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The Tapestry: Leonie (The Creoles Series #4)
 
 
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The Tapestry: Leonie (The Creoles Series #4) [Paperback]

Gilbert Morris (Author), Lynn Morris (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 5, 2005

The Creoles Series tells the stories of four young women who attend the Ursuline Convent School in New Orleans during the early nineteenth century. Each book is a romantic adventure that focuses on one woman as she faces the trials of life and faith. In this striking conclusion to The Creoles Series, Gilbert Morris delivers his award-winning storytelling, told against a cultural background unique to this series alone.

Abandoned as an infant on the steps of the Ursuline Convent School, Leonie Vernay has endured the emotional and financial poverty of an orphan. Now a young woman making her way as a humble seamstress in New Orleans, she is startled by a mysterious stranger who claims to know her identity-and her relatives.

Will Leonie find acceptance with her long-lost family, or is she on a misguided quest? In The Tapestry, Leonie must decide if her longing to belong has clouded her judgment and her ability to see love in others.


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The Tapestry: Leonie (The Creoles Series #4) + The Immortelles: Damita (The Creoles Series #2) + The Exiles: Chantel (The Creoles, Book 1)
Price For All Three: $35.58

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Editorial Reviews

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter One

Simone d'Or stared at the paper in front of her, and then suddenly, without warning, reached out and crumpled it up. Throwing it across the room, she said loudly, "I can't stand this any longer, Damita!"

Damita Madariaga, who sat across the room from Simone, stared at her roommate, taking in the long blonde hair, the dark blue eyes, and the full lower lip. Damita had always admired Simone's beauty, although she herself was recognized for being one of the most attractive girls at the Ursuline Convent. Damita took the book that she was reading and threw it across the room with all her force. The pages fluttered, and the book struck a picture on the wall and knocked it to the floor. It fell with a crash, and the glass shattered.

"Good!" Damita said viciously. "I'd like to tear the whole building down!" She got up abruptly, went over to the window and stared outside. "I'm sick of this room!" she exclaimed. "It's like being in a prison."

Actually the room was much nicer than most of the others in the convent. Both Simone and Damita came from wealthy families who had spared no expense in fixing up the bare room. The floor was carpeted with an expensive Persian rug. Silk hangings decorated the walls, and the furniture was mostly of polished rosewood gleaming from the sunlight that streamed through the large window. The two half beds, each of which occupied one side of the room, were comfortable and covered with well-chosen and attractive coverlets.

"I'd like to take Sister Agnes and dump her in a well," Simone muttered darkly. Rising from her desk, she threw herself down on the bed, put her hands behind her head, and stared up at the ceiling. "She's too mean to be a nun."

"She's worse than the rest of them. If it wasn't for her, we wouldn't be confined to quarters. I think it's a shame, and I'm going to tell my papa to take me out of this place."

"He won't do it."

Damita started to argue, then shrugged. "No, he probably won't, but I'm going to get even with her somehow or other."

Simone closed her eyes and was quiet for a time. The two girls were perfect roommates, for both were spoiled beauties. The Ursuline Convent was not designed for such proud young women, and the two had been a problem for the sisters who were responsible for their training for their entire stay.

As Damita stared out the window, her mind worked quickly. She had known little discipline at her home--she was the spoiled pet of the family, and although the discipline was somewhat stricter at the convent, neither Damita nor Simone had allowed it to interfere greatly with their lifestyles. Damita watched as one of the servants washed clothes beside a well. A young man had come to flirt with her, and Damita felt a twinge of envy. "Marie can have men flirt with her, but we can't."

Simone got up from the bed in a smooth, easy motion and walked over to stare out the window. "She'd better watch out. If Sister Agnes catches her with Juan, she'll be sorry."

The two girls watched as the young man reached out and smoothed the golden-brown cheek of the servant girl. The laughter of the two floated up to them, and Damita exclaimed suddenly, "Let's do something wicked, Simone!"

"Do something? Like what?"

"I've got to get out of this room, or it's going to drive me crazy!"

Sister Agnes had confined them to their room for a week until they brought their work up to standard. She was a stern taskmaker with no respect for the power the girls' families had. She had even required them to take their meals there, and both young ladies were furious. They were the same age, seventeen, and the confinement had been the worst punishment they had known in their lives.

"I mean it," Damita said, her lips growing tight. "Let's just get out of here for a while."

"And go where?"

"We can go see that play in town. It's Shakespeare."

"Oh, Romeo and Juliet. I'd love to see that!" Simone exclaimed, but a doubtful look crossed her face. "I don't see how we could do it."

"Sister Agnes is gone for the day. She went over to one of the villages to take some food to a needy family. We can go to the matinee. I saw it in the paper."

Simone was caught by the daring idea. "All right," she said, "let's do it. But if we get caught--"

"So what if we get caught? What can they do to us--beat us with a whip?" Damita laughed and shook her head, her glossy black hair catching the spring sunshine. "All we have to do is sneak out when nobody's looking and sneak back. It'll be almost dark when we get back. It'll be easy."

"We can't go through the gate. They'd see us."

"You know where they're repairing the wall over on the south side? It's not quite finished yet, and the men aren't working on it. We could slip through that gap that's still there. Come on, get ready!"

"Do you have enough money for us to get in?"

"Yes. I've got plenty. Hurry up, now!"

"Let's go see if Chantel wants to go with us, and maybe Leonie."

"I doubt if they will, but we'll give them a chance."

The two girls left their room and moved cautiously down the hall. They knocked on a door, and then without waiting, Simone opened it, and the two girls slipped inside.

Leonie Dousett was sitting at the desk, writing industriously. She was a petite young woman with a good figure. Her waist was the smallest of any of the girls, the envy of the rest of them. She had a heart-shaped face, auburn hair that had recently darkened to a lustrous deep brown, and well-shaped gray eyes. Her complexion was olive, very smooth. She had a widow's peak and a dimple in her right cheek when she smiled.

"What are you two doing here?" Leonie asked.

"Where's Chantel?"

"She went down the hall to the washroom." Leonie was very plainly dressed compared to the other two. She was one of the girls that the sisters at the convent took in as an act of charity. Leonie was an orphan and had made her way, when she grew old enough, by working for the sisters and sewing for some of the students. "If Sister Agnes catches you out of your room, you'll be sorry."

"I'm not afraid of her," Damita said defiantly. "She didn't have any business confining us to our room anyway."

Even as Damita spoke the door opened, and Chantel Fontaine came in. She was a tall young woman with striking green eyes. "What are you two doing out of your room?"

"Never mind that," Simone said. Her eyes were glowing with excitement. "Damita and I are going to sneak out and go see Romeo and Juliet in town."

"Yes," Damita said, "there's a matinee that starts at three o'clock, I think. We'll get back about dark."

"You can't do that," Leonie said. "You'll be in trouble if you get caught."

"We won't get caught." Damita shrugged her shoulders. "We're going to go sneak through that place in the wall they're repairing. Come on. You can go with us."

Leonie shook her head. "No. I'm not going."

"I--I don't think I'd better," Chantel said. She came from a good family but one not as wealthy and influential as Simone's and Damita's families. She was a much milder girl and more amiable in every way.

"I told you they wouldn't go," Simone said.

"Well, we're going."

Leonie and Chantel tried to dissuade their friends, but both knew it was useless.

"Come on. I've got to get out of this place!" Damita said. She grinned roguishly and winked at Leonie. "You're going to miss a good time."

Leonie didn't answer, but as soon as the two girls left, she turned to Chantel and said with a worried expression. "I wish they wouldn't do that. They could get in serious trouble."

"That's never bothered those two," Chantel remarked. "I just hope Sister Agnes doesn't catch them. I think she'd really take a cane to them this time, no matter how important their families are."

Simone and Damita made their way down the hall. Both of them, of course, knew every nook and cranny of the convent, and they silently threaded through several corridors usually vacant. Finally they stepped outside, and Damita looked cautiously in both directions. "There's nobody in the courtyard, and the workmen are gone. Come on."

Simone followed Damita as they ran lightly across the grass and reached the wall. The wall, an ancient one, had been crumbling, and now only one small gap remained unfinished. Avoiding the pile of stones and the mortar boards and other tools of the trade, the two slipped quickly through the gap. As soon as they were outside, Damita laughed. "Now, let's go to town!"

*******

The play was not the first Shakespearean play that the two girls had seen; both were lovers of drama. Damita had paid for the best seats in the house, and although Simone was worried that someone, somehow, from the convent might see them, Damita had shrugged. "Who from a convent would want to go to see actors? They think all actors are demons straight out of the pit."

"They'll think we are, too, just for going." Simone managed to smile.

When the play concluded and the actors came out for their curtain call, the two girls applauded until their hands ached. "I'm going to be an actress," Damita said firmly. "They get to travel everywhere."

"I don't think that would be a very good life. Besides, your parents would never let you do it."

"I suppose not. They never want me to have any fun, and yours are about the same."

The two left the theater and set their minds on a meal before returning to the convent. "If they're going to starve us at that old convent, we've got a right to eat out. Come on," Damita ordered.

The two girls found a cafe and filled up on shrimp, fish, and gumbo. They both laughed a great deal, feeling rather proud of their exploit.

Finally, however, the meal was finished and Simone sighed. "Come on. We'd better get back." ...


Product Details

  • Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Thomas Nelson (April 5, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0785270051
  • ISBN-13: 978-0785270058
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.5 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #977,528 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Gilbert Morris is among today's most popular Christian writers; his books having sold nearly six million copies worldwide. He specializes in historical fiction and won a 2001 Christy Award for the Civil War drama Edge of Honor. Once a pastor and English professor who earned a Ph.D. from the University of Arkansas, Morris lives with his wife in Gulf Shores, Alabama.

 

Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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5.0 out of 5 stars THE ALCHEMY, January 5, 2012
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This book was bought to complete A set in our library at church. Any book
written by this author is always enjoyed by our church members. I think this completes
the last book for our sets. We have all his books
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3.0 out of 5 stars The Alchemy, June 24, 2009
I enjoyed the first two books in this series but I felt this feel flat. This story revolved more around Simone's brother and his story then hers. Simone's love interest also has more of a story in this book then she does. Simone doesn't even make an appearance until the third chapter. The story about Simone's brother was well written and I enjoyed the plot behind him finding Christ. Simone's story on the other hand, was almost none existent. The story of the 4 girls that is so crucial in this series was not really discussed either. I was rather disappointed with this entire story as a whole, especially because Gilbert Morris is such an amazing author. I am hoping that the final story in this series is better then this story.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A gentle lady rewarded, September 5, 2006
This review is from: The Tapestry: Leonie (The Creoles Series #4) (Paperback)
It is nice to see that, every once in a while, a woman of unknown heritage and gentle manners is rewarded by life. This sweet story of Leonie's journey to family and future is worth the read. My one disappointment was the abrupt resolution of the love story. We couldn't have developed this more than a 2 page dialogue and the assumption of happily ever after?
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