Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
grunted. “Where’s your houseguest?”
Rafe slid Logan a look of promised retribution.
“Had to run and tattle, didn’t you, Logan?”
“I know; it’s normally your job.” Logan sighed
mockingly. “But you appeared to be slacking this
week, so I thought I’d help you out a bit.”
Rafe almost rolled his eyes.
Logan could be the bane of his existence when
he wanted to be. There were times that Rafe and
Crowe wondered if Logan had ever matured past the
age of sixteen.
As the middle cousin, he seemed to have
inherited Rafe’s father’s sense of practical jokes and
teasing games.
“’Preciate that, Logan,” Rafe drawled. “I’ll be sure
to return the favor soon.”
Logan chuckled as he followed Crowe to the
kitchen table and the coffee.
The two men couldn’t have been more different.
Logan had his mother’s dark blond coloring
rather than the dark Callahan hair. His skin was
bronzed, a trait all Callahan men had, a reminder of
their deep Irish roots. His eyes were the same the
deep pine-green his mother’s had been.
Mina Rafferty Callahan had been slender,
delicate, and winsome. Thankfully, her son had only
inherited her coloring. The rest of him was pure, tall
Callahan. At six feet-two inches tall, powerful and
broad, he could be a mean gutter fighter in the face of
the enemy or project a charming, teasing familiarity
with vulnerable children or frightened women.
Crowe on the other hand, was one hundred
percent Callahan, from his midnight-black hair to his
eagle-fierce golden-brown eyes. His harshly hewn
features could never be called handsome, but women
gravitated to him like bees to honey no matter where
the Callahans went. At the very least, the women
moved as close as possible, as though to draw in the
aura of danger and the oddly shaped crescent
birthmark they all carried on their right hip. He was an
inch taller than Rafe, more than two years older than
Rafe, and always seemed too determined to watch
over and protect his younger cousins, whether they
needed it at the time or not.
Rafe, on the other hand, was a plainer version.
He had the black hair, but he had his mother’s, Ann
Roberts’s sapphire-blue eyes rather than the Callahan
brown eyes. In looks, the men were more like triplets
than cousins, despite Logan’s dark blond hair. Even
as infants they had been almost impossible to tell
apart until Logan’s hair lightened.
Crowe was the image of the Callahan brothers,
Samuel, Benjamin, and David. Rafe missed it only in
the color of his eyes. They were as close as brothers
and sometimes it seemed they shared the same
bond triplets did as well.
Rafe leaned back against the counter with his
own coffee as his cousins poured theirs. Strangely
enough, Crowe sweetened and creamed his, while
Logan took his straight and black. It always seemed
as though it should have been the other way around.
It had always amazed Rafe that his eldest cousin
could be found adding to the perfectly rich, aromatic
taste of the specially grown coffee beans Rafe went to
the trouble to buy and grind himself. It was almost a
sacrilege, what Crowe did to his coffee.
It was the coffee that always seemed to tie them.
Since Clyde Ramsey, Rafe’s great-uncle, had taken
then in, he had taught them the value of coffee, the
kitchen table, and long discussions.
“So, to what do I owe the pleasure of your visit?”
Rafe asked as he arched a brow and brought the cup
to his lips, sipping at the coffee and preparing
himself. He had a feeling he knew what was coming.
Crowe was there because of Cami.
“I thought you might need some backup.” Crowe
shrugged as he leaned back in the chair, his oddly
colored brown eyes sharp as Rafe met his gaze.
“What kind of backup do I need?” Rafe could
almost feel the tension beginning to tighten at the
back of his neck.
It was damned foreboding. That sense of coming
danger or problems that would result in more trouble
than anyone needed.
Hell, all he’d wanted to do was try to enjoy the few
days fate had given him with Cami.
“They’re clearing the snow blocking the road not
far from here,” Logan said then. “It won’t be long
before they find Ms. Flannigan’s car. And her uncle is
in the lead with the plow. Eddy Flannigan isn’t known
for his even temper.”
Eddy Flannigan simply didn’t suffer fools gladly,
and he sure as hell didn’t tolerate so much as an iota
of danger where his niece was concerned. Eddy
would know, though, that the last thing Rafe wanted
would be to hurt Cami in any way.
Rafe’s lips tightened in irritation at the thought as
he moved to the refrigerator, reached up, and flipped
on the police and emergency band radio he kept
there. Turning the dials, he tuned into the channel he
knew the road crew used whenever they were
clearing snow and wanted to keep their conversations
more private.
It wouldn’t hurt to know ahead of time who else
was on that crew and whatever they may have to say.
“Sheriff, I hope you brought that rifle of yours,” a
voice drawled over the radio. “Eddy may want to
borrow it.”
“Then why are you laughing, Martin?” Archer
Tobias, sheriff of Corbin County, a man who had
once, long ago, been a friend, came over the line.
“’Cause if that’s Eddy’s niece’s car out there like
he thinks it is, then we may get to have a Callahan
killin’ after all,” Deputy Martin Eisner came back.
“Don’t worry, Eddy, I’ll testify for it. Justifiable
homicide.”
Rafe glared at the radio.
“You want me to break your fucking legs,
Eisner?” Eddy Flannigan came back, his voice
entirely serious. “Because I can. And I will.”
It was obvious the deputy was getting on the
wrong side of the smart-assed, wisecracking uncle of
Cami’s.
“Hell, Eddy, I’m trying to do you a favor here,”
Martin snapped. “Those boys work fast, remember?
We’ll be lucky if she’s not already dead.”
“Let’s not allow our imaginations to get out of
control here Martin,” Archer snapped.
“Yeah, that’s what your daddy said when Jaymi
went missing that night too,” Martin snapped back as
the sound of the plow’s motor revved and geared
higher. “You saw her car, Sheriff. That tire—”
“Martin, concentrate on clearing that snow and let
me concentrate on what may or may not have
happened,” Archer snapped back, the heavy
command in his voice working for a minute. “That’s
my job, remember?”
But no longer than a minute.
“We should call out the National Guard and have
them bring the helicopter in. We maybe could use the
help against the three of them boys now that they’re
back from the military.” Eisner sounded worried,
concerned. “Didn’t we hear they were snipers or
some shit?” He was obviously only worried about
himself.
Rafe rubbed at the side of his face in frustration.
Son of a bitch, Eisner sounded as though they were
facing a full battalion of Callahans rather than just
three of them.
Rafe knew the deputy well enough to know for a
fact that it wasn’t worry or concern he was feeling
unless it was for himself. It was pure gleeful
anticipation cloaked with a highly false, somber
demeanor.
“Martin, we don’t need a helicopter,” Archer
promised him patiently. “Eddy, take your plow up to
the house and I’ll drive your niece home, if she’s ready
to go.”
“What do you think he means by that, Eddy?”
Martin questioned with almost rabid curiosity. “What’s
he implyin’?”
“That she might want to wait until the tow truck
shows up to get her car out of the ditch, Martin?” the
sheriff snapped, his patience obviously beginning to
fray as the deputy continued to poke at Eddy’s
temper. That was never a good idea. Eddy’s temper
was short and his fists could be unpredictable. “And
see if you can’t manage to run that plow without taking
out another fence, Martin.” Eddy’s tone was harsh and
filled with disgust.
Logan sat up carefully as Crowe’s face
tightened, becoming stoney and emotionless at the
order Eddy gave the deputy.
They’d spent more than a week replacing the old
rotted and rusted fence. It was obviously a wasted
effort where one fence was concerned.
“Sorry about that. I guess ole Rafe Callahan
should have put those fences in better, huh?”
“I can hear the lawsuits now,” Archer said, his
sigh coming across the radio. “And trust me, Martin, I
won’t cover your ass on this one.”
“Hey, I didn’t see no fence,” Martin’s voice came
back slyly. “Did you see a fence, Eddy?”
“Yeah, I did, and I’m going to be the one to tell the
Callahans’ lawyer what an asshole you are. Asshole.”
Eddy informed him, “It’s no damned wonder the
mayor put you on probation. If we’re lucky, he’ll get rid
of your ass now.”
Archer was silent, and that didn’t surprise Rafe in
the least. It did surprise him, though, that Eisner was
so damned brave in destroying Callahan property.
“One of these days that girl is going to get herself
in trouble taking up with the stray dogs in this county.”
Martin came back with an air of self-importance. “And
if I ever seen a dog, those Callahan boys is three of
them.”
“I just hope for her daddy’s sake she’s okay,”
Martin radioed. “It’s too bad how she doesn’t help him
much with her poor, sick mother. She’s nothin’ like her
sister was, that’s for damned sure. Jaymi would have
been there helping her parents.”
“Fuck you, Martin! You damned little son of a
bitch!” Eddy was pissed now. Real pissed if the tone
of his voice was anything to go by. “Get him the fuck
out of here, Sheriff, because I’ll show the little bastard
exactly what justifiable homicide really is.”
Rafe lifted his head and watched as Cami came
to a shocked stop at the doorway of the kitchen.
Biting off a curse, he moved for the radio to flip it
off and keep her from hearing any more of Martin
Eisner’s stupidity.
She beat Rafe to it. She moved in front of him,
staring back at him in determination. “Let me hear
what he has to say. That’s one of Dad’s best friends,
and he’s not saying anything I haven’t already heard.”
The radio crackled again. “Martin, shut the hell
up.” Archer’s voice was rock hard and filled with