
A celebrated novelist, long enchanted by the elegance of England’s old houses, unexpectedly inherits a Tudor estate that has lain in quiet stewardship for generations. The property, once a monastic cloister, is set amid ancient woods where ivy‑clad walls and a lone bell echo through the mist. As he steps into the ancestral hall, the writer is torn between his American sensibilities and the seductive pull of aristocratic tradition.
The narrative follows his first weeks in the house, where he roams the stone corridors, studies the faded tapestries, and listens to the bell tolling in the fog‑filled mornings. The atmosphere is thick with history, and the lingering presence of the past feels both comforting and unsettling, prompting him to question what it means to belong to a lineage he has never known. Subtle hints of mystery begin to surface, suggesting that the estate may hold secrets as ancient as its walls.
Through lyrical prose and a keen eye for detail, the story explores themes of identity, artistic yearning, and the haunting allure of heritage. It sets the tone for the collection’s other tales, each offering a similarly rich blend of atmosphere and introspection.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (328K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Suzanne Shell, Andrea Ball and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
Release date
2004-12-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1857–1948
A bold and bestselling American novelist, essayist, and travel writer, she was known for sharp social observation and a fiercely independent public voice. Her novels ranged from California history to psychological fiction, with works like The Conqueror and Black Oxen helping make her one of the most widely read authors of her day.
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