Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
mused. Fuck, no, Marshal had done it out of a
vindictive desire to destroy the ranch and make them
completely paranoid. If it had been to protect them,
then the attacks would have come the times they had
sat in the ranch dark, silent ranch house and waited,
weapons ready, for the vandals to strike again.
“I want to know everything he said, Cami,” he
finally told her. “And don’t leave anything out.”
He watched as she stared up at the ceiling.
“I can’t do a play-by-play,” she told him wearily as
she turned her head to gaze back at him. “You don’t
believe me, do you, Rafer?”
“I don’t disbelieve you,” he finally sighed. “But,
Cami, you don’t know him as I do.” He shook his head
at the lifetime of memories he had where Marshal
Roberts and his deceptions were concerned.
“Rafer, he was trying to tell me something,” she
whispered, and Rafer knew she truly believed that.
“What else could it be?”
“Because he’s a son of a bitch?” he sighed
wearily.
“That’s not a good enough reason, Rafer,” she
said, saddened not just because of the life she knew
he and his cousins had lived but also because he
seemed to have accepted it as deeply as everyone
else in Corbin County. “Coincidences like this don’t
happen. There has to be more to it.”
“The reason doesn’t matter, Cami,” he assured
her with an edge of mockery. “And coincidences are
called that for a reason, I’ve learned. Sometimes, it
truly is a coincidence. Now I’m not concerned with the
past, with grandparents or with Marshal Roberts. I
want to know about those phone calls.”
“I told you about the phone calls, Rafer,” she
argued with a surge of anger. The fear was being
overshadowed now. Overshadowed by the anger that
Rafer refused to even consider the fact that danger
could be haunting him. “Why aren’t you willing to listen
to me?”
He gave a heavy sigh.
“Did you know the Corbins began this little
campaign?” he asked her softly. “Crowe’s
granddaddy stood at the entrance to the funeral home
when Logan, Crowe, and myself arrived at the funeral
home with Clyde. He barred our way. The Callahans
had no place there, he said. They murdered his
daughter and he refused to have one attend her
funeral, and Saul Rafferty, Logan’s grandfather, and
Marshal Roberts backed him on it. We weren’t
welcome there.”
Cami had heard that story more than once, and
each time she’d seen the conflict most people still
had over it. She had also seen the knowledge that
James Corbin had drawn the line that day and over
the years and he’d enforced it. Marshal Roberts and
Saul Rafferty hadn’t, though, if she remembered the
Callahan history correct. And she was pretty certain
she did.
“James Corbin enforced it,” she repeated. “Not
the others.”
“The other’s backed him, Cami,” he growled,
frustration filling his voice now. “Mine and Logan’s
grandfathers were just as much a part of it as James
Corbin was.”
“I don’t think Marshal Roberts was,” she argued.
“I don’t know about Saul Rafferty, but I do know he
moved from Corbin County just after his daughter’s
funeral. He only returns to oversee certain aspects of
the ranch, other than that his manager handles
everything. He’s separated himself from the entire
situation, hasn’t he?” She knew he had. She had
made it her business in the past few days to find out.
“Let it go, Cami,” Rafe warned her. “This isn’t
your fight, and it’s a fight you’ll lose. For God’s sake, if
any part of what you suspect is true, then can you
imagine the danger it would place
you
in?”
“You already suspected it?” she whispered,
shocked that he was fighting her if he had already
suspected something wasn’t right about the past.
“No, Cami, I don’t,” he told her, his tone short now
as he denied the charge. “Do you think we haven’t
thought of every question you’ve come up with?” He
reached out, his fingertips caressing down the side of
her face before he pulled back and watched her
quietly for long moments. “Honey, this time,
coincidence is coincidence.”
“You’re just accepting it?” She couldn’t believe it.
That Rafe wouldn’t fight against the suspected
murders of his family? Especially his parents and his
uncle?
“It’s not a question of accepting it or not
accepting it,” he informed her brusquely. “It’s the way
things are, plain and simple. The only reason you want
to change it at this point is so you can fuck me without
having to worry about the fine citizens of this county
looking down at you for sharing a bed with a
Callahan.”
Could she blame him for believing it? How many
people had ever questioned how the Callahan
cousins had been treated over the years?
How many had ever stood up for them?
Or had they, like her, been torn by the fear of
losing someone they would love with all their hearts
and the three men who only sneered in the face of
their unacceptance and flaunted the fact that they
didn’t give a damn? Men who dared their enemies to
strike out at them or anyone who loved them.
“Why did you even come here tonight if all you
wanted was to know about your grandfather’s visit?”
She was angry at herself, but a part of her was even
angrier at him. “What did it accomplish, Rafer? You
should have just called.”
He chuckled at her question then, a dark, sexy
sound of male amusement as the frustration and
anger eased from his gaze.
“What did it accomplish?” he asked arched his
brow, and gave her a heavy-lidded look of complete
male satisfaction. “Other than eliminating your need
for that fake dick tonight? It accomplished a hell of a
lot of pleasure and the best come I’ve had since the
last time I had my cock buried in your sweet little
pussy.”
“It’s last time it’s going to be buried,” she
retorted, knowing it was an empty threat, but growing
so furious now that her pride kicked in. “You should
have stayed home, Rafe.” She pushed away from
him, sliding from the bed as she acknowledged she
wasn’t going to walk away from him unscathed. Not
now, and not in the future. “You’re not willing to fight for
anything, are you, but I’m supposed to risk every part
of my heart and soul for the pleasure of having you in
my bed? Does this seem a little skewed to you
somehow? Tell me, Rafe Callahan, do you even care
what a woman would go through in this fucking county
for you? Would it even make a difference if you knew
you had broken her heart after she had already
placed herself on the firing line?”
Rafe grunted behind her, watching the slender,
graceful curve of her back as she moved from the
bed.
She was just damned determined to piss him off,
and if he was honest with himself then he admitted
she was getting close to that edge.
It wouldn’t be pretty once he let that anger build
inside him. He’d pushed those emotions back in his
teens, determined to never let them free again. He’d
fought his last battle when his Clyde had died and
Rafe had realized how many friends the man had lost
when he had taken in the three orphan cousins when
no one else would have them.
“You know, kitten, you amaze me,” Rafe drawled.
“You lay in this bed with that little toy of yours, fighting
to get off, knowing damned good and well that it’s my
dick you’re fantasizing about, and still, you’re
determined to run my ass off. I’d like to understand the
logic behind that one.”
There it was. The anger was beginning to
simmer inside his chest.
“You know the logic behind it, Rafer.” Soft, filled
with an anger he couldn’t help but acknowledge.
She kept her back to him, drew the silky robe
over her naked body before quickly belting it. “You
simply refuse to accept it. Why should I fight this alone
when you refuse to even acknowledge it? When you
don’t even give a damn about what’s happening
around you or why?”
“Acknowledge what? That you need everyone
else to approve of who you’re sleeping with?” He slid
her a hard look, determined to hold back the years of
resentment and anger that had once been buried. He
refused to allow her to resurrect them.
He stared up at the ceiling for a long moment
before rolling from the bed himself and jerking his
clothes off the floor. He’d be damned if he was going
to fight with her over this. It simply wasn’t worth it and
reminded him far too much of the arguments he had
with her sister the summer she had been killed.
Why the hell did they insist on attempting to tie
together events that even he and his contacts couldn’t
prove had a connection? And they were the ones who
had fought that battle all their lives.
No matter how hard they had tried, they couldn’t
find a single piece of evidence to link their parents’ or
their grandparents’ deaths. And God knew they would
have loved to.
Socks and jeans were pulled on quickly before
he sat on the bed and shoved his feet into his boots.
Rafe straightened again, collected his shirt from the
chair where it had fallen and pulled it over his
shoulders as well.
All the while, he was aware of her watching him,
her eyes sheening with tears every few minutes
before she blinked them back.
“You’re a coward, Cami,” he finally told her as he
secured the buttons of his shirt. “A damned little
coward that would cut her own nose off to spite her
face if it meant her daddy wouldn’t get mad at her. If it
meant he would love her.”
She turned away from him, hiding the truth from
him, he thought, knowing that was exactly why she
wanted him out of her bed after he fucked the want out
of her.
God forbid her daddy should find out about it,
Rafe thought furiously.
“You won’t even try to fight against the Corbins or
to understand why they want you and your cousins out
of this county so badly,” she argued fiercely.
“Oh hell, yes, I do know why.” He gave a bark of
mocking laughter. “The inheritances our mothers left
us were far more important to those bastards than the
grandchildren those daughters left. Especially
grandsons that looked too much like their hated
Callahan fathers.”
“Then tell me why Marshal Roberts grieved for
you?” she asked him, burying the knife that was the