* * *

When he woke it was early evening. A thin but bold amber shaft pierced a slit between the curtains, pouring in from a decidedly low western angle. He had slept like the dead; Patrick appreciated it when he wrestled up from the mattress to spy his and Amelia's meager baggage stacked neatly in a corner beside the fireplace. He hadn't heard a sound of the occurrence, not even when her pirate chest had been heaved in. "Laboratory equipment," he muttered ahead of a yawn, scrubbing hands over his eyes.

Then it occurred that several hours had passed and Amelia was still out. He threw back the quilts and leapt out onto a cold floor, ready to search. Then he realized that he had no idea where to look for her. By now she could be climbing the peaks, sheep-legged and with skirts hitched, up the crags in search of her baron. Patrick wasn't certain if the image left him relieved or terrified; perhaps both.

Curious and alone, he shuffled to her things, staring down at a brown and pink hatbox. It was round and striped like a candy, nestled beside two tapestry valises which would have been humorous if carried by a man. The thought of tiny Amelia Blake hefting them about was side-splitting.

He grasped the black lacquered handle of the first bag, and pulled it back with a hesitance that might have warned an entering stranger of a snake, or at least a possum. There, atop a neatly folded surface of white lawn underthings sat Amelia's much-celebrated 'A Patient Heart'. A stack of bundled letters beside it tempted his hand. The ribbon-wrapped correspondence might hold the answer to every mind bending question he'd had about the confounding Miss Blake. She was so delightful, so trusting; feeling ungentlemanly at his first impulse, he settled for his second, and rested his hand on the blue canvas book cover instead. Maybe it would offer some insight, too.

A large round table, a piece of furniture that appeared reconstructed from something less reputable, held court before the window and offered a perfect spot to peruse the novel. Patrick tugged back a curtain, folded into a protesting chair, and stretched out his legs. For a long moment he didn't read or move, but closed his eyes and inhaled a summer evening breeze perfumed by lilacs, and felt the first real distance from his burdens.

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He didn't start at the beginning of the novel, because in his experience that was usually the least interesting part of a book. Instead he let fate take a hand and palmed the front and back cover so that the book fell open as it wished.




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