Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
“Wayne’s not exactly enamored of me any
longer,” she finally sighed. “And Amelia and I haven’t
spoken in ages.”
There was a shadow of hurt in Cami’s gaze
before she looked down at her coffee, but there was
also a shadow of deception in her eyes. She was
hiding more half-truths and shadows of lies than Rafe
could have ever guessed.
What the hell had happened to her since he had
been gone?
Rafe glanced at his cousins in a silent exchange
that had the other two men making their excuses and
leaving the kitchen. Several minutes later the sound of
the front door clicking shut had her head lifting once
again. She was obviously surprised that the other two
had left the room and she was now alone with Rafe.
And she didn’t look comfortable with him.
What the hell did it take, he wondered, for her to
get a clue that she was stuck with him?
“Why haven’t you and Amelia spoken for the past
few years?” he finally asked Cami.
She breathed out heavily as her shoulders lifted
in an uncomfortable, defensive little gesture more
telling than words.
“Things happen.” She shrugged. “It began before
we graduated college. That last year actually. I started
work as a substitute and Amelia already had an offer
for her own classroom in Aspen for a while.” Cami
smiled at something that she obviously still found to
be a pleasant memory before rubbing at the side of
her neck a bit nervously. “Something changed that
year, I guess. No matter what I did, I couldn’t stop her
from disassociating herself from me.”
Rafe knew she had been twenty-two that year.
She and Amelia had roomed together at college and
watched out for each other as they navigated the
much larger city after being raised in near isolation in
Sweetrock. It didn’t make sense that they would have
just grown apart.
“There’s more to it, Cami,” he probed. “The halftruths
are only going to piss me off. Now tell me what
the hell happened before I have to begin questioning
others. You don’t want to push this much further.”
Her lips thinned as a flash of anger clouded her
eyes. She glanced away from him for a second,
obviously searching for some other way to get out of
answering the question.
Rafe stalked to the table, planted his hand on the
top of it, and leaned close as she stared back at him
in surprise, her eyes widening as he leaned in, nearly
nose to nose with her.
“I asked you a question,” he growled furiously as
he felt that primal instinct itching between his shoulder
blades again. The secrets she was keeping had
somehow contributed to the isolated, near-friendless
life she was living at the moment.
“Lie to me and I’ll paddle your ass.”
Delicate little nostrils flared. “Perhaps I’ll like it,”
she snapped back. “Go ahead and try it, Rafer.”
“Oh, you’ll like it,” he promised her as he came in
closer. “You’ll love it, Cami. You’ll beg for it. Your
pussy will become so hot, so wet, so desperate for
release that you’ll beg me to fuck you. You’ll beg for
my cock as deep and as hard as you can take me.”
Her face flushed, her eyes darkened.
“And I’ll even give it to you,” he promised,
dropping his voice until he knew the lower, rougher
tone would take on a brooding, rasping quality that
never failed to affect her.
And it did.
Her face flushed, arousal heating her cheeks at
the very sensual promise.
“And that’s supposed to convince me—”
“Do you know what that does to a woman,
Cami?” he whispered. “You don’t see yourself as
submissive. You’re an independent, freethinking
woman. But once you’ve come until you can come no
more, once you think it’s all you can do to breathe,
once you think it’s over.” His voice dropped further. “I’ll
do it again, Cami. And I’ll do it again. And when it’s
over, when it’s all you can do just to breathe, what
you’ll realize is what will sear you to your very soul.
You’ll realize I didn’t just spill my come inside you so
many times, pumping it as deep inside you as
possible. You’ll realize I own you. Heart and soul.
You’ll be completely mine, Cami, and you’ll love being
mine. You’ll ache for more of it. You’ll come to me
when I so much as whisper your name, because I’ll be
buried so deeply inside your soul that you won’t be
able to cut me out. There will be no forcing me out. Is
that what you want now? Is that a step you think you’re
ready to take at this moment?”
It was a step she had already taken and one she
that had nearly destroyed her. Those horrible, bleak
days were still a part of her, still a part of her
memories, and the scars were still a part of her soul.
It would destroy her to belong to him so
completely again. And she couldn’t risk his attempt to
do just as he said he would, because he could. She
was too weak where his touch, his kiss, was
concerned. Too weak, too hungry. He was already too
much a part of her.
“Now, I’m going to ask you again, kitten. What
happened?”
She swallowed tightly. “Amelia used to keep a
diary,” she whispered, her gaze lifting to him as the
anger faded from her gray eyes and they darkened in
pain instead.
He eased back slowly. “And someone found it?”
Cami drew in a slow, deep breath. “It wouldn’t be
hard to guess. Her father did while helping Amelia
move the year we graduated. He learned both our
secrets.”
“And what were those secrets?” It was worth a
try.
Cami shook her head, stubborn determination
smoothing all but the final, last vestiges of emotion.
“It’s her secret,” Cami whispered. “I’ll never betray her,
not in any way.”
“She betrayed you, evidently.”
Cami only shrugged.
“And what did he learn of your secrets?” Rafe
asked her instead.
“He learned of the night we had spent together
and how I felt about it.” She licked her lips nervously.
“How I felt about you. And while he was being nosy, he
learned something Amelia had fought to hide from
him. After that night, she never spoke to me again.”
That secret must have been a huge one. If Rafe
remembered correctly, there was some sort of gossip
surrounding her return and the hasty marriage that
took place weeks later.
“She’s married now, isn’t she?” he asked to be
certain.
“She’s married,” Cami agreed.
“And how did Wayne handle these secrets?”
Her lips quirked bitterly. “He was very
disappointed in both of us, he said. And he was, but I
really didn’t give a damn. Shame wasn’t the reason I
didn’t tell anyone, and shame has never been the
reason I didn’t want anyone to know we were lovers.”
She rose slowly from her chair.
She felt as though she had aged ten years. As
though exhaustion were so much a part of her now
that there would never be any shaking it off.
“Cami.” He moved to touch her, to draw her into
his arms, to give her what little comfort he could.
Her hand lifted imperatively, a demand that he
stop as he watched a hard shudder shake her body.
“I don’t have friends for a reason,” she
whispered. “I don’t have my parents for a reason.”
She lifted her gaze to him and it didn’t take a frigging
diary to see the pain that filled her eyes. “Because
you never had to fuck me all night long, spank me, or
make yourself so much a part of me that I couldn’t
exist without you, or without that part that I’ll suddenly
be living and breathing for.”
He heard the tears then. They didn’t fall. They
didn’t fill her eyes. They were stuck in her soul, a
wound that never healed, that never eased. And it
broke his heart.
“Cami?” What could have happened? How could
he have hurt her in such a way without ever knowing
he had done so? Fear lanced through him then. Fear
that somehow he had damaged her, taken from her
something she hadn’t willingly given because his
hunger had been so strong, so wild.
“You did the night we spent together.” He froze at
the statement. “You left a part of yourself inside me
that I never wanted to be free of. That I never wanted
to live without.” Her voice was ragged now, torn, until
he moved for her, desperate to hold her as she jerked
back from him, leaving him staring at her in shock as
her expression twisted in rage. “And I lost it anyway,
Rafe. I lost the baby I already loved until it felt as
though my soul had been seared and then ripped
from my very spirit. But I was still living, I was still
breathing, and I was alone. And I’ve stayed alone.
That way, I didn’t lose again. I didn’t suffer again. And
I sure as hell didn’t ever take that risk again until I
decided to see if rumors were true and drive by the
ranch.” Her breathing hitched as she held her hands
to her stomach, the rage and anger in her voice
ripping his soul apart. The image of complete
aloneness that surrounded her, tearing into his soul.
Cami should have never been alone. “Until I walked to
your house during a blizzard, instead of the
Phillipses’, which was closer. Until I realized I had to
see you.” And there were the tears; they gleamed in
her eyes, but they didn’t fall. “I had to see you; I had to
know if you were really home. If you were really here.
And I swore I wouldn’t touch you.” Throwing her head
back, she blinked desperately as she drew in ragged
breaths. “I just had to see you,” she whispered
hoarsely. “Now what else do you want to know, Rafe?
Tell me!” she screamed then, the pain suddenly
overflowing, penned up for five years, locked in a dark
part of her soul where she had refused to let it
escape, and now it was exploding like a volcano of
rage and pain. “What the fuck else do you need to
know?”
She turned to run.
Cami had never meant to let it go, to let it rise
inside her until it spewed from her soul like an
erupting volcano that couldn’t be stemmed.
When he had threatened to leave a part of
himself that she would never be free of, he had
triggered that inner helpless rage she had been able
to control in the past.
“The hell you will!” Rafe jumped for her as she
turned to run, to escape. “Damn you, you’re not going
anywhere. You will not run from me again, Cambria.
Not this time. Not now.”
He had seen the intent in her eyes, wild with the
agony of a loss he had never known.