Strangers in the Night

Strangers in the Night by Linda Howard, Lisa Litwack, Kazutomo Kawai, Photonica Page B

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Authors: Linda Howard, Lisa Litwack, Kazutomo Kawai, Photonica
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gave her an odd little smile. “I’ve lived in North Carolina for some time now.”
    She had the definite feeling that he wasn’t telling her the entire truth. She sat back and studied him, considering her next question before voicing it. “What do you do for a living?”
    He laughed, and there was a tone at once rueful and joyous in the sound, as if he’d expected her to pin him down. “God, some things never change. I’m in the military, what else?”
    Of course. He was a warrior born, in whateverlifetime. Snippets of information, gleaned from news broadcasts, slipped into place. With her inborn knowledge of him directing her, she hazarded a guess. “Fort Bragg?”
    He nodded.
    Special Forces, then. She wouldn’t have known where they were based, if it hadn’t been for all the news coverage during the Gulf War. A sudden terror seized her. Had he been in that conflict? What if he had been killed, and she had never known about him—
    Then she wouldn’t now have to fear for her own life.
    Somehow that didn’t mitigate the fear she felt for him. She had always been afraid for him. He lived with danger, and shrugged at it, but she had never been able to do that.
    â€œHow did you get leave?”
    â€œI had a lot of time due. I don’t have to go back for another month, unless something unexpected happens.” But there was a strained expression deep in his eyes, a resignation that she couldn’t quite read.
    He reached across the table and took her hand. His long, callused fingers wrapped around herslimmer, smaller ones, folding them in warmth. “What about you? Where do you live, what do you do?”
    The safest thing would be not to tell him, but she doubted there was any point in it. After all, he had her name, and he probably had her license plate number. If he wanted to, he would be able to find her. “I live in White Plains. I grew up there; all of my family lives there.” She found herself rattling on, suddenly anxious to fill him in on the details of her life. “My parents are still alive, and I have two brothers, one older and one younger. Do you have any brothers or sisters?”
    He shook his head, smiling at her. “I have a couple of aunts and uncles, and some cousins scattered around the country, but no one close.”
    He had always been a loner, allowing no one to get close to him—except for her. In that respect, he had been as helpless as she.
    â€œI paint houses,” she said, still driven by the compulsion to fill all the gaps in their knowledge of each other. “The actual houses, not pictures of them. And I do murals.” She felt herself tense, wanting him to approve, rather than express the incredulity some people did.

    His fingers tightened on hers, then relaxed. “That makes sense. You’ve always loved making our surroundings as beautiful and comfortable as possible, whether it was a fur on the floor of the tent or wildflowers in a metal cup.”
    Until he spoke, she’d had no memory of those things, but suddenly she saw the pelts she had used to make their pallet on the tent floor, and the way the wildflowers, which she had arranged in a metal cup, had nodded their heads in the rush of cold air every time the flap was opened.
    â€œDo you remember everything?” she whispered.
    â€œEvery detail? No. I can’t remember every detail that’s happened in this life, either; no one does. But the important things, yes.”
    â€œHow many times have we …” Her voice trailed off as she was struck once again by the impossibility of it.
    â€œMade love?” he suggested, though he knew darn well that wasn’t what she had been about to say. Still, his eyes took on a heated, sleepy expression. “Times without number. I’ve never been able to get enough of you.”
    Her body jolted with responding desireSternly she controlled it. It would mean her life

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