him once they learn where Miss
Flannigan had been forced to stay during the storm. I
think Rafe could probably use the backup if that
happens.” Especially considering the fact Cami’s
uncle was a part of that road crew.
“Protection is more like it,” Logan retorted. “Talk
about a man with his dick and his heart tied up in
knots. Our little cuz is there, I believe.”
But then Crowe had a feeling Rafe had been
there for a while; he just hadn’t been aware of it. There
had been too many chance meetings between Rafe
and Cambria over the years. Too many near misses.
And in the past few years there were too many times
Rafe had obviously been watching, waiting, for
someone who hadn’t shown. His anger then had gone
soul deep.
“Well, the road crew isn’t far from finding the car,
or making their way to our little cousin’s love nest. I
guess the kindest thing we could do is warn him, don’t
you think?” Crowe drawled.
Logan’s curse sizzled through the line, seconding
Crowe’s thoughts and sending a wave of tension to
clench his jaw and tighten his muscles.
Breathing out roughly, Crowe twisted the handle
grip of the powerful machine he’d ridden down from
the mountain, listening to the low, carefully muffled
power that vibrated through the machine. He’d
modified the machines himself, his as well as his
cousins’, to ensure the power that vibrated and
throbbed through the motors was silenced as much
as possible. Worst-case scenario, he would bank the
power and speed and run at near silence if absolutely
necessary.
There were times that more power and more
sound could be a life-threatening hindrance. And
times that any sound could mean certain death.
“Let’s go see if we can help him unknot his dick
then,” Crowe said as he gave a hard twist of the
opposite grip and shot down the mountain, carefully
balancing his weight, watching the terrain and
landmarks for known hazards beneath the snow,
aware Logan was riding in his tracks.
Exactly where Crowe needed him to ride.
Crowe had done this all their lives, going first to
clear the way for the other two. All but once. Rafe had
managed to race ahead of Crowe just one time, and
they hadn’t been the only ones who had paid for
Crowe’s lack of speed. Jaymi Flannigan Kramer had
paid with her life, and her death had left a mark on
their souls ever since.
“He’s not going to be happy with us,” Logan
promised, the wry humor coming through the earpiece
he wore as Crowe navigated around the heavy trunks
of the sheltering trees.
“But he’ll live, and that’s the point.” Actually, that
was really all that mattered to Crowe. That Rafe and
Logan lived, stayed free, and managed to find some
small portion of happiness.
Crowe hadn’t been certain that returning to
Corbin County was the best way to achieve that, but
he knew it would never stop haunting them, that the
nightmares wouldn’t cease until they faced what had
happened there and the consequences of it.
And if he was lucky, very lucky, then Crowe
himself intended to face whoever or whatever had
begun the events that had destroyed all their lives
twelve years before.
* * *
Rafe paused the coffee cup halfway to his lips as a
low muted sound reached his ears.
He knew that sound. There were two
snowmobiles approaching the house, and he knew
the sound of the muffled motors, barely discernible
above the sound of the wind howling outside the
house.
The storm was over, the sun rising to a crisp, icycold
morning and reports of crews beginning to move
out in force to dig out drivers and houses alike from
the massive amount of snow that had fallen.
That had been hours ago. He was living on
borrowed time where his time with Cami was
involved. That borrowed time could run out at any
time. Any moment. But he’d expected his time to run
out with the road crews slowly making their way from
the road to the ranch house, with only one purpose in
mind, and digging him out wasn’t it.
He knew of plenty of times that those same road
crews had refused to do more than pile more snow at
the mouth of the graveled road that led to the house.
He hadn’t expected his time to run out in the form
of his cousins’ arrival, though. Especially Crowe’s.
Grimacing, Rafe pulled extra coffee cups from
the cupboard, set sugar and creamer in the middle of
the table, and glanced toward the stairs that led to the
second floor.
Cami was showering.
She had borrowed a razor, and the water in the
shower had only just begun running. He might get
lucky and his cousins would be gone before she
finished.
He had a feeling it would be the other way
around. His cousins would arrive and wouldn’t leave
until after she did. That was more the way things
ended up working for him.
His fist clenched at the thought of her leaving. At
the thought of not holding her in his arms when he
climbed into his bed. Of not being there to share that
first cup of coffee, even if she was madder than hell at
him.
And he sure couldn’t use the kitchen table
properly if she wasn’t there, he thought with
amusement as the snowmobiles moved quickly
toward the house.
Damn, Crowe and his tinkering
with the vehicles’ motors
. They were now twice as
fast and twice as powerful as they had been when the
cousins first bought them. That meant if Crowe were
of a mind to, he could easily get Cami back to town.
Just as Rafe could have.
It wasn’t long before the steady, hard throb of
power eased into the yard, pulling up to the small area
of shoveled show that Rafe had worked on as Cami
slept that morning.
He opened the door, standing behind the glass
of the storm door as his cousins stepped off the lowbuilt
machines and looked up at him.
He almost frowned. They were dressed in the
lightweight, ultra-cold-weather gear that Crowe had
managed to procure in the military as he worked in
some of the coldest climates in the world. A ride from
Crowe Mountain to the house wasn’t long enough and
the weather really not cold enough—was it?—for the
snow camo outerwear.
Rafe stepped back as Logan reached the porch
and watched him grip the door handle and lazily pull it
open.Even his eyes were hidden behind the dark
goggles until he stepped inside, stripped off his
gloves, then eased the goggles from his face.
He would have to make certain he thanked
Logan nicely for slipping out, obviously well before
dawn, to inform their cousin Crowe of Rafe’s
houseguest.
Logan’s dark pine-green eyes were filled with
laughter as he stripped the cold-weather gear and
hung it carefully on the specially made hanger at the
side of the door. Crowe was following suit, but unlike
Logan, his eyes weren’t filled with laughter. He was
staring around the kitchen and living room carefully,
no doubt noting even the slightest change to the
rooms since he had been there the week before.
“You two are out early,” Rafe stated as he moved
back to the coffeepot, slid the decanter free, and set it
in the center of the kitchen table, close to the cups,
sugar, and cream.
“Not early enough, it would appear,” Crowe