Historical Fiction author, Jen Black, is talking about the inspiration behind her fabulous series — The Scottish Queen
Mary, Queen of Scots: "Mary in captivity,"by Nicholas Hilliard, c.1578 |
I always wanted to write and the stories that interested me
always seem to be set in the past. Even at age eleven I was an avid Mary Queen
of Scots fan and later I supported – and still do - Richard III.
I didn’t have the confidence to attempt writing until I was
thirty and even then, I kept it very much a secret enterprise. It was hard work
with a typewriter and Snopak!
My favourite author will always be Dorothy Dunnett, and it
was reading her rather austere conception of Marie de Guise that set me
researching and thinking about the character. Dunnett’s conception was a very
good one, but I began to think of a softer, warmer personality and she slowly
grew in my mind. Matho was a minor character in Fair Border Bride and several people told me how much they liked
him and why didn’t I write about him?
So, I did. I brought the two characters together in this
trilogy. The everyday facts are as close to history as I can get them for
everything but the relationship between the Dowager and Matho, because Matho is
entirely fictional. I hope Marie had an Englishman who helped her but I doubt
it!
The SCOTTISH QUEEN trilogy is filled with action, romance,
loyalty and betrayal; set against the turbulent English-Scottish wars of the
1540s, complex characters surround the infant queen of Scotland. Powerful lords
fight for their own survival and Englishman Matho Spirston becomes entangled in
the plots that surround the valiant Dowager Queen struggling alone to save her
daughter’s crown.
Abduction of the Scots Queen
(Scottish Queen trilogy Book 1)
Encouraged by Henry VIII’s promised reward, Matho and
Harry set out to abduct the infant Scots Queen and bring her to England even
though Matho thinks they have as much chance of success as a "duckling
chased by a fox.” Others pursue the same quest – namely Meg Douglas, King
Henry's headstrong niece, who flatters Matho into helping her and at the same
time snares the interest of Lord Lennox, who alternately woos her and the
Dowager Queen. The adventures that follow are swift paced and full of twists
and turns.
Queen's Courier
(The Scottish Queen Trilogy Book 2)
Against
a background of political intrigue and Tudor violence, love is not easy to find
or sustain. The Queen Dowager repudiates it, Lord Lennox balances Meg’s
attributes against those of the Dowager and the lures of Henry Tudor. Matho
Spirston falls for Scots lass Phoebe, the English invasion of Edinburgh brings
disaster, Meg nurses her guilty secret and Lennox makes his choice.
The Queen's Letters
(The Scottish Queen Trilogy Book 3)
Grief-stricken, Matho puts his life in danger when he
volunteers to deliver the Dowager Queen's letters to France. Dodging assassins,
befriending teenager Jehan and saddled with the Dowager’s illegitimate,
outspoken niece, danger intensifies when he sets out to unmask a powerful enemy
and the hangman threatens once more. Meg achieves her dearest wish, but finds
it is not all as she imagined.
Excerpt
From The Queen’s Letters
May
25th 1544, Dieppe
Matho
landed feet first, fell onto his backside with a thud that snapped his jaws
together and slid toward another drop. A voice called out nearby as he fell
over the edge of the roof, dropped into something wet and smelly, and
re-bounded onto the hard, cold cobblestoned yard. Pain sprang up in his
shoulder as if someone had hit it with a sledgehammer. Snatching a short, swift
breath he knew from the stink that he had landed on what the Aydon farmers
would have called the muck heap.
The voice came closer; French phrases that meant nothing to
him. Making careful movements with one hand jammed against his shoulder, he
rolled to his knees. The satchel containing the Dowager’s letters hung askew,
and the strap dug into his neck.
“Monsieur! Monsieur!”
A brisk volley of rapid French followed. The stable lad, his torch held high,
loomed up beside him.
“Help me up,” Matho croaked. His newly learned French had
deserted him.
A warm hand helped him to his feet. Matho, bent like an old
man and none too steady on his feet, stood in the inn yard and gazed
open-mouthed at the thirty-foot drop he had survived; then the rosy glow that
lit the sky above the building caught his attention. Sparks flew up against the
indigo sky and the hollow roar of the flames grew louder as a portion of the
roof gave way.
He half-turned, lost his balance and grabbed the lad’s arm to
stop himself falling. “D’ye speak English?”
“Oui, monsieur.”
“My French is not good.” He took a deep breath to steady his
heart, still going at a gallop.
“Many English arrive in Dieppe. They speak no French.” The
youth’s tone was either an accusation, or dismissive; most probably both.
Matho rubbed a hand across his face. “Aye, well. There’s no
call for it back home. What’s yer name?”
“Jehan Bourdain.”
“Help me get my horse, Jehan? The whole lot is going to be
burning soon.” He gestured to the smoke and flames stretching high above the
roof of the inn and decided against helping douse the fire. The layout of the
place was unknown to him, his French had deserted him and his back pained him
every time he moved a certain way. In his present condition, he would hinder
more than help.
Still gripping the flaming torch, Jehan disappeared into the
stable.
“Is there not a lantern you can use, lad?” Matho called,
stumbling after him. “You’ll set the stable afire with that thing.” He spied a
horn lantern on the window ledge, reached for it and grimaced as a pain, like a
hot wire, ran through his back.
Since Jehan was busy saddling his horse, Matho lit the fat
candle inside the lantern and doused the torch in a bucket of water.
“Are there other horses here?” he called, breathing in the
warm, musty smell of horses, hay and oats.
Muffled by wooden partitioning, Jehan’s voice drifted back to
him. “One horse only. The Scotsman took the other before the fire broke out.”
“Well, my advice would be to get yourself and the other horse
well away from here before it burns down.”
“I cannot leave. I have nowhere to go.”
“Go home.”
“This is home.” Jehan led Matho’s horse, saddled and bridled,
out into the yard.
“The inn belongs to your parents?”
“My parents are dead. I work here, and sleep with the
horses.”
Matho grunted. There was no need to ask how the parents had
died. The sweating sickness had taken half a village not far from Corbridge
last winter, and Phemie’s aunt in Edinburgh much more recently. Such things
were commonplace, but unlucky for the lad. “Well, get as far away from the fire
as you can.”
Sparks whirled dangerously close on eddies of hot wind, and
the roar of the flames grew louder. Harried figures hurled bucket after bucket
of water into the building, yet the fire glow captured one window after
another. A man staggered out, coughing, and sagged to his knees in the middle
of the yard. Four men followed him, a bundled shape carried between them.
“Hurry, lad. Let’s be away from here. And get the other
horse. We can’t leave it to burn.”
He checked his pack was tied behind the saddle, soothed his
horse and limped across the yard with the tense, trembling animal nudging his
back in its hurry to be away from danger. Jehan followed with a sturdy chestnut
on a lead rope which he thrust toward Matho.
“I get the saddle.”
Before Matho could complain, the lad raced back into the
stable and reappeared with a saddle clutched in his arms, a bridle and a large
bag slung over one shoulder. Grinning, he speedily tacked up the horse. “Now we
go, yes?”
A roar rent the air, and fierce light lit their faces. The
horses snorted and skittered sideways.
“Christ, the roof’s fallen in.”
Matho stared at the doomed inn, hardly aware that Jehan had mounted his horse.
“And the straw’s alight,” he said with resignation, watching a spark land in
the straw bale by the stable door. A shy, tentative flame sprang into life.
“Come on, let’s get away from here.”
Jen
Black
Jen
lives in the lovely Tyne valley between Hexham and Newcastle in north east
England, a stone’s throw from the Roman Wall and with a castle that dates from
the 1100’s round the corner. Writing and photography are her main interests and
walking her Dalmatian Tim twice a day keeps her fit. She has a degree in
English Language & Literature and managed academic libraries for a living.
Her father’s family have been traced back to the 1700’s on the Welsh and
English border—a place she has never been, but her maternal grandfather worked
in Skye, and there is one Scottish great-grandmother in the family tree, so if
ever there’s time, perhaps there’s more to learn on that score.
Great to finally see it up, MaryAnne!
ReplyDeleteYour books sound exciting, Jen, set as they are in such turbulent times. Will be going on my TBR list.
ReplyDeleteAn intriguing historical figure for sure, but she scares me a little too ;)
ReplyDeleteLet me know how you get on with them, Penny.....Scares you why, Mark?
ReplyDeleteGreat except, Jen and a lovely post!
ReplyDeleteVery enjoyable post, Jen. MArie De Guise is certainly an interesting character, and one I'd certainly love to know more about. Thanks for posting
ReplyDelete