The widow next door
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the man next door the sam
tural stillness tha
o deep it pressed against her ribs. The street lamp outside flickered once, twice,
s sit
e. Not on
by a tall window that faced hers as if it
nfidently, on the armrests. His face was lost to shadow, but the shape of him
sn't
watching t
s wai
ing the way it always did when instinct took over. She had lea
t enough for the light to cat
lse sk
s, she
nd unwelcome. Men didn't sit like that unles
ay. Closed the curtain. Pr
d, she
way he sat so composed, so c
nother room, in another life,
ifted his
to w
to b
palm against the glass of the wi
tared back at her pal
, and though she still couldn't see his
curved h
. Kn
ad finally
t the cur
racing , now
recog