Set in Germany and England from 1859 to
1870 (with an endnote in 1901), this is the story of Helena Trant whose
parents were so much in love they had little time for her. Still, hers was a
happy childhood among books in Oxford where her father had a bookstore. When
she was old enough, her parents sent her to Germany near the Black Forest to a
convent school where her mother had been educated.
Helena loves the forest and the fairy
tales surrounding it. She hears of the legend of the night of the seventh moon
“when mischief is abroad and is routed with the coming of dawn.” On one night,
she gets lost in the mist of the forest and is rescued by a man who takes her
to his hunting lodge. She taken with him that she might have allowed him to
have his way with her but for the intervention of a housekeeper who took
measures to preserve Helena’s virtue. But Helena never forgot the man even
though she did not know his name.
Years later, she returns to Germany and
on another night of the seventh moon Helena meets and marries her German at his
hunting lodge, but then she wakes from her idyllic honeymoon to discover she has
been drugged by a physician who tells her she has escaped a horror that befell
her in the forest. Helena lives in a fog of dreams and wonders where truth is.
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