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Assassin's Masque (3) (Palace of Spies) Hardcover – January 12, 2016
by
Sarah Zettel
(Author)
Book 3 of 3: Palace of Spies
-
Reading age12 years and up
-
Print length432 pages
-
LanguageEnglish
-
Grade level7 - 9
-
Lexile measure830L
-
Dimensions5.5 x 1.4 x 8.25 inches
-
PublisherHMH Books for Young Readers
-
Publication dateJanuary 12, 2016
-
ISBN-100544074084
-
ISBN-13978-0544074088
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"For fans of humorous historical mysteries. . . . a delightful read."
—VOYA
"Like its heroine, Zettel's tale is still smarter and wittier than its rivals."
—Kirkus Reviews
—VOYA
"Like its heroine, Zettel's tale is still smarter and wittier than its rivals."
—Kirkus Reviews
About the Author
SARAH ZETTEL is an award-winning science fiction, fantasy, romance, and mystery writer. She is married to a rocket scientist and has a cat named Buffy the Vermin Slayer. Visit her website at www.sarahzettel.com.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Prologue
In which Our Heroine makes a few summary remarks.
I trust those readers not yet familiar with these chronicles will permit me the liberty of making my own introduction. My name is Margaret Preston Fitzroy, though I am more familiarly known as Peggy. Publicly, I am the daughter of Jonathan and Elizabeth Fitzroy and a maid of honor to Her Royal Highness, Caroline, Princess of Wales. Privately (or at least, less publicly), I am a con?dential agent in the service of the Crown.
Until recently, I was also an orphan. I lived with my dour uncle, Sir Oliver Trowbridge Preston Pierpont, and my less dour, but far more nervous, Aunt Pierpont, née Delphine Amilee Carlton. Fortunately for me, this uninviting pair was provided with a daughter of about my own age, Olivia, who became my best friend, despite her penchant for keeping ?ocks of small, fat, excessively ?u?y dogs.
My residence with uncle, aunt, cousin, and dogs halted abruptly when I refused to honor the betrothal my uncle had contracted to a youth named Sebastian Sandford. I had intended to do my best by the arrangement until Mr. Sandford attempted to help himself to my virginity prior to our marriage, without my consent.
Presented with this information, my uncle displayed his sympathy for my plight by throwing me out into the street. This being an unpromising state of a?airs for any young lady, it caused me some consternation. Fortunately, however, the gentleman who would become my patron and tutor in all matters related to the craft of the con?dential agent and courtier had recently introduced himself. At that time he called himself Mr. Tinder?int. It was some time before I discovered that this overdressed, easily ?ustered, and apparently foolish “Mister’s” right name and title were Hugh Thurlow Flintcross Gainsford, Earl Tierney.
Under the auspices of Mr. Tinder?int and Certain Other Persons, I found myself impersonating a maid of honor to Her Royal Highness, Princess Caroline. I discovered a forged letter, which led to a series of Nefarious Plots with Foreign Implications designed to topple the House of Hanover from the throne of England and set up the pretender James Edward Stuart as king.
It was very much the fashion among our English aristocrats to become out of sorts with the individuals who wore the crown of England. Therefore, on a regular basis, sundry persons would organize their armies with the intention of changing out one monarch for another. This happened to Charles the First, and after him the Lord Protector, and, more recently, James the Second. James, being more prudent, or perhaps just faster, than Charles, managed to get away to France before he was deprived of his head as well as his crown.
Once James the Second ?ed, William and Mary Stuart, and then Anne Stuart, took the throne. Anne did not leave any living heirs, so the English nobility was faced with a weighty decision: to allow the stubbornly unrepentant—and Catholic—James to resume the throne, or to ?nd some entirely new (and Protestant) branch of the monarchy to ?ll his post. Opinions were expressed, plots were hatched, but all to no avail. It was decided that the ruling family of Hanover was close enough kin to the dying Queen Anne to ?ll the bill. So it was that the Elector of Hanover was o?ered the throne, which he accepted. In so doing, he became our current king, George.
As may be imagined, this turn of events left James Stuart (formerly James the Second) somewhat put out. He proceeded to express his displeasure through a series of (unsuccessful) invasions, which continued at regular intervals until he died. His son—the previously mentioned James Edward Stuart—proved himself a model of ?lial piety, and continued in the family tradition of attempting to seize the throne. As may be imagined, these e?orts spawned an ongoing series of plots and plans on the part of those Stuart partisans who had by now come to be known as Jacobites. These plots happened to involve the Sandford family—most particularly Sebastian Sandford’s father, Lord Lynn?eld, and his older brother, Julius.
The plots also, much to my surprise, involved my dour Uncle Pierpont.
Rebellion, it must be understood, is an expensive business. It requires careful, discreet men to handle its money. And as Uncle Pierpont owned a private bank, the Sandfords and others funneled a great deal of money through that bank and into the Jacobite cause. This, while lucrative for the House of Pierpont, was also treasonous. This treason was compounded by Uncle Pierpont’s acquiescing with the Sandfords’ insistence that I honor my engagement to Sebastian Sandford. It may be therefore understood that I experienced a great deal of satisfaction in exposing the Sandfords as Jacobite Plotters and Nefarious Persons. That satisfaction, however, arrived only after the Sandfords engaged in a spirited attempt to deprive me of my life.
Although I assure my readers my e?orts were considerable, my survival was much aided by the abrupt and unexpected return of my father, Jonathan Fitzroy. He had not been in his grave as I’d thought. He had instead been in France, which some might declare to be worse. When I was still a child, a royal command had sent him to ferret out the plans of the would-be Stuart king, James III. While my father spied upon James and his allies, my mother, Elizabeth, also unbeknownst to me, conducted similar investigations among London’s drawing rooms and royal court.
Those few who knew my parents’ profession considered it unnecessary to inform a small child her parents were spies. Therefore, I was left to conclude that my father had simply abandoned me. I was, of course, delighted to ?nd this was not the case. At the same time, adjustment to the ownership of a father of any sort—let alone such a dashing and unpredictable character as Jonathan Fitzroy—was proving to be more complex than I would have imagined.
For a time, I was able to soothe this agitation by happily looking forward to a future entirely devoid of Sandfords. The senior member of that clan did not survive his particular brush with Adventure. I con?dently assumed the family’s remaining branches would be quickly pruned by the blade of the King’s Justice. After all, the old lord had been a smuggler, traitor, kidnapper, murderer, and cad, and there could be no doubt that at least the elder son, Julius, partook of these delightful activities as well.
Julius, however, now held the title of Lord Lynn?eld, and the possession of a minor title is a great shield and bar to prosecution, even when it comes to treason.
It was also the case that much of the proof against the Sandfords had been destroyed.
When Julius Sandford was taken to the palace to be questioned, Uncle Pierpont decided he did not wish to be arrested, charged, and hanged, with his goods and chattels con?scated while his wife and daughter were reduced to irredeemable disgrace and poverty.
This was the true and ultimate reason behind the house ?re in St. James’s Square, which, not coincidentally, started in the book room, where my uncle kept the majority of his private papers. He also kept himself there while it all burned to ash.
So it had come to pass that while I was poor and fatherless no longer, that coldest of states had fallen squarely upon my cousin, Olivia. Olivia responded to this reversal with all the grace and fortitude that I had so frequently observed in her throughout the years of our friendship.
That is to say that, by the day of her father’s funeral, it was becoming increasingly evident that my dearest cousin was ready to explode.
In which Our Heroine makes a few summary remarks.
I trust those readers not yet familiar with these chronicles will permit me the liberty of making my own introduction. My name is Margaret Preston Fitzroy, though I am more familiarly known as Peggy. Publicly, I am the daughter of Jonathan and Elizabeth Fitzroy and a maid of honor to Her Royal Highness, Caroline, Princess of Wales. Privately (or at least, less publicly), I am a con?dential agent in the service of the Crown.
Until recently, I was also an orphan. I lived with my dour uncle, Sir Oliver Trowbridge Preston Pierpont, and my less dour, but far more nervous, Aunt Pierpont, née Delphine Amilee Carlton. Fortunately for me, this uninviting pair was provided with a daughter of about my own age, Olivia, who became my best friend, despite her penchant for keeping ?ocks of small, fat, excessively ?u?y dogs.
My residence with uncle, aunt, cousin, and dogs halted abruptly when I refused to honor the betrothal my uncle had contracted to a youth named Sebastian Sandford. I had intended to do my best by the arrangement until Mr. Sandford attempted to help himself to my virginity prior to our marriage, without my consent.
Presented with this information, my uncle displayed his sympathy for my plight by throwing me out into the street. This being an unpromising state of a?airs for any young lady, it caused me some consternation. Fortunately, however, the gentleman who would become my patron and tutor in all matters related to the craft of the con?dential agent and courtier had recently introduced himself. At that time he called himself Mr. Tinder?int. It was some time before I discovered that this overdressed, easily ?ustered, and apparently foolish “Mister’s” right name and title were Hugh Thurlow Flintcross Gainsford, Earl Tierney.
Under the auspices of Mr. Tinder?int and Certain Other Persons, I found myself impersonating a maid of honor to Her Royal Highness, Princess Caroline. I discovered a forged letter, which led to a series of Nefarious Plots with Foreign Implications designed to topple the House of Hanover from the throne of England and set up the pretender James Edward Stuart as king.
It was very much the fashion among our English aristocrats to become out of sorts with the individuals who wore the crown of England. Therefore, on a regular basis, sundry persons would organize their armies with the intention of changing out one monarch for another. This happened to Charles the First, and after him the Lord Protector, and, more recently, James the Second. James, being more prudent, or perhaps just faster, than Charles, managed to get away to France before he was deprived of his head as well as his crown.
Once James the Second ?ed, William and Mary Stuart, and then Anne Stuart, took the throne. Anne did not leave any living heirs, so the English nobility was faced with a weighty decision: to allow the stubbornly unrepentant—and Catholic—James to resume the throne, or to ?nd some entirely new (and Protestant) branch of the monarchy to ?ll his post. Opinions were expressed, plots were hatched, but all to no avail. It was decided that the ruling family of Hanover was close enough kin to the dying Queen Anne to ?ll the bill. So it was that the Elector of Hanover was o?ered the throne, which he accepted. In so doing, he became our current king, George.
As may be imagined, this turn of events left James Stuart (formerly James the Second) somewhat put out. He proceeded to express his displeasure through a series of (unsuccessful) invasions, which continued at regular intervals until he died. His son—the previously mentioned James Edward Stuart—proved himself a model of ?lial piety, and continued in the family tradition of attempting to seize the throne. As may be imagined, these e?orts spawned an ongoing series of plots and plans on the part of those Stuart partisans who had by now come to be known as Jacobites. These plots happened to involve the Sandford family—most particularly Sebastian Sandford’s father, Lord Lynn?eld, and his older brother, Julius.
The plots also, much to my surprise, involved my dour Uncle Pierpont.
Rebellion, it must be understood, is an expensive business. It requires careful, discreet men to handle its money. And as Uncle Pierpont owned a private bank, the Sandfords and others funneled a great deal of money through that bank and into the Jacobite cause. This, while lucrative for the House of Pierpont, was also treasonous. This treason was compounded by Uncle Pierpont’s acquiescing with the Sandfords’ insistence that I honor my engagement to Sebastian Sandford. It may be therefore understood that I experienced a great deal of satisfaction in exposing the Sandfords as Jacobite Plotters and Nefarious Persons. That satisfaction, however, arrived only after the Sandfords engaged in a spirited attempt to deprive me of my life.
Although I assure my readers my e?orts were considerable, my survival was much aided by the abrupt and unexpected return of my father, Jonathan Fitzroy. He had not been in his grave as I’d thought. He had instead been in France, which some might declare to be worse. When I was still a child, a royal command had sent him to ferret out the plans of the would-be Stuart king, James III. While my father spied upon James and his allies, my mother, Elizabeth, also unbeknownst to me, conducted similar investigations among London’s drawing rooms and royal court.
Those few who knew my parents’ profession considered it unnecessary to inform a small child her parents were spies. Therefore, I was left to conclude that my father had simply abandoned me. I was, of course, delighted to ?nd this was not the case. At the same time, adjustment to the ownership of a father of any sort—let alone such a dashing and unpredictable character as Jonathan Fitzroy—was proving to be more complex than I would have imagined.
For a time, I was able to soothe this agitation by happily looking forward to a future entirely devoid of Sandfords. The senior member of that clan did not survive his particular brush with Adventure. I con?dently assumed the family’s remaining branches would be quickly pruned by the blade of the King’s Justice. After all, the old lord had been a smuggler, traitor, kidnapper, murderer, and cad, and there could be no doubt that at least the elder son, Julius, partook of these delightful activities as well.
Julius, however, now held the title of Lord Lynn?eld, and the possession of a minor title is a great shield and bar to prosecution, even when it comes to treason.
It was also the case that much of the proof against the Sandfords had been destroyed.
When Julius Sandford was taken to the palace to be questioned, Uncle Pierpont decided he did not wish to be arrested, charged, and hanged, with his goods and chattels con?scated while his wife and daughter were reduced to irredeemable disgrace and poverty.
This was the true and ultimate reason behind the house ?re in St. James’s Square, which, not coincidentally, started in the book room, where my uncle kept the majority of his private papers. He also kept himself there while it all burned to ash.
So it had come to pass that while I was poor and fatherless no longer, that coldest of states had fallen squarely upon my cousin, Olivia. Olivia responded to this reversal with all the grace and fortitude that I had so frequently observed in her throughout the years of our friendship.
That is to say that, by the day of her father’s funeral, it was becoming increasingly evident that my dearest cousin was ready to explode.
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Product details
- Publisher : HMH Books for Young Readers (January 12, 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 432 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0544074084
- ISBN-13 : 978-0544074088
- Reading age : 12 years and up
- Lexile measure : 830L
- Grade level : 7 - 9
- Item Weight : 1.15 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 1.4 x 8.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,714,220 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
4.7 out of 5 stars
4.7 out of 5
30 global ratings
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Reviewed in the United States on January 15, 2016
Verified Purchase
This series is so fun. It is YA, but any fan of the lighter side of historical mysteries will be happy. Not too long has passed since the last book as we start off at Uncle Pierpont's funeral. A mystery woman arrives in heavy veils and gives a Jacobite token to Aunt Pierpont garnering strange reactions from Aunt Pierpont, Old Mother Pierpont, and Sophy Howe. Soon the older females decamp for northern family members and Olivia is at court along with her cousin. Strange undercurrents are going on with the Howe and Sebastian being helpful? plotting? something else? Hijinks ensue because it is teenagers in high stakes espionage, but really great. Really excited to see how the big reveal at the end will play out
Reviewed in the United States on June 22, 2017
Verified Purchase
A fun book. This is part of a trilogy, and I've enjoyed them all. They are really young adult books (and I'm not) but can be enjoyed by all who like a strong female (even though teenaged) lead.
Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2017
Verified Purchase
Ah, book three, just as riveting, with just as much sleuthing and intrigue as the first two. A nicely amount of plot twist (had me questioning what was to happen next!?). Loved it.
Reviewed in the United States on August 4, 2017
Verified Purchase
This series is among the most entertaining that I have come across in a long time. Each is well plotted, well edited, interesting, and fun.
Reviewed in the United States on October 9, 2017
Margaret Preston Fitzroy is better known as Peggy. She is also a confidential agent to the crown. She always thought she was an orphan, that is, until her father resurfaced from some spy event he’d been involved in. Peggy had been thrown out of her uncle’s home because she refused to marry a man they chose for her. As a result, and in order to survive, she impersonated a Maid of Honor to Princess Caroline. Of course, this was Peggy’s undercover position and since there was a conspiracy and an over throwing of some heirs from the thrown she had a job to do. There is a new player in town, a woman with a veil. With the mystery around her uncle and her father missing again, who will Peggy be able to trust?
Author Sarah Zettel has completed this trilogy with a nice ending for the heroine. This book has everything mystery and romance readers would love. There is plenty here for boys to become engaged such as spies and royal courts. Parents and teachers will want to read this series too.
Author Sarah Zettel has completed this trilogy with a nice ending for the heroine. This book has everything mystery and romance readers would love. There is plenty here for boys to become engaged such as spies and royal courts. Parents and teachers will want to read this series too.
Reviewed in the United States on December 28, 2015
If you enjoyed the first two books in the trilogy, I'm sure you'll want to read the conclusion. The style of writing was affected, with much internal deliberations by the heroine including many "who do I trust" monologues. The love interest was steadfast, and the best friend was a bit of the comic relief. Misdirections were plentiful. There was enough background to follow the story if you had not read the first two books (a first chapter gave a summary of what had gone before). I found the pacing SLOW. It was easy to put the book down, even during the more "exciting" sections. I never felt overly connected with any of the characters, and the constant machinations weren't entertaining to me. Again, if you liked the first books, I'm sure this is a conclusion worth reading; however, I doubt I could have finished three books written in this style with these characters.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 29, 2016
I didn't realize that this was the 3rd book of a trilogy but my 15yr old was very intrigued so we borrowed the first two. She liked them all but said compared to other trilogies (Divergent, Hunger Games) that the writing and stories got better with this series and Assassin's Masque was her favorite. She thought it was better than the Divergent series overall so that is saying something. The main character is strong and believable which is really hard to write for a female. There is more fashion and girly aspects to this series she said (which isn't a highlight for my tomboy daughter) but I can see how this could persuade more girls into reading. This books is a sold 4 stars. Recommended for teens and YA.
Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2016
I still have to read the first book of this series but having read the second book, I felt suitably up-to-speed to get into this presumably final book by Sarah Zettel. "Assassin's Masque" picks up with the now 17-year-old Margaret "Peggy" Fitzroy. Peggy's father has returned from the dead so she is no longer an orphan nor engaged. Unusual as it is, she is trained in espionage which makes her somewhat unsure on her relationship with her father as well as intrigues rising back at court.
I do like the period that the story takes place and Zettel's pacing is solid too. The lead, Peggy, is likable enough and I did like that she wasn't too perfect. The ending is a little rushed but overall, it was good solid read.
I do like the period that the story takes place and Zettel's pacing is solid too. The lead, Peggy, is likable enough and I did like that she wasn't too perfect. The ending is a little rushed but overall, it was good solid read.