Together again...
But far from safe
When Lauren Beckett is nearly killed in a home invasion and discovers her son was switched at birth, she knows there’s only one man she can turn to for protection. Deputy Cameron Doran isn’t expecting to find his ex-lover on his ranch, claiming the unthinkable about the nephew he’s been raising. But as they seek the truth, someone else is on the hunt...and wants them dead.
Blue River Ranch
From USA TODAY bestselling author Delores Fossen!
“What are we going to do?” Lauren came out and asked. “What are you going to do?” she amended.
He didn’t ask her to clarify, but he did look as if he wanted to repeat the question to her. “I wish there was an easy fix for this.”
So did she. But there wasn’t, and it was breaking her heart. Cameron must have seen that as well, because he said some profanity under his breath and pulled her to him. Lauren didn’t resist. Nor did she stop herself from looking up at him. It was a mistake, of course, because they were already too close to each other. Especially their mouths. And that was never a good thing when it came to Cameron and her.
“I should go back into the kitchen,” he said.
But he didn’t, and Lauren didn’t let go of him, either, so he could. Instead, she slipped her arm around his waist, drawing him even closer than he already was.
It was almost too much, and in some ways, it wasn’t nearly enough.
Because it made her want more of him.
LAWMAN FROM
HER PAST
USA TODAY Bestselling Author
Delores Fossen
Delores Fossen, a USA TODAY bestselling author, has sold over fifty novels, with millions of copies of her books in print worldwide. She’s received a Booksellers’ Best Award and an RT Reviewers’ Choice Best Book Award. She was also a finalist for a prestigious RITA® Award. You can contact the author through her website at www.deloresfossen.com.
Books by Delores Fossen
Harlequin Intrigue
Blue River Ranch
Always a Lawman
Gunfire on the Ranch
Lawman from Her Past
The Lawmen of Silver Creek Ranch
Grayson
Dade
Nate
Kade
Gage
Mason
Josh
Sawyer
Landon
Holden
HQN Books
A Wrangler’s Creek Novel
Lone Star Cowboy (ebook novella)
Those Texas Nights
One Good Cowboy (ebook novella)
No Getting Over a Cowboy
Just Like a Cowboy (ebook novella)
Branded as Trouble
Cowboy Dreaming (ebook novella)
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CAST OF CHARACTERS
Deputy Cameron Doran—When this tough Texas lawman learns his nephew might have been switched at birth, it puts him and the baby in the crosshairs of a killer.
Lauren Beckett—She left her family’s Texas ranch after her parents were murdered ten years ago. To protect her son, she returns home and puts his safety and hers in the hands of the lawman she left behind.
Patrick Lange—The son Lauren had with her late husband, Alden. When Alden died, Patrick became co-owner of his father’s wealthy estate, and that could be a motive for a killer.
Isaac Doran—The toddler Cameron has been raising. Cameron loves the boy as his own and has no plans to give him up, even if there has been a baby switch.
Gilly Doran—Cameron’s late sister, who died shortly after childbirth. Her dying wish was that Cameron would protect her son from the infant’s abusive father, Trace Waters, and Gilly’s domineering mother, Evelyn.
Evelyn Waters—She believes she has the right to raise her grandson and thinks Gilly switched the babies at birth to prevent her from doing that.
Julia Lange—Alden’s sister resents that his infant son inherited the bulk of his estate. But would she kill Lauren and her brother’s child to get her hands on the money?
Duane Tulley—A businessman who’s filed a lawsuit against Lauren to get control of the company he co-owned with her late husband. There’s enough bad blood between Lauren and him to be motive for murder.
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Excerpt from Kansas City Cop by Julie Miller
Chapter One
Someone was watching him. Deputy Cameron Doran was certain of it.
He slid his hand over the gun in his waist holster and hoped he was wrong about the bad feeling that was snaking down his spine. Hoped he was wrong about the being watched part, too.
But he knew he wasn’t.
He’d worn a badge for eleven years, and paying attention to that bad feeling had saved him a time or two.
With his gun ready to draw, Cameron glanced around his backyard. Such that it was. Since his house was on the backside of the sprawling Blue River Ranch, his yard was just a smear of grass with the thick woods only about fifteen feet away. There were plenty of trees and underbrush. The edge of the river, as well. However, there were also trails that someone could use to make their way to his house.
Someone like a killer.
You’ll all die soon.
That was what the latest threatening letter had said. The one that Cameron had gotten just two days ago. Not exactly words anyone wanted to read when they opened their mail, but he’d gotten so many now that they no longer held the emotional punch of the first one he’d gotten a couple of months ago. Still, he wasn’t about to dismiss it.
Cameron had another look around, trying to pick through the thick clusters of trees, but when he didn’t see anyone, he finished off his morning coffee and went inside. Normally, he would have made a beeline to the nursery so he could say goodbye to his nephew, Isaac, before heading off to work at the Blue River Sheriff’s Office, but this morning he went to the window over the sink and kept watch.
From the other side of the house, he could hear Isaac fussing, probably because the nanny, Merilee, was changing his diaper. Isaac was only a year old, but he got up raring to go. He objected to the couple of minutes delay that the diapering caused.
Just when Cameron was about to decide that the bad feeling had been wrong after all, he saw it. Someone moving around. Since those particular trees butted right up against an old ranch trail, the movement got his complete attention.
“Merilee,” he called out to the nanny. “Keep Isaac in the nursery a little while longer. And stay away from the windows.”
Cameron knew it would alarm the woman, but there was nothing he could do about that now. If this turned out to be a false alarm, then he could smooth things over with her. But for now, Isaac’s and her safety had to come first.
He drew his gun, and as so
on as he opened the door a couple of inches, Cameron spotted more movement. And the person who was doing the moving.
A woman peered out from one of the trees, and even though she was still pretty far from him, he caught a good enough glimpse of her face.
Lauren Beckett.
She stepped out in full view of him so he got an even better look. Yeah, it was Lauren, all right. She still had the same brunette hair that she’d pulled back into a ponytail. The same willowy build. The last time he’d seen her she’d been a teenager, barely eighteen, but the years hadn’t changed her much.
If he’d ventured a guess of who might have been lurking around his place, he would have never figured it would be her. Especially since he’d built his house on Beckett land. Her family’s land. Of course, Lauren hadn’t considered her siblings actually family—or him a friend—in nearly a decade.
Cameron felt the punch of old emotions. Ones he didn’t want to feel. He and Lauren had parted ways long ago, and he hated that the tug in his body was still there for her.
He looked at her hands. At her wedding ring. She was still wearing it though he knew her husband had died from cancer a year and a half ago when Lauren had been pregnant. Of course, she might still be wearing the ring because she and her late husband had a child together. A son, if he remembered correctly.
Who was he kidding? He remembered, all right. Little details about Lauren just stuck in his head whether he wanted them there or not.
“What are you doing back there?” he asked.
He started to reholster his gun but then stopped when she fired glances all around her. Lauren had her teeth clamped over her bottom lip, and she motioned for him to come to her.
Hell.
He’d been right about that bad feeling. Something was wrong.
“What happened?” he demanded, but she just kept motioning.
Cursing under his breath, Cameron stepped out and locked the door behind him. Judging from Lauren’s nervous gestures, someone else could be out there, and he didn’t want that person getting into the house. Keeping watch around him, Cameron gripped his gun with two hands and started toward her.
More memories and emotions came. It’d been ten years since he had seen her. Since he’d kissed her. Ten years since their worlds had turned on a dime. Her mother and father had been murdered. Butchered, really, and even though their killer had been convicted and was behind bars, Lauren hadn’t thought justice had been fully served.
Because she also blamed Cameron for not doing enough to save her folks.
That was okay because Cameron blamed himself, too.
All of those thoughts vanished for a moment, though, when he made it to her and stopped about two feet away. Still close enough to catch her scent and see those intense blue eyes. She didn’t say anything. Lauren just stood there, staring at him, but he could tell from the tight muscles in her face that this wasn’t a social visit.
Not that he thought it would be.
No. Lauren had said her final goodbye to him a decade ago, so it must have taken something pretty bad to come to him this way. Unless...maybe she wasn’t here for him.
“Your brothers probably haven’t left for work yet and are still home,” he told her. They didn’t live far, either. “Gabriel lives in his old place, and Jameson has a cabin about a half mile from here.”
She didn’t seem the least bit surprised about that, which meant maybe Lauren had kept up with her family, after all. Good. Because Cameron wasn’t the only one who thought of Lauren often. So did her brothers and her sister, Ivy.
“I can’t go to them.” Her voice was raw and strained.
“Because you broke off ties with them,” Cameron commented. “Don’t worry about that. You’re still their sister, and they’ll help you. They love you,” he added, hoping that would ease the tension he could practically feel radiating off her.
Lauren blinked, shook her head. “No. Because their houses are on the main road and someone might see me.” She turned, glancing around again, and that was when Cameron spotted the gun tucked in the back waist of her jeans.
He cursed again. “What’s wrong?”
A weary sigh left her mouth. The kind of reaction a person had when there was so much wrong that she didn’t know where to start. But Cameron figured he knew what this was about.
“We’ve all been getting threatening letters and emails,” he volunteered. “I’m guessing you got one, too?”
She nodded and dismissed it with a shake of her head. “You’re raising your sister’s child?”
Again, she’d managed to stun him. First with her arrival and now with the question. It didn’t seem the right thing to ask since this wasn’t a “catching up” kind of conversation.
“Gilly’s son, Isaac,” Cameron clarified. It had been a year since his kid sister’s death, and he still couldn’t say her name without it feeling as if someone had put a meaty fist around his heart. “What about him?”
Lauren didn’t jump to answer that. With her forehead bunched up, she glanced behind her again. “Is he...okay?”
Isaac was fine. Better than fine, actually. His nephew was healthy and happy. That wasn’t what he said to Lauren, though. “Why are you asking?”
“I need to see him. I need to see Gilly’s son.”
That definitely wasn’t an answer.
Cameron didn’t bother cursing again, but he did give her a flat look. “I’ll want to know a lot more about what’s going on. Start talking. Why are you here, and if you’re in some kind of trouble, why didn’t you call your brothers? Because I think you and I both know I’m the last person on earth you’d come to for help.”
She didn’t disagree with that, but another sound left her mouth. A hoarse sob. And that was when tears sprang to her eyes. “Please, let me see him.”
He wasn’t immune to those tears, and it gave him a tug of a different kind, one he didn’t want. “Tell me what’s going on,” Cameron repeated.
Lauren frantically shook her head. “There isn’t time.”
Cameron huffed in frustration. “Then make time. Is someone after you? And what does that have to do with Gilly’s son?”
She stared at him, her mouth trembling now, and those tears still watering her eyes. “Someone tried to kill me.”
That put him on full alert, and he automatically caught on to her arm and pulled her behind him. Cameron positioned himself in between her and the area where she kept glancing.
“Keep talking,” he insisted. He didn’t see anyone out there, but the woods were fairly thick here. “When and where did this happen?”
Again, no fast answer. Which it should have been. After all, a murder attempt should have been fresh enough in her mind that Lauren could have rattled off the details.
“Last night,” she finally said. “Two armed men broke into my house in Dallas and shot me.”
The profanity flew out of his mouth before Cameron could stop it, and he whirled around just as she pulled back the collar of her dark blue button-up shirt. There was a bandage there. A bandage covering what had to be a sensitive wound judging by the way Lauren winced when she moved her shoulder.
“I’m okay,” she added. “Well, physically anyway. The bullet only clipped me, and I was able to get away from them.”
Good. But that didn’t cause Cameron to feel any relief. “What about your son? Was he hurt?”
“No. There was a panic room in the house, and I had his nanny take him there right after the burglar alarm went off. I didn’t manage to get in there in time before they got to me.” She paused, choked back a sob. “I heard them say they had orders to kill me. And it wasn’t a case of mistaken identity or anything. They said my name.”
That did it. He took hold of her hand. “Come on. I’m taking you to Gabriel right now.”
But Lauren pulled away from him. “No. Not ye
t anyway. Not until I know it’s safe. I also heard the men say they were cops.”
Cameron stared at her. “Cops? Maybe. Criminals don’t always tell the truth, but even if they had, your brother’s not dirty.”
Even though she didn’t come out and say it, she’d once suspected Cameron of being just that—dirty. He hadn’t been, but Lauren had deemed him guilty by association. Because he’d been friends with the family of the man who’d murdered her parents. If that friendship hadn’t existed, then her mom and dad might still be alive.
Somehow, Cameron had never learned to live with that.
“Gabriel and Jameson aren’t behind this,” she said. “Whatever this is,” Lauren added in a mumble. “But if those men were really cops and they know all about me, then they must figure I’d go to my lawmen brothers.” Another pause, and she dodged his gaze. “This is the last place they’d expect me to come.”
True. It wasn’t exactly a secret about Lauren’s hatred for him. But that wasn’t hatred he was seeing in her eyes now. It was fear. Cameron was certain he was feeling some of that, as well. Fear for her. But there were still some very weird things going on.
“Where’s your son now?” he asked.
That was concern number one. Once Lauren and the child were safe, then he could work out the rest with her. The rest would include bringing in her brothers on this. No way would Gabriel and Jameson want to be left out when someone was gunning for their kid sister, and it didn’t matter if they were estranged from Lauren.
She fluttered her fingers in the direction of the trail. “He’s in the car with the nanny. That’s why I can’t stay. I have to get back to him.”
Yeah, she did, and Cameron would go with her. “Take me to him, and I can bring all three of you inside while we work this out.”
She did more of that frantic head-shaking. “Not yet. Not until I know. Not until I’m sure I can trust you.”
Cameron pulled back his shoulders. Trust had indeed been an issue between them in the past. Her trust for him anyway. But from what he could see in the depths of her eyes, this went beyond their past.
“If you didn’t trust me, why come here?” he snapped. And he hated how much it stung that this bad blood was still between them.
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