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CHAPTER 53 — CATALINA

Author: jhumz
last update publish date: 2026-05-07 02:15:58

They were back on the island for three weeks before Catalina Reyes arrived.

Her arrival was Selene's arrangement — Selene, from Geneva, building the infrastructure of what she'd taken to calling the exit architecture with the systematic thoroughness of someone who had been planning this exact thing for years and was finally permitted to do it directly.

The idea was simple: people who had come out of the network needed somewhere to land. Not institutionally — the institutional options, the prote
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  • burn between us   CHAPTER 119 — WHAT TWO YEARS BUILDS

    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

  • burn between us   CHAPTER 118 — THE THIRD NOVEL BEGINS

    He started it on a Tuesday in June.Dante knew before Elian came downstairs. The study sounds at 6:31 AM — earlier than the second novel, and earlier than the first, which told him the third one was pulling harder and had been pulling for longer than either of the others. He had learned to read the rhythm of Elian’s writing life the same way he’d learned to read the garden: subtle cues, hints that something vital was unfolding behind a closed door.The voice was different from both previous novels. Slower in its rhythm but deeper in pitch — something in the cadence that suggested more weight per sentence, the language doing more work with fewer words. Dante stood in the corridor and listened to it for a moment, a silent audience to muffled keystrokes. He thought: this one is going to be the longest. Not only in word count, but in reach, in resonance. He could feel it in the air of the house, as if the walls themselves were listening.He made coffee, letting the familiar ritual ground

  • burn between us   CHAPTER 117 — WHAT TAKES ROOT

    By May, the wisteria was doing what first-year wisteria always does—almost nothing above ground and everything below. Its thin stem clung to the south wall like a hesitant promise, a suggestion that perhaps, in the right time, beauty would emerge. To the casual eye, it looked like a failure, a plant that had given up before starting, but Dante knew better.He crouched beside the wall as he had so many times before, his hand hovering just above the soil, feeling the cool density of it. He had crouched like this in February, back when the plant was still in its nursery pot, protected and small. He closed his eyes for a moment, imagining the network of roots threading themselves inch by inch into the earth, patient and deliberate. When he pressed lightly, he could feel the slight give of the soil where it had been amended with grit, the way he had prepared it for proper drainage. He imagined the roots wrapping themselves around pebbles, finding pockets of air, claiming their home below w

  • burn between us   CHAPTER 116 — AFTER HAY

    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

  • burn between us   CHAPTER 115 — HAY-ON-WYE

    May in Hay-on-Wye was exactly what a festival in Wales in May should be — intermittently brilliant with sunshine and intermittently committed to rain, the town doing both with the equanimity of a place that had hosted this event for decades and had made peace with the weather's own strong opinions.The town itself was extraordinary — not large, settled against the River Wye with the Brecon Beacons behind it, the specific quality of a place where the landscape was a character rather than a backdrop. The bookshops were legendary, though Elian had been warned by his publisher that if he went into the bookshops he would not emerge for several hours and the publisher needed him to remain accessible until after the conversation.He had gone into one bookshop. Dante had retrieved him after forty minutes with the specific patience of someone who had anticipated exactly this."You were in there for forty minutes," Dante said."I found three books," Elian said. "One of them is for you.""You al

  • 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

  • burn between us   CHAPTER 72 — FOUNDATION INTAKE

    The first official intake under the foundation's formal program arrived on a Wednesday in August.Her name was Petra Wolff. She was thirty-four. She'd spent eight years in the eastern communications division of what remained of The Meridian's network — the portion that had survived the initial coll

  • burn between us   CHAPTER 71 — THE SECOND NOVEL

    Elian started it on a Monday.Not because Monday was significant — it wasn't, particularly — but because he'd woken that morning with the first sentence still exactly as it had been on the coastal path, unchanged, which meant it was right. Sentences that were right didn't change overnight. They sat

  • burn between us   CHAPTER 70 — WHAT SPRING GROWS

    The novel was published in July, as Elian had argued it should be.The publisher had proposed a launch event in London, which Elian declined. He proposed instead a reading at a small bookshop in Lisbon — the kind that had the right smell and the right light and a proprietor who had been selling boo

  • burn between us   CHAPTER 67 — AFTER

    The morning after Brussels was a Saturday, which meant nothing operationally but meant something domestically — the day with no schedule, no calls expected, no preparation required.Dante made breakfast.Not the minimal provisions of a transit meal — actual breakfast, the kind the kitchen in the Al

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