Forest of Secrets
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
Ursula travels deep into the New Forest to investigate rumours of a plot to overthrow Queen Elizabeth in this gripping Tudor mystery.
May, 1586. Ursula and her retinue return home from a lengthy trip to discover she has an unexpected visitor. Etheldreda Hope is a simple countrywoman who has come to Ursula with disturbing tales of strange goings-on in her rural village. Fearing that Etheldreda's reports of mysterious forest rites indicate a possible conspiracy to overthrow Queen Elizabeth in favour of her cousin, Mary Stuart, the queen's spymaster, Sir Francis Walsingham, orders Ursula to travel to Etheldreda's home to find out what's really going on.
On reaching Chenston village, deep in the New Forest, Ursula discovers an isolated, suspicious community; the locals deeply in thrall to the old pagan traditions and beliefs. But are these ancient customs harmless - or are they part of a genuine conspiracy against the queen? And, if so, who is behind it?
It's not until the night of Halloween that Ursula will discover the shocking truth.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Early in Buckley's atmospheric 19th Tudor mystery (after 2020's The Scent of Danger), Ursula Blanchard, a prosperous widow and half-sister to Elizabeth I, receives a strange visitor at her Surrey home. Etheldreda Hope has come from the village of Chenston, where her mule giving birth to a foal is arousing her neighbors' fears that she's a witch. Even more worrying, Etheldreda reports that secret rites are being committed in the forest outside Chenston, and the group's unknown leader says they must "bring about the death of an evil queen, to save an honest queen." Since Ursula works as an agent on Elizabeth's behalf, off to Chenston she must go. There she finds the villagers in thrall to odd beliefs and pagan practices, but do these have anything to do with a conspiracy to put Mary, Queen of Scots, the queen's rival, on the throne? The well-defined secondary characters who accompany Ursula add to the intrigue, notably her resourceful manservant, Roger Brockley, who's determined to protect her from the dangers they encounter, but sometimes fails to do so. Only a flat and abrupt ending disappoints. Buckley makes full use of a fascinating time and place in British history.