This book is historical fiction set in England and France in the 1300’s. There is a fair amount of action and good character development. It has a happy ending. I liked it.
Isabel was engaged to Lord Tonbridge but did not want to marry him despite the wishes of her father. A few days before the wedding, Isabel decided to escape from Tonbridge’s castle by feigning a carriage ride and visit to Tonbridge’s mother. Isabel and Willa were childhood friends, and even though Willa was Isabel’s servant, Willa was educated and polished. To disguise their escape plot, Willa dressed as a noblewoman and Isabel as a lady in waiting. Lord Tonbridge caught wind of the planned escape and had his men pursue the two women’s carriage. The henchmen accidentally killed Isabel.
Willa continued to try to escape by carriage. An itinerant knight happened to be on the same country road. Sir Gerard Fox intervened, fought off the henchmen, and rescued Willa. Willa continued to pose as a noblewoman named Lady Isabel because she thought aristocratic Fox would abandon her if he knew she was a servant.
Tonbridge was dishonest and greedy. Tonbridge’s primary objective in wanting to marry Isabel was to obtain her dowry, which included the Icon of the Virgin Mary, a valuable relic passed down for generations to the female members of Isabel’s family. Tonbridge planned to give the Icon to Cardinal Molyneux in Paris with the expectation that Molyneux would grant Tonbridge a royal title such as King of the Vatican. Molyneux planned to use the Icon as a way to buy his way into being the next Pope..
Isabel had two sisters, Claire in Paris and Catherine, a nun somewhere in France. Once Isabel was killed, Willa (going under the assumed name of Isabel) had the goal of delivering the Icon to Isabel’s sister Claire so she could keep it out of the hands of Tonbridge.
Gerard Fox was a noble English knight who lost his family’s lands and inheritance when he and his father were excommunicated by Cardinal Molyneux, a dishonest avaricious man who wanted money and a papal title.
Willa (posing as Isabel) and Fox traveled across England and France pursued by Tonbridge. Willa was unusual in having long blonde hair, just like Isabel. Fox was unusual in having a pale horse he had recently inherited from his deceased brother.
Since Molyneux wanted the Icon, Molyneux plotted with Tonbridge and had Molyneux’s illegitimate son Basquin also pursue Isabel and Fox. They knew they were looking for a blonde woman with long hair and accompanied by a noble man riding a pale horse. They bribed and threatened people along the way to give them information on where the couple were headed.
The book jumps back and forth in time. The reader learned that long ago Molyneux had kidnapped Fox’s mother from her French summer home when Fox’s father was away. Molyneux forced marriage on the woman he had coveted since childhood. Fox’s mother gave birth to Basquin but died in childbirth. Molyneux did not treat his illegitimate son well. Basquin was an evil and violent man who was always trying to curry favor with Molyneux so that he could be formally recognized and share in his father’s wealth.
Basquin was not as smart as his half-brother Fox, but he was a skilled fighter.
After leaving England, Fox and Willa/Isabel stopped at Mont. St. Michel on a peninsula off the coast of France. There they encountered two old friends of Fox: Henri and Youssef. Those two men and Fox shared the experience of previously being wronged and imprisoned by Molyneux. Tonbridge was in hot pursuit and arrived at Mont St. Michel. Henri and Youssef agreed to help Fox and Isabel try to deliver the Icon to Isabel’s sister and her husband who lived on the outskirts of Paris. The four of them successfully got out of Mont St. Michel with the Icon.
Molyneux had the home of Claire and her husband under surveillance because he and Tonbridge knew that Isabel might try to give the Icon to Claire. Claire’s husband was in debt to Molyneux and was in danger of losing everything to Molyneux. The home was in the countryside outside Paris. The husband had a business mining limestone.
Fox and Willa/ Isabel managed to sneak into Claire’s home. Claire immediately recognized that “Isabel” was not actually her sister but was in fact the servant Willa. Claire was initially skeptical about Willa’s motivations, but then she realized that Willa was just trying to protect the Icon. (Fox was not particularly surprised to learn that the woman posing as Isabel was actually a servant.). They decided that the Icon should be delivered to the third sister, Catherine, an abbess. Catherine knew the address.
Claire’s husband walked in on their conversation and was not happy about defying Molyneux. However, they all made a deal that Fox would compete in a jousting tournament, win a big prize, and pay off the husband’s debt to Molyneux. Fox would enter the tournament under an assumed name. Claire’s husband agreed to keep Fox’s whereabouts a secret and go along with the lie that Willa was Isabel.
Fox won the tournament, won the trophy, and paid off to Molyneux the debt of Claire’s husband.
At the jousting tournament Basquin managed to get Henri alone and kill him.
Fox, Willa and Youssef then tried to find Isabel’s remaining sister Catherine, a nun/abbess. They knew that Molyneux as a cardinal would also be able to locate Catherine.
At some point Fox and Basquin fought and Fox killed his half-brother.
Fox and Willa headed to the outskirts of Avignon where Catherine was an abbess. They were pursued by Tonbridge and Molyneux, who managed to capture Fox in Avignon.
At some point Tonbridge saw Isabel/Willa and realized that she although blonde was not his betrothed. Willa told him that Tonbridge’s henchmen had killed Isabel.
Willa by now was in love with Fox. Willa made a deal to trade the Icon packaged in Isabel’s old family manuscript in exchange for Fox. They agreed the trade would take place in the middle of a bridge over a river outside Avignon. Willa placed the manuscript (without the Icon) on the railing of the bridge with a string attached to it. As soon as Fox was released to her, Willa pulled the string and the manuscript fell down towards the river. Willa hoped the manuscript would sink and be irretrievably lost so that Tonbridge would believe the Icon was lost or destroyed and stop hounding them. Unfortunately, the manuscript landed on an abandoned boat of dead pestilence victims.
Tonbridge retrieved the manuscript and wrapped it in a blanket from the ship. He triumphantly presented the manuscript to Molyneux. Molyneux unwrapped the blanket, opened the manuscript, and discovered that the Icon was not inside. Molyneux got bit by a flea from the blanket, contracted the plague, and died.
Willa and Fox made it to Avignon to meet up with Catherine who recognized Willa and accepted the Icon.
Tonbridge arrived with five henchmen with the goal of grabbing the Icon, killing Fox and raping and killing Willa. Tonbridge threatened to kill Catherine. Fox killed Tonbridge’s soldiers, possibly with the help of Youssef. Just as Fox was about to be killed, Willa drew an arrow and killed Tonbridge. The Icon was now safe.
Fox proposed marriage to Willa, whom he had come to love. Willa declined, saying that she would stay at the convent with Catherine. Youssef went his own way. As Fox rode off away from the Abbey, Willa hurriedly approached on horse. She had decided to join Fox in his lifestyle as an itinerant knight who did good deeds. Up until this point they had a very proper nonsexual relationship.
This book was interesting historical fiction. I wanted to know whether Fox and Willa would succeed in protecting the Icon and whether they would become a romantic couple.
At time the book was choppy as it jumped decades of time spans, locations, and characters’ points of view (Fox, Willa, Isabel, Molyneux, Basquin, Tonbridge, Fox’s father).
Beth Morrison, the co-author, likely wanted to demonstrate her knowledge of medieval costume, custom and history. At times the medieval terminology got cumbersome and overly detailed, but it added historical color.