Winter Heart
4/5
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About this ebook
FOR THEY THAT WORK WICKEDNESS...
One man has been kidnapped. Another has been murdered.
In the bleakest depths of winter, Frevisse finds her soul chilled with the heavy burdens of duty and responsibility. Even the warmth of charity is in short supply as the villagers of Prior Byfield turn against each in bloody feuds of greed and rage, weaving knots of treachery which even the clever Frevisse may find hard to unwind.
Award-winning author Margaret Frazer gathers shadows around the hearth to tell a tale of frigid winter and icy passion. Join Frevisse in her fervent prayers for a true peace of mind and body as she pits all her forceful will against the most cunning of evils. Fear for the lives which may be destroyed in unlocking the secrets of the winter heart...
PRAISE FOR THE SISTER FREVISSE SERIES
“This is a perfect mystery: It’s flawless.” – Drood Review of Mystery
“Frazer’s grasp of the society and tangled politics in England in the mid-1400s is masterful.” – Firsts, the Book Collector’s Magazine
“Keeps readers turning the pages.” – Marina Oliver, Historical Novels Review
“Frazer’s quiet yet intense medieval mysteries are so vividly and gracefully written you just float back in time...” – BookNews from The Poisoned Pen
"Whether good or evil, her characters are vibrant and compelling. While we might like to believe that the prejudices of that era have passed into history, we are reminded that we are not so very different after all.” – Lorraine Gelly, Romantic Times Book Club
Margaret Frazer
Herodotus Award Winner ("Neither Pity, Love, Nor Fear") Edgar Award-nominee (The Servant's Tale) Edgar Award-nominee (The Prioress' Tale) Minnesota Book Award nominee (The Bishop's Tale) Minnesota Book Award nominee (The Reeve's Tale) To begin with, 'Margaret Frazer' was two people, both interested in writing and in medieval England, one of them with modern murder mysteries already published, the other with file drawers, shelves, and notebooks full of research on England in the 1400s. They met in a historical recreationist group called the Society for Creative Anachronism and joined forces to write The Novice's Tale, the first in a history mystery series centered on a Benedictine nun, Dame Frevisse, of a small priory in Oxfordshire. Both character and setting were chosen for the challenge they presented – a cloistered nun in a rural nunnery: how does one go about being involved in murders in that situation? -- and the chance to explore medieval life from a different perspective. During their collaboration, the authors worked together by first laying out the general idea of a story. Then the 'Frazer' half of the team developed the plot and characters in detail and wrote the first draft. The 'Margaret' half then re-worked that into a second draft, the 'Frazer' half re-worked that (and it helped they lived five miles apart and couldn't hear what each said about the other during these stages!), and then they did the final draft together, never able to argue over it too long because by then there would be a deadline closing in. The collaboration worked well through six books and two award nominations – an Edgar for The Servant's Tale and a Minnesota Book Award for The Bishop's Tale – before the 'Margaret' half grew tired of the series and amicably returned to the 20th century, leaving the 'Frazer' half to continue the series, with an Edgar nomination for The Prioress' Tale. I write stories set in medieval England because I greatly enjoy looking at the world from other perspectives than the 20th century. My brief college career was as an archaeology major with writing intended as a hobby, but with one thing and another, my interest came down to medieval England with writing as my primary activity, only rivaled by my love of research. But why medieval England, especially for someone who grew up without any interest in knights in shining armor and ladies fair? That's a tangled tale but the final steps were ...
Read more from Margaret Frazer
The Reeve's Tale Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Titles in the series (9)
The Outlaw's Tale: Dame Frevisse Medieval Mysteries, #3 Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Boy's Tale Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Bishop's Tale Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Witch's Tale Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Midwife's Tale Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Stone-Worker's Tale Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Murderer's Tale Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Winter Heart Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Maiden's Tale: Dame Frevisse Medieval Mysteries, #10 Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Winter Heart - Margaret Frazer
Winter Heart
A Novella by Margaret Frazer
Part of the Dame Frevisse Medieval Murder Mysteries
Published by Dream Machine Productions at Smashwords
Copyright 2011 Margaret Frazer
http://www.margaretfrazer.com
* * * * *
The thin sunshine of a January afternoon lay quietly through the room. There was no warmth to it, but in these short winter days any light at all was welcome, and for warmth there was the fire on the hearth, and there Domina Frevisse had her tall-backed chair and slanted writing desk. Turned for the afternoon light to fall across the parchment roll open on the desk, she was working her way down the small-written lines of all that had been expended for the Christmas holidays and what was left to see St. Frideswide’s priory through the rest of the winter.
It was just as well that Lent was coming with its necessary fasting. Not that there looked to be any likelihood of true shortages of food or fuel through the rest of the winter. There was no real lack of anything. It was simply that as prioress now of small St. Frideswide’s, a priory in the Oxfordshire countryside, Frevisse had to look more forward, consider things more deeply and at length, than she had ever had to do when simply one among the other nuns. She would have been content to be left to her prayers and daily duties, an ordinary nun, but she had been raised to prioress despite herself and now had very many lives dependent – both here within the nunnery and beyond its walls – on the care she gave to her duties, and that meant spending what seemed endless hours going through account rolls from all the different offices of the nunnery that, despite they worked apart, needed to be welded into a whole by her, as well as dealing with all the other matters brought to her.
She sighed and laid down her pen, freeing her cramped fingers, curling and uncurling them until they unstiffened, then holding out both chilled hands toward the fire. Her feet in their fur-lined slippers, raised above the draughts along the floor by the low railing of the desk, were warm enough. So was the rest of her in the equally fur-lined gown that had been a gift from a cousin long ago. She had resisted such ease for her body when she was a plain nun, had intended to continue doing so as prioress. Instead, she found herself making more use of the privileges that came with her place than she had ever thought she would. Except they felt less like privileges and more like mitigations. There was so much about being prioress she had never wanted, and if she had to sit here by the hour, tending to accounts and other matters, instead of busy at tasks around the nunnery as she used to be, then, yes, she needed the gown to keep her warm, and the fire to keep her fingers supple and the ink from thickening past use on the pen’s point.
A soft scratching at the closed door made her sigh, draw her hands back into her lap, and call, "Benedicite," in a bidding voice.
The door opened far enough for Dame Amicia to put her head through the gap. Please you, my lady, Master Naylor is below, asking to speak with you.
Frevisse refrained from saying he would have to be below, wouldn’t he, because the prioress’ parlor and bedchamber were up a flight of stairs from the cloister walk. Curbing her words was another necessary thing for her but nothing new: She had been making that effort from long before she became prioress. Pray, bring him up.
Dame Amicia gave a cheerful nod and withdrew, forgetting to shut the door. Frevisse straightened in her chair and looked across the room at the shadow-line creeping along the wall as the sun crept toward its setting. The afternoon was worn well away. For the priory’s steward to want to see her at this hour argued a problem beyond the ordinary. Because nuns were, in general, supposed to stay cloistered and not go beyond their nunnery walls except for greatest necessity, someone was needed to oversee, manage, and report on everything concerning their properties and people. Master Naylor had been steward here a long while, was skilled at his work, and able to deal with nearly all problems as they came, reporting on them in due time and usually with them well settled.
Frevisse braced herself for whatever was the trouble he felt he must bring to her so out of his usual time.
The two footfalls came up the stone stairs. Dame Amicia, leading, said, Master Naylor, my lady,
and stepped aside from the door. Since no nun should be alone with a man, she would stay there quietly, hands folded into her sleeves and head bowed, through whatever business followed.
Master Naylor, coming in behind her, paused to bow to Frevisse, then crossed to her. He had never grown fat in his office, which spoke well of him not battening on his charges. For all the years Frevisse had known him, his long, lean face had been so deeply lined that concern seemed to sit constantly on him, whatever his true humour might be. He wore a thick, short cloak with the hood pushed back over a doublet probably thickly padded against the cold, as likely were his knee-high boots. To judge by that and his winter-reddened face, he had been out and about with his duties, and when he had said, My lady,
to her, Frevisse gestured to the other chair beside the hearth with,