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shoulders slumped, eyes downcast, face half turned away, slipped back toward the shadows that haunted his existence.

Poor sap.

Ford cleaned the nib he'd used, replaced it in its section of his worktable. He chose his brush, dipped it in India ink, then began to lay in the areas of shadow on his penciling with bold lines. Every few dips he rinsed the brush. The process took time, it took patience and a steady hand. As he envisioned large areas of black for this final, somber panel, he filled them in partially, knowing too much ink too fast would buckle his page.

When the banging on the door downstairs-and Spock's answering barks of terror-interrupted him, he did what he always did with interruptions. He cursed at them. Once the cursing was done, he grunted a series of words-his little ritual incantation. He swirled the brush in water again and took it with him as he went down to answer.

Irritation switched to curiosity when he saw Cilla standing on his veranda holding the bottle of cab.

"We're cool, Spock," he said, to shut up the madly barking dog trembling at the top of the stairs.

"Don't like red?" he asked Cilla when he opened the door.

"Don't have a corkscrew."

This time the dog greeted her with a couple of happy leaps, and an enthusiastic rub of his body against her legs. "Nice to see you, too."

"He's relieved you're not invading forces from his home planet."

"So am I."

The response had Ford grinning. "Okay, come on in. I'll dig up a corkscrew." He took a couple steps down the foyer, stopped, turned back. "Do you want to borrow a corkscrew, or do you want me to open the bottle so you can share?"

"Why don't you open it?"

"You'd better come on back then. I have to clean my brush first."

"You're working. I'll just take the corkscrew."

"Indian giver. The work can wait. What time is it anyway?"

She noticed he wasn't wearing a watch, then checked her own. "About seven-thirty."

"It can definitely wait, but the brush can't. Soap, water, corkscrew and glasses all conveniently located in the kitchen." He took her arm in a casual grip that was firm enough to get her where he wanted her.

"I like your house."

"Me too." He led the way down a wide hallway with lofty ceilings framed in creamy crown molding. "I bought it pretty much as it stands. Previous owners did a good job fixing it up, so all I had to do was dump furniture in it."

"What sold you on it? There's usually one or two main hooks for a buyer. This," she added as she walked into the generous kitchen with its wide granite serving bar opening into a casual family room, "would be one for me."

"Actually, it was the view, and the light from upstairs. I work upstairs, so that was key."

He opened a drawer, located a corkscrew in a way that told her his spaces were organized. He set the tool aside, then stepped to the sink to wash the brush.

Spock executed what looked like a bouncing, nail-tapping dance, then darted through a doorway. "Where's he going?"

"I'm in the kitchen, which sends the food signal to his brain. That was his happy dance."

"Is that what it was?"

"Yeah, he's a pretty basic guy. Food makes him happy. He's got an autofeeder in the laundry room and a dog door. Anyway, the kitchen's pretty much wasted on me, and so was the dining area they set up over there since I don't actually dine so much as eat. I'd be a pretty basic guy, too. But I like having space."

He set up the cleaned brush bristles in a glass. "Have a seat," he invited as he picked up the corkscrew.

She sat at the bar, admired the stainless steel double ovens, the cherry cabinets, the six-burner range and grill combo under the shining stainless hood. And, since she wasn't blinded by end-of-the-day fatigue, his ass.

He took two red wineglasses from one of the cabinets with textured glass doors, poured the wine. He stepped over, offered her one, then, lifting his own, leaned on the bar toward her and said, "So."

"So. We're going to be across the road from each other for quite a while, most likely. It's better to smooth things out."

"Smooth is good."

"It's flattering to be seen as some mythical warrior goddess," she began. "Odd but flattering. I might even get a kick out of it-the Xena-meets-Wonder-Woman, twenty-first-century style."

"That's good, and not entirely off the mark."

"But I don't like the fact that you've

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