And not shut, as in, she wasnât going to say anything nasty, but shut as in preventing her bottom jaw from dropping. She was worried about
one
square foot? Liam probably had four thousand of them himselfâand that was just the front yard.
âThis is yours?â she finally had to ask him, not taking her eyes off the beautiful landscaping. She hadnât known what to expect on a maidâs salary, but it certainly hadnât been this. Tree-covered except for a small clearing that was lit as if from a beacon, with a lily pad pond in the center and stone-carved benches around it, with an old-fashioned water pump used as a fountain, and a beautiful array of annuals at the pondâs edge, the place actually looked like a fairyland. Titania would have a blast curling up by the rocks. âAre there fish in there?â
Liam nodded. âKoi. I have a few that are over a foot long.â
âWow. Iâm impressed. Koi need just the right touch to live so long.â
Seemed to be a metaphor for her life.
Liam drove over a narrow arched stone bridge, then circled around to the left, going behind the A-frame cabin-like structure with a front wall of windows that reminded her of the penthouse. The difference was (a) it wasnât owned by her father and (b) it was in the middle of nature, not above it. Sheâd always wondered about people who liked to live above nature. Who thought looking down on it was so much better than living within it. After all, a patio-sized waterfall couldnât even begin to compare to the beauty of Liamâs oasis and its gurgling water pump, or the butterflies flitting among the flowers, and the dragonflies hovering just above the surface of the pond with their wings humming in the silence.
It was so peaceful. So beautiful. A place where someone could go to escape the stresses of the day and just relax.
âSomething wrong?â Liamâs voice had a sharp edge to it. âI know itâs not the Ritz or the Hilton or anything like that, and the waterâs dirty, and the bugs are buzzing around, but this place suits me. I like sitting on the bench and watching the air bubbles on the surface from the fish, or the frogs jumping to catch the insects flying by. Or the occasional plop as one jumps in.â
âSounds peaceful.â
âIt is. Sometimes thereâs nothing better than a little solitude in nature.â
It was a hell of a lot better than solitude in her gilded cage. She was going to like it here.
Titania squirmed around in her lap, put her paws on the door by the window, and started yipping.
âAw, look. She wants to play.â
âSheâs not going to keep up all that yapping, is she? She does go to sleep at some point, right?â
âOf course she does. Sheâs just excited right now.â
âWhat about accidents? I spent too much money on the flooring to be her potty-training service.â
âTitaniaâs been housebroken since the day after I got her. You donât have to worry about a mess.â
âOh, I wasnât worried, since youâll be cleaning it up.â
âWell, of course I will. Sheâs my dog. I clean up after her.â
Liam pulled into the garage and was around to help her out of the passenger side before sheâd gathered Titania and the rest of her things.
âPut her down. She might as well learn the place from the get-go.â Liam set Titania on the floor. It was so strange to see her little dainty dog in Liamâs large, strong hands. It reminded her of an Ann Geddes photo with a baby cradled in its fatherâs hands.
Whoa. She was being way too fanciful here. Liam was just trying to help and she was the one weirding the situation out with her stupid imagination.
Save it for the artwork, Cassidy.
ExactlyâUh oh. Her art. The furniture. It was in the warehouse that sheâfortunatelyâhad leased in her own name. The rent was paid up to the end
Fyodor Dostoyevsky; Andrew R. MacAndrew
Arthur McMahon
Donna Milner
Micah Nathan
Malcolm Rhodes
Michael Paterson
Natasha Knight
Alta Hensley
Alex Bellos
Cari Silverwood