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Books by Sarnia de la Maré FRSA
Showing posts with label short stories by Sarnia de la Mare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short stories by Sarnia de la Mare. Show all posts

Sunday, November 16, 2025

The Velvet Listener A Contemporary Mills & Swoon Short by Sarnia de la Maré

About the author SARNIA. DE LA MARE https://share.google/Aw3KqzHkoM9CGcHLQ

💋 The Velvet Listener.

A Contemporary Mills & Swoon Short by Sarnia de la Maré.

Mara Lane had been the late-night voice of Heartline FM for three years, dispensing warm advice to strangers while living a private life that was anything but romantic.

The truth was that Mara had become rather accomplished at helping other people fall in love precisely because she had stopped trying it herself. She had stopped dressing up and going out. She avoided dinner parties with friends who were forever trying to matchmake her with basically any man who happened to be single.

The studio lights were low enough to be flattering in the way dim lamps flatter tired women. Her producer, Jay, waved through the glass: Caller on line four.

“Heartline FM,” she purred. “You’re live with Mara.” She had perfected a sexy sultry voice that her fans loved. Little did they know, privately she had long given up any ideas of falling in love again.

A man’s velvet voice slid into her earphones.

“Good evening, Mara. I have a problem only you can solve.”

Mara straightened. Most late callers were drunk, lovelorn, or boring. This one sounded… dangerous in the way good chocolate is dangerous, smooth and tempting.

“What seems to be troubling you?”

A low chuckle. “You, Mara, it’s you.”

“Me?”

“Yes. I listen to you every night. I know when you’re smiling. I know when you’re tired. And tonight…” A pause. “You’re pretending to understand love.”

Her pulse hopped. No one ever read her that quickly, not even Jay, who had been her producer for years.

“Well,” she said carefully, “I’m flattered you’re so observant, but the show is all about you, caller. Not me.”

“Then here’s my question.” His voice dropped a register. “What does a woman like you do when the advice she gives everyone else stops working for her?”

Mara camouflaged a little gasp. It was ridiculous, he was a voice on a telephone, how could he be so disarming? But there was something in the way he spoke… intimate, focused, as if he was in the room making love to her.

“I suppose,” she murmured, “she keeps talking until she finds someone who listens properly.”

“I’m listening,” he said softly. “More than you know.”

Jay gave her the wind-up signal, they were due an advert. Besides, who was this weirdo? She reluctantly guided the call to break, but before she could cut him off, the man added:

“I’ll call again tomorrow. Same time.”

And just like that, he was gone, leaving Mara oddly flushed.

For a month, he called at exactly 12:07 a.m. The production unit had cleared a separate call line for him.

He never gave his name.
He never flirted outright.
He simply… learned more about her with his innocent and slightly abstract questions.

His insight was unnerving and intoxicating in equal measure. Was he a stalker? Should she be worried?

Jay began calling the mysterious man “The Velvet Listener” as though he were a character in a novel.

Other fans of the show adored the segment. Ratings soared. Heartline FM executives sent Mara congratulatory emails and mentioned a pay rise.

But Mara wanted only one thing: to see the man behind the velvet voice.

On the twenty-eighth night, The Velvet Listener asked quietly, “Would you want to meet me?”

She hesitated, not wanting to sound keen and aware of possible dangers. But she had been thinking about him, late at night as she showered. In bed when she couldn’t sleep, when she touched her wanton body.

“That depends,” she whispered. “Are you even real?”

The internet was awash with comments. Mara’s Instagram and X accounts were filled with speculations, warnings, guesses as to the Velvet Listener’s identity, suggestions of marriage and happy-ever-afters, conspiracy theories that were creating spinoffs on TikTok. Several fans had even offered themselves to Velvet Listener should Mara decline his advances.

Jay wrapped up the show and handed Mara a note.

“Come to the rooftop after your shift,” it said. “If I’m not real, you’ll know immediately.”

At 1:38 a.m., Mara stepped out onto the roof. The city lay below in wet neon streaks. Wind tugged her coat open, revealing her satin pencil skirt, stockings and high heels that she had been wearing in the hope that he would see her.

And he was there.

Tall, dark and divine, just as she had dreamed he would be. The same velvet voice:

“Hello, Mara.”

She moved toward him before she realised she was doing it.

He came closer and revealed his face in the light.

He commanded a formidable and yet unassuming presence.

“Let’s write your story now.”

He drew her body towards his and kissed her, gently then hard. Passionate and driven. Urgent and focused.

Mara’s loins were alive with lust and feelings she had not experienced in years, and this, all of this, from a stranger. Could it be true? There was no time to worry now.

When he finally broke away, his breath warm against her lips, he said:

“You know I hear you. I will always listen, Mara, that is my oath to you.”

And Mara, who had spent years being everybody else’s confidante, let herself fall into the loving arms of the man who had learned her voice before ever seeing her face.

©2025 Sarnia de la Mare Published by Tale Teller Club Press.

www.taletellerclub.com

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

The Judge and the Model a 💋 Mills and Swoon Romance Short by Sarnia de la Maré

Penelope Fairlie had never faltered. 'Faltering is for amateurs and the mentally ill', she would say. 

At fifty-two, she was the embodiment of composure. That rare breed of Englishwoman who moved through life as if time itself obeyed her schedule. She was a beacon of virtue and as disappointing as a soggy digestive, though no one would ever tell her due to her ability to petrify anyone within her orbit, even other people's dogs in Hyde Park.

She lived in a tall, ordered house in Belgravia with her husband, Charles, a respected tax barrister, and their Pomeranian, Bertie, whose coiffure was definitely worse than his bark, styled by an expensive personal dog groomer from Hampstead. There were no children, a fate that had become a new normal many years before.

If one dared to asked Judge Penelope Fairlie when she last felt the surge of a carnal wave, she would probably tell you it was when she saw Julio Iglesias in concert for her twenty-first birthday

Charles Fairlie was a man of professional eloquence and personal grooming.
He had spent their thirty years of marriage perfecting the art of absence while being perpetually present, a skill much admired in the legal profession.

Their relationship had long ago settled into the comfortable civility of two people who shared mortgage statements, mutual respect, and an occasional bout of influenza. They dined well, travelled seasonally, and never raised their voices.

Their lives read like an "at Home on Sunday" newspaper spread fused with Pomeranian Monthly.

But one Tuesday Penelope returned home early, having adjourned court for a witness who had fainted theatrically in the dock.
She let herself in, hung up her Burberry coat, popped her golfing umbrella in the stand, and followed a peculiar, yet vaguely familiar sound. It was somewhere between a gasp and a whimper and reminded her of the 80s.

As a woman of the world, well familiar with the peculiarities of human behaviour in her court, the vision before her was of something more unique in her own personal catalogue of 'seen it all befores'.

Charles was on all fours in a gimp mask making woof sounds, and Barry, the groomer from Hampstead, was saying something along the lines of, "you are a very naughty boy," dragging him along with Bertie's best Chanel dog lead.

A long pause preceded the events that unfolded. Bertie himself had been sitting on his velvet cushion watching things in a confused state, just glad that now Mummy was home. He had always hated the groomer and would regularly bite him.

"Your toupee has slipped, Barry." Penelope said curtly, "along with your reputation as a my dog groomer. Get out of my house. " And you, Charles, you can leave too, I never want to see either of you again. You belong in a kennel, and I hope you get fleas."

The following weeks were tortuous. Deep pain and menopause slushed up Penelope's brain to such a degree that she had taken some time off work and visited and old school friend in Bath.

Unbeknown to Penelope, a deep current of change was about to take her to new shores.

"You will Love Bath," said Cecilia. "Stay as long as you need. Take up some classes, you can come to mine! Paletes, ballet barre, aerobics, and hot yoga."

Cecilia was optimistic and gleeful. Penelope was tired just thinking about it.

"Art then," said Cecilia."

"Art." answered Penelope for no good reason, the word fell out like a sigh.

"YES!" Cecilia was being gleeful again. "You were so good at school."

It was on the third afternoon and Penelope meandered through the town whilst Cecilia was doing something sweaty. At the Assembly Rooms, she was drawn by the sign: Life Drawing Class – All Welcome. Knowing it would get Cecelia off her back, she popped in to find out more.

Within two minutes of enquiring she was shuffled into a room and guided towards an easel with rudimentary materials. 

An artist next to her passed her something.

"Here, it's my spare."

Now fashioned in a smock and still wearing the beret she had left the house in, Penelope was not unaware of the fact that she had become a slightly ridiculous stereotype.

She picked up a pencil and looked behind the easel wondering if anyone heard her mumbled expletive.

The artist next to her giggled and whispered, "it's a schlong and a half isn't it?"

The model stood on the platform with the unselfconscious ease of youth.
Broad-shouldered, wiry, beautiful in that careless, provisional way some men are before life edits them down.
His name, she later learned as he did polite rounds to view each insult to art, was Leo. He was twenty-six, recently moved from Brighton, “a performer, mostly.”

She assumed “performer” meant actor and imagined him performing Shakespeare, glad he had robed up.

"Oh how lovely." She said, smiling and avoiding eye contact, as well as nether region staring.

When their eyes met, something ancient sent a small electric shock downward. Penelope's body remembered it still existed.

After the class, he approached her.

"I really liked your drawings of me," he said. "They are precise and ordered. You should see some of the artworks I see," he laughed.

"Would you like them? Honestly, I won't keep them. I am only here on holiday, killing time really."

Leo was ecstatic and handed her a leaflet. Performance Art Showcase — The Velvet Room, Friday 8pm.

"I know it's short notice," he said...."

“Come,” he begged. “It’s experimental. It will be very inspiring, freeing, and give you a real sense of the place. Please say you will come, it would be an honour to have you in the audience." 

Leo seemed so sweet so eager that Penelope agreed. After all, she needed to get used to going out alone now that was old, free, and single.

The Velvet Room was tucked down a narrow lane, unmarked but for a faint boom of thumping bass and the smell of incense and beer. Inside, the lighting was so intimate Penelope couldn't see a thing. People were arriving dressed in clothes she had never seen, with body parts on show that should not be seen.

A woman with green hair was throwing questions into the air. “You here for the showcase?”

Penelope nodded. “I believe so.”

The girl was holding something, "where dya wan' it?"

Penelope looked confused, "wrist or hand?" The green haired girl blew a pink bubble from her black lips and Penelope reminded herself to be....more artistic.

"Oh, hand I think," she said, still confused.

"Take yer glove off then," demanded the girl.

Before Penelope knew it there was a black smudgy tattoo inked on her well manicured hand and the girl was blowing another pink bubble and saying 'NEXT!"

The stage was a shallow platform backed by velvet curtains that had known better centuries. She found a seat near the back, removed her other glove, and tried to look as though she attended avant-garde happenings regularly.

The music began, low, slow, and full of promise. There was a pulsating boom and African rhythms emanating from all around then a tall figure stepped into the light.

It was Leo.

Dressed in nothing but metaphors.

Penelope froze. She recognised at once the calm, unhurried posture, the deliberate movements, this was not theatre, nor dance. It was… a naked exhibition. A performance of skin and hair that began to move under strobes and beats.

Around her, the audience applauded softly, reverently, as if this were Mass and he the officiant.

He spoke — low, assured, words that might once have been poetry before they undressed.

“We are bodies before we are names,” he said. “We perform to be believed.”

Penelope felt the strangest vertigo. She was blushing with embarrassment. But she took a few deep breaths and focused on the art message which to this day, she has no understanding of.

When the lights came up, she remained seated to compose herself and get over the shock.

There was a five minute break until the next performance. Time to make a subtle exit.


But Leo was running over.

“Thank you for coming,” he said. 

"Thank you for getting dressed," she said. He laughed and she noticed for the first time his beautiful face as it lit the room.

"Let's get out of here...Let me buy you a drink." Leo said in a convincing tone.

She almost declined. But politeness, that old reflex, and possibly some other old reflexes, betrayed her.

That was the start, she would muse when looking back. The time his skin and presence was so charged she could feel it in her stomach.

“You don’t talk like my usual audience,” he said, over red wine.

“Your normal audience has piercings.”

He laughed, and it broke something in her.
The laughter, the wine, the gentle disarray of being unobserved, each loosened a burden she hadn’t realised she carried. The coat of propriety was left at the door.

He spoke about leaving Brighton, about performing to survive, about wanting to write.
She listened, surprised by how much it mattered that he wanted to be understood.

When they finally stepped back into the night, the rain had softened to mist. 

"I'd like to make love to you." Leo declared.

"Let's get a hotel room," said Penelope, excited and sexually awakened in a single afternoon.

The walk to her hotel was brief, almost quiet. Neither of them suggested what would happen next; neither pretended not to know.

Leo was considerate and both domineering and submissive in passionate waves as they explored each others bodies in the finest detail. They made love four times, and then once again, before breakfast in the shower. It was more than she had made love to her husband in twenty years.

As they parted at the taxi rank Leo kissed Penelope's cheek. "I will never forget you." he whispered.

"Thank you dearest, charming boy," she answered.

For the first time in years, Penelope had faltered and tiptoed into the dark side.

But, more importantly, she discovered hat it would not kill her.

Judge Penelope Fairlie returned to London as if she were the heroine of her own parole.
Bath had washed her clean of stigma, expectations, and an imaginary birdcage.

Her hair was shorter, deliberately so, an unspoken rebellion against the helmet she had worn for thirty years. She had bought dresses that kissed her figure in linen and silks. Men would look longingly at this beautiful modern woman who knew herself. Women would watch in disgust.

"Who does she think she is, a woman of her age wearing that?"

Penelope was a Belgravia scandal, albeit, a small one.

Even Bertie seemed confused by her new scent of freedom. 

Within weeks, she was back on the bench, a leaner, luminous, version of herself, possessed of an unnerving calm. Courtroom 7 had missed her efficiency, if not her warmth. The clerks whispered that she smiled now, occasionally, which was far more disconcerting than her old froideur.

But fate, like a malicious court usher, was waiting to file an unexpected motion.

The case was Regina versus Leontius Ryder.

Penelope glanced at the list and thought the name familiar, but it wasn’t until he entered the dock, hands folded, curls tamed, that her heart performed a most un-judicial leap.

Leo.

The naked philosopher of The Velvet Room now stood before her in a borrowed suit, accused of public indecency and the destruction of a civic sculpture valued at £100,000.

“Your Honour,” said the prosecution, “the defendant’s so-called performance involved squirting cream over the marble bust of Sir Robert Peel while entirely unclothed.”

Penelope inhaled sharply through her nose. The vision of cream was inconveniently vivid.

Leo looked up. Recognition was hard as a lightening streak. His eyes widened, then softened, as if to say forgive me, muse.

Penelope composed herself, rearranging her face into its most neutral expression, the mask of a woman who could sentence her own libido if required.

“The court,” she began, “is not a theatre.”
A pause.
“Though I appreciate some of you may find the acoustics similar.”

A ripple of laughter broke the tension.

The trial, inevitably, was adjourned. She could not preside; conflict of interest, emotional and otherwise.

Outside, the press had gathered.

Judge Sees Defendant Naked! shouted one speculative headline the next day. It's the Naked Truth Your Honour! said another. 

Charles sent a curt text: You’ve become quite the spectacle, Penny. I am suing for custody of Bertie.
She deleted it and ordered another martini.

When Leo appeared again, weeks later, she attended discreetly, a mere spectator in civilian clothes. He was represented by a nervous young barrister who clearly adored him.

When the verdict came — guilty, with mitigating artistic intent — Penelope almost smiled. A small fine, community service, and an interview on Channel 4.

When the fuss had died down, and it didn't take long, Leo waited in the rain outside chambers.

"I am so glad you messaged," he said. “I didn’t mean to embarrass you.” He was looking down like a schoolboy, but then he looked up and was the man she had longed for all these weeks.

“You didn’t,” she lied. “You reminded me I’m still flammable.”

He grinned. “That’s not a bad epitaph.”

They walked together through the wet London streets until decorum dissolved again. But this time it was bigger than passion. It was a longing that both needed to satiate in the knowledge that however long it lasted it would be time treasured with the lust and companionship of two people who could escape their scripts. And that it was nobody’s business but their own.

“Perhaps I’ll paint you next,” he said.

“Don’t,” she replied, “you’d only end up in court again.”

But her smile, that new, dangerous smile, said otherwise.


©2025 Sarnia de la Mare


Monday, September 8, 2025

'The Fitting' A Short Story by Sarnia de la Mare Tale Teller Club Audiobook Modern Fiction

The Riverbank by Sarnia de la Maré #shorts #shortstory

✍️ 

“The Riverbank” is a gothic family story of resentment, revelation, and reconciliation. A narrator discovers the hidden tragedy of Great Aunt Katherine’s youth — and with it, a new tenderness that bridges the gap between past and present.


“Cinematic video of a quiet riverbank glade, bluebells swaying in a soft breeze, golden light filtering through tall trees, birdsong ambience, slow panning motion as if exploring the glade — peaceful but with an undercurrent of melancholy, 10 seconds, 16:9”



Great Aunt Katherine had been seemingly on her last legs for about thirty years. Since I could remember she had been shrinking and creaking and swaying in the wind. Finally, she was gone and was currently residing in a casket for public viewing before burial later in the day.
We had never gotten along.


She was caustic and bitter and complained about everything. She irked me to the core.
None of us liked her and we seldom got in touch. Mum had fallen out with her years back and the connections rusted and corroded like old batteries. Damage had been done with emotional weaponry and unrepentant intent.


But in death people rally together to do their duty and triumphantly, one hopes, they ignore the fallout from the battleground.


The undertaker had worked a treat. Great Aunt’s hair was spruced and pompadoured like a grand poodle and someone had done a great job on her makeup. In repose, I thought I saw in her some beauty. I had never seen it before in her. How, I wondered, had I not seen it before? Perhaps then, it had been the light.


It was stuffy and death makes me nauseous so I took myself off for some air in the Lancashire sun.
 

The Riverbank


The grounds of the estate were rambling and pretty, cared for by a team of gardeners and gamekeepers. I followed a winding road, then a desire path through an accidental arch of higher foliage. Birds sang and I noticed the accidental grace of an untouched place.




‘You wanna be careful down there luv,’ said a man with a thick accident and clobber befitting a man who works on the land.


‘Oh, where does it go, this path?’ I asked.


‘Just by the riverside, it’s dangerous if you lose your footing; and don’t be tempted to swim in it, there’s wild currents, people ‘av drowned.’


‘Ok,’ I said, ‘I’ll be careful’.
‘Make sure you are, shout if there’s a bother’.


I objected to be being told and marched arrogantly on.


The riverside was a reedy unkempt place and the water seemed almost still. I doubted anyone had drowned there. I followed the bank upstream for some minutes and saw a beautiful glade just inland covered in bluebells. The blue-purple velvet tones in the late sun were breathtaking and I stopped to take a photograph on my phone.


I misjudged the bank and as I stepped back, cascaded down the steep slope, twisting my ankle as I landed with little room to spare before the water’s edge. It was a close shave. I would probably have to eat humble pie after all.


I stroked my foot; it was sore and I assumed I had twisted it. Reluctantly I called for help without trying to sound panicked.


Something had stabbed on my way down, something sharp. I was bleeding quite badly from my thigh.



I looked up the bank amongst the flattened grasses and saw something. It shimmered in the sun’s rays.


A bellowing voice broke the silence.
‘Are you alright? I told you to be careful din I?’


It was the gamekeeper doing his job, thank goodness.
‘I was trying to take a photograph,’ I explained feebly. ‘I hurt my ankle’.


‘Stay put, if you think you can follow a simple instruction. I will get my car and the first aid kit.’


The gamekeeper muttered several gripes and made his way to prepare for an overly dramatic rescue mission.


I waited as instructed and looked at the shiny object, it was a large red and gold brooch with an open bent pin. I must have stabbed myself as I tumbled down the verge.
It was tarnished and dirty but I could see it was gold. The stone looked like ruby, but I cannot profess to be an expert. It wasn’t paste, that much I knew. It was big and I was pleased to have found it immediately wondering if it was worth anything.


I began to polish it on my skirt, breathing hard on it and trying to remove the muck. As I did so I could see a small clasp and a hinge.


I tried to prize it open but it seemed to be stuck. After some brute force, the clasp was released.


Inside was like a locket, squared off. There were two photographs. One side, a picture of a young woman, a beautiful young woman and a young man with dark eyes. The woman’s hair was mounted in pompadour fashion on her proud dignified face. They were lovers, you could tell.


The other was a picture of an infant in swaddling clothes.


I tried to take out the photos but the baby picture was stuck fast. The other came out easily and inscribed on the reverse in tiny handwriting was my great aunt’s name, Katherine Baltimore and a date, 1938.


I looked again at the beautiful woman in the photograph and there I saw her as I have never seen her before.


‘Alright, old tight!’ shouted the gamekeeper.


The rescue mission passed off with ease and we trundled along the road towards the house in a four by four that looked and smelled like things were growing in it.


‘How long have you worked here?’ I asked.
‘Nigh on sixty years,’ said the gamekeeper.
‘Did my Aunt ever marry?’


‘No no, she was broken-hearted as a young girl, so they say. Had a love, apparently, died in the river there. I told you dint I?....don’t get close to the river, it has a jinx it does, I’m tellin’ ya, and your ma’ld never forgive me should out ‘appen.’


We arrived at the house to a general fuss about the state of my health and I was taken to be ‘fixed up.’


Mum was not pleased and came to my room to reprimand me in that maternal way mums do.


‘Why did you go to the riverside? People have drowned there!’ she exclaimed.
‘I wish people would stop telling me that’ I said in disgruntled fashion, ‘and who was it, Great Aunt Katherine’s boyfriend? I can’t believe she ever had one, looked like she hadn’t ever been laid with that scowl.’


‘That’s unkind,’ said mum.


‘Oh yeah sorry, I shouldn’t speak ill of the dead. But she was such a bitch.’
Mum sat down on the bed next to me.


‘Well, I may as well tell you, it won’t do any damage now, I suppose.
Your Great Aunt was such a rebel. She had this red hair. My great-grandma used to say it was the hair was the problem. There was a boy here, employed. He was rough, son of the gamekeeper who rescued you.’


I raised my internal eyebrows at the word rescue but listened intently.
‘My great-grandma knew he was going to cause trouble because he had those eyes.’
‘What eyes?’ I asked


‘Ones that make you want to lie down and take your clothes off, that’s what eyes.’
‘Oh. Those eyes......’ I said, knowingly.


‘Well,’ mum continued, ‘they struck up a very intense relationship but it was never going to work. Everyone was up in arms about it. They were different people, different classes, different upbringings. Those eyes were not going to solve the problem.’


‘So, what happened? I asked, desperate now for the full story.


‘Well, your Great Aunt ended the affair but he took it badly. They say he jumped off the bridge upstream where the two rivers meet and his body was washed up here, by the bluebell glade. He had been drinking, no one really knew what had happened.’


‘But she had a baby,’ I said.


‘Yes, how did you know? It was stillborn. At the time it was all for the best.’

I went downstairs to look at the coffin and say farewell to a great aunt who had felt such pain and loss. I looked at her face embraced in the sumptuous cream satin. Great Aunt Katherine looked content, different from when I had seen her this morning. I wondered if she would have wanted me to keep the brooch and considered its value. But I knew that that would be wrong.



She would want to be reunited with her baby and her love with the lay-down eyes.


I put the brooch on her lapel and kissed her forehead. Then I apologized and said farewell.


© 2019 Sarnia de la Maré FRSA


🌳 Creative Analysis of The Riverbank

Tone & Structure:
The story begins with biting humor — the narrator’s irreverence toward Great Aunt Katherine makes the opening vivid and slightly wicked. But as the setting shifts from the suffocating viewing room to the estate grounds, the story deepens: the narrator moves from judgement to discovery, from the living’s bitterness to the dead’s secret life.

The Riverbank as Threshold:
The riverbank is the perfect liminal space — half-safe, half-dangerous, beautiful yet treacherous. It mirrors the aunt’s own story: the secret affair, the tragedy, the stillborn baby. The fall on the riverbank is almost ritualistic — a physical initiation that allows the narrator to literally bleed into the family history and uncover the brooch.

Symbolism:

  • The Brooch: The red and gold object is almost talismanic, piercing the narrator before revealing Katherine’s hidden truth.

  • Bluebells: Symbols of humility, grief, and constancy — they frame the site of the lost lover’s death.

  • The River: A site of danger, cleansing, and memory — the family’s pain still flows there.

Character Arc:
The narrator starts dismissive (“she was such a bitch”) but ends tender, apologizing to Katherine, returning the brooch, and reuniting her with the past she loved. The story is ultimately about reconciliation — between generations, between judgment and empathy, between life and death.


🎭 Performance & Reading Notes

Mood: Start dry and ironic, then let it soften and slow as the story turns reflective.
Voice: Use a conversational tone at first (“We had never got along…”), a slightly dramatic hush for the riverbank fall, and then a warm, intimate tone for the coffin scene.
Pacing: Build tension at the fall — quicken slightly — then slow dramatically for the discovery of the brooch and the family revelations.
Ending: Deliver the last paragraph gently, like a benediction — the kiss on the forehead is the emotional release.

Overall Vibe: A gothic family drama with a redemptive ending.




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