A 30-Minute Delay Led Him Back To The Woman He Never Forgot-heuh

Elliot Danvers had always believed airports suited men like him.

They were efficient, expensive, impersonal places where a person could move from one life to the next without explaining himself.

He liked that.

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At forty-six, he had become very good at not explaining himself.

His work had taught him to keep emotion out of his voice and hesitation out of his face.

He owned lodges and small hotels that appeared in glossy travel pieces, the sort with photographs of clean linen, quiet views and fireplaces that looked as if no one had ever actually needed warmth from them.

People described him as disciplined.

Focused.

Difficult to distract.

He had learnt to accept those words as compliments, though once, many years ago, someone had told him that being difficult to distract was not the same as being strong.

That person had been Maren Bell.

He had not allowed himself to think of her properly for a long time.

Not in the morning, when the kettle clicked off in an empty kitchen.

Not at charity dinners, when women with careful smiles asked whether he had ever come close to marrying.

Not in hotel corridors, when the smell of clean sheets and polish carried him suddenly back to his family home, to a girl in a plain cardigan carrying fresh towels past rooms she was never allowed to feel comfortable in.

Maren had worked in that house when they were young.

Not as a guest.

Not as family.

That had been made clear to both of them in a hundred quiet ways.

She knew which cups were for visitors and which ones were chipped at the back of the cupboard.

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