Château Amboise – The Sensational Mystery of Aesmeh de la Rose

From the moment I  found myself at the base of the ramparts at Château Amboise, a grotesque, morbid sensation settled across my shoulders, then a pressure leaned in against my right arm and I stiffened.

“I died here,” a voice whispered.

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Earlier that morning, while I bought roses and baguettes and began my winding procession through the cobblestone streets, the same voice drew me closer.

Having arrived in Amboise less than twenty-four hours earlier, my first walk through town led me to the base of the castle ramparts at Château Amboise.

The moment I found myself at the locked gate leading across the small moat, I heard her again, “I died here.”

Storyteller & Character Meet in Amboise

My mind fickered. Scenes of a woman tossed from the tower above, crashing against the pavement, played out over and over. The water stains of rust or wear streaming down from the window tuned to blood and the air bristled with the scent of lilies and life violently exiting.

As a result, the woman who spoke pulled me back into her time and showed me, then nodded, took my hand, and asked me to remember.

“Do not leave me here again,” she said.

At that moment, I’d convinced myself I’d gone crazy. Had I watched too much Outlander? Slipped into some delusional state brought on by jet lag and the ongoing series of serendipitous events leaving me without time to recover from the last?

Whatever it was, Amboise, France, and its royal heritage had long called to me without me listening. In the works for years, Woman On The Wall only ever had one major setting. This tiny town on the banks of the Loire River drove me right to its edge and there I stood, clear in every way that I returned to a place I’d known in not just one lifetime, but many.

Aesmeh Tells Me Her Story

“I died here.”

Did this woman speak of my death or her own? I will never truly know. However, she stayed with me for a long while. There, she wove me in and out of abandoned space. She requested that I listen and remember them, remember how I used to know them.

An unnatural urge to rip open the gates and throw myself into the spaces leading up into the castle took hold. I fought her stories, her words, the places she revealed to me.

I knew who spoke, Aesmeh. She needed me to know where her life played out. It was as if she’d waited five-hundred years for someone to finally hear her and not run.

Oh, how I wanted to run.

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My own urge to get the hell out of there took over. I wandered, grateful for the lack of interest that anyone else in Amboise seemed to have for those quiet, abandoned places. They carried with them the deep resonance of stories. Those were much more difficult to hear than one of royal pageantry, art, and afternoons in the garden.

As my head cleared and the voice faded, I relished the accomplishment of breaking free of her. Then, all of a sudden, she was right in front of me.

I told myself it was just a window. One which I’m sure was made with the gentle face of a striking ancient woman visible when the sun caught it just right. Maybe she appeared because someone thought it appropriate for this historic royal hamlet. Maybe, she wasn’t done with me.

Her eyes followed me as I moved up and down the row of houses. Finally, I collapsed across the street from her and just listened.

“So,” she said. “Let me introduce you to everyone else.”

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