Prologue
1890
"I'm imagining you as a corpse. You'd be lovely."
He leaned forward to lift a strand of dark hair caught in the perspiration on her cheek and Mary burst out laughing when she saw the earnest, dreamy expression on his face.
"What do you mean? Corpses can't be beautiful." She rolled out from under him and propped herself up on her elbows, studying his gray eyes, the irises broken by slivers of brown and green. They reminded her of the eyes of a bird or a cat, intense and nearly unblinking.
It was early summer, and the Vermont hills around the colony were the bright green of the lush alfalfa in the fields, dotted here and there with sheep and stands of raucously colored wildflowers: white Queen Anne's Lace, blue asters, orange Indian Paintbrushes and, further into the woods, the tiny, hidden trilliums and jack-in-the-pulpits, shell-pink and green.
They were lying on a blanket spread out on the thick grass of the cemetery, where wildflowers grew along the iron fence, twining through the rails. The granite and slate stones were dull in summer light. Outside the graveyard were the formal gardens that belonged to the big yellow house planted above them on a little rise. Up there the more pedigreed foxgloves and delphiniums and lilies filled their designated plots and below them, in the humid air, the Green River flowed placidly by, catching on a rock in the shallow bed every once in awhile and swirling for a moment before moving on.
He was pale from working in the studio and when he leaned over to touch her again, his white hand looked like a slap mark on her sun-pinked cheek.
"You've always reminded me of Ophelia," he said. "I would like to represent you lying dead in the brook, surrounded by flowers, like Mr. Millais' painting. There's something about your black hair and your dark eyes and your pale skin. It's as though you were made of marble, as though you'll never change. When you haven't been out in the sun, that is." He smiled and stroked the base of her throat.
She frowned, then reached up to place a finger against his lips. "Please don't," she said after a moment. "I don't like to think about dying, I don't think it's beautiful at all."
His eyes filled with indignation, the way they did when one of the other artists disagreed with him.
"You speak as though it were something you could choose not to participate in," he sneered. "We all die. We all rot away. None of us is safe from him." He gestured toward one of the older stones, which depicted a leering, grinning skeleton holding an arrow. "And it can be beautiful. The moment of death, when the body is frozen in still-life, like a painting or a sculpture. I've always thought about how remarkable it would be if you could create an image of someone just as they died, to freeze them in that instant when they are neither dead nor alive. If an artist could represent that moment of death, it would be a work of art like no other work of art, a masterpiece."
"Like The Lady of Shalott," Mary said carefully, reciting. He made her feel that she should be careful about details, facts and names, that they were important to him. Besides, she felt she had said something wrong and she wanted to make it up to him. "It's a poem I've just read in that little book you gave me. By the Lord of Tennyson. She looks down from her tower and sees Sir Lancelot, and leaves her weaving. Then the curse comes over her as she dies in the boat. 'Till her blood was frozen slowly, and her eyes were darken'd wholly.' I imagine her lying there, and I think she must have been the most beautiful lady, just as you say, in the moment that she died. Do you know that poem?"
"Of course. And it's by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, my dearest poet." He looked up toward the house, absentmindedly drawing circles on her neck with his fingertip.
She spoke very thoughtfully, as though she had decided to give him a present of her words. "When I die, I want to be buried in a boat, like the Lady of Shalott," she said.
"In a boat?"
"Mmmm. A boat made of marble. And I would lie in the boat forever, singing." She stretched a bare foot out over the margin of the blanket and brushed it against the nap of grass.
He smiled. "What about right here? You could be buried in your boat under the willow tree, with the flowers all around, and all the colony will come visit you."
"The colony," she spat out. "I'm tired of the colony. I don't care if the colony comes to visit me. You think the colony is all that matters. I don't. I want to go away from here. I want to live in Europe." Her cheeks were stained with pink.
He stroked her hair, trying to calm her. "No you don't," he said. "This is your home. This is where you belong."
"I belong with you," she said, reaching up and pulling his head down to her chest. He resisted for a moment, then lay his cheek on the buttons of her dress, the bone pressing against his skin.
The colony at Byzantium was a paean to the beautiful, a monument to the idea that one could live more beautifully in the country.
For the artists, who flocked north come summer for the heady mixture of solitude and like-minded companionship, it was a place where, above everything, aesthetic perfection reigned.
Beauty reigned in the rolling hillsides of the Vermont countryside, it reigned in the silhouette of the staid, silent mountain, it reigned in the graceful, lovely homes and gardens and in everything the artists did. Birth, celebration, even death — all were made beautiful in Byzantium.
— Muse of the Hills: The Byzantium Colony
1860-1956
by Bennett Dammers
Chapter One
December 4
The girl's nude body lay in the boat, her dead eyes staring heavenward, her long hair coiling strangely to the ground. One graceful arm was thrown across her breasts, covering them carelessly in a gesture more flirtatious than modest; the other arm trailed limply. Unmarred and impossibly smooth, the bloodless surface of her skin looked soft as soap.
Or soft as marble, thought Sweeney St. George as she flipped through the photographs that she'd found lying at one end of the seminar table, for that was what the lovely, lifeless woman in the pictures was made of.
It was three weeks before Christmas and outside the windows of the worn and very green fourth floor seminar room, Cambridge was covered in a thin layer of brand-new snow. Under the delicate coating, the buildings at this end of the Yard looked to Sweeney like gingerbread houses dusted with powdered sugar. There was something about a snowstorm that purified the city, made it cozier and even more lovely.
After removing her parka and checking the wall clock to confirm that her "Iconography of Death" students wouldn't be arriving for several minutes, Sweeney had dropped the full slide carousel into the projector, placed her notes in front of her and settled her almost six-foot frame into one of the remarkably uncomfortable chairs around the table to look at the pictures.
The somewhat blurry color snapshots had been taken in a New England cemetery complete with slate and granite headstones typical of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and a few marble examples from the late nineteenth and twentieth. The older Puritan stones stood at attention near the back fence, the more recent dead resting nearer to the front gate, dry autumn leaves piled around their bases. As she always did when she saw photographs of cemeteries she hadn't yet visited, Sweeney found herself wishing for a couple of hours alone with those stones and her gravestone rubbing materials. She loved the magic of making rubbings, the way long obscured words and images revealed themselves under her hand. This one would contain a few good eighteenth century examples, she was sure, and there would be some lovely carvings of willow trees and soul's heads. But all in all, it was a thoroughly average graveyard in every way.
In every way, that was, except for the strange, life-sized monument of the young woman. Sweeney flipped through the pile and found the best of them, a head-on shot. She studied it carefully.
The girl was limp in the bottom of the shallow, vaguely fashioned rowboat and behind her, the stern rose like a hangman's hood. Sitting jauntily upon it, and holding a scythe, was the remarkable figure of Death, his bony arms and legs intricately carved from the milky stone.
Sweeney looked again. That was strange. Images of the human face of Death were common on Puritan stones from the mid-1600s and even into the early nineteenth century, but the style of this stone was much more advanced than any Puritan stone she had ever seen. In fact, it was more like a sculpture, the dead woman's face and breasts as softly and expertly rounded as a Rodin or a Saint-Gaudens. What was the date?
She flipped through the pictures and found one that was a close-up of the tablet at the end of the stone that was engraved with a few words and some kind of poem.
Mary Elizabeth Denholm
January 3, 1872 to August 28, 1890
So it was late Victorian. That was puzzling. It was completely atypical for a Victorian stone, even this late. By the time this Mary Denholm had died, stonecarvers had moved on to the more familiar euphemistic images for death such as willow trees, or romanticized cherubs and garlands. But here was this strange reaper, his figure so much more accomplished than those of his brethren on other stones. This Death was a man, with a man's face somehow suggested in the familiar skull. He gazed down at the girl lying beneath him, his eyes soft, a dreamy smile playing at his bony lips. There was something familiar about the way he looked down at his prey, Sweeney realized, something loving.
She did a quick calculation. Eighteen. The girl had been eighteen. What had she died of? Childbirth was a likely cause, but there wasn't a husband named on the stone, as in "Mary, Beloved Wife of James," so perhaps it had been something else. She searched the marble surface, grainy in the photos. In all her years of studying gravestones and mourning jewelry, shrouds and death masks and funerary art, Sweeney had never seen anything quite as intriguing as this lovely, eroticized sculpture of a dead girl.
The verse below the name and dates on the tablet was inscribed in small, precise letters and Sweeney struggled to make them out. She tipped the surface of the photograph toward the fluorescent overhead light and there they were, as bizarre as the work on which they'd been etched.
Death resides in my garden, with his hands wrapped 'round my throat
He beckons me to follow and I step lightly in his boat.
All around us summer withers, blossoms drop and rot,
And Death bids me to follow, his arrow in my heart.
There was more, but Sweeney looked up from the photograph then, for something about the dead girl, the strange poem, and the smiling figure of Death had made her think of the early New England gravestones that described Indian raids or grisly murders, and wonder how this girl had died.
Voices sounded in the hall. She tucked the photographs into her bookbag and stood up to welcome her class.
"Hey, Sweeney," said Brendan Freeman, one of her senior advisees. "How's it going?"
Still two years away from her thirtieth birthday, Sweeney knew she wasn't the model of a professorial authority figure. Her class outfits tended toward jeans or whatever she'd found that week at her favorite Cambridge vintage clothes shop, and her bright red curls, which fell halfway down her back, were often unruly, hastily pinned up with a pencil or a binder clip. But she hadn't gotten to be 28 without beginning to understand how she affected people, and she knew that there was something about her open, lightly freckled face, with its large green eyes and delicate nose, its almost-but-not-quite-beautiful expression of passionate expectancy, that put her students at ease, but that also made them want to work. Her department chairman had once told her he thought she was too familiar with her students, but insisting on "Professor St. George" seemed a hollow gesture.
"Hi Brendan. Hi everybody. How are you all holding up?"
It was the last class before the winter vacation and they filed in lethargically, lugging backpacks and textbooks. The shabby carpet and sickly green walls of the seminar room reflected their moods. When they were seated, she could see she'd lost about half of them to early flights home or late nights in the library for other classes.
She took a deep breath. She just had to get through this lecture and one more and she'd be done until January. "All right, let's get going. Today's lecture is entitled The Triumph of Death. Ring any bells? Come on, let's see what you remember from the reading." A few tentative hands waved back at her.
The strange gravestone would have to wait.
Sweeney was almost through with the class when Toby DiMarco slipped in and sat down in a chair at the back of the darkened room, grinning at her and then bowing his head of dark, Italian Renaissance curls to the table in mock concentration. Toby wasn't in the class, but he was Sweeney's best friend and he liked to come and watch her teach. They'd met their freshman year at college and, with the exception of the three years Sweeney had been in England at Oxford, had both stayed in Boston. Since returning to America almost a year before, Sweeney had been appointed an assistant professor in the History of Art and Architecture department and published a book on Victorian death ritual and art called "The Art of the Grave: Death and the Victorian World." The book had enjoyed some modest success: an NPR interview and a quirky and complementary review in the New York Times Book Review. Paradoxically, its success had gotten for Sweeney her job and made her the most disliked member of the department. Her colleagues found her area of specialty overly broad and decidedly low brow. And they were envious of her mainstream success. Yet they could see that she was beloved as a teacher and felt pressure — more and more each year — to cultivate a few younger members of the department. So she was tolerated rather than liked, and knew her chances of ever receiving tenure were next to nil.
Toby, for his part, had made a career of graduate school. He was forever trying to finish his novel — a Generation X roman a clef long ago called promising by a beloved writing professor — as well as his seemingly interminable Ph.D. thesis on an obscure American poet named James Milliner, and would turn from one to the other at six-month intervals, announcing each time to his exhausted friends that he had finally decided to commit to whichever project it was. The problem, which Sweeney was always trying to identify for him without hurting his feelings, was that he didn't know whether he wanted to be a writer or an academic. So he continued on being neither exactly.
"If you look here, you'll see what I mean about the skeleton," she told the class, pointing to the head of a jaunty-looking Death, leaning against an urn on a gravestone up on the slide screen. "Anyone want to guess when this is? Brendan, would you like to give it a stab? No pun intended."
That got a laugh from the class.
"I'd guess eighteenth century," Brendan said. "1760s?"
"Close." Sweeney grinned at him gratefully. "1750s. A cemetery near Concord. Remember the skeleton and now, look at this one." She pressed the "ahead" button on the projector controls.
Up came a medieval fresco, a resurrection scene with a skeleton lurking in the background.
"Skeletons have been used as memento mori symbols in art as far back as the Greeks and Romans, who displayed them at feasts as a reminder that they were mortal and ought to enjoy life while they could. Skeletons were reproduced on drinking cups and in floor mosaics, things people saw and used every day.
"Skeletons and skulls-and-crossbones were common until the end of the eighteenth century," she went on, "when they were replaced by the more euphemistic images — cherubs, soul's heads and the like. These images came to stand in for the more macabre ones. If you think for a moment about someone walking through a cemetery, looking at the stones, you can see what the difference would have been between say an eighteenth-century one and a Victorian example."
Unless, she realized, you were talking about the stone she'd just seen in those photographs.
Sweeney glanced up at the clock. It was 11.
"Well, that's it. We'll finish up in January. Thank you, everybody. Have a great holiday and safe trip to wherever you're going. I'll see you in a month or so. Remember to keep reading in Genetti and start thinking about your final paper topics."
"Hey prof.," Toby said when everyone had filed out of the room. "Good class." He looked the way she pictured him when she hadn't seen him for awhile, skinny as one of her skeletons, his cherubically curly black hair too long and completely unarranged. She felt a surge of affection as he shrugged out of his black leather jacket and moved his wire-rimmed glasses aside to rub the bridge of his nose. With his pale skin and dark Italian eyes, he'd always reminded her of a goofier modern version of the nubile gods in Rococo paintings.
"Thanks."
"By the way, which poor member of the Smith class of 1945 gave up her clothes for the cause?" He cast a disapproving look at her outfit.
"What?" She looked down at her pleated skirt and belted jacket. "Don't you think it's cool? I think it's a Balenciaga knockoff."
Toby didn't say anything. He tended to date girls who wore fashions that could be found in current fashion magazines.
"And what's that around your neck?"
"Oh, look." She showed him the small gold and black coffin, inhabited by a skeleton and hanging on a chain around her neck. It was a museum reproduction of the Tor Abey Jewel, a well-known Elizabethan memento mori item and a recent purchase.
"You're weird."
"Thanks a lot. To what do I owe the honor?" She pointed to a chair and they sat down.
"What are you doing for Christmas again? Something fun like spending it completely alone with a bottle of scotch and some 32-hour BBC costume drama?"
"Shut up." She kicked his chair. "I like having Christmas by myself. And besides, I'm on an old Italian movie kick right now." She said it lightly, but his words had bitten a little. He knew her too well. It was exactly what she'd been planning.
"Well, if you can drag yourself away from Marcello Mastroianni long enough to come to Vermont with me, I've got a proposition for you."
She raised her eyebrows. "What kind of proposition?"
"A gravestone. To be precise, the gravestone in the photographs that were here when you came into the room." Leave it to Toby, with his flair for the dramatic, to know that the unlabeled photos would spark her interest.
"Did you leave those? I couldn't figure out where they came from." She retrieved the prints from her bookbag and spread them out on the table.
"So what do you think?"
"I'm intrigued." She found the close-up of the tablet and read the bizarre epitaph in its entirety this time.
Death resides in my garden, with his hands wrapped 'round my throat
He beckons me to follow and I step lightly in his boat.
All around us summer withers, blossoms drop and rot,
And Death bids me to follow, his arrow in my heart.
We sail away on his ocean, and the garden falls away
where life and death are neighbors, and night never turns to day.
A wind comes up on the water, Death's sails are full and proud
My love I will go with thee, dressed in a funeral shroud.
Now her tomb lies quiet, the shroud is turned to stone
And where Death had been standing, is only the grave of her bones.
"Hmmm."
"I know, the poem's not very good," Toby said. "But I think you'll be interested anyway."
"All right. Tell me more."
"You knew I went to Vermont for Thanksgiving, right? To stay with Patch and Britta?"
Sweeney nodded. Patch and Britta Wentworth were Toby's aunt and uncle on what Sweeney liked to call the "grand branch" of his family. They lived with their children in the former arts colony in Byzantium, Vermont, in a house called Birch Lane that had been built by Toby's great-grandfather. The great-grandfather was Herrick Gilmartin, a well-known landscape and portrait painter from the 1880's on. Gilmartin, the sculptor Bryn Davies Morgan and a host of other well-known American artists had summered or lived off-and-on in the colony at Byzantium for most of their working lives. Sweeney didn't know much about the colony, but she'd once heard a colleague say that for a time, Byzantium and a handful of other New England artists' communities had contained the greatest concentration of artistic talent in the United States.
"Well, while I was up there, I was looking around in the little cemetery near Patch and Britta's and remembered that there's always been some question about that stone. It's pretty strange for the time period, right?"
Sweeney nodded. "Really strange. The girl would be a very typical Victorian or turn-of-the-century monument, if she were standing and draped over a grave or something, but the figure of Death is incredibly weird, very un-Victorian actually. And it's clearly by a real artist, not just a stone carver. Any idea who it was?"
"I don't think anybody knows. The assumption is that it was by someone who was a member of the colony or someone who visited, but it isn't signed."
"Who was the girl? Mary Denholm."
"Just a local girl. The family lived down below my great-grandparents' house and one of the Denholm descendants still lives in the house. Ruth Kimball. I've known her all my life."
Sweeney studied the photographs while he talked.
"So what's the proposition?"
"Come up to Vermont with me for Christmas. I already asked Patch and Britta and they said they'd love to have you. You can look into this stone a little, maybe get a chapter for your book about an anomalous, heretofore unidentified masterpiece, have some fun for a change. Christmas is great up there, lots of skiing and wassailing. Whatever wassailing is. And they have this giant party every year, a couple of days before the 25th. You'll love it."
There was a note of desperation in his voice that made her ask, a little slyly, "Why do you want to go back up to Vermont again so soon after Thanksgiving? You could go spend Christmas with your mom in California."
He blushed. "Well, there's this really cool woman who's the granddaughter of one of Patch and Britta's friends. She just moved back to the colony and I met her at Thanksgiving."
Sweeney felt a tiny, unwelcome stab of jealousy. Why hadn't he told her about it before? "So why do you want me along? For female companionship if things crash and burn with the granddaughter?"
He grinned at her, then blushed. "No, it'll just be more fun."
"I don't know, Toby . . ." she said, still staring at the photographs. "I'm so exhausted from finishing up this thing for European Art Criticism. I'm trying to kiss up to everyone in the department, even though they all hate me. It's completely draining. And you know how I feel about staying with people. I'm always tiptoeing around and cleaning up the bathroom as soon as I'm done. I'll probably spill a beer on the Persian carpet or something. I'd rather just be alone. Christmas is a weird time for me."
"Come on, Sweeney. It's been a year since you got back from England. All you've done since then is work. You spend too much time by yourself."
When she looked up at him, he glanced away, embarrassed. She could feel her face flush, her heart catch with hurt. But I've been successful, she wanted to cry out, her own shrill voice echoing in her head. I've seen the dividends of my emotional exile.
"Look, just sleep on it, okay? I know this stone is up your alley." He kissed her good-bye and, reluctantly, Sweeney met his eyes. He was right, of course. The prospect of her planned holiday stretched out in front of her now, wan and depressing.
"Okay," she said, still aware of that small, ugly pang of jealous discomfort. "I'll think about it."
Sweeney was one of those Scroogeish souls for whom bright store windows and the inevitable round of Christmas parties and gifts inspired only dread and a longing for the empty, short days of early January, when winter is finally left to get on with it in earnest.
There were good reasons for this. Like many people who dislike December, she had no warm family memories to associate with the holidays. Her father had committed suicide when she was thirteen. She had some vague memories from before the defining event; emotionally complicated, largely silent dinners at her father's parents' big house in Newport; her father's last minute presents, flashlights or batteries from gas stations, wrapped in the ancient Christmas paper her grandmother had kept in a desk drawer in the study. After, she and her mother had gotten through the holidays rather than celebrated them and her Yuletide associations ran to unclean motel rooms in second-rate resort cities or take-out turkey eaten at the table of whatever house or apartment they happened to be living in.
Another reason was her occupation. Spending her days amongst gravestones, skeletons and images of the dead, Sweeney could not imagine the tiny baby Jesus, tucked into the manger and wrapped in maternal adoration, without picturing the other Jesus, bleeding, dying in agony on the cross. Christmas seemed only a precursor of worse things to come.
But while she stewed inwardly, the rest of the world seemed intent on happiness. Passing through the department's second floor warren of cubicles on the way to her own tiny closet of an office, Sweeney watched students leaving for vacation hugging each other and dropping off presents for professors and Mrs. Pitman, the motherly department secretary.
After returning a couple of phone calls and sending off a quick email to a journal editor interested in her article on a family of Massachusetts stonecarvers, Sweeney took Toby's photographs out again and laid them on her desk.
Then she took down from her bookshelf some volumes on New England stones, particularly from the late nineteenth century. Her office was so small that there was room only for her most essential texts, her desk and chair, and an extra seat for student conferences. She spread the books out on her desk and after an hour and a half of reading, she was convinced her first impression had been correct.
The stone was completely, weirdly anomalous.
But before she trekked all the way to Vermont, she wanted to make sure there wasn't some kind of obvious explanation. There were all kinds of ways she could go about finding out, but the simplest option presented itself as she thought about her conversation with Toby. Why not call the descendant? What was her name? Something Kimball . . .
Sweeney looked over the notes she'd jotted down. Ruth. That was it. Ruth Kimball. It would be much too easy if Ruth Kimball could just explain the whole thing, but years of research had taught her that sometimes the obvious route to an answer was the best one.
She got the number from information and then sat still trying to decide what to do. She had discovered over the years that people sometimes got angry when asked about long-dead ancestors. There was often enmity and resentment buried deep among the roots of family trees. She could write a letter, but something in her wanted to know now.
The phone rang six times before a woman answered with a gruff, "Yup?"
"Oh, yes. I was looking for Ruth Kimball. Is she available?"
"Yup?"
"I'm sorry. Are you Ruth Kimball?"
"I said I was. What do you want?"
Sweeney took a deep breath, picturing an annoyed older woman, scowling down the phone. "Oh, I'm so sorry. My name is Sweeney St. George and I'm a professor down here in Boston. My area of specialty is funerary art, gravestones and things like that and well, the gravestone of an ancestor of yours, a Mary Denholm, was recently brought to my attention." Good God, she was going on. Get to the point, Sweeney. "Anyway, I found it really intriguing and I was wondering if I could ask you a few questions about it?"
"Yup."
"Well, yes. What I was wondering was . . ." She had forgotten her questions. "I mean, do you have any information about the artist who created the stone. It's very strange, for the time period and for the region."
"I don't know who did it. I don't think anybody around here does anymore. Probably one of the artists from the Byzantium colony. You know about the colony?" She pronounced the word "colony" with an air of distaste. The woman's accent was unlike any Sweeney had heard before, somewhere between Boston and London, a salty, almost colonial burr, as though her settler relatives had passed it down, barely adulterated by two hundred years in the new world. Like Toby, she pronounced the name of her hometown Bisantum, rather than Byzantium.
"Yes," Sweeney said. "You mean the Byzantium Arts Colony?"
"That's right. One of the artists, I think."
"Oh. Well, could I ask you how Mary Denholm died? She was very young and it might have a bearing on who created the stone and why they chose such a large monument." Sweeney was thinking about Victorian monuments made to commemorate children who had died in large scale tragedies like apartment fires or mine disasters.
Then she heard a child's voice in the background and Ruth Kimball told her to hold on for a moment, calling out a muffled warning. "Well," she said when she was back on the phone, "she was supposed to have drowned, you know. That was the story that was got about. But, my grandmother Ethel, who grew up with Mary, always said she'd been killed by one of the Byzantium artists and the whole thing was hushed up."
"Killed? You mean murdered?"
"Yeah, murdered. That's what my grandmother always said. No one around here thinks there's anything to it but well, they wouldn't want it to get out, would they? The colony folks."
"No, I suppose they wouldn't. I . . ." There was a knock on her open office door and Brendan Freeman came in. Damn, she'd forgotten she had an appointment with him. "Oh, hold on, Mrs. Kimball." She held up a finger, letting Brendan know she'd be off in a second. "I'm sorry, Mrs. Kimball. I have to go. Could I call you tonight perhaps, so we could talk at more length?"
"Got Bingo tonight. I'll be around tomorrow, though. My daughter Sherry's working and I'm watching Charley. That's my granddaughter."
"Okay, fine. Thank you. Tomorrow evening then."
She jotted down some notes as she gestured to Brendan to sit down.
Toby's gravestone was getting interesting.
Reprinted from O' Artful Death by Sarah Stewart Taylor.
By permission of St. Martins Press.
Copyright © 2003 by Sarah Stewart Taylor.
All rights reserved. This excerpt, or any parts thereof,
may not be reproduced in any form without permission.