The virgins war, p.1

The Virgin's War, page 1

 

The Virgin's War
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The Virgin's War


  The Virgin’s War is a work of historical fiction. Apart from the well-known actual people, events, and locales that figure in the narrative, all names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to current events or locales, or to living persons, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2016 by Laura Andersen

  Reading group guide copyright © 2016 by Random House LLC

  All rights reserved.

  Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, an imprint of Random House, a division of Random House LLC, a Penguin Random House Company, New York.

  BALLANTINE and the HOUSE colophon are registered trademarks of Random House LLC.

  RANDOM HOUSE READER’S CIRCLE & Design is a registered trademark of Random House LLC.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Andersen, Laura, author.

  Title: The virgin’s war : a Tudor legacy novel / Laura Andersen.

  Description: New York : Ballantine Books, [2016] | Series: Tudor legacy

  Identifiers: LCCN 2016007745 (print) | LCCN 2016013172 (ebook) | ISBN 9780804179409 (softcover : acid-free paper) | ISBN 9780804179416 (ebook)

  Subjects: LCSH: Elizabeth I, Queen of England, 1533-1603—Fiction. | Great Britain—Kings and rulers—Succession—Fiction. | Great Britain—History—Tudors, 1485-1603—Fiction. | Inheritance and succession—Fiction. | Queens—Great Britain—Fiction. | BISAC: FICTION / Historical. | FICTION / Sagas. | FICTION / Romance / Historical. | GSAFD: Historical fiction.

  Classification: LCC PS3601.N437 V59 2016 (print) | LCC PS3601.N437 (ebook) | DDC 813/.6—dc23

  LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/​2016007745

  ebook ISBN 9780804179416

  randomhousereaderscircle.com

  Book design by Caroline Cunningham, adapted for ebook

  Cover design: Susan Zucker

  Cover photograph: Jeff Cottenden

  v4.1

  ep

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Prelude

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-one

  Chapter Twenty-two

  Chapter Twenty-three

  Chapter Twenty-four

  Chapter Twenty-five

  Postlude

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  By Laura Andersen

  About the Author

  Reading Group Guide

  Fifteen-year-old Pippa Courtenay woke to the blazing sun of a late July day already smiling and practically floated out of bed—before promptly falling earthbound under the onslaught of humid heat. It hadn’t rained for three weeks and each day the temperatures seemed to climb higher. She would have to choose her clothing with care today if she didn’t want to melt before noon.

  After the briefest hesitation, she threw caution to the wind and decided to forgo a petticoat entirely. No one would know she wasn’t wearing one beneath her striped blue silk kirtle. Over that she laced her lightest gown of white voile, delicately embroidered with jewel-toned flowers and vines so lifelike they appeared to twine around her as she walked. Her abundant honey-gold hair she plaited severely away from her face and off her neck, with the single black streak she’d had since birth painting a curve back from her right temple.

  Then she tripped downstairs to Wynfield Mote’s hall, humming as she went. And when she entered the high-paneled lofty space, he was waiting for her as promised: Matthew Harrington.

  Eighteen, tall, broad, brown-haired and brown-eyed, Matthew gave her one of his rare smiles. “Shall we?” he asked.

  Considering the unusual heat of this summer, they had decided on a breakfast picnic while the air was still breathable rather than openly liquid. For the same reason, they had decided to walk rather than punish horses with a ride. Their route was instinctive—eastward to the old church.

  Pippa talked at an unusually rapid pace even for her. The words spilled out in a rush and burble of delight, dancing from topic to topic. It was such a pleasure to have Matthew home. For the last year he had been deep in his studies at Balliol College, Oxford, but two days earlier had returned to visit his parents. Edward and Carrie Harrington had served the Courtenays for more than twenty years, and Matthew was as much a part of the family as her siblings.

  Pippa loved her family. But her older sister, Lucette, had been moody and difficult the last few years and now spent a great deal of time in London—ostensibly studying with Dr. Dee but more practically avoiding their parents. Her two brothers were training seriously with their father this summer and riding back and forth often to Tiverton Castle. Stephen, two years older, still thought of Pippa as a child, but even her own twin, Kit, had little time to spend with her. Matthew, though, could always be counted on.

  She didn’t set out to make the day momentous. She rarely set out to do anything—if Lucette invariably acted from principle, Pippa relied on instinct. Although most people found Matthew uncommunicative, with her he spoke freely. In and around and over her quicksilver voice, he told her wry stories about his college and tutors and fellow students, making her laugh in a manner no one else did. Not even Kit.

  After the slow ramble, they reached the copse of beeches that looked down a hill onto the stone walls and spire of the old Norman church. She flung herself into the fragrant meadow grass at the trees’ edge and leaned back on her elbows, staring up at the sky. Matthew lowered himself more cautiously to sit beside her and deftly handled the domestic details of laying out breakfast: ripe strawberries, early apples, fresh bread, and soft cheese. They took their time eating, letting their stories slowly wind down into companionable silence.

  Eyes closed, Pippa lay down in the sweet-smelling, sun-warmed grass.

  “Princess Anne is coming to Wynfield soon?” Matthew asked.

  “Next week.”

  “And what trouble are the two of you planning to launch this time?” He corrected himself. “The three of you, I mean. Kit is the worst.”

  “Anabel’s the worst,” Pippa said drowsily. “Because she isn’t afraid of my mother. You’ll be here, won’t you?”

  “I’ve been invited to Theobalds for a month, to work with Lord Burghley’s household. I can hardly say no to England’s Lord High Treasurer.”

  Pippa’s eyes flew open, the first shadow of the day crossing her sunny mood. “But I want you here!”

  “What a pity I cannot learn the intricacies of English government from a fifteen-year-old girl.”

  He was deliberately baiting her, and she let herself rise to it. “Anabel is a fifteen-year-old girl,” she pointed out caustically. “And before long she will be in a position to compose her own household and council. Shouldn’t you be trying to please her?”

  “The princess is far too practical to want advisors with no experience. Why do you think Lord Burghley is taking an interest in me? Because he believes it likely Princess Anne will draw me into her circle. He intends me to be an asset.”

  Pippa delivered a practiced pout—only halfheartedly, because pouting never worked on Matthew. Really, the only person it ever worked on was her father. When he merely continued to look steadily at her, Pippa huffed a gusty sigh and gave it up.

  “I never could make you do what I wanted,” she complained.

  He made a sound between a laugh and a cough. “Do you think so?”

  There was a queer note to his voice that made Pippa sit up and study him sharply. His face looked placid as always, but she caught the slightest quiver at the corner of his lips.

  “Matthew?”

  All her life Pippa had moved through the world with an awareness of shifting layers of meaning and feeling. Most often it was her twin whose emotions pressed in upon her, Kit who came to her in flashes of his present state. But just now the emotions were entirely her own. And in all that brilliant, beautiful day, there was only one thing she wanted.

  So she took it.

  Pippa leaned in so suddenly that Matthew startled back. But she gave him no chance to speak or wonder or think at all. She simply kissed him.

  It was, of necessity, inexpert. Pippa was not in the habit of kissing the gentlemen of her acquaintance. She was attractive and wellborn and wealthy, but she also had a formidable father. Rumour had it Dominic Courtenay had nearly killed Brandon Dudley several years ago after discovering him in passionate concord with Lucette. Which meant Pippa would have to take the initiative with any man—and with no one more than the self-effacing Matthew.

  Almost at once, as though sparked by the touch, Pippa felt Matthew’s emotions blaze into life. His first instinct was pure physical response—his second, to pull away. But because she felt the resistance coming, she put her hands on the sides of his face to keep him engaged.

  And once past his second instinct, Matthew let himself return her kiss. Having nothing to compare it to, Pippa had no idea i f he was experienced or not. All she knew was that it was right. They fit perfectly, as she had always known they would.

  Despite her curious double awareness, it was still a surprise when Matthew spoke. “I love you,” he whispered in a suspiciously rough voice into her hair when they released each other to breathe. “I have always loved you, Philippa. But you already knew that, didn’t you?”

  She laughed breathlessly. “Why does everyone think I know everything?”

  “Only the things that matter.”

  And just like that, like a candle being snuffed out, the brilliant day vanished and Pippa was wrapped in a dream or vision—a very specific one that had crept into her life so long ago it seemed to have always been with her. Rushlight and fog, insistent hands and masked faces, melodious Spanish voices mixed with the unmistakable lilt of the Scots, the certain knowledge that she was dying…

  The vision had never frightened her—until now. Because for the first time, a new element was added to the familiar litany of her life’s eventual end. “Run, Philippa. Run now!” Matthew’s voice. Matthew’s beautiful, beloved voice, strained with fear and anger. But she could not run, because he was bleeding and if she left him he would die—

  Pippa gasped, the shock of it like falling into an icy Devon stream in winter. She came back to the hillside, the warm sun on her face and Matthew grasping her hands. “What’s wrong?” he asked.

  She slipped out of his hold and stood, still disoriented as to time and place. All she could do was escape as quickly as possible. “I don’t always like what I know,” she managed to reply. “And neither would you. Don’t follow me, Matthew.”

  She ran away, knowing he would not override her. Matthew’s restraint would always win out.

  1 November 1584

  Middleham Castle

  Dear Kit,

  I confess to being unreasonably envious of you! Would you believe that it snowed here yesterday? Yes, it melted by morning, but when I think of you and Stephen in the temperate Loire Valley, I long to board the first ship that will take me away from Yorkshire.

  And yes, I know, I am the one who counseled Anabel to take up residence this far north. But do you not remember Madalena’s Moorish grandmother telling me that I am by nature contradictory? Who am I to gainsay such a wise woman?

  I am not the only contradictory female in Yorkshire. I suppose you know from Anabel that Brandon Dudley and Nora Percy married suddenly last month. Not, despite what the gossips say, because there is a child coming too soon—no, for all its apparent suddenness, this wedding has been looming for some years. I am only surprised that they waited this long. Nora is already thirty and has been in love with Brandon forever. But her mother did not approve—probably because Eleanor Percy hoped that one day her daughter would learn to be as cynical at manipulating men as she is herself.

  Although Eleanor’s manipulations have not been notably successful lately. The Earl of Ormond proved willing to be her lover, but not her husband. And with the dangerous situation in Ireland, Ormond has finally broken with Eleanor for good and sent her back to England. She was not invited to her daughter’s wedding.

  Nor was the queen informed of the marriage in advance, despite Nora being her niece. Anabel is a little tense, awaiting her mother’s response.

  I wish you would write more often. To me, not just to Anabel. It has been surprisingly lonely being apart from all my siblings. At least you and Stephen are together, and Lucie has Julien.

  Still, there is little time to indulge in self-pity in this household. Anabel is almost as ferocious a ruler as her mother, and Matthew—

  Pippa Courtenay broke off writing. For a woman who had often been told she never lacked for things to say, she could not find the words to finish that sentence. How to explain her current tenuous relationship with Matthew Harrington, a man she had known since birth? At the age of fifteen, she had allowed herself one reckless moment with him—and had spent the last seven years ensuring they never again crossed the boundaries of simple friendship.

  Twice in the last eighteen months she had attempted to explain to him the wisdom of that decision and persuade him to look for his future happiness elsewhere. It had not gone according to plan.

  Which seemed to be the theme of the Courtenay family these last two years. After a bloody mess in Ireland, her older brother Stephen had spent five months confined to the Tower of London. He’d subsequently lost his title and estates as Earl of Somerset, then been unofficially banished from England. Now he and Kit—Pippa’s twin—were training in France and serving with their father’s old friend, Renaud LeClerc. And Lucie, though gloriously happy in her marriage to Renaud’s son, Julien, had suffered three miscarriages in the last two years.

  Hands came to rest on Pippa’s shoulders and she gasped. The Princess of Wales said teasingly, “Run out of things for which to scold Kit? I can provide you a list if you need it.”

  “But then what will you write to him?”

  Anabel took a seat next to Pippa, radiant in one of the soft-hued, luminous gowns meant to distinguish the princess from her royal mother’s taste for richer jewel-toned colours. With a small, secret smile, she confided to Pippa, “Don’t worry about me. I have no shortage of things to write to Kit.”

  No doubt. Pippa put aside her unfinished letter and deliberately changed the subject from emotional entanglements to something less fraught. Like politics. “How is the news from Dublin?”

  Anabel pulled a face. “It continues disastrous. With the fall of Waterford, only Dublin and Cork are open to reinforcements, and that’s presupposing we have any to send. No one thought the Spanish troops would remain in Ireland this long, but success breeds willingness and King Philip has had little difficulty rotating men in and out without losing the advantage.”

  King Philip being also Anabel’s father. She had not referred to him as such, not even to Pippa, for two years. Not since the Spanish fleet had landed ten thousand soldiers to oppose English possession of Ireland. The Spanish king was the enemy now, or at least well on his way to becoming such.

  “I suppose Mary Stuart continues to crow about it in her correspondence all over Europe,” Pippa noted. After escaping English captivity several years before, the onetime Scots and French queen had added Spain to her list of royal titles with her marriage to King Philip. Even more than her husband, Mary violently opposed all English interests.

  “Certainly, Mary cannot contain her satisfaction when writing to her oldest son. James’s letters to me are three-quarters rants about his mother and one-quarter demands that England do something about Mary Stuart and Ireland. Not that he’s offering any material help.”

  The courtship of King James VI of Scotland and England’s Princess of Wales had thus far been conducted entirely on paper. Pippa couldn’t help teasing, “Leaving no space for a single word in any of those letters about his most cherished bride-to-be?”

  With simply the slant of her eyebrows and the curl of her lip, Anabel could switch from charming to haughty. Rather like her mother. “I am quite happy to escape fulsome and insincere compliments, I assure you. I am less happy when King James presumes to criticize England’s queen and Parliament for not sending more aid to Ireland. In my last letter, I pointed out that Scotland is also a Protestant nation and perhaps they would be interested in lending money or men for the fight in Ireland. I imagine that will shut him up for a bit.”

  “This is quite the most amusing courtship I’ve ever witnessed,” Pippa offered lightly.

  “Just so long as James remains content with the courtship rather than pressing for a consummation of the treaty.”

  Anabel didn’t have to add the obvious—that she continued to hope the marriage might never take place. Anabel was stubborn and passionate and hardheaded and romantic all in one. As long as she remained unwed, there existed the smallest hope that she might be allowed to marry the man she loved: Kit Courtenay.

  Pippa sighed inwardly. The course of true love never did run smooth. But this is beginning to be ridiculous. For all of us.

 

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