Authors: Lora Leigh
Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Murder, #Crime, #Erotica, #Ranchers
hair in frustration. “I didn’t say I knew why,” she
admitted. “But as you said, why give a fuck who you
fuck? Why call Jaymi and threaten her? Why do the
same with me? And why resurrect a monster? Unless
there were two killers and one of them has decided to
start killing again.”
Her gaze met Rafe’s, and she saw the suspicion
her questions had raised, but she also saw doubt.
The cousins didn’t want to accept that Jaymi could
have died because of her tie to Rafe, but Cami had
accepted it a long time ago. She had simply believed
the past was dead.
Unfortunately, it wasn’t dead.
She could feel it, like a chill racing across her
flesh, like the whisper of unseen force at her ear.
There was so much more going on here than
three families’ disowning their grandsons because of
who their fathers were and because the boys’
mothers refused to love anyone else. No, there was
something more sinister, and she had a feeling that
finding the answers to the questions she had raised
could be a long time coming. And asking those
questions where other ears could hear would be more
dangerous than she might have anticipated.
As she began to turn and move toward the
counter and the coffee left in the pot, one of the cell
phones in the center of the breakfast table began to
vibrate imperatively.
Rafe’s hand flashed out, gripping the phone and
flipping it open before hitting the call button in a
seamless move as he brought it to his ear.
“Yeah?” he answered quietly, and waited a
second, a frown brewing between his brows.
“How long have you been there?” His voice
seemed to harden, his sapphire eyes gem bright and
just as hard as he listened.
Pulling her gaze from his, Cami moved to the
coffeepot and refilled the empty cup she had set in
front of it earlier.
“Stay in place until daylight, then head to Cami’s,”
he said. “Crowe or Logan will have breakfast for you.”
Rafe listened again before grunting mockingly.
“Not in your dreams, Tank,” he replied to whatever the
other man said. “I’ll be sleeping.”
Perhaps Tank wanted Rafe to fix breakfast.
“We’ll talk tomorrow,” Rafe told him before
flipping the phone closed and staring back at Cami.
“Tank’s at Amelia’s. No one is moving in or out, but he
saw Amelia in her upstairs bedroom window as she
closed the curtains. She’s not showing up tonight.”
It was still early.
She would show, Cami knew, but it wouldn’t be
until late. Very late if Amelia followed the time line
they’d had when they were younger.
Amelia had always been very adept at slipping
out of her father’s house and slipping into Cami’s.
“She has the key to the basement door,” Cami
told Rafe quietly as she set the coffee cup back on the
counter. “I never had the lock changed, just in case
she needed someplace to run to.”
Rafe leaned forward. “Cami, what was the secret
you were keeping for Amelia?”
Closing her eyes, she lowered her head, her jaw
clenching painfully.
Had it just been this morning? Had she told Rafe
they had lost a child and in the next second been
forced to face yet another emergency?
There had been no chance to rest, to find peace
or a few moments to discuss much of anything that
had happened three years before.
“Cami, the time to keep secrets is over,” he
warned her, his voice low yet hard. “Why did Amelia
go from the rebel with a cause to that staid, silent
wraith of a young woman we saw today? What did her
father learn when he read your diary?”
She was careful to keep her gaze down, but from
the corners of her eyes she watched Crowe. Closely.
And he was consciously not looking in her direction.
“Cami, I have to agree with Rafe,” Logan stated,
his gaze compassionate but just as determined as his
cousin’s. “We need to know now. She’s passing you
notes that she can’t sign in her own name, and coded
with a message that only you would understand that
she needs to meet with you. Something’s wrong here,
and it’s affecting more than just those in this room at
the moment.”
But it affected one of them more than the other,
and obviously, that one hadn’t trusted his cousins with
the information.
“Cami.” Rafe’s tone was warning. “I won’t beg for
the information. What I’ll do is start asking questions
around town; is that what you want?”
Cami flinched.
Crowe lifted his head then, his gaze slicing
across the room to her, obviously aware she was
watching him from the corners of her eyes.
She watched as he drew in a deep breath and
gave a short shake of his head before he said, “She
helped me break into the courthouse the month we
were home on leave that year. She stole her father’s
key, slipped inside with me, opened the safe, and I
took the file he had been putting together on us. We
wiped the computers, made certain there were no
copies, and then I took her home.”
Cami swallowed tightly.
Amelia had told her about it several nights later,
after Crowe had disappeared into Crowe Mountain
once again. Excited, nervous, her emerald eyes
sparkling with what Cami knew was a surfeit of pure
sexual arousal, Amelia had told her exactly what had
happened before he took her home. Crowe was
leaving quite a few details out of the story.
“Hell.” Logan blew out a hard breath as frustration
creased his face. “Now he’s blackmailing her.”
“And no one cared to tell us.” Crowe directed the
accusation at Cami.
“Perhaps someone thought you’d be man
enough to at least pay attention to any changes in her
after your little escapade,” she shot back. “Tell me,
Crowe, did you even bother to question why Amelia
married so quickly? Or why she changed so
drastically?”
His lips thinned. “I didn’t know until today.”
Cami’s jaw tightened as her lips pursed for a
second in an attempt to hold back her anger.
It didn’t work.
“Why doesn’t that surprise me?” she charged
roughly. “Did you even give a damn after you charmed
her out of what you wanted and left her watching for
you every damned day?”
His eyes narrowed.
“Cami,” Rafe warned, “let it go for now. We’re all
less than calm, and there’s no sense in fighting
among ourselves.”
She let her gaze connect with Rafe’s, the need to
continue the accusation straining her patience.
Because she knew how Amelia felt where Crowe was
concerned.
Like Rafe for Cami, Crowe had lit a fire inside
Amelia that even the knowledge of the repercussions
if anyone learned what she had done couldn’t cool.
Amelia knew that Crowe was even more forbidden to
her than to any other woman in the county, with the
exception of the current Corbin princess, Ann.
And someone had found out. The wrong person
had found out, and it had destroyed Amelia’s dreams.
Her father had somehow found the diary that
Cami kept hidden in a box of letters and cards tucked
in the back of her nightstand behind books,
mementos, and a picture of her with her mother and
Jaymi.
Cami had never learned how he had found it.
What she learned, though, was the price she and
Amelia both had paid for the discovery.
The price they were still paying.
“I hate this fucking county,” Logan breathed out
roughly as silence filled the room. “Wayne Sorenson
always was a Corbin lapdog. It’s a shame his
daughter is paying for his lack of backbone.”
Wayne Sorenson was particularly cruel. Amelia
hadn’t just betrayed him; she had broken the law. He
had the proof of it in the journal Amelia’s best friend
had recorded the events of the night in. Amelia and
Cami would stay away from each other, Amelia would
marry the man Wayne had been shoving down her
throat, and she would become the perfect daughter. If
she didn’t, he would ensure that she was arrested for
breaking into the courthouse and interfering in an
investigation against suspected criminal elements.
There was nothing he could do to Crowe,
because for some reason Cami hadn’t mentioned his
name. It was a habit she had taken as a teenager.
She never wrote their names. She called them
instead by the predatory nicknames she had given
them. Rafe was the wolf, Logan was the tiger, and
Crowe was the lion, the king of the jungle, simply
because he seemed to be harder than the other two.
There was no way Amelia could deny Cami had
written about her, though. Her name was there, written
in bold black, and the act had been described in
exacting detail.
“I’m getting a shower and heading to bed,” Cami
told the cousins. “This hasn’t been my best day and I’d
just as soon go to sleep and forget it happened for a
while.”
She could feel the heaviness weighing her soul
down as guilt bit at her hard and deep.
She hadn’t just lost everything she had held dear,
but she had also managed to strip every shred of
Amelia’s freedom. Because if she hadn’t returned
home and done exactly what her daddy wanted, then
he would make certain her prints were found inside
the safe and the county attorney at the time would
have arrested her and made certain she spent time in
prison. Then her father had upped the ante. She
would do what he wanted, or he would take Cami’s
journal and implicate her in the crime as well. He
might not be able to arrest Crowe, but Wayne could
destroy both her and Cami’s life.
Wayne Sorenson had tied his daughter’s hands,
hobbled her, blindfolded her, then shoved a dagger
so deep inside her heart that Cami knew her friend
would never recover.
Moving through the house and up the stairs,
Cami told herself she would make it up to Amelia one
of these days. It was one of those promises Cami
made almost daily and one she knew she couldn’t fix.
She’d lost so much simply because of the county she
had been so determined to stay in. She hadn’t wanted
to move to Denver, but Aspen was just small enough
that she could never live there without running into her
parents.
If her mother ever recovered from the stroke
she’d had, if she ever left the nursing home—
Unfortunately, she had seemed more than content
exactly where she was. Away from her husband.
Still, if not her parents, Cami would end up