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Artist's Proof

Chapter 9 The corridor did not lead where Gertie expected. It led to a space that existed outside the geometry of the inn, a new, vast, shadowy hall that smelled of turpentine, congealed varnish, and a taste on the tongue like the metallic tang of blood and vitriol. The air was chilly, still, and heavy with the weight of a thousand unseen witnesses. Gertie followed the ghost of Francisco de Goya. He moved with a limp that seemed to drag the very shadows that followed him, his black coat trailing like smoke. He did not look back; he simply gestured with his hand toward a massive oak door. "Welcome to my atelier, Señorita," Goya said, his voice echoing as if in an empty room. He spoke in a tone of biting irony that cut through pretensions. He bowed, and said, "You must excuse me, for I am deaf. I cannot answer any questions you undoubtedly have about your present circumstances. I am charged only to disclose to you, urgently, what you may expect by pursuing your plan."...

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...

From Virgil’s Aeneid to the Senate Chamber

The Persistence of Memory The story of Dido, the tragic Queen of Carthage from Virgil’s Aeneid, has echoed through centuries of Western literature, shaping our understanding of love, betrayal, and the devastating power of a woman scorned. From the classical epic to William Congreve’s Restoration drama, and even into the heated political theater of the 1990s, the figure of Dido continues to resonate—a symbol of emotional ruin wrought by duty, abandonment, and the female voice. When Senator Howell Heflin asked Anita Hill during the 1991 Clarence Thomas confirmation hearings, “Do you consider yourself a woman scorned?” he was not merely invoking a pop-culture cliché. He was drawing on a deep literary tradition—one that traces back to Virgil’s Dido and finds its way into Congreve’s The Mourning Bride, where the now-iconic line “Heav’n has no rage like love to hatred turned, nor Hell a fury like a woman scorn’d” was born. This question, loaded with historical and dramatic weight, invites a ...

Finishing School for a Diplomat

Chapter 7 The coolness of the rectory was balm against the fever of the Spanish sun, but the air inside was warm with a different kind of heat: the heat of war, of feudal obligations, and of a world that operated on rules Gertie had never been taught to navigate. Like the walls of the room anciently made of rough-hewn stone, the plaster peeling in places to reveal the brick beneath, she felt as if she were growing scales.  A simple wooden crucifix hung above the hearth, and the scent of beeswax candles and dried thyme hung heavy in the stillness. Gertie sat across from Father Mateo. He sat calmly, and with that knowing smile which never left his look. Her mind was racing, trying to place him, who did he remind her of? In Germany, dignity was a matter of state, of uniform, of reputation. Here, it seemed to be a matter of land, of family, of a medieval past. "Did you know my father?" Gertie asked, her voice breaking the silence. She needed to anchor herself. She needed to know ...

The Quietude of the Cloister

Chapter 6 The sun in Spain did not shine; it frowned. It was a different light than the golden, vibrant warmth of Provence. This was a glaring white, unforgiving brightness, that bleached the color from paintings and turned the landscape into a shimmering haze. Gertie sat on a stone bench in the center of a small, medieval plaza, the dust of the road in her nostrils. The only sound was the dry rustle of wind through the olive trees and the distant bleating of a goat. Henri was gone. She felt utterly alone. The change of scenery was not just geographical; it was elemental. In Germany, in her family home Villa Lindenhof, the world had been one of proud keeps, rich interiors, and the solemn, weighty undertones of high society. Here, in this far corner of the Iberian Peninsula the world was coarse, rustic, and simple. There were no grand titles, no covert glances, no hidden agendas in the eyes of the villagers who watched her from the windows. They saw a young woman, tired and disheveled, ...

The Gilded Cage of the Occitan

Chapter 5 The landscape did not merely change; it turned upside-down. As the Bugatti swept past the gray, rain-slicked plains of the north, the world seemed to catch fire. The landscape, previously a dull study in neutrals and gray, shattered into a canvas of impossible blues and brilliant, burning yellows. It was as if they had driven straight into a painting by Vincent van Gogh. The cypress trees standing sentinel by the roadside were not just green; they were dark, twisting flames of emerald, reaching for a sun that seemed to hum in knowing harmony. Gertie looked round and round, eyes wide. The air was thick with the scent of lavender, rosemary, and hot stone. They were in the heart of Provence, a land that had once driven a Dutch artist to madness with its beauty, a place where the light was so intense it seemed to strip the soul bare. "Look," Gertie whispered, pointing to a field of wheat. It rippled in the breeze like a sea of gold, the stalks dancing in a rhythm that f...

La Vie en Bleu

Chapter 4 The air in the depot smelled of wet wool. It was a provincial town in the heart of France where the rain seemed to have soaked permanently into the cobblestones. Every house along the street stood with its shutters drawn, as if the buildings themselves were holding their breath, waiting anxiously. There were no pedestrians. No cackle of gossiping neighbors. No life. Just gray sky and monotonous dripping of rain water from the eaves, and the distant, forlorn echo of a train whistle. Gertie stood by the edge of the platform, her baggage at her feet. It was a small valise, the one which she had never used before, perfect for a trip such as the one she was taking. She pulled her coat tighter. Such weather. She felt exposed, although she was alone. The silence of the town was not tranquil; it was watchful. Every window felt like an eye. Every shadow, a potential trap. She knew the risks. The town was a notorious labyrinth of informants. The Milice, the Vichy militia, were everywhe...