Through a Glass Darkly
Chapter 8 The inn was not a building so much as a mass of mortar and stubbornness. It stood at the edge of the village, a low structure of rough-hewn stone that seemed to have grown out of the hillside rather than built upon it. The walls were thick, bleached white with age, and smudged with the soot of wood fires. The windows were like small, deep-set eyes that looked out beneath a heavy brow onto the dusty courtyard. Inside, the air was heavy with scents: wood smoke, dried herbs, the decay of curing ham, and the earthy, damp smell of the dirt floor that had been pounded hard as concrete. Gertie's room was a cell at the end of a hall, with a low ceiling, although the view from the small window was a delight. The bed was a sturdy oak frame with a straw mattress that smelled of lavender and must. An oil lamp burned on the nightstand, casting shadows against the plaster walls. It was a room of stark simplicity, devoid of the plush velvet and heavy drapes of the Villa Lindenhof. Here...