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There were those that said; "If you do not want your business known, keep it out of the Burkhardt". I was never intelligent enough to heed the warning. Bob and Erin were, on the surface, diametrically opposites - he was a divorced Air Force retiree with a well-earned lascivious reputation. She was an Air Force reservist, a mother, and the wife of a pastor. When their paths crossed several times over they felt compelled to connect. What had begun as a casual friendship quickly blossomed into something deeper. Erin tried to extricate herself before her heart wanted what it should not have.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
There were those that said; "If you do not want your business known, keep it out of the Burkhardt". I was never intelligent enough to heed the warning. Bob and Erin were, on the surface, diametrically opposites - he was a divorced Air Force retiree with a well-earned lascivious reputation. She was an Air Force reservist, a mother, and the wife of a pastor. When their paths crossed several times over they felt compelled to connect. What had begun as a casual friendship quickly blossomed into something deeper. Erin tried to extricate herself before her heart wanted what it should not have. Despite Erin's reservations, Bob pushed the relationship into what could have been considered a full blown affair. The two had fallen close to in love, but were keenly aware that a future together would have been little more than a dream.
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Autorenporträt
R.H. Liggins is a retired Air Force veteran, saw combat during his multiple tours in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War. He developed a lifelong compassion for writing fiction since his pre-teen days. He credits this compassion partly to the introduction of 'racy' novels by his best friend of the time, Robert Lenel Jackson. It started his ventures to differentiate facts from fictions. He has found fictions to be more exciting than facts. He finds 'street corner' philosophers to be more colorful than philosophers with academic credits. The author was born and grew up in Baltimore, Maryland during his formative years through college before joining the Air Force. He ended up in Dayton, Ohio, as a last stop of many in his decorative career in the United States Air Force, where he resided for more than twenty years.