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It took Jacob a minute. "Oh. Ugh. The third wife. Okay, I see your point."

"She wants to be there in the clearing. To do what little she can, as she puts it." He sighed.

"That was the secondary reason for my staying with her tomorrow. She's quite inventive when she wants something."

"Yes, she has an excellent mind for things like that," Jasper said, looking excited.

"You really are looking forward to meet her, aren't you?" Edward asked, looking at him bemused.

"Yeah," Jasper said, looking sort of embarrassed.

"You know, your military brother gave her the idea just as much as the story did."

"Neither side meant any harm," Edward whispered, peace-making now.

"And when does this little truce end?" Jacob asked. "First light? Or do we wait until after the fight?"

There was a pause as they both considered.

"First light," they whispered together, and then laughed quietly.

"Boys," Esme said, shaking her head.

"Sleep well, Jacob," Edward murmured. "Enjoy the moment."

It was quiet again, and the tent held still for a few minutes. The wind seemed to have decided that it wasn't going to flatten us after all, and was giving up the fight.

Edward groaned softly. "I didn't mean that quite so literally."

Edward groaned again. Actually, he probably read the line exactly how his book-self said it in the tent.

"Sorry," Jacob whispered. "You could leave, you know - give us a little privacy."

"Would you like me to help you sleep, Jacob?" Edward offered.

"You could try," Jacob said, unconcerned. "It would be interesting to see who walked away, wouldn't it?"

"Don't tempt me too far, wolf. My patience isn't that perfect."

Jacob whispered a laugh. "I'd rather not move just now, if you don't mind."

Edward started humming to himself, louder than usual - trying to drown out Jacob's thoughts, I assumed. But it was my lullaby he hummed, and, despite my growing discomfort with this whispered dream,

"Whispered dream," Edward repeated, shaking his head.

I sank deeper into unconsciousness . . . into other dreams that made better sense. . . .

"Because it was a real dream," Emmett chuckled and took the book that Edward was handing him.

Chapter Twenty-Three

Monster

"Monster," Emmett read. "Ah... finally, the fighting starts."

Edward was scowling at that, but didn't say anything.

When I woke up in the morning, it was very bright - even inside the tent, the sunlight hurt my eyes. And I was sweating, as Jacob had predicted. Jacob was snoring lightly in my ear, his arms still wrapped around me.

I pulled my head away from his feverishly warm chest and felt the sting of the cold morning on my clammy cheek. Jacob sighed in his sleep; his arms tightened unconsciously.

Edward was not looking comfortable with this and it was only made worse by the way Emmett was reading it, grinning at him evilly.

I squirmed, unable to loosen his hold, struggling to lift my head enough to see. . . . Edward met my gaze evenly. His expression was calm, but the pain in his eyes was unconcealed.

"Is it any warmer out there?" I whispered.

"Yes. I don't think the space heater will be necessary today."

I tried to get to the zipper, but I couldn't free my arms. I strained, fighting against Jacob's inert strength. Jacob muttered, still fast asleep, his arms constricting again.

"Some help?" I asked quietly.

Edward smiled. "Did you want me to take his arms all the way off?"

"I don't think she wants you to maim the pup," Emmett chuckled. "But I wouldn't mind..."

"Emmett!" Esme scolded sharply.

"Sorry," Emmett said - not really looking sorry, but at least he stopped talking.

"No, thank you. Just get me free. I'm going to get heat stroke."

Edward unzipped the sleeping bag in a swift, abrupt movement. Jacob fell out, his bare back hitting the icy floor of the tent.

"Hey!" he complained, his eyes flying open. Instinctively, he flinched away from the cold, rolling onto me. I gasped as his weight knocked the breath out of me.

And then his weight was gone. I felt the impact as Jacob flew into one of the tent poles and the tent shuddered.

"Edward!" Esme said, looking incredulously at him.

"He was crushing her," Edward muttered, the corner of his mouth was twinged upwards, but he looked like he was trying to appear somber.

"That's still no excuse to throw him," Esme said sharply.

"Sorry," Edward sighed, looking a lot more serious about that this time.

Yeah right, Alice thought, and Edward gave the smallest indication of agreement to that.

The growling erupted from all around. Edward was crouching in front of me, and I couldn't see his face, but the snarls were ripping angrily out of his chest. Jacob was half-crouched, too, his whole body quivering, while growls rumbled through his clenched teeth. Outside the tent, Seth Clearwater's vicious snarls echoed off the rocks.

"Now see what you've done," Esme said.

"You're right. I really should not have done that," Edward said.

You're only saying that because Bella is in the tent too, Alice thought and again Edward seemed to agree with that, too.

"Stop it, stop it!" I yelled, scrambling awkwardly to put myself between them. The space was so small that I didn't have to stretch far to put one hand on each of their chests. Edward wrapped his hand around my waist, ready to yank me out of the way.

"Stop it, now," I warned him.

Under my touch, Jacob began to calm himself. The shaking slowed, but his teeth were still bared, his eyes furiously focused on Edward. Seth continued to growl, a long unbroken sound, a violent background to the sudden silence in the tent.

"Jacob?" I asked, waiting until he finally dropped his glare to look at me. "Are you hurt?"

"And now you really are sorry," Emmett said. "She's on little Jakey's side."

"Of course not!" he hissed.