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PORTRAIT
OF VICTORINE
by
Mary Devlin
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Lindsay
Parker expected an exciting life when
she moved to teach art in Paris. The
excitement, however, proved to be more
than she had bargained for. A Picasso
is stolen from the school. Two
previously unknown Cézannes turn up in
a junk shop. One of her new friends is
kidnapped and another is murdered. Is
Lindsay next? Does she, like the
others, know too much? And all the
while, at her side, is the handsome,
brilliant, and mysterious Alain
Bordeaux. Who is he? How is he
connected to the art thefts? And what
role is he destined to play in
Lindsay's life? To learn the answers
to all these questions, Lindsay must
investigate alone - in the underworld
of Paris.
"The French art setting is
perfect for this book,
complete with a budding Paris romance
and a few near-death experiences. So
for those who love romantic mysteries,
Impressionist art, and Paris, France,
I would strongly recommend that you
get a copy of Portrait of
Victorine and read it." ***** -
Sara's Library
Prologue
1914
The woman was frightened. Nervously she glanced
around the room. Her treasures were all out in the
open-cherished reminders of when she was young,
and fair, and the toast of the Paris art world.
They were coming-the Germans-and they would burst
in here and take everything. They would take her
wonderful collection out of her life forever.
The few rugs that decorated the floor were old and
worn, most of their color faded away. The
furniture was sturdy, highly polished and smelling
of lemon oil, but in desperate need of repair and
reupholstering. The house itself had fallen into
disrepair; there was a mustiness about its damp
rooms that no potpourri could mask. Her savings
long gone, the woman could not afford to spend the
money to render her surroundings secure and
attractive. Only her collection of paintings added
any beauty at all to the place where she passed
almost all of her time-and now they would soon be
gone.
As she paced the room, her eyes caught a glimpse
of her reflection in the mirror. She studied her
image regretfully. No more the lovely model she!
Her hair, once long, thick, and a deep lustrous
chestnut, was now sparse, dull, graying; her skin,
once smooth and creamy, now slack and lined; her
body, once fashionably plump and curvaceous, now
reduced to a state of near-emaciation. Only her
eyes-a rich cobalt blue-remained, but even they
had begun to lose their sparkle. Reminiscing of
happier days, she raised her eyes to a small
landscape, uncertain and abstract in form, but
slashed through and through with powerful greens
and browns. Ah, Paul! Dear troubled, tortured
Paul, now in his grave these eight years. His face
had been homely and his body big like a bear's,
but he had been kind, and he had loved her. And
there had been Claude - Claude, whose paintings
actually shimmered. Claude, though aging, was
still quite vigorous. She had been told that he
still painted, still participated actively in
shows and exhibitions. She had often toyed with
the idea of visiting Claude, but her mirror had
caused her to abandon that idea. She wanted him to
remember her as she had been, not as she was now.
She walked across the bare hardwood floor to the
opposite side of the room, where she could hear
the gentle sound of curtains flapping in the
window. A small portrait of a sweet-faced little
girl hung in a place of honor over a Victorian
mahogany table. Tenderly the woman lifted the
painting from its hook and stared at it. Auguste,
dear August, whom she still loved. even though she
had heard he could no longer paint. His eyesight,
she had been told, was failing and his hands, the
gentle hands that had caressed her body so often -
were crippled with arthritis. Yet he had pushed
on, determined to remain an artist, transferring
his concentration to sculpture, using a young
assistant when his own hands failed him. She could
almost smell his cologne, his tobacco, in his
studio where she had posed for him so long ago. In
the early days of her sojourn in this house, she
had told the neighbors about her romance with
Auguste, but they had gazed at her cynically, as
if they didn't believe a word of it.
She laughed sardonically. Who could blame them?
Who in their right mind would ever believe that
this skinny, aging woman had once lain in the arms
of one of the greatest painters of all time? She
would certainly do so never again - not in this
life.
She sighed. Her life - the life she had cherished
- was over. All she had left were her memories and
her treasures: the paintings which had once been
given to her by the men whom she had loved.
Soon they would be taken away. And then she would
have nothing to live for.
A deafening noise shook the very beams of the
house. Startled, the woman nearly dropped the
painting. Was that a clap of thunder, or was it
cannon fire? Were the Germans finally coming?
The Germans had long been known for their
appreciation for the arts. Now they wanted to
conquer all of Europe, and it was rumored that
they stole every masterpiece they encountered.
Surely they were familiar with the works of her
beloved Paul, Claude, and Auguste. If they passed
through her village, her treasures were doomed.
The Germans would take them and she would never
see them again.
The woman's lips compressed into a thin line. No!
The Germans would not take them away from her! She
had once had power over some of the greatest
painters that ever lived - and now, though she had
little power left, she she could summon enough to
preserve what few mementoes she still possessed.
With trembling hands that seemed strangely
disembodied, she tore the painting of the young
girl from its frame, then broke the frame
unrecognizable pieces. Flinging the canvas onto a
nearby sofa, she then seized a dazzling riverscape
and used a pair of scissors to pry away the nails
securing it to the polished walnut displaying it.
In a frenzy horn of desperation, she did the same
with all the paintings, then carried the remnants
of the frames out to the back yard, where she cast
them into the incinerator and fired it up. The
flames rose; the smoke irritated her eves and
nose, but triumph rushed through her as she tossed
the pathetic splinters into oblivion. Feeling
strangely satisfied, she stood back and watched as
the lovely frames she had once admired were
reduced to ashes.
But there! Frames could be replaced. The paintings
could not. Quickly
she hurried back to her living room, where the
canvases now lay in a pile on one of the faded,
colorless rugs. She glanced around. Where could
she hide them? Where would the Germans be sure to
miss them?
Inspiration struck her like a bolt of lightning.
She knew. Something a neighbor had once told her,
something she had heard from a shopkeeper when she
first moved into this house.
For the next three hours she worked frantically,
driven by grim determination. Her head began to
ache; the joints of her fingers throbbed
painfully, but still she worked on, continuing
ceaselessly until every painting was hidden. When
the final touches had been made to the last hiding
place, she stood and gazed around her.
The room looked pathetically bare and colorless.
But her paintings, her treasures, the last
remnants of her very life, were hidden away,
skillfully concealed where the Germans, or anyone
else undesirable, would never find them.
Suddenly a bomb went off inside her head. The pain
spread throughout her body; her eyes ceased to
focus and all around her faded into a blur. Her
sense of balance failed her, and she tumbled onto
the thinnest of her pathetic collection of rugs,
where the stale smell of the dust overwhelmed her
nostrils. Gradually consciousness faded away and
she slipped thankfully into a pleasant dream,
where once more she was young and beautiful, where
once more her beloved painters toasted her, teased
her, kissed her, immortalized her on canvas.
An hour later a neighbor found her - alive, but
unable to speak or move. Frantically, he
telephoned for the local doctor, who made it to
the house in time to save her life.
But Victorine would never be the same.
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