patrick1
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- May 13, 2003
- Posts
- 1,308
A secret is something you only tell one other person.
Anna: I miss you. It's a secret.
It was OK. No security risk. Tim had no way of communicating with Anna. No address, no mobile phone, no telepathy. But he did find himself saying it out loud, in the dark of the night, to the walls of the cheap hotel in Brighton. 'I miss you.'
Neon light streaked in through a gap in the drapes. The white sheets formed themselves into the shape of Anna's thighs. The surprise glint of the gold ring there. Anna: I -
No I don't miss you.
So at five in the morning there he was, gulping down the one Days Inn portion of coffee, going over the paperwork of the assignment again. Joan Brenner, dob 30/11/84 born Brighton Sussex UK, educated Brighton and Hove High School, matriculated...
That was why he'd found himself thinking of Anna. 30/11/84. It had been a deep and dark November a year ago, when strictly against regs (Intimate personal relationships between trainees will rank as unreasonable conduct and give rise to instant dismissal) he and the white-thighed gold-glinting Anna Cross had found themselves making passionate love in a freezing fucking store cupboard of a barracks somewhere in the wastes of southern France where Camp November or should he say Novembre was based because they feared their rooms had cameras and bugs in them so they rolled amid blankets and towels and emergency rations and candles and -
'Light me a candle,' she'd said. 'It's my birthday.'
And she had gone on to do extraordinary things to intimate places on her body with that candle – who could have dreamt that a woman who could defeat him at chess in thirteen moves would have such, such, well, depths to her?
It's my birthday. Twenty-four years old. 30/11/84. Twenty-five now.
Probably he had it wrong. It was the middle of the night, maybe she'd meant December 1st. But the association tugged at him now. He even hunted the drawers of room 318 for a candle. Somehow it would have seemed in honour of her, to light one. But Gideon had left no more than his bible to find.
Tomorrow Tim would find the missing Joan Brenner. Fired by caffeine and joyful memory, he suddenly imagined it possible. Even with the dim-witted Craven, currently sleeping off his hangover in the next room, as his partner. Even though she'd left Brighton at 18 when her parents died, never to return – which was why the rest of the investigating team was pursuing other leads in London and Switzerland – maybe her vital secret, the thing told to only one other person, would be here and would lead him to her. He, they, would find it tomorrow. Today. When the world woke. Then he would call the Network in triumph. They'd say Whee-hooo! And insist he took a year-long assignment with Anna Cross as a reward.
Of course it can't happen. Of course it must, then! And so he ordered more coffee from the sleepy man on reception, and ploughed through files, newspaper clippings, coroners' reports, maps, jottings, rambling notes from others – buoyed by the wonderful illusion of hope. And the memory of the glint of gold between a woman's thighs.
Anna: I miss you. It's a secret.
It was OK. No security risk. Tim had no way of communicating with Anna. No address, no mobile phone, no telepathy. But he did find himself saying it out loud, in the dark of the night, to the walls of the cheap hotel in Brighton. 'I miss you.'
Neon light streaked in through a gap in the drapes. The white sheets formed themselves into the shape of Anna's thighs. The surprise glint of the gold ring there. Anna: I -
No I don't miss you.
So at five in the morning there he was, gulping down the one Days Inn portion of coffee, going over the paperwork of the assignment again. Joan Brenner, dob 30/11/84 born Brighton Sussex UK, educated Brighton and Hove High School, matriculated...
That was why he'd found himself thinking of Anna. 30/11/84. It had been a deep and dark November a year ago, when strictly against regs (Intimate personal relationships between trainees will rank as unreasonable conduct and give rise to instant dismissal) he and the white-thighed gold-glinting Anna Cross had found themselves making passionate love in a freezing fucking store cupboard of a barracks somewhere in the wastes of southern France where Camp November or should he say Novembre was based because they feared their rooms had cameras and bugs in them so they rolled amid blankets and towels and emergency rations and candles and -
'Light me a candle,' she'd said. 'It's my birthday.'
And she had gone on to do extraordinary things to intimate places on her body with that candle – who could have dreamt that a woman who could defeat him at chess in thirteen moves would have such, such, well, depths to her?
It's my birthday. Twenty-four years old. 30/11/84. Twenty-five now.
Probably he had it wrong. It was the middle of the night, maybe she'd meant December 1st. But the association tugged at him now. He even hunted the drawers of room 318 for a candle. Somehow it would have seemed in honour of her, to light one. But Gideon had left no more than his bible to find.
Tomorrow Tim would find the missing Joan Brenner. Fired by caffeine and joyful memory, he suddenly imagined it possible. Even with the dim-witted Craven, currently sleeping off his hangover in the next room, as his partner. Even though she'd left Brighton at 18 when her parents died, never to return – which was why the rest of the investigating team was pursuing other leads in London and Switzerland – maybe her vital secret, the thing told to only one other person, would be here and would lead him to her. He, they, would find it tomorrow. Today. When the world woke. Then he would call the Network in triumph. They'd say Whee-hooo! And insist he took a year-long assignment with Anna Cross as a reward.
Of course it can't happen. Of course it must, then! And so he ordered more coffee from the sleepy man on reception, and ploughed through files, newspaper clippings, coroners' reports, maps, jottings, rambling notes from others – buoyed by the wonderful illusion of hope. And the memory of the glint of gold between a woman's thighs.
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