Isabelle loved Monty more than life, but her sentiments did not remain secreted away in the cloisters of her heart. A writer of no little renown, she put her mind and that overflowing heart to paper in order to give life to true love's expression:
O love of mine, will you ne'er take note of the one who loves you so,
you whose wandering heart takes flight while vacant eyes fix on me.
No matter her passion, her proffering of gifts and attention on the man she was enamored of, he paid her no heed. An unrequited love, to be sure, an admiration from afar though Isabelle was often in Monty's company. His attention, his heart . . . both were in a far off place where she could never inhabit.
She told her story through the vanity press but the books -- delivered to her cottage on Fairway Drive -- remain, to this day, in boxes gathering dust and eaten through by rats. . . .