Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
proved that Thomas Jones was the man Crowe
stabbed that night managed to clear them.”
“Yet they’re still treated worse than rapists and
murderers who admit to their crimes,” she pointed
out. “I thought it would get better for them, but in the
past twelve years it seems to have only grown worse.”
“It’s easy to blame them,” Archer suggested.
“Thomas Jones is dead, and they’re alive.”
Could it possibly be that simple?
It wasn’t enough to satisfy her though, just as she
knew she had an ulterior motive. She wanted Rafe.
She wanted back in his bed, she wanted to know why
she couldn’t forget him, why she ached for him, and
that wasn’t going to happen if she wanted to live and
work in Sweetrock.
“Thanks for the ride home, Archer,” she said
dropping the subject and hoping she had given him
enough for him to investigate it as he drew closer to
where she lived in her two-story little ranch.
“I’ll call Jack’s Towing before heading back up
the mountain,” Archer told her. “He can bring your car
in sometime today.”
She nodded slowly. “That’s fine; thank you
again.”
She wasn’t going to need it today anyway.
Archer sighed as he turned the car down Main
Street and drove closer to the dark, probably cold,
and definitely lonely house she had bought from her
parents.
It was all she could do to keep from begging him
to take her back to Rafer’s. To beg Rafer to hold her
just a little while longer. But the fear was like a
padlock, locking the words and the ability to reach out
to Rafer in such a way deep inside her.
“I don’t know what’s going on.” She rubbed her
temple with her fingers, finally glancing at Archer
again as she breathed out a hard sigh. “Why did he
have to come back, Archer? Why did he have to
change everything?”
“He’s not changing anything for you without your
help,” Archer said gently. “And from what you just said
about Jaymi, you be damned careful. It might be a
good idea to be a little cautious for a while.” Archer
knew about the nights they had spent together, though
he didn’t know about the child she had lost.
A sardonic smile twisted her lips. Hadn’t that
been the same advice she had given her sister twelve
years before?
“I’ll be sure to do that,” Cami promised as she
slid out of the sheriff’s vehicle and closed the door
before heading to the house.
She turned and waved good-bye as she stepped
into the silent house.
Yes. It was cold. Lonely.
Closing and locking the door behind her, she
turned the thermostat up, hoping to alleviate the chill
inside her as well as the one that filled her home. She
hadn’t really been warm in years, until Rafer had held
her again. Now the lack of that warmth was damned
painful.
The cell phone rang out its strident ringtone to
alert her she had a call. Caller ID was clearly blocked,
and until now she didn’t think she’d ever received a
blocked call.
“Hello,” she answered cautiously.
The voice, despite its gentle sadness, held a
sinister, malicious edge.
“You better hope you spent your time with Rafer
Callahan wisely. You should have chosen someone
else to dirty yourself with if you needed a hard fuck,”
the voice warned her somberly. “If it happens again,
you could meet the same end as your sister. Wouldn’t
that be a shame, Ms. Flannigan? Wouldn’t it hurt your
family, your friends, to find your body broken and
discarded for fucking that bastard?”
Who the hell would call and say something so
cruel? She and Jaymi had been close, much closer
than most sisters with such an age difference
between them.
But she remembered the calls Jaymi had
received while sleeping with Rafe, and she had once
told Cami that the caller’s voice had sounded tearful
and filled with regret.
“I’m always careful,” Cami told him quietly,
confidently. “And I don’t do bullies. Or cowards.” She
disconnected the call quickly, then ignored the next
several as she moved back to the kitchen and laid the
device on the table. She stood back by the counter
and simply watched it as though it were a snake,
coiled and hissing as “
blocked number
” showed on
the caller ID again.
As a third-grade teacher for the only elementary
school in the county, she ended up meeting most
people, whether they were parents or not, more than
once. She recognized that voice, even as carefully
disguised as it had been.
Still, she would remember whose voice it was,
and when she did, unlike her sister, Cami would raise
hell and make damned sure he paid for attempting to
terrorize her, let alone threatening her.
She knew Jaymi had finally realized who had
been calling her. The week before she had died she
had attended one of the county-sponsored street
dances in the town square, and when she had
returned to the apartment she had been more than
upset. She had been furious. She hadn’t said she had
known, but Cami had known her sister and she had
known when the phone rang that night and the look on
Jaymi’s face when the caller ID had come up
“blocked.” Jaymi had taken the phone to the
bedroom, but as she walked into the other room Cami
could have sworn she heard Jaymi say,
Now I know
why you hate him so bad
. But Jaymi had refused to
tell Cami who it was or what was going on. The next
week, Jaymi had been killed.
Cami drew in a hard, deep breath.
What was she going to do now? she wondered.
The implications of the phone calls were frightening.
The phone rang again.
Eyes narrowed, she stalked back to the table,
checked the number, and saw the “blocked” signal
again. Pushing the call button, she brought it quickly to
her ear. She would be damned if she was going to
live in fear. “Fuck off, nutcase,” she snapped.
There was silence for a moment. Long enough
for Cami to realize it wasn’t the unknown, threatening
voice of moments before.
“I just wanted to make certain you got home
okay,” Rafe’s voice came over the line carefully.
Cami’s teeth snapped together. “Here’s a piece
of advice, Rafer Callahan. Unblock your number when
you call; otherwise, I won’t be answering.”
She was not going to worry about missed calls
and whether or not it was Rafe.
“You know, you’re the only person that calls me
Rafer,” he growled, something in his tone warning her
he was more angry than simply irritated. She didn’t
think it was because she was calling him by his full
given name.
“Learn to live with it,” she muttered as she began
moving through the house, closing curtains and
checking locks again.
The normal nightly ritual suddenly had a new,
sinister meaning, and she didn’t like it. Because it
didn’t matter she had already checked them once,
she needed to check them again.
“Your cousin Martin took out close to a thousand
feet of new fence on his way in and out,” Rafe
informed her. “I’m suing.”
Yes, Eisner was her third cousin on her mother’s
side and Crowe’s very, very distant cousin on his
mother’s side.
“And you’re telling me why? I’m not his lawyer;
that’s his cousin Doug Atchinson. Give him a call.”
She had no sense of guilt because she rarely
remembered Martin was related to her. Besides he
should have known better.
“You’re being awful accommodating all of a
sudden.” Suspicion laced Rafe’s voice, and she could
almost see him staring back at her. She could almost
see herself drowning in those bottomless sapphireblue
eyes.
“So are you,” she fired back. “How the hell am I
supposed to pretend we haven’t been occasional
fucks if you start calling to check up on me?”
She needed to get over the past few days, the
heated passion and the feel of his flesh against hers.
She needed to let her body readjust to not having him
inside her. To not having him pumping hard and deep
and stretching her pussy with that delicious pleasurepain
she could have so easily become addicted to.
She might have already become addicted, because
she was dying for him. She needed her fix.
“What happened?” Suspicion laced his voice.
“Was someone at the house when you got there? Has
someone called?”
She tensed. How had he known she was feeling
spooked?
“If there were, and they had, then I know how to
use my Smith and Wesson to deal with it,” she
promised him as that craving for him began to pound
through her blood veins. “And just to set you straight,
Rafer,
you
happened. You’re like some kind of
damned catalyst or something, because every time
you invade my damned space you completely fuck my
life up. Stay on your own side of the county and let me
deal with mine.”
She disconnected the call. But she held the
phone between her breasts, her eyes closed, her
breathing rough, as she fought to hold back her tears
and to contain her anger. She couldn’t let this happen
to her again. She could not allow herself to sink into
that well of physical and emotional hunger as she had
the last time.
She wanted to stomp her feet on the floor like a
child and rage against fate, life and the unfairness of
aching for a man she couldn’t have. Because having
him meant losing herself in him and she couldn’t allow
that to happen again, if she wanted to live in her
hometown.
Other women could have affairs with married
men, cheat on their husbands, or have more than one
lover at the same time. She, on the other hand,
couldn’t even have the man she dreamed about the
most. The one who kept her heart racing and her
pussy so wet she was going to have to change
panties. She couldn’t do it because she didn’t have
the emotional distance to survive if anything
happened to him.
A sigh fell from her lips as she closed her eyes
briefly. Other women knew how to love and still retain
their souls. She didn’t know how to do that, it seemed.
As for her panties, she realized she didn’t have to
worry about changing them because she had
forgotten to put them back on after they had dried
hanging over Rafer’s shower.
“You’re the only one who calls me Rafer.”
The