girl in England I thought was important for a while. She stopped returning my calls after I told her my mother’s mother was a Jew off the boat from Kraków.” A shrug. “I was raised Catholic, but one-fourth part Jewish is enough for plenty of people.”
Jordan leaned back against him, the warm arms around her waist. “You’re Tony Rodomovsky. I like all your parts . . . and don’t you dare make that into a smutty joke.”
“Wouldn’t dream of it.” They stood a moment, entwined and silent, then Tony kissed the slope of her shoulder and stood back. “You’ve got one more roll to develop.”
“Yes,” she managed to say.
The air had thickened. Jordan ran the second roll through, knowing she wasn’t doing her usual meticulous job, not caring. She clipped her prints up and cleaned away her chemicals, feeling his gaze redoubled.
“Finished?” came Tony’s voice behind her.
She shoved the last of the trays aside, turned around to meet his gaze, and felt the tilting sensation of utterly giving in. Not to stop and ask Is this wise? but to think I don’t care and seize it. “Come here, you.”
“Thank God. Another roll would have killed me.” He came toward her in the red light, catching the end of the yarn tying back her hair and tugging it slowly free. She’d abandoned the Rita Hayworth pin curls long ago; Jordan felt her loosened hair slip straight and easy through his fingers.
“I’m going to New York in the fall,” she said, getting it out before the talking stopped altogether. “Until then, I’m going to be working like a dog in this darkroom and looking after my sister—and hopefully, having a mad, passionate fling with you.” Winding her arms around Tony’s neck, she looked him in the eye. He had eyes to drown in. “How does that sound?”
His voice was rough. “Sounds like heaven.”
Their mouths crashed together in the red glow of the safelight, hands pulling at buttons, shirttails tugging out of waistbands. Jordan reached behind, hoisted herself up to sit on the worktable, pulling him with her. Tony’s shirt landed on the floor, then Jordan’s blouse. “I always meant to put a cot in here for the nights I work late and get tired . . .” Jordan murmured between kisses. “I never got around to it.”
“That is a serious oversight,” he agreed, disposing of her brassiere and tossing her on her back.
“Do you—” Jordan stopped, gasped. He was kissing his way very slowly down the line of her ribs, and it was impeding her ability to speak. She’d had no idea the skin over her ribs was that sensitive. Then again, she’d never dated any male in her life, Garrett included, who had bothered paying attention to it. “Do you have any—”
“In my pocket.” She felt Tony smile against her navel. “I’ve got no desire to be a daddy just yet.”
“Good. Hurry up—” Reaching up to tug him closer.
“Nope.” He pinned her wrists flat, giving that grin that made her stomach flip. “You had hours to work, J. Bryde. My turn.”
Chapter 43
Ian
August 1950
Boston
Five addresses, and nothing?” Fritz Bauer’s cigarette rasp growled in Ian’s ear across the telephone line.
“Not die Jägerin, anyway.” Ian would have bet good money all five of the men who had answered his knock and listened to his “moving to the neighborhood” story had a war record worth hiding. “Nina managed to get snaps with a little Kodak, pretending to take pictures of the neighborhood, getting our fellows at the edge of the frame. Relatively clear shots—can you do some matching work with your files, see if we can find names to go with the faces? If they’re identifiable war criminals—”
“What did I tell you about fighting an extradition battle in the United States, Graham?”
“Someone has to fight it,” Ian said with a grim smile. “I’ll send you the packet. I’m for Pennsylvania tomorrow.”
Sixth address on the list, and the longest drive so far; more than six hours. If die Jägerin wasn’t there, their last chance was the address in Florida. Let her be in Pennsylvania, Ian prayed. He wasn’t sure the overstretched budget could take any more road trips. The reason they were now into August—August!—with still two addresses left to check was because between the telephone, the rent, and the drives to the first five addresses, they had to wait for the next month of Ian’s annuity to come in. A search for a murderess halts dead in its tracks for the want of ten more