The Virgin's Daughter, known to some as Katie and others as Sis, is on the run. Not just from the unknown people who have been killing those that have protected her since before she was born. Now she's on the run from Erin, her first love and the head of the secret society formed to protect her. Because Erin betrayed her and Matt, another of her protectors who she's also come to love. During the next forty days of her life, Katie won't just be running from Erin, though. She will also be running towards her future. But, what future? A life where she can have what she's had to forfeit up until now? Or a life where she finds and fulfills the mystery of her existence?
The story of Elizabeth I, as it's never been told before-through the eyes of two ladies-in-waiting closest to her.
The Virgin's Daughter
Eleanor Percy Howard Gage Stafford (she had a gift for outliving husbands) drew male eyes wherever she went, no matter that she was nearing fifty. But then Eleanor had always had the trick of making the most of her assets.
he asked Martin. “To make you see sense. Dane did you a favour, pulling you out of Cahir before it was too late.” “It was only too late because Dane made good and certain to blow my cover.” “You did that yourself—the moment you allowed ...
We read now about Sydney, the virgin's daughter, hidden by a ruler, known to none of the court, but beloved and a once and future queen of the most powerful empire in the world.
In her sweeping historical debut, Ella March Chase explores a thrilling possibility: that the Tudor bloodline did not end with the Virgin Queen.
The Virgin's Daughters: In the Court of Elizabeth I
First published in 1993, The Virgin Suicides announced the arrival of a major new American novelist.
NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY RT BOOK REVIEWS Perfect for fans of Philippa Gregory, Alison Weir, and Showtime’s The Tudors, The Boleyn King is the first book in an enthralling trilogy that dares to imagine: What if Anne ...
Lachrymatories, or tear-catchers, were worn by brides during the war. The women were to fill the bottles with their tears as a sign of devotion to their husbands while they were away. Many men never returned from battle, and thus their ...