It is 1660. The King is back, but memories of the
Civil War still rankle. In rural Westmorland, artist
Alice Ibbetson has become captivated by the rare Lady's
Slipper orchid. She is determined to capture its unique
beauty for posterity, even if it means stealing the
flower from the land of recently converted Quaker,
Richard Wheeler. Fired by his newfound faith, the former
soldier Wheeler feels bound to track down the missing
orchid. Meanwhile, others are eager to lay hands on the
flower, and have their own powerful motives. Margaret
Poulter, a local medicine woman, is seduced by the
orchid's mysterious herbal powers, while Sir Geoffrey
Fisk, Alice's patron and a former comrade-in-arms of
Wheeler, sees the valuable plant as a way to repair his
ailing fortunes and cure his own agonizing illness.
Fearing that Wheeler and his new friends are planning
revolution, Fisk sends his son Stephen to spy on the
Quakers, only for the young man to find his loyalties
divided as he befriends the group he has been sent to
investigate. Then, when Alice Ibbetson is implicated in
a brutal murder, she is imprisoned along with the
suspected anti-royalist Wheeler.As Fisk's sanity grows
ever more precarious, and Wheeler and Alice plot their
escape, a storm begins to brew, from which no party will
escape unscathed. Vivid, gripping and intensely
atmospheric, ''The Lady's Slipper'' is a novel about
beauty, faith and loyalty. It marks the emergence of an
exquisite new voice in historical fiction. |
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