
“Thank you, Gran’pa. That was a lovely evening.”
Spencer beamed. “A rare pleasure, my dear.” Arm in arm, they entered the hall. “Perhaps in a few months we might consider a dance, eh?”
Kit smiled. “Perhaps. Who knows-we might even entice this mysterious Lord Hendon with the promise of music.”
Spencer laughed. “Not if he’s Jake’s lad. Never could stand any fussing and primping, not Jake.”
“Ah, but this one’s a new generation-who knows what he’ll be like.”
Spencer shook his head. “As you get older, my dear, one thing becomes clear. People don’t really change, generation to generation. The same strengths, the same weaknesses.”
Kit laughed and kissed his cheek. “Good night, Gran’pa.”
Spencer patted her hand and left her.
But once in her room, Kit couldn’t settle down. She let Elmina help her from her gown, then dismissed her; enveloped in a wrapper, she prowled the room. The single candle wavered and she snuffed it. Moonlight streamed in, shedding more than enough light. Thinking of Spencer’s dance, Kit bowed and swayed through the steps of a cotillion. At its end, she sank onto the window seat and stared out over the fields. In the distance, she could hear the swoosh of the waves, two miles away.
The odd emptiness remained, that peculiar feeling of lack that had settled deep inside her. In an effort to ignore it, she fixed her senses on the ebb and surge of the tide, letting the sounds lull her and lead her toward slumber. She’d almost succumbed when she saw the light.
A flash of brilliance, it flared in the dark. Then, just as she’d convinced herself she’d imagined it, it came again. There was a ship offshore, signaling to-to whom? On the thought, the muted reflection of an answering flash from beneath the cliffs gleamed on the dark water.
