Lady Jane Grey was held for almost 7 months in the Tower after her cousin Edward VI declared her his successor to the throne. Jane, Edward, and Jane's husband Dudley were all very young and were manipulated by their parents and members of the Privvy council. Henry VIII's succession act of 1544 had already restored his "illegitimate" daughters to their rightful places in line to be heirs to the throne, and after 9 days, Jane and her husband and their fathers were removed bu Queen Mary and her forces. Dudley's father was executed. Jane and Dudley were held in the Tower for almost 7 months, leading up to an uprising orchestrated by Jane's father, which led not only to his beheading, but also to that of Jane and Guildford's executions.
This book imagines what might have happened in those 7 months. Jane was actually accompanied to the Tower with three ladies in waiting. Ladies in waiting were not necessarily friends of the royalty, but were chosen for their noble standings. Little is known about the actual Elizabeth Tilney, and it is highly doubtful she spent all this time exclusively with Lady Jane--more than likely, the three ladies took turns staying with Jane in the confinement. But here, Dunn portrays her as a teenager (like Jane) who wants to escape from her home and family, and possibly, an affair with an older man.
Aside from flashbacks to Tilney's home, scenes around the Tower, and the trial of Jane and Guidlford, this novel takes place mostly in the confined space of the rooms in the tower where Jane is held. Being royalty--Jane was the great niece of Henry the VIII--afforded a rather comfortable confinement, with domestic servants to prepare food for them, do laundry, and allow Jane to keep her beloved books and writing materials with her, as well as have her ladies (or in this fictionalized version, lady) in waiting with her for support and help with dressing. Elizabeth is nominally a Catholic, and Jane is of course, a Protestant. While both are still teenagers, they have had very different lives. Jane leads an austere and pious life, while Elizabeth is from a boisterous household where she is largely ignored as the youngest daughter. Jane has been close with both Katherine Parr
(Henry's last wife) and Edward VI, Henry's son and the King. Elizabeth has been close to Harry, an older neighbor of the Tilney's, embarking on an illicit and hidden sexual relationship with him. But all three teenagers--Jane, Guildford, and Elizabeth--have their youth and relative inexperience with the real world in common. Elizabeth becomes close to both Jane and Guildford.
This is a total fiction of course--no one really knows what Jane and Guildford's days were like in the Tower, aside from the usual deprivations and worries. They probably did not develop any meaningful relationships with people they didn't already know there, aside from Jane's quickly formed friendship with Queen Mary's chaplain, John Feckenham, who was sent to convert Jane to Catholicism immediately before her execution (he was unsuccessful).
Elizabeth's character uses language that sounds above her station in life--she is not a scholarly girl, despte her nobility--reading is not a hobby. She also uses language that is anachronistic. However, where Dunn did reach me in this novel was with the emotional connection that occurs towards the end of the novel, when Elizabeth is faced with both the reality of Jane and Guildford's impending execution, and that of the actual beheading of her friends. She is terrorized. She finally sees that everyone living and working in the Tower is faced with this reality more often that she ever imagined. Her escape from her own manor home and family becomes much more: it's a complete loss of innocence, and an education.
While this novel is highly flawed, I could totally see it edited and rewritten as a wonderful stage play, taking place in one room in the Tower. I did love the way Jane's character was not romanticized. Guildford as well, is written in a more realistic manner--an immature teenage boy with a love for life, and his family, and even his child bride.