July 17th, 1892 — Foxwood Estate Bath
The Foxwood estate was beautiful, and Natsuko was lucky that her room happened to be on the first floor of the building. Although she was sure the views from the upper rooms were lovely and panoramic, her own had a set of double doors that led out to a small veranda that met the landscaping of the garden. It was high summer - sunrise was 3:30am, but the night had already begun to give way to the morning when Suki found herself restless and fully awake. The house was warm and she had left the doors of the veranda open to allow a breeze into the room, so she slipped from the bed, took a book from her bedside table and a shawl from a chair and made her way to the veranda, where the cool of the morning air outside felt like am elixir.
Stopping at the door, she inhaled deeply, the scent of the night jasmine hung in the air. There was a low stone wall separating the manicured veranda from the gardens beyond and Natsuko stationed herself there, sitting with her back to an edging pillar and her feet tucked up beneath her, wrapped in her shawl, book in hand she took a few minutes to enjoy the serenity of the early hours, with only the spider in it's dew glistening spiders web for company.
She wasn't sure how long she had stayed there, lazily watching the spider spin, harrowed by the occasional fairy who had escaped from the likely now dismantled decorations from the night before and reading from the mediocre novel she had procured in London and pondering all that had gone on that evening before, when from amidst the early morning bird song, another sound stood out. 'Is anyone there?' Suki asked, a note of concern the colouring the edge of her question. She pulled her shawl a little closer around her, still in nightdress as she was, and listened again.
Stopping at the door, she inhaled deeply, the scent of the night jasmine hung in the air. There was a low stone wall separating the manicured veranda from the gardens beyond and Natsuko stationed herself there, sitting with her back to an edging pillar and her feet tucked up beneath her, wrapped in her shawl, book in hand she took a few minutes to enjoy the serenity of the early hours, with only the spider in it's dew glistening spiders web for company.
She wasn't sure how long she had stayed there, lazily watching the spider spin, harrowed by the occasional fairy who had escaped from the likely now dismantled decorations from the night before and reading from the mediocre novel she had procured in London and pondering all that had gone on that evening before, when from amidst the early morning bird song, another sound stood out. 'Is anyone there?' Suki asked, a note of concern the colouring the edge of her question. She pulled her shawl a little closer around her, still in nightdress as she was, and listened again.