Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
disappearing as she heard the sounds of something
crashing, yelling, cursing, and the pounding of feet
running through her hall like a stampede of elephants.
“You bastard!” she sobbed, her legs collapsing,
throwing her to the hardwood floor as she braced
herself against the side of the steps. Cami felt her
legs folding beneath her as the blows to her head, the
terror, and the sudden, overwhelming relief stole her
last bit of strength.
With one hand braced around the spindle of the
banister, her fingers locked desperately around the
smooth wooden support as she laid her head against
her arm and screamed out in rage.
Tears filled her eyes, and one even escaped
before she could battle it back. Breathing harshly and
fighting back what could easily turn into desperate,
agonizing cries, she whispered Rafe’s name.
Her dress was ruined. The silk underslip was still
intact; her stockings were probably ruined. And if she
had just told Rafer about that call during the afternoon,
then she wouldn’t have been alone. And no one would
have ever gotten the jump on Rafer as he had on her.
Oh God, where was Rafe?
She was cold and so scared. The entire world
was spinning much too fast, and all she wanted to do
was make the twisting, spinning motions cease
before she began retching all over her pristine
wooden floor.
“Cambria?” She heard Archer’s yell as he rushed
through the opened front door.
She tried to lift her head as he came to a hard,
shocked stop. It wobbled on her shoulders, though,
causing her sight to careen wildly once again,
dragging a moan from her lips. Instantly he was
kneeling in front of her, his hands and his gaze going
over her quickly.
“Are you okay?” He touched her forehead. The
brief touch sent a wave of pain tearing through her,
causing her to flinch and jerk her head back a second
before she began gagging from the revolving room.
She could taste blood in her mouth. The taste of
it added to the sickening, retching sensation gripping
her stomach. If everything would just slow down. If it
would just stop spinning for more than a second or
two, then she could find her balance.
Dizziness rushed over her again, forcing her to
put her head down, to swallow desperately and fight
the sickness threatening to overwhelm her.
“Did you get him?” she finally gasped weakly
when she could lift her head to try to focus on Archer.
He looked like he was wavering, slithering from side
to side like a cobra attempting to mesmerize her.
Rather than mesmerizing her, it only made her
feel sicker, more confused.
Frowning, she knew something was wrong but
was having a hell of a time concentrating on what.
She knew she was ill, that the blows to her head
hadn’t been a good thing.
“How many, Cami?” he was yelling at her, holding
up his hand. Or something. He was holding something
up in front of her face.
She tried to focus, blinking, almost whimpering at
the disorientation and the pain surging through her
head once again.
Oh God, she hated not being able to concentrate,
unable to think or to rationalize.
“How many?” Archer yelled at her again.
How many?
“Two Archers,” she whispered, dazed as she laid
her head against her arm once again, wondering why
she kept seeing two of him when she knew there was
only one. Archer didn’t even have a brother, let alone
a twin.
“Archer, I don’t feel well,” she whispered,
suddenly terribly frightened of the disorientation she
couldn’t seem to shake.
“Ambulance is on its way, Cami.” His hands
clasped her face, forcing her to tilt her head back as
the room swam around her and pure agony raced
through her temples, her eyes, shooting to the back of
her neck.
She tried to swat at his hand, to scream, but all
that came out was a weak whimper. “Rafer.”
“It’s Archer, Cami. Fuck, where is that
ambulance?”
Who was he talking to? Please, not Martin
Eisner. Martin would tell her uncle, and her uncle and
Aunt Ella would rush over.
Ella would fuss over her.
Her mother used to fuss over her.
Uncle Eddy would threaten to kill the bastard, and
he would mean it.
She needed Rafer.
“Archer.” She couldn’t hold her head up, could
barely breathe enough to force out a single word:
“Rafer.”
She could see the darkness edging in on her
vision.
“Did Rafer do this, Cami?” Shock, fury, it all filled
his voice.
Why was he so angry? Rafer had slipped into her
bedroom. She had tried to tell him they couldn’t do
this. They couldn’t slip around, and he didn’t listen to
her any more than her own body did.
She could hear someone else beyond her vision,
yelling about Rafer.
She tried to shake her head.
“Get Rafer,” she whispered. “Have to tell—”
She had to tell Rafer. She had to warn him.
“Cami, answer me, damn you!” Archer was
yelling at her. Archer had never yelled at her. “Cami,
did Rafer do this?”
She needed Rafer. There were too many voices
screaming in her head. Or was that around her head?
The darkness was coming closer, closer. And
she had to warn Rafer.
“Warn Rafer—,” she could barely whisper. It was
a breath of a sound, the last of her energy before she
faced nothingness.
Oh God, was this how Jaymi had felt when she
died? Could Cami feel that complete absence of
being before she left the world? She sobbed, crying
out for the hell her sister must have endured and
terrified of facing it herself. Of being unable to avoid it
and unable to force herself away from it.
That dark, icy nothingness closed over her, like a
freezing, merciless veil of ice. There was nothing
comforting, nothing gentle, about it. It was terribly
frightening, dragging her into it as she fought
helplessly to retain consciousness, to warn Rafer.
Someone needed to warn Rafer.
* * *
Dawn was rolling over the mountains when Rafer
finally gave up the battle to sleep, rose, showered,
and dressed for the day. He was putting on coffee
when Logan and Crowe made their way from their
rooms, their distinctly irritated looks directed straight
at him.
“I didn’t wake you,” he informed them both as he
set out enough cups for the three of them.
“We didn’t say you had,” Logan growled,
definitely testy. He never had cared much for early
mornings.
“Then what are you doing awake?” Rafe poured
the coffee.
“Hell if I know, probably because you’re awake,”
Crowe grunted as he hitched the loose cotton pants
he wore a little closer to his hips and scratched at his
bare, scarred chest.
God, Rafe wished Crowe would wear a shirt. The
sight of those scars on his chest and back was too
much for Rafe to bear to look at. But saying anything
to Crowe, pointing it out, or reminding him of it wasn’t
always a good idea. Though how he could forget
about it Rafe had never understood.
Logan plopped down in the seat across from
Rafe, the gray running shorts he wore riding almost as
low as Crowe’s pants as he yawned and scratched at
the side of his rough jaw. The closely cropped beard,
a shade or two darker than his hair, was never
completely shaved free of his face. Unlike Crowe,
Logan preferred to hide his scars.
The mementos they had from their teenage years
sucked.
Rafer didn’t carry physical scars; he instead
carried the mental scars. None of them had escaped
unscathed from the hatred and merciless need for
revenge that had been exacted on each of them in
one form or another.
“We have two investors coming in day after
tomorrow,” Crowe reminded them both as he sipped
at the coffee. “Do you think we could get a cook out
here or something?” He looked around the kitchen
with a look of hope.
Poor Crowe, he’d gotten used to breakfast the
short time he’d been in Boston with Ryan’s family.
Ryan Calvert, the lost Callahan brother, had been
adopted by a family in Boston while his older brothers
were in the military. He hadn’t found the family forced
to give him up until well after his brothers’ deaths. But
he’d been there in time to save the nephews he hadn’t
known he’d had.
“I doubt it,” Rafe told Crowe, sipping at his coffee
as he rose from the chair again and paced to the
kitchen window.
“What the fuck are you looking for, Rafe?” Logan
finally burst out. “You did that half the night, until we
went to bed, and now you’re starting that shit again.
Are you on speed or something?”
Hell if Rafe knew what was wrong with him.
He kept expecting … something. Someone.
Cami. And the thought of Cami had a chill tearing
up his spine. Son of a bitch, he couldn’t figure out
what the hell was wrong.
Rafe stared down the road again, his brows
drawn into a frown as he tried to put together the
pieces of what was making him so crazy.
Not that the nerve-wracking emotions made
sense, but he’d learned a long time ago not to expect
anything in Corbin County to actually make sense.
Because it wasn’t going to happen.
And nothing concerning Cami ever made sense.
One thing was for sure, though; he had to see
her. Just as fast as he could get there, he suddenly
thought. Back door, front door, slipping through the
basement window, it didn’t fucking matter. He should
have gone last night. He should have turned around
the second this feeling had hit him like a punch in the
gut.
Hell, he should have never returned to the ranch
last night. What he should have done was headed
straight to her house, slipped in, crawled into that big
bed beside her, and fucked her until they were both
exhausted. Maybe then he could have slept. One thing
was for damned certain, he wasn’t sleeping now. And
he wouldn’t sleep until he got to her. Until he assured
himself she was okay.
It was that thought. That feeling that suddenly had
adrenaline surging through him and his body tensing
to rush to dress and leave.
As he started to turn from the window he
glimpsed a flash of black and orange amid the newly
budding trees and paused until the vehicle came into