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Synopsis
Rosamund Clifford, the mistress of King
Henry II, has died an agonizing death by
poison—and the king’s estranged queen,
Eleanor of Aquitaine, is the prime
suspect. Henry suspects that Rosamund’s
murder is the first move in Eleanor’s
long-simmering plot to overthrow him. If
Eleanor is guilty, the result could be
civil war. The king must once again
summon Adelia Aguilar, mistress of the
art of death, to uncover the truth.
Adelia is not happy to be called out of
retirement. She has been living
contentedly in the countryside caring
for her infant daughter. But Henry’s
summons cannot be ignored, and Adelia
must again join forces with the king’s
trusted fixer, Rowley Picot, the bishop
of St. Albans, who is also her baby’s
father.
Adelia and Rowley travel to the murdered
courtesan’s home, in a tower within a
walled maze—a strange and sinister place
from the outside, but far more so on the
inside, where a bizarre and gruesome
discovery awaits them. But Adelia’s
investigation is cut short by the
appearance of Rosamund’s rival: Queen
Eleanor. Adelia, Rowley, and the other
members of their small party are taken
captive by Eleanor’s henchman and held
in the nunnery of Godstow, where Eleanor
is holed up for the winter with her band
of mercenaries, awaiting the right
moment to launch their rebellion.
Isolated and trapped by the snow and
cold, Adelia and Rowley watch as dead
bodies begin piling up. Adelia knows
that there may be more than one killer
at work, and she must unveil their true
identities before England is once again
plunged into civil war. . . . |