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CHAPTER 114 — PREPARATION

Author: jhumz
last update publish date: 2026-06-11 02:44:06

Hay-on-Wye in May.

The town was in full bloom, a riot of green and bright spring flowers spilling from the gardens, window boxes, and the edges of the river Wye. Bookshops had their front doors propped open, and the smell of paper, ink, and the tang of river air mingled in the breeze. The festival ran for its usual ten days, a gathering of writers and readers and thinkers, a place where ideas were both currency and celebration. Elian and Dante were scheduled for the Saturday of the second weeke
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    The second anniversary of arriving in the Alentejo house fell on a quiet Thursday in October. It was not a date either of them had deliberately tracked — the purchase had happened in the last week of October, their arrival not long after, and no one had marked it on a calendar or set any reminder. But Elian had known it was coming, and Dante had known that Elian had known, which meant that the morning carried a subtle, anticipatory weight. Not heavy, not ceremonial, but a faint hum in the background, like the opening note of a piece of music they both recognized. Dante woke first. He lay in the familiar room that had slowly become the axis of his life. The east-facing window let in the first strands of morning light, pale and glancing across the whitewashed wall. From the property’s edge came the sound of the Atlantic — not the roar of winter storms, but the steady, thoughtful rhythm of waves moving around the rocks below the cliffs. The air was cool, faintly scented with salt and

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    They drove to Cardiff after the conversation, the late dusk of May stretching across the sky in a muted orange that slowly bled into lavender. The road from Hay to Cardiff was two hours through the Brecon Beacons — two hours of moving between worlds. The Welsh landscape was doing its May performance, a spectacle of viridian and emerald, where each hill rolled like the back of some ancient, slumbering creature. The grass shimmered with a kind of wet light, almost alive, and the hedgerows seemed to hum in the quiet air. The road threaded through valleys that were both eternal and indifferent, beautiful in the way things are beautiful when they have grown into themselves without ever thinking of being seen. Elian drove.He drove the way he always did — with that mix of ease and alertness, a little faster than Dante might choose, but never in a way that felt unsafe. Around the curves he leaned into the motion, the car becoming an extension of his thought, a fluid translation of mind into

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  • burn between us   CHAPTER 114 — PREPARATION

    Hay-on-Wye in May.The town was in full bloom, a riot of green and bright spring flowers spilling from the gardens, window boxes, and the edges of the river Wye. Bookshops had their front doors propped open, and the smell of paper, ink, and the tang of river air mingled in the breeze. The festival ran for its usual ten days, a gathering of writers and readers and thinkers, a place where ideas were both currency and celebration. Elian and Dante were scheduled for the Saturday of the second weekend—a main stage conversation that Elian's publisher had negotiated months before, once the invitation was confirmed. The festival director had been precise about the framing: a conversation about the relationship between personal life and public record, about the fragile balance of building something real and deciding, consciously, to let the world see it.Elian prepared in the only way he knew how for speaking to audiences. He did not write a script. He never wrote scripts. He prepared by think

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  • burn between us   CHAPTER 34 — WHAT ELIAN WRITES

    Three weeks in, Elian let him read the first chapter of the novel.Not offered — Elian left it on the kitchen table in the morning and went for a walk along the coastal path and when Dante came downstairs it was just there, the notebook open to the first page with a density of handwriting that told

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