![]() ![]() Meanwhile, the scandalized villagers spy on the "witch," and at last force her to endure the bloodcurdling ordeal of trial by hot iron. A tender love grows between them in the cottage, but Marnie still fears the marriage bed. With the help of the kindly and wise village priest, she begins to invent a sign language for him. But Marnie realizes that the boy is deaf, and his bursts of anger come from his inability to communicate. Suspicions grow when she befriends an outcast, a "mad" boy called Raver whose rages and yammerings look to villagers like the work of the devil. ![]() ![]() When he is killed in a fall, she feels more release than grief, in spite of the village rumors that she caused his death with a witch's curse. His drunken lovemaking repels her, but Marnie must endure because he is the lord's middle son and she has married him to save her family from starvation. In an ancient time, a newlywed girl is taken to a seaside thatched cottage by her much older husband. New Zealand author Sherryl Jordan has crafted a riveting story, reminiscent of the work of Thomas Hardy, that's shimmering with the romanticism of a fairy tale but told with the vivid detail and suspense of a modern novel. ![]()
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