Stranger in the Moonlight

Stranger in the Moonlight by Jude Deveraux

Book: Stranger in the Moonlight by Jude Deveraux Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jude Deveraux
Tags: Romance, Contemporary
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attended every one of her one-man shows while she was at school. One time, he’d barely escaped being seen. She’d come in with two other girls, a tall, slim, dark-haired one, and a short blonde girl with a figure that had every male in the room staring.
    But Travis only had eyes for Kim. She’d grown up to be as pretty as she’d been when they were children. And he liked the way she laughed and seemed to be so happy. Travis didn’t think he’d ever been that happy in his life—at least not since he’d left Edilean and Kim so many years before.
    “I make jewelry,” she said.
    He turned on the bench to look at her. “The jewelry kit!”
    She smiled. “You remember that?”
    “You had me open it. You got it . . . ?”
    “My aunt and uncle had given it to me for Christmas, but I wasn’t interested enough to even open it. I was an ungrateful child! It was in that box Uncle Ben brought to us.”
    “With my bicycle,” Travis said, his voice softening with the memory. “You were very creative with everything in that kit. I was amazed.”
    “And you were an excellent model,” she said. “No boy I knew would have let me put a necklace of beads around him.” She didn’t tell him that the pleasure of those two weeks and the jewelry kit were all tied together. Travis and jewelry and happiness were synonymous to her.
    “I still have that necklace,” he said.
    “Do you?” she asked.
    “Yes. Kim, that was the best two weeks of my childhood.”
    She started to say it was for her too, but she didn’t. “What are your plans about your mother?”
    “I don’t really have a plan. I just heard of this yesterday. She called . . .” He thought it best not to say “my secretary.” “And left a message saying she wanted to get married, so she needed a divorce. That’s all she said. It was a total shock to me. I thought she was living in an apartment in a house owned by a respectable older widow and they were sewing children’s clothes. Now I find out that Mom is doing back bends in front of the whole town.” He looked at Kim. “So, no, I haven’t come up with a plan. Mainly, I want—”
    “What?”
    “I want to know if this man Joe Layton is good for my mother. Forget love—she thought she was in love with my father. I want to know if he’s a good person and that he’s not going to browbeat my little mother.”
    Kim drew her breath in sharply. Jecca’s mother had died when she was young, and she’d been raised by her father. Joe Layton was a very strong-willed man who liked things done his way. All through college, there had been hundreds of girlfriend sessions where Jecca was tearing her hair out about some maddening thing her father had said or done. While the man could be very sweet, he could also be a serious pain in the neck. And he was very possessive! When Jecca fell in love with a man in Edilean, Virginia, Joe Layton had moved there to be with her—and his stunt had almost caused Jecca and Tris to break up.
    “What is it?” Travis asked.
    “I, uh . . .” She didn’t know exactly what to say. She was saved from replying by the sound of voices coming their way.
    Kim could tell from Travis’s expression that he didn’t want to be seen. At least not yet, before he saw his mother. “Follow me,” she said as she stood and lifted her long skirt to start running down a narrow path through the woods.
    “Gladly,” Travis murmured as he followed her. It was dark in the heavily wooded area, but there was enough moonlight to see Kim’s pale skin and the silvery blue of her dress. He loved watching her run.
    His eyes were so focused on her that he almost collided with what looked to be an old playhouse. The tall turret, shadowed in the moonlight, looked like where the evil witch in a fairy tale would live.
    “In here,” Kim said as she opened the door, then locked it behind them.
    Travis started searching for a light switch, but Kim caught his wrist and put her finger to her lips indicating he

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