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Available 4.15.24


The Secret History Of Elizabeth Tudor, Vampire Slayer

The Secret History Of Elizabeth Tudor, Vampire Slayer, January 2011
by Lucy Weston

Gallery Books
Featuring: Elizabeth Tutor; Mordred
288 pages
ISBN: 143919033X
EAN: 9781439190333
Trade Size
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"Deliciously dark, with lush historical details, this vampire fantasy begs the tantalizing question:"

Fresh Fiction Review

The Secret History Of Elizabeth Tudor, Vampire Slayer
Lucy Weston

Reviewed by Lynn Cunningham
Posted January 13, 2011

Paranormal Romance

Elizabeth Regina Tudor: Daughter of the murderous King Henry VIII and the unfortunate Anne Boleyn, Queen of England...oh, and Vampire Slayer! No one was more shocked than Elizabeth when, on the night before her coronation as queen, her trusted adviser, Cecil, and her astrologer, Dr. Dee, came to her insisting that she must come with them immediately. They led her to the tomb of her late mother, Anne. It is here that a magnificent and magical transformation takes place over Elizabeth. Because of this, her birthright as Vampire Slayer is raised.

As Elizabeth struggles to accept her new position as the Queen of England, she's also struggling with this new found power she has to slay the vampires that are threatening to take over the human existence in England. Her main target is the Vampire King, Mordred, bastard son of Arthur. Yet, even as Elizabeth plots to kill Mordred, she's also highly drawn to him. Will this attraction keep her from doing her duty as Vampire Slayer?

Not many people think of Elizabeth as a woman in love. However, she's quite taken with the Lord Robert Dudley, or Robin, as she calls him. While she maintains that she will never marry Robin, or any other man, this very entertaining book bears the question as to whether or not she really was the "virgin queen" after all.

Said to be part of a set of journals that Elizabeth kept, THE SECRET HISTORY OF ELIZABETH TUDOR, VAMPIRE SLAYER, is packed full of glorious historical details of that time period that makes this story of Elizabeth come even more alive to its readers. Not to be left out, Mordred also gets to tell his version of events.

Lucy Weston shares the story of Elizabeth's Vampire Slayer secret life while also revealing many intimate details of Elizabeth's private life, particularly her interactions with Robin. Treated like an actual historical event that has only just come to light in modern times, this is a captivating and entertaining read. Even the name, Lucy Weston, has its own historical significance that you may want to investigate.

If you happen to love vampires, vampire slayers, romance and history, do yourself a huge favor and pick up a copy of this book. You'll be hooked from page one. In fact, the way this book is written may leave at least a bit of doubt in your mind as to whether or not the information contained here really is a work of fiction.

Learn more about The Secret History Of Elizabeth Tudor, Vampire Slayer

SUMMARY

Sovereign Power. Eternal Pleasure.

Revealed at last in this new vampire saga for the ages: the true, untold story of the "Virgin Queen" and her secret war against the Vampire King of England. . . .

On the eve of her coronation, Elizabeth Tudor is summoned to the tomb of her mother, Anne Boleyn, to learn the truth about her bloodline—and her destiny as a Slayer. Born to battle the bloodsucking fiends who ravage the night, and sworn to defend her beloved realm against all enemies, Elizabeth soon finds herself stalked by the most dangerous and seductive vampire of all.

He is Mordred, bastard son of King Arthur, who sold his soul to destroy his father. After centuries in hiding, he has arisen determined to claim the young Elizabeth as his Queen. Luring her into his world of eternal night, Mordred tempts Elizabeth with the promise of everlasting youth and beauty, and vows to protect her from all enemies. Together, they will rule over a golden age for vampires in which humans will exist only to be fed upon. Horrified by his intentions, Elizabeth embraces her powers as a Slayer even as she realizes that the greatest danger comes from her own secret desire to yield to Mordred . . . to bare her throat in ecstasy and allow the vampire king to drink deeply of her royal blood.

As told by Lucy Weston, the vampire prey immortalized in Bram Stoker's Dracula, this spellbinding account will capture your heart and soul—forever.

Excerpt

Midnight, 15 January 1559

In the moonlight, the scaffold appears to be made of bleached bones from one of the leviathans that wash up on our shores from time to time to general alarm, for what godly world encompasses such creatures? The platform is raised high above the crowd of gray shadows gathered around its base. A woman climbs slowly, carrying the weight of her anguish and fear. She holds her hands clutched in front of her, as though in prayer. Stepping out onto the platform, she steps into the beast’s gaping maw and is devoured.

Sometimes the woman is my mother; other times she is I.

For most of my youth, I expected to die on that spectral scaffold, sacrificed to the same great beast that took my mother. That I have not met such a fate by this, my twenty-fifth year, is no doubt due to the mercy of Almighty God, although Doctor Dee credits my survival to the alignment of the stars at the moment of my birth, which suggests that my life rests on a cosmic whim.

However I came to be, I am not male. For that sin–whether hers or mine–Anne Boleyn died. She went to her crowning with me in her belly, through sullen crowds that called her a witch and conjured her death. I have done somewhat better. This day, the gray shadows spewed into the streets of London where, imbued with the ruddy cheer of winter under a chill blue sky, they hailed me with such vigor that for a little time, I let myself bask in the false glow of their approbation. Still I do not forget.

My ladies have no notion of what I see as I sit gazing out onto Tower Green, seemingly glad to rest in the aftermath of the tumultuous welcome into my capital. They see only the empty moon-washed sward agleam with winter frost behind the cheery, reflected glow of the fire that warms my bed chamber. Pretty girls mostly of my own age, they bustle about under Kat Ashley’s watchful eye, folding my clothes, chatting among themselves, excited for the coming day.

As am I. Truly, I look forward to the moment when the holy oil will touch my brow and breast, and I will be transformed into the anointed of God, chosen by Him to rule over my father’s kingdom. The irony does not escape me. Child of the despised queen whose head had to be cut off to save the king’s manhood, I have Henry’s red hair and his name. Since Mary’s autumn death, I have his throne. Somewhere, I like to think that my mother is laughing.

It is dark but clear with moon shadows sharpening all the angles of the ancient White Tower–the Conqueror’s pride–that looms over the fortress added onto by so many monarchs down through the centuries. Nothing moves on the river beyond save for the fast-running tide. Peering through the leaded glass of the royal apartments set snug against the inner curtain wall, I feel a surge of affection for ancient London. I will have to be as a gypsy rope walker in the years to come to have any hope of balancing between the city’s puffed-up merchants and rapacious barons, its sullen Catholics and fire-breathing Reformers, all amid the babble that rises from its docks and spills over into ever- rancorous Parliament. But I am good at balancing. I was born with a light step and an instinct for when and how to stretch out my arms to embrace what I need most. Nothing so surely marks me as a changeling for neither of my parents possessed that skill.

In my bed gown and cap, wrapped in a lace-edged wool shawl against the dampness penetrating the old stone walls, I am ready to slip into the high, four-poster bed curtained with embroidered silk, stretch out beneath the ermine blanket, and dream my queenly dreams.

There is a knock at the door.

My ladies turn as one, rapt. Do they truly believe that Robin–the dear friend from my darkest days and, so far as I will allow it, my secret lover–would call on the night before my coronation? I told him not to and he has the sense to obey me, most of the time.

But then who comes at this, the midnight hour?

A maid opens the door. Two men stand revealed. Doctor John Dee is the younger, although he manages nonetheless to convey an impression of great sagacity. I met him for the first time two years before when Robin brought him to my notice. The magus had risked his life to counsel me, having barely survived arrest and interrogation at the order of my sister Mary, who feared him greatly. She had reason to do so for it was Dee who cast the horoscope that foresaw the time of her death, an act that, had it been discovered, would have sent him to the stake. Armed with that knowledge, I was able to outlast the plotting of my enemies who browbeat my sister to order my execution virtually to the moment of her final breath. In the aftermath of Mary’s demise, it was Dee who determined the most auspicious date for my coronation, now scant hours away.

The magus is tall, possessed of piercing brown eyes, with a pale beard half-way down his chest. Wisdom and gravity adorn him as much as do his scholar’s robes. Beside him, William Cecil looks smaller and of less consequence. That impression is almost comically misleading. William is my closest advisor, the man I call my ‘Spirit” and trust above all others, who in the dark years of my sister’s reign kept the light of hope alive in me. In his late thirties, already burdened by gout despite his avoidance of all excess, he is as virtuous in his private life as he is ruthless in matters of state. Both qualities make him invaluable to me.

“Majesty,” the two murmur in unison as they enter and incline their heads.

“If we might speak alone,” William adds. He glances at my ladies, who hover close together like so many bright-hued canaries suddenly sensing the presence of a cat.

I dismiss them with a wave of my hand. They go, trailing backward glances of concern. Before the door closes behind them, I hear their anxious murmurs.

Only Kat remains, dear Kat, who came to me as my nurse when I was scarcely four years old and has remained at my side ever since save for those dark times when she suffered imprisonment for my sake. I have said and it is true that I received life from Anne but love from Kat. I love her in return. Virtually my first act upon learning of Mary’s death and my own ascension to the throne was to name her First Lady of My Bedchamber. She takes her responsibilities seriously, sometimes too much so.

“You, too,” I say to her but gently for she is old now, well nigh on to seventy years, and I would not hurt her for the world. All the same, she must recognize that I am no longer the lonely, frightened child she cosseted. I am a woman now and Queen.

“Majesty–” she begins.

I cut her off with a smile. “I worry for your health, dearest, for how could I ever manage without you? Please me and go to your rest.”

She obeys but not without a frown that creases her withered apple face and would have shriveled men lest intent upon their business.

“What has happened?” I ask at once when we are alone for something grave must have to explain their presence in the dead of night.

“We come on a matter touching on the security of the realm,” Dee replies. “If Your Majesty would be so good as to accompany us–” He gestures in the direction of the door.

I am, to put it plainly, dumbfounded. The procession into London and the reception afterward for the city’s dignitaries, each vying with all the others for my notice, ran late. The coming day promises to be both glorious and fraught in the extreme. By what right does anyone lay claim not merely to my attention at such a time but that I should actually go with them for some unnamed purpose? Even such good servants as Dee and Cecil must needs explain themselves.

“What matter touching on the security of the realm?” I demand. “Do not speak in riddles but state your purpose clearly.”

William is accustomed to my sometimes querulous nature, Dee far less so. Both pale slightly.

“Majesty,” William says. “The threat to your realm is so strange and sinister, so defying of all mortal reason, that upon the advice of good Doctor Dee, it was determined that it could only be revealed to you now.”

“The conjunction of the planets was not favorable before this hour,” the magus endeavors to explain. “But it will remain so for only a short time. You must come with us.”

Had I not known both men so well and had they not served me with such devotion through perilous times, I would have ordered them from my chamber at once. As it was, I still seriously consider doing so.

“Please, Majesty,” Dee entreats. “Time is fleeting and there is much to accomplish.”

Before I can reply, William lifts the heavy fur cloak I wore earlier in the day and drapes it over my shoulders in a gesture at once protective and insistent.

“We are your most loyal servants, Majesty,” he says simply. “I would lay down my life for you and so would Doctor Dee. I beg you to find it in your heart to trust us for just a little while and I promise that all will be made clear.”

In all fairness, William has earned my forbearance, as has Dee. Though I remain reluctant to engage in so odd an enterprise, I acquiesce. Wrapped in the fur cloak, I remove my silk chamber slippers and allow William to help me don a pair of leather pattens. That done, I suffer to be led from my rooms and down the stone corridor to the winding steps that give out onto Tower Green.

At once, my breath freezes in the chill air but I scarcely notice, so glorious is the sight I behold. The sky, shorn of clouds after the leaden storms of recent days, is a riot of stars. Orion hunts in the west but I have little time to contemplate him before Dee draws my attention elsewhere.

“Look there, Majesty, Jupiter rises in Aquarius as Mars does the same in Scorpio. Both augur well for your rule. As you are the lion, so shall you command the powers of war and wisdom throughout your long reign.”

“God willing it will be long,” William says fervently. He is shivering already. “It may not be if Her Majesty takes a chill.”

“Then let us go on,” I say, suddenly more cheerful in the face of this strange adventure.

We turn in the direction of the Chapel of St. Peter ad Vincula. When Mary held me captive in the Tower, where I dwelled in daily expectation of my death, I was allowed to pray only in my rooms. That suited me well enough for I had no desire to enter the place where my mother is buried, having been carried there directly from her execution mere yards away and deposited in her grave with scant ceremony.

Nor is she alone. Catherine Howard, my father’s other slain queen, lies beside her along with poor Lady Jane Grey, the brilliant child who treacherous Northumberland tried to foist on the realm. The Nine-Day Queen died in the same manner as my mother and Catherine Howard, whose final resting place she shares.

Dee must have sensed my reluctance for he touches my arm lightly and says, “Pray forgive us, Majesty, but the signs are unmistakable. Only in this place at this time can we achieve what must be done.”

Having gone so far, I tell myself that it would be cowardly to turn back. Even so, I enter the Chapel slowly and stand for several moments staring down the short nave toward the altar. There, just to the left near the chapel’s north wall, is the simple flagstone slab beneath which my mother lies. Nothing else marks her presence or that of the others. Yet I know where she is all the same. Several years ago, I pestered poor Kat, who surely deserves better from me than I have ever given her, to tell me what she knew. She complied, if reluctantly. From her, I learned the details of my mother’s death and interment as recorded by eyewitnesses. I have never spoken of it with anyone else, not even Robin.

“Hurry, Majesty,” Dee says and urges me forward.

I still do not comprehend what he and William intend, yet I obey all the same. Something about the nearness of my mother’s grave draws me on. I walk toward it clutching the fur robe tightly, unable to take my eyes from the cold gray slab that holds her earthbound.

But that is absurd. My mother’s soul, which I privately accord to be as pure as anyone’s, has long since flown to its reward. Nothing lies beneath the slab save her mortal remains. And yet—

“Majesty?” As though from a great distance, I hear William speak. He sounds uncertain but that cannot be right. The most trusted of my counselors is a man of extraordinary competency never at a loss in any situation.

Until now. I turn and see him just behind me, pale in the faint glow of the lamps kept burning in the Chapel all night, some say to hold at bay the vengeful ghosts who dwell there. By contrast, Dee seems in his element, his eyes alight with excitement.

I turn my head again toward the grave. A faint but unmistakable mist rises from it, illuminated by the starlight pouring through the high windows above the altar. Scarcely aware of what I am doing, I move closer. The mist grows, expands, thickens until I am engulfed within it. Oddly devoid of fear, I stand as though observing all from outside myself, able only to marvel at what is happening.

The silence is so profound that I can hear my own measured heartbeat. Apart from that, there is only a great hush, as though the world beyond has ceased to exist. I can no longer feel the floor beneath my feet; it is as though I have become detached, floating free of earthly strictures. The mist has a quality of warmth and softness that I would not have expected. Additionally, I imagine that I smell roses. Far in the back of my mind, a memory stirs. My mother, twirling me in her arms, in a garden filled with white and crimson blossoms.

And my father looking on, weighing us both through slitted eyes.

I breathe and with each breath the mist enters into me, becomes part of me, filling me. The barriers between what is myself and what is not begin to shimmer and grow transparent until they melt away altogether. I am the mist and it is I. Looking down the length of my body, I discover that I am shimmering as though lit from within by a bright, white light. Still, I am not afraid. My mother is there with me. I hear her speak not in words as we know them but in the deepest recesses of my heart.

“My daughter,” Anne says, “do not fear your duty. Embrace it that this realm may be preserved against the scourge of evil that has come upon it.”

She speaks and my heart, so long steeled against the cruelties of the world, cries out in yearning for her. Without hesitation, I take the final steps and kneel beside my mother’s grave.

How to describe what happens next when I scarcely understand it myself? It is as though a great wall within me suddenly cracks and the light pours through it. I am blinded and yet I see for the very first time. See my beloved land unfolding beneath skies across which sun and storm alike speed in an instant. See night and day flow in quick succession as ages pass, armies clash, and fortresses rise and fall. See myself rising above my city, above my realm, a Queen Regnant clothed in majesty, armed with power unlike any I have ever glimpsed while all around a vicious, savage enemy, red-fanged, black-winged, soars across the moon.

I bear it so long as I can before my mind reels away to find surcease in blessed darkness. Dee and Cecil together catch me as I slump unconscious to the chapel floor.

*****

Drifting over the city, following the pewter ribbon of the river, I, Mordred, king of the dark realm, came to the ancient hill where once Gog and Magog were worshipped by wiser folk than are to be found there now. The temples of the old ones are buried under the timber of the Saxons, interred in turn beneath the stones the Normans raised, foundation for the abode of kings, the place of execution for queens. I smelled the earth, well sated with blood. It warmed me.

She was sitting at a tower window behind a curtain of frost running like a web of frozen ferns across the leaded panes. Fire-haired, pale-skinned Elizabeth, child of Anne, the one for whom I have waited so long. I confess to a certain excitement upon seeing her finally.

She was not conventionally beautiful, being both too slender and too tightly strung like a fine thoroughbred mare that resists mounting. No matter; she was everything I desired, everything I needed. Or she might be. The coming hours would tell the tale.

Little men with little minds would do their utmost to make her my enemy. I, who would give her immortality if only she had the wit to take it! I remember being human, if only barely, as a dream that dissolves upon waking. It is a May fly’s existence, here today, gone today. Surely, she would recognize better when it is offered to her. If not–

Her throat was white and slim. I could just make out the thin blue tracing of her life’s blood coursing beneath her skin. Could feel on my tongue the hint of how she would taste. Hunger stirred in me but I could wait, if only for a little while.

Separated by mere inches but invisible to her, I observed Elizabeth at my leisure, watching the steady rise and fall of her breath beneath pippin breasts. She appeared absorbed in her own thoughts, with no sense of me, not then, nor any awareness that she sat, not on the edge of a throne but perched on the hinge of fate. Swing one way and I would open the eternal vistas of the night to her and place her by my side in golden halls where death can never rule. Swing the other…I would drain her to the final carmine drop and throw regret away along with her hollowed husk.

Surely it would not come to that.

A flicker of motion on Tower Green drew my eye. Bustling in their importance, the men of the hour hurried along with their cloaks clutched close against winter’s chill and their own fear. No doubt they had a plan to manage Elizabeth if she balked but they looked anxious all the same, as well they should for they involved themselves in matters vastly beyond their ken. Balanced on the air, hovering over my ancient and eternal kingdom, I watched them come. They paused at the foot of the stairs leading to the royal apartment to exchange a final, anxious glance.

And up they went.

I followed when they emerged again with her in tow. I watched them enter the chapel that holds so much pain. I witnessed all that transpired from my perch on the far side of the high window above the altar.

That light…the roses–oh, yes, I smelled them. Dear, dead Anne still couldn’t resist meddling, scant good it would do her.

It was too much for my poor Elizabeth, of course. She lay on the slate floor, hovered over by her fretful gentlemen, so pale and still, scarcely breathing. I could restore her with a touch but this was not the time. She had chosen her path; now she had to follow it to me.

It was as well that the centuries had taught me patience for I swear, were that not the case I would have claimed her here and now. How tempting to do so beside her mother’s grave. How exquisitely just.

They lifted her, only just managing between them despite her being wand slim. Her head fell back against the magus’ arm, her face turned up to the altar windows through which I gazed. A strange yet hauntingly familiar sensation overtook me and for a moment I saw another face, so similar, so implacably different. Morgaine, my love. My betrayer.

Away then, from memory and shadow into night made bright by the certainty that victory, so long awaited, would not now be long denied.

*****

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