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Fire (Hardcover)
L. C. Tyler
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R482
R420
Discovery Miles 4 200
Save R62 (13%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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When we last saw Ethelred Tressider, he was pulling a disappearing
act, eager to pack in his career as a mediocre mystery-writer, and
happy to leave his (deservedly) long suffering agent, Elsie,
holding the bag. But any bag that Elsie holds will soon be brimful
of chocolates, and as Ten Little Herrings opens, she is tracking
Ethelred to a run-down French hotel hosting a stamp-collectors
conference. A murder (quelle surprise!) ensues, and, as the title
(a nod to Agatha Christie's famous Ten Little Indians) suggests,
the whole thing turns into a blissfully funny parody of classic
British crime fiction.
Ahilarious parody of Agatha Christie and fourth in a series
nominated for two Edgar awards. Ethelred Tressider's career is not,
let's face it, what one might call glittering. This is not
surprising: Ethelred lost any real interest in writing mystery
novels many years ago, and his audience has never been truly
excited about reading them. And yet the bills must be paid. In a
desperate effort to revive his imagination, Ethelred books a cruise
down the Nile--cradle of civilization, ancient royal rivalries,
etc. Well, it worked for Agatha Christie.
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A Well-Earned Death
L. C. Tyler
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R304
R254
Discovery Miles 2 540
Save R50 (16%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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'I was seduced from John Grey's first scene' Ann Cleeves Duke's
Company actress Kitty Burgess has a stunning future before her -
until she vanishes after the opening performance of Aminta Grey's
new play, The Summer Birdcage. One of her fellow actors swears he
saw her being bundled into a black coach driven by six black horses
outside the theatre. Then no more is heard of her - until the body
of a young woman is found dead beside the road in Hertfordshire. It
appears to be Kitty, so Aminta and her husband Sir John Grey,
travel to Bishop's Stortford to identify her. The girl has been so
badly beaten it is impossible to tell who she is, but there are
three clues - the dress she is wearing, a ring and a copy of the
script of Aminta's play, left (perhaps a little too conveniently)
in the victim's hands. Back in London Aminta catches sight of a
young woman who looks exactly like Kitty but before she can do
anything, the woman runs off and is lost in the crowd. Meanwhile,
rumours abound at court that Kitty was about to become the king's
new mistress and all fingers are being pointed at Lady Castlemaine
for having arranged for her rival to be spirited away and killed.
And now John Grey finds that is no longer just his wife who is
determined to prove Kitty Burgess is alive. It would seem her
disappearance - and possible reappearance - is part of some much
wider conspiracy, and that Kitty may be about to play the most
dangerous, and possibly deadly, role of her life. A role from which
there may be no escape ... Praise for L.C. Tyler 'Len Tyler writes
with great charm and wit . . . made me laugh out loud' Susanna
Gregory 'Tyler juggles his characters, story, wit and clever one
liners with perfect balance' The Times 'A dizzying whirl of plot
and counterplot' Guardian 'Unusually accomplished' Helen Dunmore 'A
cracking pace, lively dialogue, wickedly witty one-liners salted
with sophistication . . . Why would we not want more of John Grey?'
The Bookbag
'I was seduced from John Grey's first scene' Ann Cleeves Eastwold,
1670, and local legend tells how on a still night, if you stand on
the beach there, you can still hear the bells of the drowned church
of St James tolling mournfully beneath the waves... Eastwold, once
one of the greatest ports in England, has been fighting a losing
battle with the sea ever since it was granted its charter by King
John. Bit by bit the waves have eaten the soft cliffs on which it
stands, until only a handful of houses remain. But still it sends
two MPs to Parliament and rich men from London are prepared to pay
well for the votes of the dozen or so remaining burgesses of the
town. The voters are looking forward to a profitable by-election,
only for the Admiralty's candidate, the unpopular Admiral Digges,
to end up in a fishing net, every bit as drowned as his prospective
constituency. Is it an accident, as the coroner has ruled, or has
Digges been murdered, as the Admiralty fears? John Grey, Justice of
the Peace and former spy, receives a request from the authorities
to uncover the truth. Hot on the heels of Grey is Samuel Pepys,
sent by his master the Duke of York to stand for the watery seat in
place of Digges. He also brings Grey clarification of what kinds of
truth the Duke is happy for him to uncover and what he should
ignore. With spring edging cautiously towards the windswept east
coast, Grey starts to question the remaining residents and other
well-paid officials of the non-existent town. He meets with
suspicion from the voters and polite obstruction from Pepys. Will
Grey uncover the murderer before the last of the town vanishes
beneath the waves? As one of inhabitants warns him: 'This is a
troubled place, Sir John. It is a dead town. Can you not feel that?
Have you not seen the bones that litter the beach? It is a dead
town that cries to be buried and forgotten.' Praise for L.C. Tyler
'Len Tyler writes with great charm and wit . . . made me laugh out
loud' Susanna Gregory 'I was seduced from John Grey's first scene'
Ann Cleeves 'Tyler juggles his characters, story, wit and clever
one liners with perfect balance' The Times 'A dizzying whirl of
plot and counterplot' Guardian 'Unusually accomplished' Helen
Dunmore 'A cracking pace, lively dialogue, wickedly witty
one-liners salted with sophistication . . . Why would we not want
more of John Grey?' The Bookbag
"How can you lose money growing a crop everyone wants with labour
that costs next to nothing?" In 1671 there are fortunes to be made
in Barbados, owning slaves and planting sugar cane. But drought,
floods, locusts and his own incompetence have brought Hubert
Umfraville down and caused him to flee the island in the most
humiliating fashion. Now back in England, he hopes to restore his
fortunes through extortion. In Barbados he has discovered a secret
that people here may pay him to keep quiet about. When his body is
found in the orchard of the house he has just rented in Essex,
there is no shortage of suspects. Has his intended blackmail victim
preempted him? Or has one or other of his old crimes caught up with
the failed plantation owner? John Grey, Essex magistrate and
husband of a famous London playwright, finds himself investigating
what seems to be the well-merited death of a former slave owner.
But as the list of suspects grows, and even encompasses a member of
his own family, Grey is forced to question the nature of justice
and what any of us is entitled to do to gain our freedom.
The fifth John Grey historical mystery 1668. John Grey is now a
Justice of the Peace and lives in the manor house he has inherited
on his mother's death with his new wife, Aminta. As the village is
cut off from the rest of the world by a heavy snowfall, George
Barwell is discovered dead in the woods. Grey is called to examine
the horribly disfigured body amidst the rumours that the attack has
been the work of the Devil as the victim had been cursed by reputed
witch Alice Mardike just days before his violent death. As
Barwell's father-in-law leads the villagers into kidnapping Alice
and throwing her into the millpond to see if she floats as a witch
or drowns as an innocent woman, Grey agrees to investigate the
murder: his main suspect is the very man leading the witch hunt.
But if Grey can't solve the mystery of George Barwell's death
within a week, Mardike will be tried for witchcraft - and the
sentence has already been decided . . . Praise for L.C. Tyler 'Wit
and witchcraft in a snowbound seventeenth century Essex make a
potent combination in The Bleak Midwinter, a welcome addition to
L.C. Tyler's fine John Grey series of crime novels' Simon Brett,
bestselling author of the Blotto and Twinks series 'Unusually
accomplished' Helen Dunmore 'I enjoyed The Bleak Midwinter
enormously. Len Tyler writes with great charm and wit, and there
were parts that made me laugh out loud' Susanna Gregory 'Tyler
juggles his characters, story, wit and clever one liners with
perfect balance' The Times 'A cracking pace, lively dialogue,
wickedly witty one-liners salted with sophistication . . . Why
would we not want more of John Grey?' The Bookbag 'A dizzying whirl
of plot and counterplot' Guardian 'I was seduced from John Grey's
first scene' Ann Cleeves
Ethelred Tressider and his agent Elsie Thirkettle have been invited
to lecture on a creative writing course at Fell Hall, a remote
location in the heart of ragged countryside that even sheep are
keen to shun. While Ethelred's success as a writer is distinctly
average, Elsie sees this as an opportunity to scout for new,
hopefully more lucrative, talent. But heavy snow falls overnight,
trapping those early arrivals inside, and tensions are quick to
emerge between the assembled group. When one of their number goes
missing, Ethelred leads a search party and makes a gruesome
discovery. With no phone signal and no hope of summoning the
police, can Ethelred and Elsie identify the killer among them
before one of them is next?
The sixth John Grey historical mystery John Grey is visited at his
London office by Thomas Cade, a shipbuilder, who tells Grey he has
evidence that Samuel Pepys is taking substantial bribes in his
position at the Naval Office. Grey sends him on his way, telling
him he has little chance against such a powerful man as Pepys - and
then the following morning Cade's stabbed body is found in the
grounds of Lincoln's Inn Later that day Grey meets up with his
benefactor Lord Arlington who tells him the king himself wants Grey
to investigate corruption in the Naval Office - and it occurs to
Grey that by dismissing Cade to his death, he has now lost his best
witness and informant. He begins his investigation by questioning
the dead man's wife - who it transpires was having an affair with
Pepys... as were a great many other ladies. And as the
investigation becomes increasingly hampered while the Court closes
ranks and threats made against his life, Grey begins to suspect
that Arlington's agenda is less to do with reform of the navy and
more to do with gaining an advantage over his rivals at Court ...
Praise for L.C. Tyler 'Len Tyler writes with great charm and wit .
. . made me laugh out loud' Susanna Gregory 'I was seduced from
John Grey's first scene' Ann Cleeves 'Tyler juggles his characters,
story, wit and clever one liners with perfect balance' The Times 'A
dizzying whirl of plot and counterplot' Guardian 'Unusually
accomplished' Helen Dunmore 'A cracking pace, lively dialogue,
wickedly witty one-liners salted with sophistication . . . Why
would we not want more of John Grey?' The Bookbag
‘Very much set in “Golden Age” territory … a great deal of fun' The Guardian
Dr Hilary Joyner is neither well liked nor well respected among his academic peers. However, he believes his next project will bring him the recognition he deserves. He is working to uncover the truth behind the ‘buried treasure story’, a local Sussex legend involving an invaluable golden statue, fabled to be hidden among the religious houses in the county. Although his latest book deadline is looming, Ethelred Tressider unwittingly finds himself hosting both the academic and his own redoubtable literary agent, Elsie Thirkettle, for the weekend. The three soon find themselves part of a hunt for the missing figure, but it isn’t long before Joyner’s research comes to an abrupt end with his death. Ethelred and Elsie must piece together the clues of the past to solve the mystery in the present – if they can avoid the distractions of chocolate and feminine wiles for long enough, that is.
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Fire (Hardcover)
L. C. Tyler
1
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R604
R164
Discovery Miles 1 640
Save R440 (73%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The fourth John Grey historical mystery 1666. London has been
destroyed by fire and its citizens are looking for somebody,
preferable foreign, to blame. Only the royal Court, with its strong
Catholic sympathies, is trying to dampen down the
post-conflaguration hysteria. Then, inconveniently, a Frenchman
admits to having started it together with an accomplice, whom he
says he has subsequently killed. John Grey is tasked by Secretary
of State, Lord Arlington, with proving conclusively that the
self-confessed fire-raiser is lying. Though Grey agrees with
Arlington that the Frenchman must be mad, he is increasingly
perplexed at how much he knows. And a body has been discovered that
appears in every way to match the description of the dead
accomplice. Grey's investigations take him and his companion, Lady
Pole, into the dangerous and still smoking ruins of the old City.
And somebody out there - somebody at the very centre of power in
England - would prefer it if they didn't live long enough to
conclude their work... Praise for L.C. Tyler 'Tyler juggles his
characters, story wit and clever one liners with perfect balance' -
The Times 'A cracking pace, lively dialogue, wickedly witty
one-liners salted with sophistication . . . Why would we not want
more of John Grey?' - The Bookbag
Ethelred Tressider, mid-list crime writer, is surprised when fellow
author Henry Holiday unexpectedly turns up on his doorstep. He's
even more surprised when Henry confesses that he may have committed
murder while drunk on New Year's Eve. Though he has little
recollection of the night, Henry fears he may have killed drinking
companion and fellow crime writer Crispin Vynall, and asks Ethelred
to discreetly make enquiries in order to discover the truth.
Duke's Company actress Kitty Burgess has a stunning future before
her - until she vanishes after the opening performance of Aminta
Grey's new play, The Summer Birdcage. One of her fellow actors
swears he saw her being bundled into a black coach driven by six
black horses outside the theatre. Then no more is heard of her -
until the body of a young woman is found dead beside the road in
Hertfordshire. It appears to be Kitty, so Aminta and her husband
Sir John Grey, travel to Bishop's Stortford to identify her. The
girl has been so badly beaten it is impossible to tell who she is,
but there are three clues - the dress she is wearing, a ring and a
copy of the script of Aminta's play, left (perhaps a little too
conveniently) in the victim's hands. Back in London Aminta catches
sight of a young woman who looks exactly like Kitty but before she
can do anything, the woman runs off and is lost in the crowd.
Meanwhile, rumours abound at court that Kitty was about to become
the king's new mistress and all fingers are being pointed at Lady
Castlemaine for having arranged for her rival to be spirited away
and killed. And now John Grey finds that is no longer just his wife
who is determined to prove Kitty Burgess is alive. It would seem
her disappearance - and possible reappearance - is part of some
much wider conspiracy, and that Kitty may be about to play the most
dangerous, and possibly deadly, role of her life. A role from which
there may be no escape ... Praise for L.C. Tyler 'Len Tyler writes
with great charm and wit . . . made me laugh out loud' Susanna
Gregory 'I was seduced from John Grey's first scene' Ann Cleeves
'Tyler juggles his characters, story, wit and clever one liners
with perfect balance' The Times 'A dizzying whirl of plot and
counterplot' Guardian 'Unusually accomplished' Helen Dunmore 'A
cracking pace, lively dialogue, wickedly witty one-liners salted
with sophistication . . . Why would we not want more of John Grey?'
The Bookbag
'I was seduced from John Grey's first scene' Ann Cleeves John Grey
is visited at his London office by Thomas Cade, a shipbuilder, who
tells Grey he has evidence that Samuel Pepys is taking substantial
bribes in his position at the Naval Office. Grey sends him on his
way, telling him he has little chance against such a powerful man
as Pepys - and then the following morning Cade's stabbed body is
found in the grounds of Lincoln's Inn Later that day Grey meets up
with his benefactor Lord Arlington who tells him the king himself
wants Grey to investigate corruption in the Naval Office - and it
occurs to Grey that by dismissing Cade to his death, he has now
lost his best witness and informant. He begins his investigation by
questioning the dead man's wife - who it transpires was having an
affair with Pepys... as were a great many other ladies. And as the
investigation becomes increasingly hampered while the Court closes
ranks and threats made against his life, Grey begins to suspect
that Arlington's agenda is less to do with reform of the navy and
more to do with gaining an advantage over his rivals at Court ...
Praise for L.C. Tyler 'Len Tyler writes with great charm and wit .
. . made me laugh out loud' Susanna Gregory 'I was seduced from
John Grey's first scene' Ann Cleeves 'Tyler juggles his characters,
story, wit and clever one liners with perfect balance' The Times 'A
dizzying whirl of plot and counterplot' Guardian 'Unusually
accomplished' Helen Dunmore 'A cracking pace, lively dialogue,
wickedly witty one-liners salted with sophistication . . . Why
would we not want more of John Grey?' The Bookbag
The fifth John Grey historical mystery 1668. John Grey is now a
Justice of the Peace and lives in the manor house he has inherited
on his mother's death with his new wife, Aminta. As the village is
cut off from the rest of the world by a heavy snowfall, George
Barwell is discovered dead in the woods. Grey is called to examine
the horribly disfigured body amidst the rumours that the attack has
been the work of the Devil as the victim had been cursed by reputed
witch Alice Mardike just days before his violent death. As
Barwell's father-in-law leads the villagers into kidnapping Alice
and throwing her into the millpond to see if she floats as a witch
or drowns as an innocent woman, Grey agrees to investigate the
murder: his main suspect is the very man leading the witch hunt.
But if Grey can't solve the mystery of George Barwell's death
within a week, Mardike will be tried for witchcraft - and the
sentence has already been decided . . . Praise for L.C. Tyler
'Tyler juggles his characters, story wit and clever one liners with
perfect balance' The Times 'A cracking pace, lively dialogue,
wickedly witty one-liners salted with sophistication . . . Why
would we not want more of John Grey?' The Bookbag 'A dizzying whirl
of plot and counterplot' Guardian 'I was seduced from John Grey's
first scene' Ann Cleeves 'Unusually accomplished' Helen Dunmore
'I was seduced from John Grey's first scene' Ann Cleeves 1670.
Eastwold, once one of the greatest ports in England, has been
fighting a losing battle with the sea ever since it was granted its
charter by King John. Bit by bit the waves have eaten the soft
cliffs on which it stands, until only a handful of houses remain.
But still it sends two MPs to Parliament and rich men from London
are prepared to pay well for the votes of the dozen or so remaining
burgesses of the town. The voters are looking forward to a
profitable bye-election, only for the Admiralty's candidate, the
unpopular Admiral Digges, to end up in a fishing net, every bit as
drowned as his prospective constituency. Is it an accident, as the
coroner has ruled, or has Digges been murdered, as the Admiralty
fears? John Grey, Justice of the Peace and former spy, receives a
request from the authorities to uncover the truth. With spring
edging cautiously towards the windswept east coast, Grey starts to
question the remaining residents and other well-paid officials of
the non-existent town. He is met with suspicion and polite
obstruction from the voters - and then another suspicious death
occurs. Will Grey uncover the murderer before the last of the town
vanishes beneath the waves? Praise for L.C. Tyler 'Len Tyler writes
with great charm and wit . . . made me laugh out loud' Susanna
Gregory 'I was seduced from John Grey's first scene' Ann Cleeves
'Tyler juggles his characters, story, wit and clever one liners
with perfect balance' The Times 'A dizzying whirl of plot and
counterplot' Guardian 'Unusually accomplished' Helen Dunmore 'A
cracking pace, lively dialogue, wickedly witty one-liners salted
with sophistication . . . Why would we not want more of John Grey?'
The Bookbag
When obscure crime writer Ethelred Tressider vanishes from his
home, his indefatigable agent, Elsie Thirkettle, is soon on his
trail. Finding him proves surprisingly easy. Bringing him home is
another matter. Having followed Ethelred to a hotel in the French
Loire, she finds herself confined there with him after a prominent
philatelist is murdered. Elsie is torn between her natural desire
to interfere in the police investigation and her urgent need to
escape to the local chocolatier.
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Fire (Paperback)
L. C. Tyler
1
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R298
R248
Discovery Miles 2 480
Save R50 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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The fourth John Grey historical mystery 1666. London has been
destroyed by fire and its citizens are looking for somebody,
preferable foreign, to blame. Only the royal Court, with its strong
Catholic sympathies, is trying to dampen down the
post-conflaguration hysteria. Then, inconveniently, a Frenchman
admits to having started it together with an accomplice, whom he
says he has subsequently killed. John Grey is tasked by Secretary
of State, Lord Arlington, with proving conclusively that the
self-confessed fire-raiser is lying. Though Grey agrees with
Arlington that the Frenchman must be mad, he is increasingly
perplexed at how much he knows. And a body has been discovered that
appears in every way to match the description of the dead
accomplice. Grey's investigations take him and his companion, Lady
Pole, into the dangerous and still smoking ruins of the old City.
And somebody out there - somebody at the very centre of power in
England - would prefer it if they didn't live long enough to
conclude their work... Praise for L.C. Tyler 'Tyler juggles his
characters, story wit and clever one liners with perfect balance'
The Times 'A cracking pace, lively dialogue, wickedly witty
one-liners salted with sophistication . . . Why would we not want
more of John Grey?' The Bookbag 'A dizzying whirl of plot and
counterplot' Guardian 'I was seduced from John Grey's first scene'
Ann Cleeves 'Unusually accomplished' Helen Dunmore 'Literate,
witty, and huge fun' Irish Independent
The second John Grey historical mystery It is December 1657. John
Grey, at his cramped desk in Lincoln's Inn, is attempting to resume
his legal career. A mysterious message from a 'Mr SK' tempts him
out into the snowy streets of London and to what he believes will
be a harmless diversion from his studies. But Mr SK's letter proves
to have been intended for somebody else entirely and Grey
unwittingly finds himself in the middle of a plot to assassinate
the Lord Protector - a plot about which he now knows more than it
is safe to know. Can he both prevent the murder and (of greater
immediate relevance) save his own skin? Both the Sealed Knot and
Cromwell's Secretary of State, John Thurloe believe he is on their
side, but he is unsure that either is on his. As somebody is kind
enough to point out to him: 'You are a brave man, Grey. The life of
a double agent can be exciting but very short.' Grey just has to
hope that prediction is wrong. Praise for L.C. Tyler 'Tyler juggles
his characters, story wit and clever one liners with perfect
balance' - The Times 'A cracking pace, lively dialogue, wickedly
witty one-liners salted with sophistication . . . Why would we not
want more of John Grey?' - The Bookbag
The first John Grey historical mystery The theatres are padlocked.
Christmas has been cancelled. It is 1657 and the unloved English
Republic is eight years old. Though Cromwell's joyless grip on
power appears immovable, many still look to Charles Stuart's
dissolute and threadbare court-in-exile, and some are prepared to
risk their lives plotting a restoration. For the officers of the
Republic, constant vigilance is needed. So, when the bloody corpse
of a Royalist spy is discovered on the dung heap of a small Essex
village, why is the local magistrate so reluctant to investigate?
John Grey, a young lawyer with no clients, finds himself alone in
believing that the murdered man deserves justice. Grey is drawn
into a vortex of plot and counter-plot and into the
all-encompassing web of intrigue spun by Cromwell's own spy-master,
John Thurloe. So when nothing is what is seems, can Grey trust
anyone? 'Tyler juggles his characters, story wit and clever one
liners with perfect balance' - The Times 'A cracking pace, lively
dialogue, wickedly witty one-liners salted with sophistication . .
. Why would we not want more of John Grey?' - The Bookbag
'Witty and amazing, L. C. Tyler has a wicked sense of humour' M. C.
Beaton 1665, and the Great Plague has London in its grip. Where
better, then, to hide a murdered man than among the corpses on
their way to the Plague pit? When a supposed Plague victim is found
with a knife in his back, John Grey, now a successful lawyer, is
called in to investigate. The dead man was known to be carrying a
compromising letter from the Duke of York to the French ambassador.
Now the letter has vanished and Secretary of State Lord Arlington
wants it. But Arlington is not the only one trying to recover the
letter. Somebody has killed once trying to obtain it - and is
prepared to kill again. Grey must set off on a journey through
Plague-ravaged England to fulfil his commission and keep himself
safe from his enemies - if the Plague doesn't get him first...
Praise for L.C. Tyler 'Tyler juggles his characters, story wit and
clever one liners with perfect balance' The Times 'A historical
thriller, but one written with tongue firmly in cheek . . . Tyler
is a witty writer, and this third outing for Grey is great fun' -
Sunday Times 'An exciting, well-plotted and brilliantly witty
historical mystery' For Winter Nights
The second John Grey historical mystery It is December 1657. John
Grey, at his cramped desk in Lincoln's Inn, is attempting to resume
his legal career. A mysterious message from a 'Mr SK' tempts him
out into the snowy streets of London and to what he believes will
be a harmless diversion from his studies. But Mr SK's letter proves
to have been intended for somebody else entirely and Grey
unwittingly finds himself in the middle of a plot to assassinate
the Lord Protector - a plot about which he now knows more than it
is safe to know. Can he both prevent the murder and (of greater
immediate relevance) save his own skin? Both the Sealed Knot and
Cromwell's Secretary of State, John Thurloe believe he is on their
side, but he is unsure that either is on his. As somebody is kind
enough to point out to him: 'You are a brave man, Grey. The life of
a double agent can be exciting but very short.' Grey just has to
hope that prediction is wrong. Praise for L.C. Tyler 'Tyler juggles
his characters, story wit and clever one liners with perfect
balance' - The Times 'A cracking pace, lively dialogue, wickedly
witty one-liners salted with sophistication . . . Why would we not
want more of John Grey?' - The Bookbag
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