Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
good twenty-minute walk from the house that would
have taken Cami much longer as she labored for
breath.
She glanced at the clock, willing the doctor to call
her back about the prescription before it was too late.
She worked at the pharmacy, but still, Mr. Keene
wouldn’t like it if she had to let herself in tonight to fill
the prescription.
If he were in town, he would have come in himself
and done it, she knew. He liked Cami. Hell, everyone
liked Cami, except their father.
“How did you lose your medicine?” Cami’s
answer perplexed her. Her sister wasn’t an
irresponsible child. She’d been forced to grow up
young, and hadn’t had the luxury of being able to
forget the simplest things. Mark Flannigan, their
father, had little patience for teenage angst or
forgetfulness from his youngest child.
Cami shrugged at the question and turned her
gaze away to stare at the wall on the other side of the
bed.
“Cami?” Jaymi touched her sister’s chin gently to
turn her gaze back to her. “What happened to your
medicine?”
“I don’t know.” Her dry lips trembled as her eyes
filled with tears. “Dad came in the bedroom and he
was upset because there were dirty clothes on the
floor and the tissues were on my table. I think he threw
them away when he started throwing everything in the
trash.”
Jaymi’s lips thinned.
She knew better than to call him, or to appear at
the house furious over it. Mark always had a way of
making it look as though it were Cami’s fault, or even
pretending innocence.
While he did, their mother would stare at him in
resigned accusation before mumbling about taking
her medicine and heading for her bedroom.
She wasn’t going to allow this to continue, she
decided. Once Cami was better, they would go to the
house and pack her things before bringing them to the
apartment. Cami was being neglected in the most
despicable way. Even worse, Mark was risking her
health. He had to have known he had thrown the
medicine away. That wasn’t something that was done
by accident, and she knew Cami wasn’t a messy
child. She was too neat for her age and Jaymi
couldn’t believe there had been enough tissues on the
bed table for Mark to have missed the bottle of pills
and the cough medicine.
She just prayed the doctor was willing to fax the
prescription in to the pharmacy before Jaymi broke
several different state and federal laws and refilled the
prescriptions herself.
She would not allow her sister to suffer more
tonight, and the hospital was more than an hour away.
After the wreck she’d been in the week before, she
was wary about driving the mountain roads.
There shouldn’t have been anything wrong with
her brakes. There had been no reason they would go
out as she started down the mountain, causing her to
nearly crash over one of the sheer cliffs that dropped
to a boulder-strewn ravine below.
It had been sheer luck that had kept her from
going over. That and the fact that a rock slide from the
cliff above the road had caused the state to clear a
wide area on the other side of the road to make room
for debris.
She’d managed to steer her car to the other side
and the very fact that she hadn’t been going fast had
possibly saved her life, Joe Townsend had told her.
But he had acted oddly. He’d refused to look her
in the eye, and Joe was the type of man who looked a
person in the eye. But when he’d warned her to be
careful, and she had taken it as a warning, he’d been
more commanding than concerned.
“Jaymi, watch what you’re doing,” he told her
fiercely. “Don’t be taking any chances.”
She hadn’t been aware she was taking any
chances. At least not in her car.
But the night she and Rafe had stopped seeing
each other, another call had come in, and this time,
she was certain she knew who it was. Mostly certain
of it. There was just enough doubt that she had to see
him first, had to look in his eyes as he spoke to her to
be certain.
Each time she called him the call went to voice
mail. The one time she’d shown up at his office, he
had been “unavailable,” according to his secretary.
But he couldn’t hide forever. Sweetrock was a small
town, she was going to see him eventually.
The ring of her cell phone had her jerking the
device from the table next to the bed and flipping it
open. The prescription had been faxed in. The
pharmacy was closed, but the doctor was certain it
would be filled before the doors opened the next
morning.
So was she. She had the keys to the store and
she had the license to work behind the counter and fill
prescriptions. She was supposed to have it checked
by the pharmacist; she wasn’t supposed to fill
anything without Martin Keene’s presence. But this
was an emergency. It was her sister.
Cami fought to cough again, nearly losing her
breath as she tried weakly to clear the obstruction in
her lungs.
“Cami, I’m going to go get your prescription,” she
told her as she rose from the chair and grabbed the
jacket she’d laid at the end of the bed earlier. “I’ll be
back in a bit, okay?”
Cami nodded, her eyes drifting closed, her
breathing labored as she tried to rest before another
bout attacked.
“Get some rest, baby.” Leaning down, she kissed
her sister on the forehead before grabbing her purse
and keys and heading out of the apartment.
It was dark. The street lights glowed weakly in the
evening fog, casting sinister shadows along the nearly
deserted back streets.
She considered moving to the front of the block,
but it was the quieter part of the evening. There wasn’t
much traffic until Main Street and then heading south
toward the interstate.
The pharmacy was only a few blocks from her
apartment, which was why she liked the job. She
could walk to work and back, and even during the rain
and snowstorms, it wasn’t a bad walk. It would just be
a wet one.
Which was why Cami had bronchitis. Her father
had sent her the eight blocks from their home to the
pharmacy to get their mother’s prescription rather
than waiting for Jaymi to bring it to the house after she
locked up.
He had deliberately attempted to get Cami ill,
she thought as she tucked her hands into the light
jacket she wore and strode faster along the neat, welllit
back street.
Cami was susceptible to bronchitis and
pneumonia. If the first stage wasn’t treated quickly
and aggressively, then Cami could become viciously
ill. She’d been hospitalized twice in the past four
years, once for pneumonia, the second time for
double pneumonia.
Pausing at the street corner, she felt a chill race
up her spine and marked it down to the thought that
her father might be attempting to kill his youngest
child. If she was his youngest child.
Jaymi had done some counting in the past
weeks since her father had revealed his attempt to
convince Uncle Eddy and Aunt Ella to keep Cami
when they moved to Aspen.
Cami was thirteen. She would be fourteen in
three months. Add nine more months to that, and it
added up to the time their mother had taken Jaymi
and stayed in Denver with Aunt Beth for nearly a year.
Jaymi had been ten, and she remembered, even
now, how much happier her mother had been then.
She laughed, giggled on the phone. Sometimes,
Jaymi would wake up in the middle of the night and
thought she heard a man’s voice in the bedroom
across the hall.
She remembered the man her mother had said
was a friend of Beth’s. He had worn a uniform. Dark
hair, and eyes a soft, soft gray ringed with the same
odd blue color Cami’s were ringed with.
She walked across the street as realization
began to rush through her.
God, why hadn’t she made the connection before
now?
For years she had watched Mark Flannigan treat
Cami like shit, and had agonized over how a father
could be so cruel. Why hadn’t she remembered the
darkly handsome man with the gentle smile and big
hands?
Why hadn’t she remembered, during that time,
the day she had come home from the park with a
neighbor to find her mother sobbing as though she
were dying? Aunt Beth had been crying as well and
Uncle Jonah had been grief-stricken.
She unlocked the pharmacy and stepped in,
careful to lock the door behind her, holding her breath
as she heard a car easing down the street.
She prayed it wasn’t Mr. Keene, or the police.
She would hate to have to explain why she was here.
Even if she did have the key, she didn’t have
permission to be in before it was time to open the
pharmacy.
Moving quickly to the back, she began to fill the
prescription as those memories continued to ease
forward from whatever shadowed recess they had
been hiding in.
She was still shocked, dismayed that she hadn’t
remembered that summer so long ago. She should
have. Because she remembered her father showing
up not long after that and he and Uncle Jonah fighting
over something Mark had called a “whoreson” and
“wife-stealing brother.”
It was beginning to make sense. So much was
becoming more clear.
She had been pushing so many memories back
over the years, trying to keep the truth at bay. She
hadn’t wanted to remember, though it was something
Cami deserved to know. But that didn’t mean it
wouldn’t destroy her. Cami still had the hope that the
day would come that Mark would accept her as a
daughter and part of the family.
The fact that he never would wasn’t lost on Jaymi,
or Jonah, if she could remember the past well enough
to recall the screaming match they had gotten into.
Why? Why had she forgotten?
That question tormented her as she finished
filling the prescription, capped it, and printed out the
label before peeling the paper from it and sticking it
onto the bottles.
The antibiotic would take at least twenty-four
hours to kick in, but the cough medicine would ease
her labored breathing and the horrible coughing.
Did Cami take her susceptibility to bronchitis
from her natural father? Jaymi wondered as she
made her way to the back door.