“Desiree the child bride, and her sister Miranda, had gone
grave-robbing for a wedding gown. In the north end of the cemetery, among the
palatial mausoleums with their broken windows of stained glass where the ivy
crept in, was the resting place of a young woman who’d been murdered at the
altar while reciting her marital vows. The decaying tombstone, among the
cemetery’s most envied, was a limestone bride in despair, shoulders as slumped
as a mule’s, a bouquet of lilies strewn at her feet. Though her murder, by her
groom’s jealous mother, had been long in the past, everyone knew that her
father had had her buried in her gown of lace and silk.”
― Timothy Schaffert, My Mother She Killed Me, My Father He
Ate Me: Forty New Fairy Tales
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