The army-mystery-trauma story line that runs constantly throughout the tankobon is left hanging at story close, but to me, it was never played up to be more than it was meant to be: a tool to explore the two men's psyches. The true story lies in a much smaller sphere, within the unseen dynamics of Eric and Steve.
Love morphs and changes over the years, and the depth that it can attain--depth that is barely expressible, so we turn to poetry and art--is captured within 'My Life With You'. The dialogue is tight and yet expansive; the art is emotional and flows easily and intensely.
This story's downfall: some of those significant moments that should have been explored for cohesion within this tankobon, never manifested. And it was most shocking when an important emotional issue was blue-balled since most scenes were plotted with artisan precision.
One of my favourite stories for the way the relationships morphs over the years is 'Kizuna' by Kodaka Kazuma. While not as explicitly illustrated, this one is very much in similar style. The plot is mysterious, compelling, action-packed, and engaging while still remaining highly erotic and angsty, reminding me of Higuri You's 'Gorgeous Carat'. Like that one, a lot of the full play-by-play is left to the imagination, but masters that art of the implied moment.
Story telling technique wise, the reader's emotions are manipulated to connect with characters profoundly with her creative delivery style: flashbacks of important past events which directly affect the current scene's happenings are interwoven. She also takes a flash of a future event and then transports the reader into the past, curious for the explanation.
Based on her excellent story telling not aligning up with the missing pieces of the puzzle, I would bet dollars to donoughts that there is a planned second book. It is fairy recent (2008), so maybe she does have plans.
Fantasy Shrine did a professional scanlation job.