by Nora Roberts
 
   Contents
   Also by Nora Roberts
   Title Page
   Copyright
   Dedication
   Chapter 1
   Chapter 2
   Chapter 3
   Chapter 4
   Chapter 5
   Chapter 6
   Chapter 7
   Chapter 8
   Chapter 9
   Chapter 10
   Chapter 11
   Chapter 12
   Epilogue
   Special Excerpt from Calculated in Death
   About the Author
   Nora Roberts
   Hot Ice
   Sacred Sins
   Brazen Virtue
   Sweet Revenge
   Public Secrets
   Genuine Lies
   Carnal Innocence
   Divine Evil
   Honest Illusions
   Private Scandals
   Hidden Riches
   True Betrayals
   Montana Sky
   Sanctuary
   Homeport
   The Reef
   River’s End
   Carolina Moon
   The Villa
   Midnight Bayou
   Three Fates
   Birthright
   Northern Lights
   Blue Smoke
   Angels Fall
   High Noon
   Tribute
   Black Hills
   The Search
   Chasing Fire
   The Witness
   Series
   Irish Born Trilogy
   Born in Fire
   Born in Ice
   Born in Shame
   Dream Trilogy
   Daring to Dream
   Holding the Dream
   Finding the Dream
   Chesapeake Bay Saga
   Sea Swept
   Rising Tides
   Inner Harbor
   Chesapeake Blue
   Gallaghers of Ardmore Trilogy
   Jewels of the Sun
   Tears of the Moon
   Heart of the Sea
   Three Sisters Island Trilogy
   Dance Upon the Air
   Heaven and Earth
   Face the Fire
   Key Trilogy
   Key of Light
   Key of Knowledge
   Key of Valor
   In the Garden Trilogy
   Blue Dahlia
   Black Rose
   Red Lily
   Circle Trilogy
   Morrigan’s Cross
   Dance of the Gods
   Valley of Silence
   Sign of Seven Trilogy
   Blood Brothers
   The Hollow
   The Pagan Stone
   Bride Quartet
   Vision in White
   Bed of Roses
   Savor the Moment
   Happy Ever After
   The Inn BoonsBoro Trilogy
   The Next Always
   The Last Boyfriend
   eBooks
   The O’Hurleys
   The Last Honest Woman
   Dance to the Piper
   Skin Deep
   Without a Trace
   The Donovan Legacy
   Captivated
   Entranced
   Charmed
   Enchanted
   Cordina’s Royal Family
   Affaire Royale
   Command Performance
   The Playboy Prince
   Cordina’s Crown Jewel
   The MacGregors
   Playing the Odds
   Tempting Fate
   All the Possibilities
   One Man’s Art
   For Now, Forever
   The MacGregor Brides
   The Winning Hand
   The MacGregor Grooms
   The Perfect Neighbor
   Rebellion & In from the Cold
   Night Tales
   Night Shift
   Night Shadow
   Nightshade
   Night Smoke
   Night Shield
   The Calhouns
   Courting Catherine
   A Man for Amanda
   For the Love of Lilah
   Suzanna’s Surrender
   Megan’s Mate
   Irish Legacy Trilogy
   Irish Thoroughbred
   Irish Rose
   Irish Rebel
   Best Laid Plans
   Loving Jack
   Lawless
   Summer Love
   Boundary Lines
   Dual Image
   First Impressions
   The Law Is a Lady
   Local Hero
   This Magic Moment
   The Name of the Game
   Partners
   Temptation
   The Welcoming
   Opposites Attract
   Time Was
   Times Change
   Gabriel’s Angel
   Holiday Wishes
   The Heart’s Victory
   The Right Path
   Rules of the Game
   Nora Roberts & J. D. Robb
   Remember When
   J. D. Robb
   Naked in Death
   Glory in Death
   Immortal in Death
   Rapture in Death
   Ceremony in Death
   Vengeance in Death
   Holiday in Death
   Conspiracy in Death
   Loyalty in Death
   Witness in Death
   Judgment in Death
   Betrayal in Death
   Seduction in Death
   Reunion in Death
   Purity in Death
   Portrait in Death
   Imitation in Death
   Divided in Death
   Visions in Death
   Survivor in Death
   Origin in Death
   Memory in Death
   Born in Death
   Innocent in Death
   Creation in Death
   Strangers in Death
   Salvation in Death
   Promises in Death
   Kindred in Death
   Fantasy in Death
   Indulgence in Death
   Treachery in Death
   New York to Dallas
   Celebrity in Death
   Anthologies
   From the Heart
   A Little Magic
   A Little Fate
   Moon Shadows
   (with Jill Gregory, Ruth Ryan Langan, and Marianne Willman)
   The Once Upon Series
   (with Jill Gregory, Ruth Ryan Langan, and Marianne Willman)
   Once Upon a Castle
   Once Upon a Rose
   Once Upon a Star
   Once Upon a Kiss
   Once Upon a Dream
   Once Upon a Midnight
   Silent Night
   (with Susan Plunkett, Dee Holmes, and Claire Cross)
   Out of This World
   (with Laurell K. Hamilton, Susan Krinard, and Maggie Shayne)
   Bump in the Night
   (with Mary Blayney, Ruth Ryan Langan, and Mary Kay McComas)
   Dead of Night
   (with Mary Blayney, Ruth Ryan Langan, and Mary Kay McComas)
   Three in Death
   Suite 606
   (with Mary Blayney, Ruth Ryan Langan, and Mary Kay McComas)
   In Death
   The Lost
   (with Patricia Gaffney, Mary Blayney, and Ruth Ryan Langan)
   The Other Side
   (with Mary Blayney, Patricia Gaffney, Ruth Ryan Langan, and Mary Kay McComas)
   The Unquiet
   (with Mary Blayney, Patricia Gaffney, Ruth Ryan Langan, and Mary Kay McComas)
   Also available . . .
   The Official Nora Roberts Companion
   (edited by Denise Little and Laura Hayden)
   THE BERKLEY PUBLISHING GROUP
   Published by the Penguin Group
   Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
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   Penguin Books Ltd., Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
   This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The publisher does not have control over and does not have any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.
   TIMES CHANGE
   An InterMix Book / published by arrangement with the author
   PUBLISHING HISTORY
   Harlequin Books edition / September 2001
   InterMix eBook edition / December 2012
   Copyright © 1989 by Nora Roberts.
   Excerpt from Calculated in Death copyright © 2013 by Nora Roberts.
   Cover clock © 26kot/shutterstock.
   All rights reserved.
   No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.
   For information, address: The Berkley Publishing Group,
   a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.,
   375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014.
   ISBN: 978-1-101-56931-3
   INTERMIX
   InterMix Books are published by The Berkley Publishing Group,
   a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.,
   375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014.
   INTERMIX and the “IM” design are trademarks of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
   For Isabel, who’s always been ahead of her time
   Chapter 1
   He knew the risks. He was a man who was willing to take them. One misstep, one bad call, and it would all be over, essentially before it had begun. But he had always considered life a gamble. Often—perhaps too often—he had allowed his impulses to rule and plunged recklessly into potentially dangerous situations. In this case, he had figured the odds painstakingly.
   Two years of his life had been spent calculating, simulating, constructing. The most minute details had been considered, computed and analyzed. He was a very patient man—when it came to his work. He knew what could happen. Now it was time to discover what would.
   More than a few of his associates believed he had crossed the line between genius and madness. Even those who were enthusiastic about his theories worried that he’d gone too far. Popular opinion didn’t concern him. Results did. And results of this, the greatest experience of his life, would be personal. Very personal.
   Seated behind the wide curve of the control panel, he looked more like a buccaneer at the helm of a ship than a scientist on the verge of discovery. But science was his life, and that made him as true an explorer as the ancient Columbus and Magellan.
   He believed in chance, in the purest sense of the word—the unpredictable possibility of existence.
   He was here now to prove it. In addition to his calculations, the technology at his command, his knowledge and his computations, he needed one element that any explorer required for success.
   Luck.
   He was alone now in the vast, silent sea of space, beyond the traffic patterns, beyond the last charted quadrant. There was an intimacy here between man and his dreams that could never be achieved in a laboratory. For the first time since his voyage had begun, he smiled. He had been in his laboratory too long.
   The solitude was soothing, even tempting. He’d almost forgotten what it was like to be truly alone, with only his own thoughts for company. If he’d chosen, he could have cruised along, easing back on the throttle and taking the aloneness to heart for as long as it suited him.
   Up here, at the edge of man’s domain, with his own planet a bright ball shrinking in the distance, he had time. And time was the key.
   Resisting temptation, he logged his coordinates—speed, trajectory, distance—all meticulously calculated. His long, agile fingers moved over dials and switches. The control panel glowed green, casting a mystic aura over his sharp-featured face.
   It was concentration rather than fear that narrowed his eyes and firmed his lips as he hurtled toward the sun. He knew exactly what the results would be if his calculations were off by even the slightest margin. The bright star’s gravity would suck him in. It would take only a heartbeat for his ship and its occupant to be vaporized.
   The ultimate failure, he thought as he stared at the luminous star that filled his viewing screen. Or the ultimate achievement. It was a gorgeous sight, this glowing, swirling light that filled the cabin and dazzled his eyes. Even at this distance, the sun held the power of life and death. Like a hot, hungry woman, it bewitched.
   Deliberately he lowered the shield on the viewing screen. He pushed for more speed, watching the dials as he neared the maximum the ship could handle. A check of gauges showed him that the outside temperature was rising dramatically. He waited, knowing that beyond the protective screen the intensity of light would have seared his corneas. A man shooting toward the sun risked blindness and destruction—risked never achieving his destiny.
   He waited while the first warning bell sounded, waited as the ship bucked and danced under the demands of velocity and gravity. The calm voice of the computer droned on, giving him speed, position and, most important, time.
   Though he could hear his own blood pounding in his ears, his hand was steady as it urged more speed from the laboring engines.
   He streaked toward the sun, faster than any man had ever been known to fly. Jaw clenched, he shoved a lever home. His ship shuddered, rocked, then tilted. End over end it tumbled—once, twice, a third time—before he could right it. His fingers gripped the controls as the force slapped him back in the chair. The cabin exploded with sound and light as he fought to hold his course.
   For an instant his vision grayed and he thought fatalistically that instead of being burned up in the sun’s heat he would simply be crushed by her gravity. Then his ship sprang free, like an arrow from a bow. Fighting for breath, he adjusted the controls and hurtled toward his fate.
   ***
   What impressed Jacob most about the Northwest was the space. As far as he could see in any direction, there was rock and wood and sky. It was quiet, not silent but quiet, with small animals rustling in the underbrush and birds calling as they wheeled overhead. Tracks dimpling the blanket of snow around his ship told him that larger animals roamed here. More importantly, the snow itself told him that his calculations were off by at least a matter of months.
   For the moment, he had to be satisfied with being approximately where he wanted to be. And with being alive.
   Always meticulous, he returned to his ship to record the facts and his impressions. He had seen pictures and videos of this place and time. For the past year he had studied every scrap of information he could find on the late twentieth century. Clothes, language, sociopolitical atmosphere. As a scientist he’d been fascinated. As a man he’d been appalled and amused by
 turns. And baffled when he’d remembered that his brother had chosen to live here, in this primitive time and place. Because of a woman.
   Jacob opened a compartment and took out a picture. An example of twentieth-century technology, he mused, as he turned the Polaroid snapshot over in his hand. He studied his brother first. Caleb’s easy grin was in place. And he looked comfortable sitting on the steps of a small wooden structure, dressed in baggy jeans and a sweater. He had his arm around a woman. The woman called Libby, Jacob thought now. She was unquestionably attractive, as females went. Not as flashy as Cal’s usual type, but certainly inoffensive.
   Just what was there about her that had made Cal give up his home, his family and his freedom?
   Because he was prepared to dislike her, Jacob tossed the picture back in its compartment. He would see this Libby for himself. Judge for himself. Then he would give Cal a swift kick and take him home.
   First there were some precautions to take.
   Moving from the flight deck to his personal quarters, Jacob stripped off his flight suit. The denim jeans and cotton sweater that had cost him more than he cared to remember were still in their plastic holder. Excellent reproductions, he thought as he tugged the jeans over his long legs. And, to give the devil his due, extremely comfortable.
   When he was dressed, he studied himself in the mirror. If he ran into any inhabitants during his stay—a brief one, he hoped—he wanted to blend in. He had neither the time nor the inclination to attempt to explain himself to a people who were most assuredly slow-witted. Nor did he want any of the media coverage that was so popular in this time.
   Though he hated to admit it, the gray sweater and the blue jeans suited him. The fit was excellent, and the material was smooth against his skin. Most importantly, in them he looked like a twentieth century man.
   His dark hair nearly skimmed his shoulders. It was thick, and it was always disheveled, as he paid more attention to his work than to hairstyles. Still, it was an excellent frame for his angular face. His brows were often drawn together over dark green eyes, and his mouth, usually grim when he was poring over calculations, had an unexpected and powerful charm when he relaxed enough to smile.
   He wasn’t smiling now. He slung his bag over his shoulder and left the ship.
   Depending on the slant of the sun rather than on his watch, Jacob decided it was just past noon. The sky was miraculously empty. It was incredible to stand under the hard blue cup and see only the faint white trail of what he assumed was the vapor trail from an old continental transport. They called them planes, he remembered, watching the stream lengthen.