Cover of The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession
    True Crime

    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession by Michael Finkel tells the riveting true story of Stéphane Breitwieser, one of the most prolific art thieves in history. Over the course of several years, Breitwieser stole hundreds of priceless works from museums across Europe, all while evading capture. Finkel explores the complex motivations behind Breitwieser's crimes, including his obsessive love for art and the impact of his actions on his personal life. The book examines themes of obsession, passion, and the thin line between art and crime.

    In Chap­ter 37 of “The Art Thief,” Anne-Cather­ine reveals to Swiss art detec­tive Von der Müh­ll that she doubts the sin­cer­i­ty of her past rela­tion­ship with Bre­itwieser, claim­ing he saw her mere­ly as an object. How­ev­er, Bre­itwieser appears to move on quick­ly after Anne-Cather­ine cuts ties with him in late 2005. He begins dat­ing Stéphanie Man­gin, a nurse’s assis­tant who resem­bles Anne-Cather­ine in both looks and pro­fes­sion. Their bond is imme­di­ate, prompt­ing Bre­itwieser to move into Stéphanie’s apart­ment in Stras­bourg short­ly after their rela­tion­ship begins.

    Bre­itwieser finds new­found hope, refer­ring to Stéphanie as his “rock” and plans for the future. Addi­tion­al­ly, he expe­ri­ences a finan­cial boon when he is paid over $100,000 by a pub­lish­ing com­pa­ny for a ten-day inter­view that leads to the release of his book, *Con­fes­sions of an Art Thief.* In it, he out­lines a plan to piv­ot to life as an art-secu­ri­ty con­sul­tant, intend­ing to offer afford­able solu­tions like updat­ed dis­play cas­es and motion sen­sors to muse­ums and col­lec­tors.

    Things take a turn for the worse when Bre­itwieser, feel­ing embold­ened by the pub­li­ca­tion and a new life, steals items from a cloth­ing bou­tique at the air­port in Paris. His reck­less deci­sion leads to his arrest after he mis­counts the num­ber of under­cov­er secu­ri­ty guards. Despite the minor legal consequences—an overnight stay in cus­tody and com­mu­ni­ty service—his pub­lic image crum­bles. Crit­ics mock him, and his aspi­ra­tions of becom­ing a respect­ed con­sul­tant are met with ridicule.

    Bat­tered by pub­lic opin­ion, he retreats to Stéphanie’s apart­ment, where he strug­gles with feel­ings of worth­less­ness and iso­la­tion, find­ing it dif­fi­cult to secure legit­i­mate employ­ment. His emo­tion­al tur­moil esca­lates, cul­mi­nat­ing in a relapse into thiev­ery when he steals a valu­able land­scape by Pieter Brueghel the Younger at an antiques fair in Bel­gium, which he hangs in Stéphanie’s apart­ment. This act brings him a fleet­ing sense of joy and con­nec­tion to art, yet he risks every­thing, includ­ing his rela­tion­ship with Stéphanie.

    When she dis­cov­ers the paint­ing’s ori­gins, she real­izes the weight of their sit­u­a­tion and, feel­ing com­pro­mised, ends their rela­tion­ship. In a twist of betray­al, she con­tacts the police with evi­dence of his theft, lead­ing to Breitwieser’s arrest once again.

    0 Comments

    Heads up! Your comment will be invisible to other guests and subscribers (except for replies), including you after a grace period.
    Cover of The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession
    True Crime

    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession by Michael Finkel tells the riveting true story of Stéphane Breitwieser, one of the most prolific art thieves in history. Over the course of several years, Breitwieser stole hundreds of priceless works from museums across Europe, all while evading capture. Finkel explores the complex motivations behind Breitwieser's crimes, including his obsessive love for art and the impact of his actions on his personal life. The book examines themes of obsession, passion, and the thin line between art and crime.

    In Chap­ter 37 of “We Solve Mur­ders,” the char­ac­ters Amy, Steve, and Rosie engage in a tense dia­logue about the poten­tial threats that Amy may face. Rosie ques­tions whether some­one named Jeff could acquire Amy’s blood, but Amy defends Jeff, stat­ing he warned her about dan­ger­ous indi­vid­u­als, Lou­bet and Joe Blow. The con­ver­sa­tion shifts as Steve points out that Jeff was aware of Amy’s where­abouts when mul­ti­ple mur­ders occurred.

    The plot thick­ens when Amy men­tions Henk van Veen, a for­mer col­league who has been steal­ing clients since leav­ing the com­pa­ny, sug­gest­ing he could be a sus­pect. Rosie spec­u­lates that Henk might also be involved in elim­i­nat­ing clients to scare oth­ers away from Max­i­mum Impact. Amy is uncer­tain about Henk’s cur­rent loca­tion but sug­gests he would not know her move­ments.

    Amy also brings up Susan Knox, Jeff’s assis­tant, whom she believes would know both her loca­tion and pos­si­bly have access to her blood. Rosie pro­pos­es they should relo­cate to St. Lucia to con­tin­ue their inves­ti­ga­tion, but Steve feels reluc­tant, hav­ing just set­tled into his new home. The dis­cus­sion leads to the recog­ni­tion that if Amy’s blood is found at a crime scene, it could lead to severe con­se­quences for her.

    While con­tem­plat­ing their actions, Amy insists they must move, want­i­ng to inves­ti­gate the case of Bel­la Sanchez, a recent vic­tim. Rosie backs her up, while Steve feels con­flict­ed about leav­ing his new place. As ten­sions rise, Steve receives a call from Car­los, indi­cat­ing some­one named Eddie Flood is search­ing for Amy. This new­found dan­ger push­es the group to con­sid­er St. Lucia as nec­es­sary refuge.

    With the urgency mount­ing, the trio pre­pares to leave. Steve thinks of a way to divert Eddie’s pur­suit while still man­ag­ing their inves­ti­ga­tion. As they plot their next move, Rosie men­tions her pilot’s avail­abil­i­ty, empha­siz­ing they’ll need to act quick­ly to evade any threats lurk­ing near­by. Over­all, the chap­ter inter­twines sus­pense­ful inves­ti­ga­tion dynam­ics with the char­ac­ters’ per­son­al stakes, push­ing them clos­er to action amidst grow­ing dan­ger .

    0 Comments

    Heads up! Your comment will be invisible to other guests and subscribers (except for replies), including you after a grace period.
    Cover of The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession
    True Crime

    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession by Michael Finkel tells the riveting true story of Stéphane Breitwieser, one of the most prolific art thieves in history. Over the course of several years, Breitwieser stole hundreds of priceless works from museums across Europe, all while evading capture. Finkel explores the complex motivations behind Breitwieser's crimes, including his obsessive love for art and the impact of his actions on his personal life. The book examines themes of obsession, passion, and the thin line between art and crime.

    In Chap­ter 37 of “All the Col­ors of the Dark,” the pro­tag­o­nist expe­ri­ences an over­whelm­ing surge of fear as her body shuts down, sig­nal­ing a dire sit­u­a­tion. She becomes aware of a flick­er­ing light indi­cat­ing the pres­ence of dan­ger in her sur­round­ings. Despite smelling smoke, she can­not see the flames that have forced her from the fire-start­ing barn back to the safe­ty of the main house. Des­per­a­tion sets in as she screams for some­one, grap­pling for any sem­blance of hope.

    In a moment of pan­ic, she gazes towards the ceil­ing and spots a hop­per win­dow. The glass is paint­ed black, but cracks allow light to seep through, hint­ing at a way out. How­ev­er, the smoke con­stricts her chest and throat, mak­ing it dif­fi­cult to breathe. Try­ing to muster strength, she reach­es for the ledge to pull her­self up but finds it near­ly impos­si­ble.

    Deter­mined, she makes anoth­er attempt, using the rough wall for sup­port. She digs in her sneak­ers and, with her sling­shot, man­ages to crack the glass once, then shat­ter­ing it a sec­ond time. This effort allows Saint to wrig­gle through the open­ing, though the shat­tered glass tears at her. In a moment that mix­es pain and relief, she is lift­ed from her per­ilous sit­u­a­tion by some­one whose iden­ti­ty ini­tial­ly eludes her.

    Amidst the chaos, she can­not con­tain her fury, hurl­ing insults at the per­son who res­cues her. How­ev­er, just as the flames react vio­lent­ly, she feels her­self going limp, suc­cumb­ing to her fear and exhaus­tion in the arms of her res­cuer. With com­fort­ing words, Nix reas­sures her that he has her, cre­at­ing a moment of frag­ile safe­ty in a world of chaos. This chap­ter encap­su­lates the ten­sion between fear and res­cue, depict­ing a vivid strug­gle for sur­vival and the pow­er­ful instinct to fight against over­whelm­ing odds.

    0 Comments

    Heads up! Your comment will be invisible to other guests and subscribers (except for replies), including you after a grace period.
    Cover of The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession
    True Crime

    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession by Michael Finkel tells the riveting true story of Stéphane Breitwieser, one of the most prolific art thieves in history. Over the course of several years, Breitwieser stole hundreds of priceless works from museums across Europe, all while evading capture. Finkel explores the complex motivations behind Breitwieser's crimes, including his obsessive love for art and the impact of his actions on his personal life. The book examines themes of obsession, passion, and the thin line between art and crime.

    0 Comments

    Heads up! Your comment will be invisible to other guests and subscribers (except for replies), including you after a grace period.
    Cover of The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession
    True Crime

    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession by Michael Finkel tells the riveting true story of Stéphane Breitwieser, one of the most prolific art thieves in history. Over the course of several years, Breitwieser stole hundreds of priceless works from museums across Europe, all while evading capture. Finkel explores the complex motivations behind Breitwieser's crimes, including his obsessive love for art and the impact of his actions on his personal life. The book examines themes of obsession, passion, and the thin line between art and crime.

    Chap­ter Thir­ty-Sev­en encap­su­lates a pro­found­ly per­son­al and trans­for­ma­tive night for the pro­tag­o­nist, jux­ta­posed against an under­ly­ing ten­sion that sim­mers qui­et­ly before inten­si­fy­ing towards the chapter’s end. After an inti­mate encounter with Andrew, the pro­tag­o­nist finds her­self in a moment of post-coital reflec­tion and new­found vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty, nes­tled with­in the con­fines of an uncom­fort­ably small cot. This phys­i­cal dis­com­fort par­al­lels a deep­er sense of dis­com­fort root­ed in the pro­tag­o­nist’s break­ing of Nina’s strict house rules, hint­ing at a rebel­lion that car­ries both lib­er­a­tion and con­se­quences.

    The nar­ra­tive grace­ful­ly tran­si­tions from an intro­spec­tive exam­i­na­tion of the pro­tag­o­nist’s unlike­ly evening to a sud­den awak­en­ing, pro­pelled by phys­i­cal need and a stark real­iza­tion of Andrew’s absence. This absence is not just physical—it’s a sym­bol of the ephemer­al­i­ty and iso­lat­ing aspects of their con­nec­tion, high­light­ed by the uncom­fort­able sleep­ing arrange­ment and the protagonist’s con­tem­pla­tion of join­ing Andrew, sug­gest­ing a desire for close­ness yet accep­tance of their sep­a­rate real­i­ties.

    The cot, an object of phys­i­cal dis­com­fort, becomes emblem­at­ic of the pro­tag­o­nist’s cur­rent tran­si­tion­al phase—between the com­fort of past famil­iar­i­ty and the uncer­tain promise of future change, under­scored by her antic­i­pa­tion of this being the last night in such a set­ting. Andrew’s depar­ture from the cot, dri­ven by prac­ti­cal dis­com­fort, mir­rors the protagonist’s own emo­tion­al and phys­i­cal jour­ney towards seek­ing more in life, beyond the con­straints of uncom­fort­able cir­cum­stances and strin­gent rules.

    As the chap­ter clos­es, the pro­tag­o­nist’s attempt to leave the room is met with resis­tance, a metaphor­i­cal por­tray­al of the obsta­cles she faces on her path to change. The stuck door­knob is not just a phys­i­cal bar­ri­er but a nar­ra­tive device sym­bol­iz­ing the chal­lenges in mov­ing for­ward from a place of emo­tion­al con­fine­ment to lib­er­a­tion.

    This chap­ter mas­ter­ful­ly mar­ries the themes of inti­ma­cy, per­son­al growth, and the con­fronta­tion of phys­i­cal and metaphor­i­cal bar­ri­ers, weav­ing a com­pelling nar­ra­tive that push­es the pro­tag­o­nist towards intro­spec­tion and the immi­nent chal­lenge of tran­scend­ing her cur­rent cir­cum­stances.

    0 Comments

    Heads up! Your comment will be invisible to other guests and subscribers (except for replies), including you after a grace period.
    Cover of The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession
    True Crime

    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession by Michael Finkel tells the riveting true story of Stéphane Breitwieser, one of the most prolific art thieves in history. Over the course of several years, Breitwieser stole hundreds of priceless works from museums across Europe, all while evading capture. Finkel explores the complex motivations behind Breitwieser's crimes, including his obsessive love for art and the impact of his actions on his personal life. The book examines themes of obsession, passion, and the thin line between art and crime.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    CHAPTER
    37
    “NO!” Amren screamed, at the door in an instant, her fist a radi­ant forge as
    she slammed it into the lead—once, twice.
    And above—the rush and gar­gle of water tum­bling down­stairs, fill­ing the
    cham­ber—
    No, no, no—
    I reached the door, slid­ing the box into the wide inside pock­et of my
    leather jack­et while Amren’s blaz­ing palm flat­tened against the door,
    burn­ing, heat­ing the met­al, swirls and whorls radi­at­ing out through it as if
    they were a lan­guage all her own, and then—
    The door burst open.
    Only for a flood to come crash­ing in.
    I grap­pled for the thresh­old, but missed as the water slammed me back,
    sweep­ing me under the dark, icy sur­face. The cold stole the breath from my
    lungs. Find the floor, find the floor—
    My feet con­nect­ed and I pushed up, gulp­ing down air, scan­ning the dim
    cham­ber for Amren. She was clutch­ing the thresh­old, eyes on me, hand out
    —glow­ing bright.
    The water already flowed up to my breasts, and I rushed to her, fight­ing
    the onslaught flood­ing the cham­ber, will­ing that new strength into my body,
    my arms—
    The water became eas­i­er, as if that ker­nel of pow­er soothed its cur­rent, its
    wrath, but Amren was now climb­ing up the thresh­old. “You have it?” she
    shout­ed over the roar­ing water.
    I nod­ded, and I real­ized her out­stretched hand wasn’t for me—but for the
    door she’d forced back into the wall. Hold­ing it away until I could get out.
    I shoved through the arch­way, Amren slip­ping around the threshold—just
    as the door rolled shut again, so vio­lent­ly that I won­dered at the pow­er
    she’d used to push it back.
    The only down­side was that the water in the hall now had much less
    space to fill.
    “Go,” she said, but I didn’t wait for her approval before I grabbed her,
    hook­ing her feet around my stom­ach as I hoist­ed her onto my back.
    “Just—do what you have to,” I grit­ted out, neck craned above the ris­ing
    water. Not too much far­ther to the stairs—the stairs that were now a
    cas­cade. Where the hell was Rhysand?
    But Amren held out a palm in front of us, and the water buck­led and
    trem­bled. Not a clear path, but a break in the cur­rent. I direct­ed that ker­nel
    of Tarquin’s power—my pow­er now—toward it. The water calmed fur­ther,
    strain­ing to obey my com­mand.
    I ran, grip­ping her thighs prob­a­bly hard enough to bruise. Step by step,
    water now rag­ing down, now at my jaw, now at my mouth—
    But I hit the stairs, almost slip­ping on the slick step, and Amren’s gasp
    stopped me cold.
    Not a gasp of shock, but a gasp for air as a wall of water poured down the
    stairs. As if a mighty wave had swept over the entire site. Even my own
    mas­tery over the ele­ment could do noth­ing against it.
    I had enough time to gulp down air, to grab Amren’s legs and brace
    myself—
    And watch as that door atop the stairs slid shut, seal­ing us in a watery
    tomb.
    I was dead. I knew I was dead, and there was no way out of it.
    I had con­sumed my last breath, and I would be aware for every sec­ond
    until my lungs gave out and my body betrayed me and I swal­lowed that
    fatal mouth­ful of water.
    Amren beat at my hands until I let go, until I swam after her, try­ing to
    calm my pan­ick­ing heart, my lungs, try­ing to con­vince them to make each
    sec­ond count as Amren reached the door and slammed her palm into it.
    Sym­bols flared—again and again. But the door held.
    I reached her, shov­ing my body into the door, over and over, and the lead
    dent­ed beneath my shoul­ders. Then I had talons, talons not claws, and I was
    slic­ing and punch­ing at the met­al—
    My lungs were on fire. My lungs were seiz­ing—
    Amren pound­ed on the door, that bit of fae­light gut­ter­ing, as if it were
    count­ing down her heart­beats—
    I had to take a breath, had to open my mouth and take a breath, had to
    ease the burn­ing—
    Then the door was ripped away.
    And the fae­light remained bright enough for me to see the three beau­ti­ful,
    ethe­re­al faces hiss­ing through fish’s teeth as their spindly webbed fin­gers
    snatched us out of the stairs, and into their frogskin arms.
    Water-wraiths.
    But I couldn’t stand it.
    And as those spiny hands grabbed my arm, I opened my mouth, water
    shov­ing in, cut­ting off thought and sound and breath. My body seized, those
    talons van­ish­ing—
    Debris and sea­weed and water shot past me, and I had the vague sense of
    being hur­tled through the water, so fast the water burned beneath my
    eye­lids.
    And then hot air—air, air, air, but my lungs were full of water as—
    A fist slammed into my stom­ach and I vom­it­ed water across the waves. I
    gulped down air, blink­ing at the bruised pur­ple and blush­ing pink of the
    morn­ing sky.
    A sput­ter and gasp not too far from me, and I tread­ed water as I turned in
    the bay to see Amren vom­it­ing as well—but alive.
    And in the waves between us, onyx hair plas­tered to their strange heads
    like hel­mets, the water-wraiths float­ed, star­ing with dark, large eyes.
    The sun was ris­ing beyond them—the city encir­cling us stir­ring.
    The one in the cen­ter said, “Our sister’s debt is paid.”
    And then they were gone.
    Amren was already swim­ming for the dis­tant main­land shore.
    Pray­ing they didn’t come back and make a meal of us, I hur­ried after her,
    try­ing to keep my move­ments small to avoid detec­tion.
    We both reached a qui­et, sandy cove and col­lapsed.
    A shad­ow blocked out the sun, and a boot toed my calf. “What,” said
    Rhysand, still in bat­tle-black, “are you two doing?”
    I opened my eyes to find Amren hoist­ing her­self up on her elbows.
    “Where the hell were you?” she demand­ed.
    “You two set off every damned trig­ger in the place. I was hunt­ing down
    each guard who went to sound the alarm.” My throat was ravaged—and
    sand tick­led my cheeks, my bare hands. “I thought you had it cov­ered,” he
    said to her.
    Amren hissed, “That place, or that damned book, near­ly nul­li­fied my
    pow­ers. We almost drowned.”
    His gaze shot to me. “I didn’t feel it through the bond—”
    “It prob­a­bly nul­li­fied that, too, you stu­pid bas­tard,” Amren snapped.
    His eyes flick­ered. “Did you get it?” Not at all con­cerned that we were
    half-drowned and had very near­ly been dead.
    I touched my jacket—the heavy met­al lump with­in.
    “Good,” Rhys said, and I looked behind him at the sud­den urgency in his
    tone.
    Sure enough, in the cas­tle across the bay, peo­ple were dart­ing about.
    “I missed some guards,” he grit­ted out, grabbed both our arms, and we
    van­ished.
    The dark wind was cold and roar­ing, and I had bare­ly enough strength to
    cling to him.
    It gave out entire­ly, along with Amren’s, as we land­ed in the town house
    foyer—and we both col­lapsed to the wood floor, spray­ing sand and water
    on the car­pet.
    Cass­ian shout­ed from the din­ing room behind us, “What the hell?”
    I glared up at Rhysand, who mere­ly stepped toward the break­fast table.
    “I’m wait­ing for an expla­na­tion, too,” he mere­ly said to wide-eyed Cass­ian,
    Azriel, and Mor.
    But I turned to Amren, who was still hiss­ing on the floor. Her red-
    rimmed eyes nar­rowed. “How?”
    “Dur­ing the Tithe, the water-wraith emis­sary said they had no gold, no
    food to pay. They were starv­ing.” Every word ached, and I thought I might
    vom­it again. He’d deserve it, if I puked all over the car­pet. Though he’d
    prob­a­bly take it from my wages. “So I gave her some of my jew­el­ry to pay
    her dues. She swore that she and her sis­ters would nev­er for­get the
    kind­ness.”
    “Can some­one explain, please?” Mor called from the room beyond.
    We remained on the floor as Amren began qui­et­ly laugh­ing, her small
    body shak­ing.
    “What?” I demand­ed.
    “Only an immor­tal with a mor­tal heart would have giv­en one of those
    hor­ri­ble beasts the mon­ey. It’s so … ” Amren laughed again, her dark hair
    plas­tered with sand and sea­weed. For a moment, she even looked human.
    “What­ev­er luck you live by, girl … thank the Caul­dron for it.”
    The oth­ers were all watch­ing, but I felt a chuck­le whis­per out of me.
    Fol­lowed by a laugh, as rasp­ing and raw as my lungs. But a real laugh,
    per­haps edged by hysteria—and pro­found relief.
    We looked at each oth­er, and laughed again.
    “Ladies,” Rhysand purred—a silent order.
    I groaned as I got to my feet, sand falling every­where, and offered a hand
    to Amren to rise. Her grip was firm, but her quick­sil­ver eyes were
    sur­pris­ing­ly ten­der as she squeezed it before snap­ping her fin­gers.
    We were both instant­ly clean and warm, our clothes dry. Save for a wet
    patch around my breast—where that box wait­ed.
    My com­pan­ions were solemn-faced as I approached and reached inside
    that pock­et. The met­al bit into my fin­gers, so cold it burned.
    I dropped it onto the table.
    It thud­ded, and they all recoiled, swear­ing.
    Rhys crooked a fin­ger at me. “One last task, Feyre. Unlock it, please.”
    My knees were buckling—my head spin­ning and mouth bone-dry and
    full of salt and grit, but … I want­ed to be rid of it.
    So I slid into a chair, tug­ging that hate­ful box to me, and placed a hand
    on top.
    Hel­lo, liar, it purred.
    “Hel­lo,” I said soft­ly.
    Will you read me?
    “No.”
    The oth­ers didn’t say a word—though I felt their con­fu­sion shim­mer­ing
    in the room. Only Rhys and Amren watched me close­ly.
    Open, I said silent­ly.
    Say please.
    “Please,” I said.
    The box—the Book—was silent. Then it said, Like calls to like.
    “Open,” I grit­ted out.
    Unmade and Made; Made and Unmade—that is the cycle. Like calls to
    like.
    I pushed my hand hard­er, so tired I didn’t care about the thoughts
    tum­bling out, the bits and pieces that were a part of and not part of me: heat
    and water and ice and light and shad­ow.
    Curse­break­er, it called to me, and the box clicked open.
    I sagged back in my chair, grate­ful for the roar­ing fire in the near­by
    fire­place.
    Cassian’s hazel eyes were dark. “I nev­er want to hear that voice again.”
    “Well, you will,” Rhysand said bland­ly, lift­ing the lid. “Because you’re
    com­ing with us to see those mor­tal queens as soon as they deign to vis­it.”
    I was too tired to think about that—about what we had left to do. I peered
    into the box.
    It was not a book—not with paper and leather.
    It had been formed of dark met­al plates bound on three rings of gold,
    sil­ver, and bronze, each word carved with painstak­ing pre­ci­sion, in an
    alpha­bet I could not rec­og­nize. Yes, it indeed turned out my read­ing lessons
    were unnec­es­sary.
    Rhys left it inside the box as we all peered in—then recoiled.
    Only Amren remained star­ing at it. The blood drained from her face
    entire­ly.
    “What lan­guage is that?” Mor asked.
    I thought Amren’s hands might have been shak­ing, but she shoved them
    into her pock­ets. “It is no lan­guage of this world.”
    Only Rhys was unfazed by the shock on her face. As if he’d sus­pect­ed
    what the lan­guage might be. Why he had picked her to be a part of this
    hunt.
    “What is it, then?” Azriel asked.
    She stared and stared at the Book—as if it were a ghost, as if it were a
    miracle—and said, “It is the Leshon Hakodesh. The Holy Tongue.” Those
    quick­sil­ver eyes shift­ed to Rhysand, and I real­ized she’d under­stood, too,
    why she’d gone.
    Rhysand said, “I heard a leg­end that it was writ­ten in a tongue of mighty
    beings who feared the Cauldron’s pow­er and made the Book to com­bat it.
    Mighty beings who were here … and then van­ished. You are the only one
    who can uncode it.”
    It was Mor who warned, “Don’t play those sorts of games, Rhysand.”
    But he shook his head. “Not a game. It was a gam­ble that Amren would
    be able to read it—and a lucky one.”
    Amren’s nos­trils flared del­i­cate­ly, and for a moment, I won­dered if she
    might throt­tle him for not telling her his sus­pi­cions, that the Book might
    indeed be more than the key to our own sal­va­tion.
    Rhys smiled at her in a way that said he’d be will­ing to let her try.
    Even Cass­ian slid a hand toward his fight­ing knife.
    But then Rhysand said, “I thought, too, that the Book might also con­tain
    the spell to free you—and send you home. If they were the ones who wrote
    it in the first place.”
    Amren’s throat bobbed—slightly.
    Cass­ian said, “Shit.”
    Rhys went on, “I did not tell you my sus­pi­cions, because I did not want
    to get your hopes up. But if the leg­ends about the lan­guage were indeed
    right … Per­haps you might find what you’ve been look­ing for, Amren.”
    “I need the oth­er piece before I can begin decod­ing it.” Her voice was
    raw.
    “Hope­ful­ly our request to the mor­tal queens will be answered soon,” he
    said, frown­ing at the sand and water stain­ing the foy­er. “And hope­ful­ly the
    next encounter will go bet­ter than this one.”
    Her mouth tight­ened, yet her eyes were blaz­ing bright. “Thank you.”
    Ten thou­sand years in exile—alone.
    Mor sighed—a loud, dra­mat­ic sound no doubt meant to break the heavy
    silence—and com­plained about want­i­ng the full sto­ry of what hap­pened.
    But Azriel said, “Even if the book can nul­li­fy the Caul­dron … there’s
    Juri­an to con­tend with.”
    We all looked at him. “That’s the piece that doesn’t fit,” Azriel clar­i­fied,
    tap­ping a scarred fin­ger on the table. “Why res­ur­rect him in the first place?
    And how does the king keep him bound? What does the king have over
    Juri­an to keep him loy­al?”

    0 Comments

    Heads up! Your comment will be invisible to other guests and subscribers (except for replies), including you after a grace period.
    Cover of The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession
    True Crime

    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession by Michael Finkel tells the riveting true story of Stéphane Breitwieser, one of the most prolific art thieves in history. Over the course of several years, Breitwieser stole hundreds of priceless works from museums across Europe, all while evading capture. Finkel explores the complex motivations behind Breitwieser's crimes, including his obsessive love for art and the impact of his actions on his personal life. The book examines themes of obsession, passion, and the thin line between art and crime.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    C ELIA GOT ABSOLUTELY SMASHED DURING the wed­ding. She was
    hav­ing a hard time not being jeal­ous, even though she knew the whole
    thing was fake. Her own hus­band was stand­ing next to Har­ry, for
    cry­ing out loud. And we all knew what we were.
    Two men sleep­ing togeth­er. Mar­ried to two women sleep­ing
    togeth­er. We were four beards.
    And what I thought as I said “I do” was It’s all begin­ning now. Real
    life, our life. We’re final­ly going to be a fam­i­ly.
    Har­ry and John were in love. Celia and I were sky-high.
    When we got back from Italy, I sold my man­sion in Bev­er­ly Hills.
    Har­ry sold his. We bought this place in Man­hat­tan, on the Upper East
    Side, just down the street from Celia and John.
    Before I agreed to move, I had Har­ry look into whether my father
    was still alive. I wasn’t sure I could live in the same city he lived in,
    wasn’t sure I could han­dle the idea of run­ning into him.
    But when Harry’s assis­tant searched for him, I learned that my
    father had died in 1959 of a heart attack. What lit­tle he owned was
    absorbed by the state when no one came for­ward to claim it.
    My first thought when I heard he was gone was So that’s why he
    nev­er tried to come after me for mon­ey. And my sec­ond was How sad
    that I’m cer­tain that’s all he’d ever want.
    I put it out of my head, signed the paper­work on the apart­ment, and
    cel­e­brat­ed the pur­chase with Har­ry. I was free to go wher­ev­er I
    want­ed. And what I want­ed was to move to the Upper East Side of
    Man­hat­tan. I per­suad­ed Luisa to join us.
    This apart­ment might be with­in a long walk’s dis­tance, but I was a
    mil­lion miles away from Hell’s Kitchen. And I was world-famous,
    mar­ried, in love, and so rich it some­times made me sick.
    A month after we moved to town, Celia and I took a taxi to Hell’s
    Kitchen and walked around the neigh­bor­hood. It looked so dif­fer­ent
    from when I left. I brought her to the side­walk just below my old
    build­ing and point­ed at the win­dow that used to be mine.
    “Right there,” I said. “On the fifth floor.”
    Celia looked at me, with com­pas­sion for all I had been through
    when I lived there, for all I had done for myself since then. And then
    she calm­ly, con­fi­dent­ly took my hand.
    I bris­tled, unsure if we should be touch­ing in pub­lic, scared of what
    peo­ple would do. But the rest of the peo­ple on the street just kept on
    walk­ing, kept on liv­ing their lives, almost entire­ly unaware of or
    unin­ter­est­ed in the two famous women hold­ing hands on the side­walk.
    Celia and I spent our nights togeth­er in this apart­ment. Har­ry spent
    his nights with John at their place. We went out to din­ner in pub­lic, the
    four of us look­ing like two pairs of het­ero­sex­u­als, with­out a
    het­ero­sex­u­al in the bunch.
    The tabloids called us “America’s Favorite Dou­ble-Daters.” I even
    heard rumors that the four of us were swingers, which wasn’t that
    crazy for that peri­od of time. It real­ly makes you think, doesn’t it? That
    peo­ple were so eager to believe we were swap­ping spous­es but would
    have been scan­dal­ized to know we were monog­a­mous and queer?
    I’ll nev­er for­get the morn­ing after the Stonewall riots. Har­ry was at
    rapt atten­tion, watch­ing the news. John was on the phone all day with
    friends of his who lived down­town.
    Celia was pac­ing the liv­ing room floor, her heart rac­ing. She
    believed every­thing was going to change after that night. She believed
    that because gay peo­ple had announced them­selves, had been proud
    enough to admit who they were and strong enough to stand up,
    atti­tudes were going to change.
    I remem­ber sit­ting out on our rooftop patio, look­ing south­ward, and
    real­iz­ing that Celia, Har­ry, John, and I weren’t alone. It seems sil­ly to
    say now, but I was so  .  .  . self-involved, so sin­gu­lar­ly focused, that I
    rarely took time to think of the peo­ple out there like myself.
    That isn’t to say that I wasn’t aware of the way the coun­try was
    chang­ing. Har­ry and I cam­paigned for Bob­by Kennedy. Celia posed
    with Viet­nam pro­test­ers on the cov­er of Effect. John was a vocal
    sup­port­er of the civ­il rights move­ment, and I had been a very pub­lic
    sup­port­er of the work of Dr. Mar­tin Luther King Jr. But this was
    dif­fer­ent.
    This was our peo­ple.
    And here they were, revolt­ing against the police, in the name of
    their right to be them­selves. While I was sit­ting in a gold­en prison of
    my own mak­ing.
    I was out on my ter­race, direct­ly in the sun, on the after­noon after
    the ini­tial riots, wear­ing high-waist­ed jeans and a black sleeve­less top,
    drink­ing a gib­son. And I start­ed cry­ing when I real­ized those men
    were will­ing to fight for a dream I had nev­er even allowed myself to
    envi­sion. A world where we could be our­selves, with­out fear and
    with­out shame. Those men were braver and more hope­ful than I was.
    There were sim­ply no oth­er words for it.
    “There’s a plan to riot again tonight,” John said as he joined me on
    the patio. He had such an intim­i­dat­ing phys­i­cal pres­ence. More than
    six feet tall, two hun­dred and twen­ty-five pounds, with a tight crew cut.
    He looked like a guy you didn’t want to mess with. But any­one who
    knew him, and espe­cial­ly those of us who loved him, knew he was the
    first guy you could mess with.
    He may have been a war­rior on the foot­ball field, but he was the
    sweet­heart of our four­some. He was the guy who asked how you slept
    the night before, the guy who always remem­bered the small­est thing
    you said three weeks ago. And he took it on as his job to pro­tect Celia
    and Har­ry and, by exten­sion, me. John and I loved the same peo­ple,
    and so we loved each oth­er. And we also loved play­ing gin rum­my. I
    can’t tell you how many nights I stayed up late fin­ish­ing a hand of
    cards with John, the two of us dead­ly com­pet­i­tive, trad­ing off who was
    the gloat­ing win­ner and who was the sore los­er.
    “We should go down there,” Celia said, join­ing us. John took a seat
    in a chair in the cor­ner. Celia sat on the arm of the chair I was in. “We
    should sup­port them. We should be a part of this.”
    I could hear Har­ry call­ing John’s name from the kitchen. “We’re out
    here!” I yelled to him, at the same moment as John said, “I’m on the
    patio.”
    Soon Har­ry appeared in the door­way.
    “Har­ry, don’t you think we should go down there?” Celia said. She
    lit a cig­a­rette, took a drag, and hand­ed it to me.
    I was already shak­ing my head. John out­right told her no.
    “What do you mean, no?” Celia said.
    “You’re not going down there,” John said. “You can’t. None of us
    can.”
    “Of course I can,” she said, look­ing to me to back her up.
    “Sor­ry,” I said, giv­ing her the cig­a­rette back. “I’m with John on
    this.”
    “Har­ry?” she said, hop­ing to make one final suc­cess­ful plea.
    Har­ry shook his head. “We go down there, all we do is attract
    atten­tion away from the cause and toward us. The sto­ry becomes
    about whether we’re homo­sex­u­als and not about the rights of
    homo­sex­u­als.”
    Celia put the cig­a­rette to her lips and inhaled. She had a sour look
    on her face as she blew the smoke into the air. “So what do we do,
    then? We can’t sit here and do noth­ing. We can’t let them fight our
    fight for us.”
    “We give them what we have and they don’t,” Har­ry said.
    “Mon­ey,” I said, fol­low­ing his train of thought.
    John nod­ded. “I’ll call Peter. He’ll know how we can fund them. He’ll
    know who needs resources.”
    “We should have been doing that all along,” Har­ry said. “So let’s
    just do it from now on. No mat­ter what hap­pens tonight. No mat­ter
    what course this fight takes. Let’s just decide here and now that our
    job is to fund.”
    “I’m in,” I said.
    “Yeah.” John nod­ded. “Of course.”
    “OK,” Celia said. “If you’re sure that’s the way we can do the most
    good.”
    “It is,” Har­ry said. “I’m sure of it.”
    We start­ed fil­ter­ing mon­ey pri­vate­ly that day, and I’ve con­tin­ued to
    do so the rest of my life.
    In the pur­suit of a great cause, I think peo­ple can be of ser­vice in a
    num­ber of dif­fer­ent ways. I always felt that my way was to make a lot
    of mon­ey and then chan­nel it to the groups that need­ed it. It’s a bit self-
    serv­ing, that log­ic. I know that. But because of who I was, because of
    the sac­ri­fices I made to hide parts of myself, I was able to give more
    mon­ey than most peo­ple ever see in their entire life­time. I am proud of
    that.
    But it does not mean I wasn’t con­flict­ed. And of course, a lot of the
    time, that ambiva­lence was even more per­son­al than it was polit­i­cal.
    I knew it was imper­a­tive that I hide, and yet I did not believe I
    should have to. But accept­ing that some­thing is true isn’t the same as
    think­ing that it is just.
    Celia won her sec­ond Oscar in 1970, for her role as a woman who
    cross-dress­es to serve as a World War I sol­dier in the film Our Men.
    I could not be in Los Ange­les with her that night, because I was
    shoot­ing Jade Dia­mond in Mia­mi. I was play­ing a pros­ti­tute liv­ing in
    the same apart­ment as a drunk. But Celia and I both knew that even if
    I had been free as a bird, I could not go to the Acad­e­my Awards on her
    arm.
    That evening, Celia called me after she was home from the
    cer­e­mo­ny and all the par­ties.
    I screamed into the phone. I was so hap­py for her. “You’ve done it,”
    I said. “Twice now you’ve done it!”
    “Can you believe it?” she said. “Two of them.”
    “You deserve them. The whole world should be giv­ing you an Oscar
    every day, as far as I’m con­cerned.”
    “I wish you were here,” she said petu­lant­ly. I could tell she’d been
    drink­ing. I would have been drink­ing, too, if I’d been in her posi­tion.
    But I was irri­tat­ed that she had to make things so dif­fi­cult. I want­ed to
    be there. Didn’t she know that? Didn’t she know that I couldn’t be
    there? And that it killed me? Why did it always have to be about what
    all of this felt like for her?
    “I wish I was, too,” I told her. “But it’s bet­ter this way. You know
    that.”
    “Ah, yes. So that peo­ple won’t know you’re a les­bian.”
    I hat­ed being called a les­bian. Not because I thought there was
    any­thing wrong with lov­ing a woman, mind you. No, I’d come to terms
    with that a long time ago. But Celia only saw things in black and white.

    0 Comments

    Heads up! Your comment will be invisible to other guests and subscribers (except for replies), including you after a grace period.
    Cover of The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession
    True Crime

    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession by Michael Finkel tells the riveting true story of Stéphane Breitwieser, one of the most prolific art thieves in history. Over the course of several years, Breitwieser stole hundreds of priceless works from museums across Europe, all while evading capture. Finkel explores the complex motivations behind Breitwieser's crimes, including his obsessive love for art and the impact of his actions on his personal life. The book examines themes of obsession, passion, and the thin line between art and crime.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    37
    As per­form­ers, we girls have our hair. That’s the real thing guys want to see.
    They love to see the long hair move. They want you to thrash it. If your hair’s
    mov­ing, they can believe you’re hav­ing a good time.
    In the most demor­al­iz­ing moments of my Las Vegas res­i­den­cy, I wore tight
    wigs, and I’d dance in a way where I wouldn’t move a hair on my head. Every­one
    who was mak­ing mon­ey o� me want­ed me to move my hair, and I knew it—and
    so I did every­thing but that.
    When I look back, I real­ize how much of myself I with­held onstage, how
    much by try­ing to pun­ish the peo­ple who held me cap­tive I pun­ished every­one
    else, too—including my loy­al fans, includ­ing myself. But now I know why I’d
    been sleep­walk­ing through so much of the past thir­teen years. I was trau­ma­tized.
    By hold­ing back onstage, I was try­ing to rebel in some way, even if I was the
    only one who knew that was what was hap­pen­ing. And so I didn’t toss my hair
    or �irt. I did the moves and I sang the notes, but I didn’t put the �re behind it
    that I had in the past. Ton­ing down my ener­gy onstage was my own ver­sion of a
    fac­to­ry slow­down.
    As an artist, I didn’t feel able to reach the sense of free­dom that I’d had before.
    And that’s what we have as artists—that free­dom is who we are and what we do.
    I wasn’t free under the con­ser­va­tor­ship. I want­ed to be a woman in the world.
    Under the con­ser­va­tor­ship, I wasn’t able to be a woman at all.
    It was di�erent, though, with Glo­ry. As the Glo­ry sin­gles rolled out, I start­ed
    get­ting more pas­sion­ate about my per­for­mances. I start­ed to wear high heels
    again. When I wasn’t try­ing so hard and I just let myself ele­vate as a star onstage,
    that’s when it came across the most pow­er­ful­ly. And that’s when I could real­ly
    feel the audi­ences lift­ing me up.
    Pro­mot­ing Glo­ry, I began to feel bet­ter about myself. That third year in Vegas I
    got a lit­tle bit of �re back. I start­ed to appre­ci­ate the daz­zle of per­form­ing in Sin
    City every night, and the spon­tane­ity of feel­ing alive in front of an audi­ence.
    Even though I might not have been doing my best onstage, there were pieces of
    me that began to awak­en again. I was able to tap back into that con­nec­tion
    between a per­former and an audi­ence.
    I have trou­ble explain­ing to peo­ple who haven’t been onstage what it’s like to
    sense that cur­rent between your phys­i­cal body and the bod­ies of oth­er human
    beings in a space. The only metaphor that real­ly works is elec­tric­i­ty. You feel
    elec­tric. The ener­gy runs out of you and into the crowd and then back into you
    in a loop. For such a long time, I’d had to be on autopi­lot: the only cur­rent I
    could access was what­ev­er was inside of me that kept me mov­ing.
    Slow­ly, I began to believe in my capa­bil­i­ties again. For a while I didn’t tell
    any­one. I kept it a secret. Just as I escaped into my dreams to get away from the
    chaos of my par­ents when I was a lit­tle girl, in Las Vegas, now as an adult but
    with less free­dom than I’d had as a child, I began to escape into a new dream—
    free­dom from my fam­i­ly and a return to being the artist I knew I had in me.
    Every­thing began to seem pos­si­ble. Hesam and I became so close that we
    start­ed to talk about hav­ing a baby togeth­er. But I was in my thir­ties, so I knew
    that time was run­ning out.
    At the begin­ning of the con­ser­va­tor­ship I was over­whelmed with doc­tor
    appoint­ments. Doc­tor after doc­tor after doctor—probably twelve doc­tors a
    week—coming to my home. And yet, my father wouldn’t let me go to the
    doc­tor when I asked for an appoint­ment to get my IUD removed.
    When the con­ser­va­tor­ship hap­pened, every­thing became con­trolled, with
    secu­ri­ty guards every­where. My whole life changed in a way that might have
    been safer for me phys­i­cal­ly but was absolute­ly hor­ri­ble for my sense of joy and

    0 Comments

    Heads up! Your comment will be invisible to other guests and subscribers (except for replies), including you after a grace period.
    Cover of The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession
    True Crime

    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession by Michael Finkel tells the riveting true story of Stéphane Breitwieser, one of the most prolific art thieves in history. Over the course of several years, Breitwieser stole hundreds of priceless works from museums across Europe, all while evading capture. Finkel explores the complex motivations behind Breitwieser's crimes, including his obsessive love for art and the impact of his actions on his personal life. The book examines themes of obsession, passion, and the thin line between art and crime.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    CHAPTER 37
    Patri­cia told Carter that Korey was on drugs. Korey was so sick and
    con­fused from James Har­ris that Carter believed her imme­di­ate­ly. It
    helped that this was one of his biggest night­mares.
    “This is from your side,” he said as they threw Korey’s clothes into
    an overnight bag. “No one on my side of the fam­i­ly has ever had this
    kind of prob­lem.”
    No, Patri­cia thought. They just mur­dered a man and buried his
    body in the back­yard.
    She prayed for for­give­ness. She prayed hard. Then they took Korey
    to South­ern Pines, the local psy­chi­atric and sub­stance abuse
    treat­ment cen­ter.
    “You’ll make sure she’s mon­i­tored twen­ty-four hours a day?”
    Patri­cia asked the intake admin­is­tra­tor.
    Her night­mare was that Korey would do what the oth­er chil­dren
    had done. She thought of Des­tiny Tay­lor and the den­tal floss, Orville
    Reed step­ping in front of the car, Latasha Burns and the knife. They
    had the mon­ey to weigh the odds in their favor, but she didn’t want
    odds when it came to her daugh­ter. She want­ed a guar­an­tee.
    She tried to talk to Korey, she tried to say she was sor­ry, she tried
    to explain things, she tried hard, but whether it was because of
    James Har­ris or because of what they were doing to her, Korey didn’t
    even acknowl­edge she was in the room.
    “Some of them do this,” the intake admin­is­tra­tor said. “I saw one
    kid break his mother’s nose dur­ing intake. Oth­ers just shut down.”
    When they got home the qui­et in the house ate at Patri­cia,
    remind­ing her of the dam­age she had done to her fam­i­ly. She felt a
    sense of urgency. She had to fin­ish this. She had to get her fam­i­ly
    back and glue the pieces togeth­er before it got any worse. It was only
    a mat­ter of time before they hit a point beyond which noth­ing could
    be fixed.
    That night, Carter left to bury him­self in work at his office. Half an
    hour lat­er, the phone rang. She answered.
    “Where’s Korey?” James Har­ris asked.
    “She’s sick,” Patri­cia said.
    “She wouldn’t be sick if she were still with me,” he said. “I can
    make her bet­ter.”
    “I need time,” she said. “I need time to fig­ure things out.”
    “What am I sup­posed to do while you dither?” he asked.
    “You have to be patient,” she said. “This is hard for me. It’s my
    entire life. My fam­i­ly. It’s every­thing I know.”
    “Think fast,” he said.
    “Until the end of the month,” she said, try­ing to buy time.
    “I’ll give you ten days,” he said, and hung up.
    She tried to be around Blue as much as pos­si­ble. She and Carter
    asked if he had any ques­tions, they told him it wasn’t his fault, they
    said that he could see Korey in a week or two, when­ev­er her doc­tors
    said it was all right, but Blue bare­ly spoke. She sat next to him while
    he played games on the com­put­er in the lit­tle study. He clat­tered
    away on the key­board, mov­ing col­ored shapes and lines onscreen.
    “What does this one do?” she asked about a but­ton, and then
    point­ed to a num­ber at the top of the mon­i­tor. “Does that mean
    you’re win­ning? Look at your score, it’s so high.”
    “That’s the amount of dam­age I’ve tak­en,” he said.
    She want­ed to tell him she was sor­ry she hadn’t pro­tect­ed him and
    his sis­ter bet­ter. But when­ev­er she began, it sound­ed like a farewell
    speech and she stopped. Let him have one more untrou­bled week.
    Before she was ready, Sat­ur­day arrived and Patri­cia woke up
    scared. She cleaned Korey’s room to keep her­self busy, stripped her
    bed, col­lect­ed all her clothes off the floor and washed them, fold­ed
    them, put them back into draw­ers in neat stacks, ironed her dress­es
    and hung them up, stacked her mag­a­zines, found the cas­es for all her
    CDs. She recov­ered $8.63 in change from the car­pet and put it in a
    jar for when Korey came home.
    Around four, Carter stood in the door and watched her work.
    “We have to go soon if we want to see the pregame,” he said.
    They had made plans to watch the Clem­son-Car­oli­na game
    down­town near the hos­pi­tal with Leland and Slick’s chil­dren.
    “You go on,” Patri­cia said. “I have things to do.”
    “You sure you don’t want to come?” he asked. “It’ll be good to do
    some­thing nor­mal. It’s mor­bid to sit around the house alone.”
    “I need to be mor­bid,” she said, and gave him her “brave sol­dier”
    smile. “Have a nice time.”
    “I love you,” he said.
    It took her by sur­prise and she fal­tered for a moment, think­ing of
    every­thing James Har­ris had told her about Carter’s out-of-town
    trips and won­der­ing how much of it was true.
    “I love you, too,” she made her­self say back.
    He left and she wait­ed until she heard his car back out of the
    dri­ve­way, and then she got ready to die.
    Patricia’s stom­ach felt emp­ty. Her whole body felt drained. She felt
    sick, light-head­ed, flut­tery. Every­thing felt hol­low, like it was all
    about to float away.
    In her bath­room, she put on her new black vel­vet dress. It felt tight
    and awful and hugged her in all the wrong places and made her self-
    con­scious of her new curves, and then she adjust­ed it and pulled it
    down and cinched and strapped and smoothed. It clung to her like a
    black cat’s skin. She felt more naked with it on than off.
    The phone rang. She answered it.
    “Final­ly,” he said.
    “I want to see you,” she said. “I made my deci­sion.”
    There was a long pause.
    “And,” he prompt­ed.
    “I decid­ed that I want some­one who val­ues me,” she said. “I’ll be at
    your place by 6:30.”
    Eye­lin­er, a bit of eye­brow pen­cil, mas­cara, some blush. She blot­ted
    her lip­stick with Kleenex and dropped red balls of tis­sue into the
    trash. She brushed her hair, curled it just a touch to give it body, then
    sprayed it with Miss Brecks. She opened her eyes and they stung
    from the falling mist of hair­spray droplets. She looked at her­self in
    the mir­ror and saw a woman she didn’t know. She didn’t wear
    ear­rings or jew­el­ry. She took off her wed­ding ring. She fed Rag­tag,
    left a note for Carter say­ing she’d had to run down­town to see Slick
    in the hos­pi­tal and she might spend the night, and left home.
    Out­side, a cold wind thrashed the trees. Cars lined the block, all of
    them there to watch the Clem­son-Car­oli­na game at Grace’s. Ben­nett
    was a hard­core Clem­son alum, and he host­ed the big get-togeth­er for
    the game every year. Patri­cia won­dered how he would deal with
    every­one drink­ing. She won­dered if he’d start again.
    The wind came black and bleak off the har­bor, toss­ing the waves
    into white­caps. She passed Alham­bra Hall and looked at the far end
    of the park­ing lot, close to the water, and saw the mini­van parked
    there. She could just see a few hud­dled shapes inside. They looked
    pathet­i­cal­ly small.
    Friends, Patri­cia thought. Be with me now.
    James Harris’s house was dark. His porch lights were off and only
    a sin­gle lamp shone from his liv­ing room win­dow. She real­ized he’d
    done it so no one would see her come to his front door. Cars filled
    every sin­gle dri­ve­way, and as she walked, a swelling of cheers
    erupt­ed from all the hous­es. Kick­off. The game had begun.
    She knocked on the front door, and James Har­ris opened it, lit
    from behind by the dim glow of the liv­ing room lamp, the only light
    in the house. The radio purred clas­si­cal music, a piano rid­ing gen­tle
    orches­tral surges. Her heart danced inside her rib cage as he locked
    the door behind her.
    Nei­ther moved, they just stood in the hall, fac­ing each oth­er in the
    soft spill of light from the liv­ing room.
    “You’ve hurt me,” she said. “You’ve scared me. You’ve hurt my
    daugh­ter. You’ve made my son a liar. You’ve hurt the peo­ple I know.
    But the three years you’ve been here feel more real than the entire
    twen­ty-five years of my mar­riage.”
    He raised his hand and traced the side of her jaw with his fin­gers.
    She didn’t flinch. She tried not to remem­ber him scream­ing in her
    face, spat­ter­ing it with her daughter’s blood, her daugh­ter who would
    hurt for­ev­er because of his hunger.
    “You said you made up your mind,” he said. “So. What do you
    want, Patri­cia?”
    She walked past him into the liv­ing room. She left a trace of
    per­fume in the air. It was a bot­tle of Opi­um she’d found while
    clean­ing Korey’s room. She almost nev­er wore per­fume. She stopped
    in front of the man­tel and turned to face him.
    “I’m tired of my world being so small,” she said. “Laun­dry,
    cook­ing, clean­ing, sil­ly women talk­ing about trashy books. It’s not
    enough for me any­more.”
    He sat in the arm­chair across from her, legs spread, hands on its
    arms, watch­ing her.
    “I want you to make me the way you are,” she said. Then she
    low­ered her voice to a whis­per. “I want you to do to me what you did
    to my daugh­ter.”
    He looked at her, his eyes crawl­ing across her body, see­ing all of
    her, and she felt exposed, and fright­ened, and just a lit­tle bit aroused.
    And then James Har­ris stood up and walked over to her and laughed
    in her face.
    The force of his laugh­ter slapped her, and sent her stum­bling a half
    step back. The room echoed with his laugh­ter, and it bounced crazi­ly
    off the walls, trapped, dou­bling and redou­bling, bat­ter­ing at her ears.
    He laughed so hard he flopped back down in his chair, looked at her
    with a crazy grin on his face, and burst out laugh­ing, again.
    She didn’t know what to do. She felt small and humil­i­at­ed. Final­ly,
    his laugh­ter rolled to a stop, leav­ing him short of breath.
    “You must think,” he said, gasp­ing for air, “that I’m the stu­pid­est
    per­son you’ve ever met. You come here, all dolled up like a hook­er,
    and give me this breath­less sto­ry about how you want me to make
    you one of the bad peo­ple? How did you get to be so arro­gant?
    Patri­cia the genius, and the rest of us are just a bunch of fools?”
    “That’s not true,” she said. “I want to be here. I want to be with
    you.”
    This brought anoth­er wave of ugly laugh­ter.
    “You’re embar­rass­ing your­self and you’re insult­ing me,” James
    Har­ris said. “Did you think I’d believe any of this?”
    “It’s not an act!” she shout­ed.
    He grinned.
    “I won­dered when you’d get to right­eous indig­na­tion.” He smiled.
    “Look at you: Patri­cia Camp­bell, wife of Dr. Carter Camp­bell, moth­er
    of Korey and Blue, debas­ing her­self because she thinks she’s smarter
    than some­one who’s lived four times as long as her. See, Patri­cia, I
    nev­er under­es­ti­mat­ed you. If you told Slick you planned to come into
    my house, I knew you came into my house. And if you got into my
    house, I knew you’d got­ten into my attic and found every­thing there
    was to find. Was her license sup­posed to be bait? Leave it in my car
    and go to the police and tell them you found it and they’d pull me
    over and find it and get a search war­rant? In what sad housewife’s
    dream does some­thing like that work? Those books you girls read
    have real­ly rot­ted your brains.”
    She couldn’t make her legs stop shak­ing. She sat down on the
    raised brick hearth. The vel­vet dress rode up and bunched around
    her stom­ach and hips. She felt ridicu­lous.
    “Then again, I moved here because you peo­ple are all so stu­pid,”
    he said. “You’ll take any­one at face val­ue as long as he’s white and
    has mon­ey. With com­put­ers com­ing and all these new IDs I need­ed
    to put down roots and you made it so easy. All I had to do was make
    you think I need­ed help and here comes that famous South­ern
    hos­pi­tal­i­ty. Y’all don’t like talk­ing about mon­ey, do you? That’s low
    class. But I waved some around and you all were so eager to grab it
    you nev­er asked where it came from. Now your chil­dren like me
    more than they like you. Your hus­band is a weak­ling and a fool. And
    here you are, dressed up like a clown, with no cards left to play. I’ve
    been doing this for so long I’m always pre­pared for the moment
    when some­one tries to run me out of town, but you’ve tru­ly sur­prised
    me. I didn’t expect the attempt to be so sad.”
    A rhyth­mic, wet huff­ing sound filled the room as Patri­cia bent
    dou­ble and tried to breathe. She attempt­ed to start a sen­tence a few
    times, but kept run­ning out of breath. Final­ly she said, “Make it
    stop.”
    From far away, she heard a cho­rus of faint voic­es shout­ing with
    dis­ap­point­ment.
    “I tried once,” he said. “But an artist is only as good as his
    mate­ri­als. I thought for sure the humil­i­a­tion I inflict­ed on you three
    years ago would make you kill your­self, but you couldn’t even do that
    right.”
    “Make it stop,” Patri­cia said. “Just make it all stop. I can’t do this
    any­more. My son hates me. For the rest of his life I’ll be the crazy
    woman who tried to kill her­self, the one he found con­vuls­ing on the
    kitchen floor. I put my daugh­ter in a men­tal hos­pi­tal. I have ruined
    my fam­i­ly. I couldn’t pro­tect them from you.”
    She sat, hunched over, spit­ting her words at the floor, her hands
    were claws dig­ging into her knees, her voice scour­ing her ears like
    acid.
    “I thought you were filth. I thought you were an ani­mal,” she said.
    “But I’m worse. I’m noth­ing. I was a good nurse, I real­ly was, and I
    walked away from the one thing I loved because I want­ed to be a
    bride. I want­ed to get mar­ried because I was ter­ri­fied of being alone.
    I want­ed to be a good wife and a good moth­er, and I gave every­thing
    I had, and it wasn’t enough. I’m not enough!”
    She shout­ed the last words, then looked up at James Har­ris, her
    face a grotesque mask of streaked make­up.
    “My hus­band has no more con­sid­er­a­tion for me than a dog,” she
    said. “He goes off and screws lit­tle girls with the oth­er men and we
    sit home like good lit­tle women and wash their shirts and pack their
    bags for their sex trips. We keep their hous­es warm and clean for
    when they’re ready to come home and show­er off some oth­er
    woman’s per­fume before tuck­ing their chil­dren into bed. For years
    I’ve pre­tend­ed I don’t know where he goes, or who those girls are on
    the phone, but every time he comes home, I lie there in bed beside
    my hus­band, who doesn’t touch me, who doesn’t talk to me, who
    doesn’t love me, and I pre­tend I can’t smell some twenty-year-old’s
    body on him. Our chil­dren hate us. Look at mine. It would have been
    bet­ter if a dog raised them.”
    She hooked her fin­gers into claws and pulled them through her
    hair, har­row­ing it into a crazed haystack, jut­ting out in every
    direc­tion.
    “So here I am,” she said. “Giv­ing you the last thing I have of val­ue
    and beg­ging you to spare my daugh­ter. Take me. Take my body. Use
    me until you throw me away, but leave Korey alone. Please. Please.”
    “You think you can bar­gain with me?” he asked. “This is some kind
    of sad seduc­tion, trad­ing your body for your daughter’s?”
    She nod­ded, meek and small.
    “Yes.”
    She sat, a long run­nel of snot dan­gling from her nose, drip­ping
    onto her dress. And final­ly, James Har­ris said:
    “Come.”
    She pushed her­self up, and walked to him on shaky legs.
    “Kneel,” he said, point­ing to the floor.
    Patri­cia low­ered her­self onto the floor at his feet. He leaned
    for­ward and took her jaw in one big hand.
    “Three years ago you tried to make a fool of me,” he said. “You
    don’t get any more dig­ni­ty. We’re going to final­ly be hon­est with each
    oth­er. First, I’m going to replace Carter in your life. Is that what you
    want?”
    She nod­ded, then real­ized he need­ed more. “Yes,” she whis­pered.
    “Your son loves me already,” he said. “And your daugh­ter belongs
    to me. I’ll take you now, but she’s next. Will you do that? Will you
    give me your body to buy her anoth­er year?”
    “Yes,” Patri­cia said.
    “One day it will be Blue’s turn,” he said. “But for now, I’m the
    fam­i­ly friend who helps put your life back togeth­er after your
    hus­band dies. Every­one will think that we just nat­u­ral­ly felt a
    pow­er­ful attrac­tion, but you’ll know the truth: you gave up your
    pathet­ic, mis­er­able, bro­ken fail­ure of a life to accept your place at my
    feet. I’m not some doc­tor, or lawyer, or rich mommy’s boy try­ing to
    impress you. I am sin­gu­lar in this world. I am what you peo­ple make
    leg­ends from. And now I’ve turned my atten­tion on you. When I’m
    done, I’ll adopt your chil­dren and make them mine. But you’ve
    bought them one more year of free­dom. Do you under­stand?”
    “Yes,” she said.
    James Har­ris stood and walked up the stairs with­out look­ing back.
    “Come,” he said over his shoul­der.
    After a moment, Patri­cia fol­lowed, only paus­ing on the way to
    unlock the dead­bolt on his front door.
    In the dark­ness of the upstairs hall, she saw white sol­id walls all
    around her, each one a closed door, and then she saw a black hole
    like the entrance to a tomb. She walked into the mas­ter bed­room.
    James Har­ris stood in the moon­light. He had tak­en off his shirt.
    “Strip,” he said.
    Patri­cia stepped out of her shoes and inhaled sharply. Stand­ing
    bare­foot on the cool wood­en floor made her feel naked. She couldn’t
    do this, but before she could stop her­self her hands were already
    mov­ing to her back.
    She unzipped the dress and let it fall to the floor and stepped out of
    it. Blood rushed and flowed to parts of her body that were dry,
    leav­ing her light-head­ed. Her head spun and she won­dered if she
    would faint. The dark­ness seemed very close around her and the
    walls seemed very far away. A fever seized her as she unsnapped her

    0 Comments

    Heads up! Your comment will be invisible to other guests and subscribers (except for replies), including you after a grace period.
    Cover of The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession
    True Crime

    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession by Michael Finkel tells the riveting true story of Stéphane Breitwieser, one of the most prolific art thieves in history. Over the course of several years, Breitwieser stole hundreds of priceless works from museums across Europe, all while evading capture. Finkel explores the complex motivations behind Breitwieser's crimes, including his obsessive love for art and the impact of his actions on his personal life. The book examines themes of obsession, passion, and the thin line between art and crime.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    37
    I haven’t been in a hos­pi­tal since I was fif­teen, when I broke my elbow try­ing to impress a guy on a
    skate­board. I’d hat­ed the expe­ri­ence then and it’s not my favorite now.
    I’m sup­posed to go home tomor­row, but where home is, I have no idea. The house in Thorn­field
    Estates is gone, burned to the ground, and the new life I had tried to build is gone with it.
    It prob­a­bly says some­thing about me that this is the part I’m fix­at­ed on, not the part where the man
    I was engaged to had locked his wife in a pan­ic room for months. Weird­ly, in a way, that part of the
    sto­ry was almost a relief. Every­thing that hadn’t quite added up, every­thing that had trig­gered my
    fight-or-flight instincts made sense now. Every­thing was clear.
    And I know that for the rest of my life, I’ll see the look on Bea’s face as she charged up the stairs
    to save Eddie. No mat­ter what I felt for him, it was nev­er that. It nev­er could’ve been that.
    Just like Eddie nev­er could have loved me like he clear­ly loved Bea.
    When Bea had opened the pan­ic room door, there’d been a whoosh­ing sound, crack­ling, a blaze of
    heat that had sent me stum­bling back, and instinct kicked in.
    I ran.
    Down the stairs, out the door, onto the lawn, falling into the grass, chok­ing and gasp­ing.
    In the end, I’d done the thing I’d been doing all my life—I saved myself.
    Which meant I’d left Bea and Eddie to die.
    Sigh­ing, I unwrap the Pop­si­cle my nurse had sneaked me. Banana.
    I’m lucky. Every­one says so. No burns, just smoke inhala­tion, which makes my throat and chest
    still ache, but giv­en that the house is lit­er­al­ly ash­es, I got out pret­ty light­ly, all things con­sid­ered.
    Except for the part where I’m home­less and adrift now.
    I’m about to set­tle even deep­er into self-pity when there’s a soft rap­ping at my door, and I turn to
    see Detec­tive Lau­rent there.
    “Knock-knock,” she says, and my heart leaps up into my throat, mak­ing me bite down on the
    Pop­si­cle, the cold burn­ing my teeth.
    “Hi,” I say, awk­ward, and she ges­tures toward the plas­tic chair near my bed.
    “Can we have a quick chat?”
    It’s not like I can tell her no, and I’m guess­ing she knows that since she doesn’t wait for me to
    answer before she sits down.
    Cross­ing her legs, she smiles at me, like we’re friends and this is just a fun bed­side vis­it, and I try
    to make myself smile back until I remem­ber that I’m sup­posed to be trau­ma­tized and upset.
    The last few days have com­plete­ly thrown me off my game.
    I look down, fid­dle with the wrap­per of the Pop­si­cle, and wait for her to say some­thing.
    “How are you feel­ing?” she asks, and I shrug, tuck­ing my hair behind my ears.
    “Bet­ter. Still raspy,” I say, ges­tur­ing to my throat. “It all still seems so unre­al, I guess.”
    Detec­tive Lau­rent nods, the cor­ners of her eyes crin­kling as she gives me a sym­pa­thet­ic look, but
    there’s some­thing about the way she’s watch­ing me that I don’t like. Some­thing that makes me feel
    naked and exposed.
    “I sup­pose you know by now that your fiancé didn’t make it out of the fire.”
    I press my lips togeth­er, clos­ing my eyes briefly, but inside, my wind is whirring. Is this where
    she tells me they found two bod­ies in the ash­es? What do I say? Do I tell her the truth about Bea and
    Eddie, about all of it?
    “I do,” I man­age to croak out, fear sound­ing like sad­ness, which is good.
    “And I imag­ine you also know that our work­ing the­o­ry is that he burned the house down on
    pur­pose. That he want­ed to kill him­self and you as well.”
    No.
    No, I did not know that, and my shock and con­fu­sion as I look at the detec­tive isn’t feigned. “On
    pur­pose?” I say, and she nods, sigh­ing as she leans back in her chair.
    “Jane, there is a very good chance Edward Rochester was involved in the mur­der of Blanche
    Ingra­ham and the dis­ap­pear­ance of his wife.”
    “Oh my god,” I say soft­ly, press­ing a hand to my mouth.
    Detec­tive Lau­rent shifts in her chair as out­side, I hear the squeak of a wheel­chair, the beep of
    var­i­ous machines. “In look­ing into Tripp Ingraham’s involve­ment, we found signs that Eddie had also
    been there that night. His car on the secu­ri­ty cam­era at the Thorn­field Estates entrance, one of your
    neigh­bors remem­ber­ing that he also left home late the night his wife and Blanche had gone to the lake.
    Noth­ing con­crete, and we were still in the process of gath­er­ing evi­dence, but now…”
    She trails off, and I see her hand go to the badge at her waist for a sec­ond.
    “What about Tripp?” I ask. “What hap­pens now?”
    It’s weird and more than a lit­tle off-putting to feel any sym­pa­thy for Tripp Ingra­ham, and I’ll
    even­tu­al­ly get over it, but now that I know the whole sto­ry, it’s hard not to see him as a vic­tim, too.
    Anoth­er per­son caught up in the shit­storm that was Eddie and Bea.
    “He’s been cleared of any sus­pi­cion,” Detec­tive Lau­rent says. “Truth­ful­ly, we nev­er had as much
    on him as we let him think. We were hop­ing he’d crack, or bring down Eddie in the process.”
    Then she sighs. “Any­way, the fire was clear­ly set on pur­pose, which makes us think Eddie knew
    we were get­ting close.”
    Lean­ing over, she takes my hand. “I’m so sor­ry. I know this all must be a shock.”
    It is, but not in the way she thinks. They think Eddie killed him­self because he killed Blanche and
    Bea. Which means they didn’t find Bea’s body in the fire.
    Which means she’s still out there.
    “We may have some more ques­tions lat­er on,” the detec­tive says, pat­ting my hand and stand­ing up,
    “but I just want­ed to let you know where things stood right now.”
    “Thank you,” I say, and she smiles again.
    “Take care of your­self, Jane.”
    As she heads for the door, I can’t help but ask one more ques­tion.
    “Did you … is Eddie’s body…”

    0 Comments

    Heads up! Your comment will be invisible to other guests and subscribers (except for replies), including you after a grace period.
    Cover of The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession
    True Crime

    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession

    by LovelyMay
    The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession by Michael Finkel tells the riveting true story of Stéphane Breitwieser, one of the most prolific art thieves in history. Over the course of several years, Breitwieser stole hundreds of priceless works from museums across Europe, all while evading capture. Finkel explores the complex motivations behind Breitwieser's crimes, including his obsessive love for art and the impact of his actions on his personal life. The book examines themes of obsession, passion, and the thin line between art and crime.

    Chap­ter 37 of “The Ten­ant of Wild­fell Hall” by Anne Bron­të reflects the pro­tag­o­nist’s con­tin­ued strug­gle with per­son­al bound­aries and unwant­ed affec­tion, as well as her deter­mi­na­tion to pre­serve her val­ues in the face of per­sis­tent temp­ta­tion.

    On Decem­ber 20th, 1825, the pro­tag­o­nist finds her­self reflect­ing on her life’s hard­ships, espe­cial­ly con­cern­ing her role as a guide and pro­tec­tor for her son in a world she per­ceives as dark and wicked. Despite her chal­lenges and lone­li­ness, she remains com­mit­ted to her duties and prin­ci­ples, pri­mar­i­ly because of her son and the absence of any­one else to ful­fill her role.

    The chap­ter then tran­si­tions to the pro­tag­o­nist’s ongo­ing inter­ac­tions with Mr. Har­grave, who has shown a respect­ful demeanor for sev­er­al months, caus­ing her to low­er her guard and start to see him as a friend. How­ev­er, Har­grave over­steps bound­aries, declar­ing his love in a man­ner that demands a defin­i­tive rejec­tion from the pro­tag­o­nist. This inci­dent and his lat­er attempts to woo her under­line her strug­gles with male atten­tion and her firm stance against com­pro­mis­ing her integri­ty. The pro­tag­o­nist rebuffs Hargrave’s advances, empha­siz­ing the impor­tance of her morals and respon­si­bil­i­ties over fleet­ing hap­pi­ness.

    Har­grave’s inabil­i­ty to respect the pro­tag­o­nist’s wish­es leads to a deci­sive con­fronta­tion where she demands he cease his advances or leave. She holds stead­fast to her belief in a high­er moral duty and the impor­tance of a clear con­science over suc­cumb­ing to desires that would bring shame and dis­hon­or. Har­grave’s reaction—first one of shock and then resignation—highlights the pro­found emo­tion­al tur­moil and con­flict but ulti­mate­ly leads to his deci­sion to leave for Paris, pro­vid­ing tem­po­rary relief to the pro­tag­o­nist.

    The chap­ter clos­es with the pro­tag­o­nist feel­ing a sense of deliv­er­ance, rein­forc­ing themes of resilience, the quest for per­son­al auton­o­my, and the com­plex­i­ty of nav­i­gat­ing rela­tion­ships with­in soci­etal con­fines. Her reflec­tions and deci­sive actions reveal her inner strength and com­mit­ment to liv­ing by her prin­ci­ples, even when faced with dif­fi­cult choic­es and the prospect of con­tin­ued lone­li­ness.

    0 Comments

    Heads up! Your comment will be invisible to other guests and subscribers (except for replies), including you after a grace period.
    Note