Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
Logan and Crowe slept in positions that
would block all access to the stairs.
There was no way in hell to get from the kitchen
to the stairs or from the stairs to the kitchen, where
her coffeepot awaited.
“Just tell them to move their sorry asses,” Rafe
said lightly as he bounded down the stairs behind her
rather than walking softly as she had.
“They’re sleeping.” She frowned up at him, not
entirely agreeing with the command.
“They were, until Lard Ass stomped down the
stairs,” Crowe groused as he rolled over in the
sleeping bag and jerked the extra-down-filled material
over his head.
It wasn’t exactly cold, but a fire would have been
nice. Before she’d acquired three grown male
bodyguards, she would have had the fire ready to light
and the coffee set to have already been made.
She held back the sigh that would have slipped
past her lips and looked at the clock.
Before she had acquired her bodyguards, she
would have had a job to go to. The fire would have
waited until evening, and then it would have been a
nice glass of wine rather than coffee as she graded
papers.
She was going to have to call the principal,
though her Uncle Eddy had promised to talk to his
other niece himself. Serena Carlyle was Ella’s sister’s
daughter and had taken the post of principal the year
before when the previous principal had retired.
A resident of Aspen, Serena wasn’t influenced by
the barons though. Thank God!
“Someone needs to make coffee,” Logan
grumbled from somewhere inside his sleeping bag.
“Get your lazy ass up,” Rafe ordered as he
stepped into the living room and began stepping over
the bodies. “We have a busy day ahead of us.”
“And what is ahead of you that’s going to be so
busy?” Cami asked as she followed behind him,
albeit picking her way through the living room more
slowly.
She was still incredibly tender, her hip was still
one large bruise, and though the headaches weren’t
as severe or as often as they had been at first, they
were still prone to hit and last for hours at a time.
The bruising to her skull could have resulted in
much, much more serious complications. Thankfully,
the initial concussion and disorientation was the worst
she had suffered.
She could have returned to work, though she
admitted it wouldn’t have been easy. Cami was
guessing she could look forward to spending the rest
of the school year out on leave and when the new fall
season began she doubted she would have a job.
Moving to Aspen was out of the question, she
thought as she stepped into the kitchen, greeted by
the tempting scent of coffee beginning.
“And what are you doing today that’s going to be
so busy?” she asked as she pulled the edges of the
gray sweater she wore snugly around the white cotton
shirt she had tucked into her jeans.
“We have a few errands to run,” Rafe told her as
he moved to the cabinets and, as he had the day
before, began preparing breakfast.
They never asked her to fix breakfast, though
Rafe had acted like a kid in a candy store the morning
she had cooked during their snowbound adventure.
“Logan and I have to check the ranch and my
house before meeting you and Rafe at the
courthouse,” Crowe finished as he too stepped into
the kitchen.
“Meeting us at the courthouse?” She arched a
brow as she looked over to where Rafe was loading
one of her larger skillets with bacon. “And why are we
going to the courthouse?”
“My lawyer and I have a meeting with the county
attorney to discuss Deputy Eisner and his lack of
talent in navigating private drives with a piece of
county equipment.”
She almost winced. “You’ve sued the county?”
“Not yet.” Rafe flashed her a grin over his
shoulder before turning back to the two pounds of
bacon Logan had brought in the day before. “That’s
what we’re discussing.”
Cami lowered her head, shaking it at the
impossible sense of fun that seemed to fill Rafe’s
face.
“You know this is insane, right?” she accused
him. “Rafe, suing the county is only going to piss more
people off.”
“Fuck ’em,” Logan drawled as he moved plates
from the cabinet and handed them to Rafe before
taking Cami’s cup from her hand and filling it with
coffee. “You’re probably the only one in this county
that likes us anyway.”
“Who says I like you?” She arched her brow,
hiding the fact that she did like him.
She had always liked the Callahan cousins, even
when she was younger. Especially when she was
younger, when the cousins had been like fables,
larger than life and used as a bogeyman threat
against little children who refused to behave.
Logan pouted good-naturedly as Crowe grunted
at the response. She noticed he did that a lot. He
didn’t talk much, but he watched, listened, and he
waited. There was always a sense of waiting where
Crowe was concerned, as though he knew something
was about to happen and was determined to be
prepared.
“So I have to go to this meeting why?” She turned
back to Rafe as he moved to the refrigerator and
pulled a dozen eggs from the inside.
He flicked her a look that assured her he meant
for her to go, one way or the other.
She crossed her arms over her breasts, cocked
a hip, and tapped her toe against the floor twice as
she waited.
“Ignoring me isn’t going to get you your way
automatically,” she assured him as he returned to the
sizzling bacon. “I have things to do today myself.”
“And I have no intentions of leaving you here
alone,” he informed her, his tone hardening. “And I
can’t miss this meeting. Eisner deliberately took that
fence out, and he was too damned gleeful about the
results to suit me; now he’s going to pay for it.”
“And you don’t think it would be a good time to
take the high road and let it go?” she asked him.
“Give it a rest, Rafe. No one is going to care if Deputy
Eisner is fired or not, except Eisner. But what they will
do is come together against you, rather than for him.”
Rafe shrugged. “Good luck to them.”
She turned to Crowe, wondering if, as the oldest
cousin, he would at least show a bit more maturity.
“You should stay out of this one,” he told her
instead, his darker voice rumbling more than usual.
“Let Eisner pay for his sins. He’s quick enough to
attempt to make others pay for sins that aren’t theirs.”
“Stay out of it?” She let her brows arch in amused
disbelief. “There’s not the first one of you that could
possibly keep your nose out of my business at this
point, and you have the nerve to tell me to keep mine
out of a part of yours? Or his?” She nodded to Rafe.
“Not as long as he’s sleeping in my bed I won’t.”
Rafe had to turn back to the sizzling bacon to
hide the grin tugging at his lips as Cami turned that
teacher’s attitude on Crowe without a thought.
There were very few people Rafe had ever
known who were willing to stand and stare at his older
cousin as though he were a mischievous schoolboy
stepping out of line.
“I’m not sleeping in your bed, though,” he pointed
out.
“No, you’re sleeping on my living room floor,” she
retorted with false sweetness. “If you don’t like my
opinion, then you’re more than welcome to sleep in
the backyard.”
Logan’s snort of laughter was followed by
another of Crowe’s less than impressed male grunts.
“The backyard is probably more comfortable,”
Crowe informed her. “Unfortunately, not as secure.”
“Yeah, like someone’s going to get past Rafe
while he’s pacing the bedroom floor,” she stated.
Rafe arched his brows at the acidic little
comment. He had no idea she was aware of the fact
that sleep was often a long time coming for him.
He wasn’t exactly pacing the bedroom floor,
though. That would have been counterproductive.
More often than not he was standing by the bedroom
window, silent, still, and watching the shadowed edge
of her back garden carefully.
Crowe had managed to pinpoint the location
where her attacker had come into her yard and
slipped into the window well that hadn’t been as
secure as it should have been.
There had been no prints, just as Archer said
there hadn’t been. But what Crowe had found was that
the back door lock had been broken from the inside,
not the outside. Someone hadn’t wanted it known that
the basement had been used for the entrance point
into the house. That window had been opened from
the inside as well, not from the outside.
Someone she had trusted had opened that
window.
Crowe had locked it back, and now the cousins
were going to see about giving that someone a
chance to slip in and unlock it again.
That meant getting her out of the house without it
appearing as though he had deliberately gotten her
out of the house. The meeting was the perfect
opportunity for that.
Besides that, he knew for a fact that the county
attorney, Wayne Sorenson, would have a much harder
time playing the bastard with Cami sitting there
watching him.
Cami and Wayne Sorenson’s daughter, Amelia,
had been best friends. They had practically grown up
in the same house. Amelia’s mother had been best
friends with Cami’s mother, and the two girls had
been inseparable as children and young adults.
Wayne and Mark hadn’t associated with each
other much, though. Wayne had been younger and
hadn’t seemed to connect with Mark’s aloof bigotry.
“It may not be a good idea to take me to that
meeting with you, Rafe,” Cami advised him as the last
of the breakfast dishes were cleared away more than
an hour later.
She was still limping a bit, the bruise on her hip
obviously bothering her as she shifted in her chair
again, accepting the cup of coffee Logan reached to
her as Crowe finished loading the dishwasher.
She had watched them as though they were
aliens as they cleaned her kitchen. Or as though she
had expected them to leave the mess for her.
“And why is that?” Rafe asked as he rinsed the
skillet he’d used to prepare the meal and turned back
to her.Drying his hands, he watched her as she nibbled
at her thumbnail, a concerned expression on her face
as she watched him.