The beginning of May had come quickly, more quickly than she’d been able to blink her eyes three times fast, and sometimes Kate couldn’t tell if the passing of time was a blessing or a curse. Maybe both, for different reasons. On one hand, she was getting older and theoretically wiser, and it had been months since the book’s release without any paper coverage--it almost seemed like she was in the clear, but she still felt too wary of a different outcome to be sure. On the other, more time was passing and so many parts of her felt like they were stagnating--not getting better, not getting worse, just existing and persisting, irritatingly.
Her villa was an oasis and a reprieve, but sometimes it felt like a prison, too. There were so many references to the past in this house; Kate couldn’t deny that the largest part of why she hadn’t sold this home and bought a new one, free from emotional residue, was the sweet, sharp twisting of sentimentality. She was sentimental to a fault, so many parts of her lived and died in her past and in her memories. This had been her first real home away from her parents’--she had moved in with Charlie when she’d moved to England, yes, but that was already his established apartment and it was different than calling someplace new home. With someone.
She didn’t know if it helped or hurt her to remain here, or how it looked to other people, but she mostly didn’t care. Kate was passionate, she was dragged around mercilessly by her heart, people knew this. If they expected anything different, they could go beat down a piece of cardboard’s door and leave her be.
Despite her acute loneliness that didn’t seem to mend or destroy, regardless of environment, it was always nice to have a visitor here and there, like a little life raft. Very few people from Britain had been to this house, but Kate trusted Harlan well enough she’d given him the go-ahead to come here after his conference in New York ended. An owl from him earlier in the day told her he’d be here in the early evening, so the house was clean, Simon was fed, she was showered, and dinner was in the oven.
Kate was expecting him but the knock at the door startled her nonetheless--she had only recently taken down the wards, and had briefly considered putting them back up after her book had been in danger of being leaked, but she’d managed to cinch everything up okay and thus had left them be. She skittered across the floor to answer it, big smile on her face, “Hi.†Kate stepped aside, dragging one foot to bring them back together in her new location. “C’mon in, dinner’s in the oven.â€