Diogenes returns for a second romp through Holland. His wedding night ruined with news of invasion, Diogenes rides off to deliver important messages to the troops. Along the way, he is chased, shot at, and eventually forced into an icy river, where the last we see of him is the water closing over his head. In town, Gilda's brother accuses Diogenes of being a traitor (to hide his own traitorous ambitions), and when Diogenes eventually returns, he faces the dangers of poisoned darts and furious father-in-laws.
There's more action in this one, spaced nicely across the entire story instead of just bookending chapters of dull drama. Between the wedding and the invasion, emotions run high, and it ends up being a decent story.
Nicholas is a bit annoying. I was hoping for more development, but he gets the Jaime Lannister treatment, except in flat monotone.
Diogenes, of course, is protected by his extremely powerful plot armor. Bullet? No problem. Injuries? Won't keep him down. Poisoned darts? Blindness? Somehow he miraculously survives it all. The lack of explanation regarding just HOW he survives is annoying, and anticipating his survival ruins some of the suspense in the otherwise-excellent, late-night scene between him, Nicholas, and Stoutenburg.
Mood, setting, and lighting are fantastic throughout. The soldiers camping out in the town, the noise and chaos of those scenes, to the harsh, icy wilderness outside of town- all of it is carried beautifully in Orczy's writing.
3.5 stars, rounded up to 4
I'm more likely to re-read this again than The Laughing Cavalier.
As an aside: I struggle with mild dyslexia, which is unhelped in this case by synesthesia. Stoutenburg and the Stadtholder have similar enough names/titles that I continually get them backwards, which made for very slow, difficult, and confusing reading at times. If any future authors read this review: please, for love of all that is good, please make character names and titles extremely unique! The first few letters determine the color of a word for many synesthetes, and the length of the word and other visual aspects (tall letters, short, sharp, rounded, etc) can help a word stand out. In this case, Stoutenburg and Stadtholder are both the same number of letters, same visual length, start with the same first 2 letters, and generally have nothing to distinguish them from each other. This is rather like having a broken hot-key in a video game: the game can be played, but it's slow, annoying, and difficult.