In the Dark
manage the memories of abuse she carried fromher childhood. It seemed to be working. She was more at peace with herself than at any time since they had met.
     
Serena was totally different in appearance from Cindy. She was tall and full-figured. She had shoulder-length dark hair, but it was fuller and wavier than Cindy’s. Her face had a high forehead and emerald green eyes. Her skin glowed, but he could see the damage where her legs had been badly scarred. She was healing from the fire—she could run again without her legs or her lungs giving out—but she had come to accept that her body would always be flawed now. Not perfect. Not forever young. It was the devil’s bargain that everyone made with age, but Serena had put it off longer than most. She had covered herself up after the fire, even to Stride, but she was wearing shorts again, not caring if people saw. She had also gained a few pounds over the spring, when she couldn’t work out with the intensity she had in the past. She was dieting to shed them, but Stride didn’t care. He thought she looked voluptuous.
     
Her eyes opened as he took a seat in the leather chair near her. She carefully unfolded her legs and stretched them. Above her shorts, she wore a black bra over her full breasts. Her hair was tied into a ponytail behind her head.
     
“It’s late,” she said.
     
“Yeah, sorry, time got away from me.”
     
“Were you with her?”
     
He didn’t hear any jealousy in her voice, but he wanted to reassure her anyway.
     
“No, I left Tish down at the boardwalk hours ago. I went over to the police archives and pulled the material on Laura’s murder and began going through the file again. The next thing I knew, it was almost midnight.”
     
“She got to you, didn’t she?” Serena asked.
     
“I guess she did.”
     
“What do you think of her?”
     
Stride rubbed the brass studs of the red leather chair under his fingertips. “She’s keeping things from me. I don’t know what, but I don’t like that.” He added, “I can tell that you don’t like her.”
     
Serena shook her head. “You’re wrong.”
     
“Come on. I saw your hackles go up.”
     
“No, it’s true. She doesn’t like me . Big difference.”
     
“How can you tell?”
     
“Women know, Jonny.”
     
He wasn’t about to argue.
     
“Was there anything in the police file?” Serena asked.
     
“No, but Tish had something new.”
     
He told her about the letter Tish had given him and about the possibility that they could find DNA on the postage stamp or the flap of the envelope.
     
Serena digested this and then studied him with thoughtful eyes. “I’m surprised you never told me anything about Laura and her death. We’ve been together a long time now, Jonny. Is there a reason you didn’t want to share it with me?”
     
He didn’t know what to say, because he wasn’t sure why he had kept the story to himself. That week in July had changed him so profoundly, in so many ways, that he was never the same person again. He had realized during that week that he was going to spend the rest of his life with Cindy. He had decided during that week, as he got to know Ray Wallace, that one way to fight back against death was to become a cop. He had also discovered how much it hurt to make mistakes and that some mistakes could never be erased. When he thought about who he was today, he could draw a straight line all the way back to that summer. Even so, he had never been able to talk about it. He rarely talked about the passions that drove him. He realized that in the two years he had been coaxing Serena to share secrets about her past, he had rarely spent any time sharing secrets of his own.
     
Serena saw in his silence that he wasn’t ready to say anything. She didn’t push him. Instead, her face softened into a teasing smile.
     
“Guess what I did this evening?” she said.
     
He cocked his head with a silent question.
     
“I went to the library and found a copy of your high school yearbook from 1977,” she told

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