A Plague of Poison (Templar Knight Mysteries, No. 3)
A Plague of Poison (Templar Knight Mysteries, No. 3) book cover

A Plague of Poison (Templar Knight Mysteries, No. 3)

Mass Market Paperback – March 3, 2009

Price
$7.74
Publisher
Berkley
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0425226773
Dimensions
4.1 x 0.78 x 6.7 inches
Weight
6.2 ounces

Description

"Marvelous period detail." -- Jayne Ann KrentzNew in the "terrific" Templar Knight mystery series. -- Jayne Ann Krentz Maureen Ash was born in London, England, and has had a lifelong interest in British medieval history. Visits to castle ruins and old churches have provided the inspiration for the Templar Knight Mysteries.xa0She enjoys Celtic music, browsing in bookstores, and Belgian chocolate.xa0She now lives on Vancouver Island in British Columbia. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Table of Contents Title Page Copyright Page Dedication One Two Three Four Five Six Seven Eight Nine Ten Eleven Twelve Thirteen Fourteen Fifteen Sixteen Seventeen Eighteen Nineteen Twenty Twenty-one Twenty-two Twenty-three Twenty-four Twenty-five Twenty-six Twenty-seven Twenty-eight Twenty-nine Thirty Thirty-one Thirty-two Thirty-three Thirty-four Thirty-five Thirty-six Thirty-seven Epilogue Author’s Note Praise for The Alehouse Murders “I loved The Alehouse Murders. Combining marvelous period detail with characters whose emotions and personalities would ring true in any era, Maureen Ash has launched a terrific new historical mystery series. I’ll be standing in line for the next Templar Knight Mystery.” —Jayne Ann Krentz, New York Times bestselling author of Running Hot “A deft re-creation of a time and place, with characters you’ll want to meet again.” —Margaret Frazer,national bestselling author of A Play of Lords “A delightful addition to the medieval mystery list. It is well researched and, even better, well written, with distinct, interesting characters and plot twists that I didn’t expect . . . I look forward to more books in the series.” —Sharan Newman, author of The Shanghai Tunnel “Fans of quality historical mysteries will be delighted with this debut . . . The first in what will hopefully be a long-running series of Templar Knights whodunits.” — Publishers Weekly “Maureen Ash masterfully creates a medieval world full of rich historic detail and peopled with fascinating characters. Her complex hero, Sir Bascot de Marins, immediately engages the reader as he tracks a ruthless killer in a mystery that will keep the reader guessing until the very end.” —Victoria Thompson,national bestselling author of Murder on Bank Street “A perplexing mystery with its flawed but sympathetic hero . . . An enjoyable read.” — Gumshoe Review “Good, old-fashioned mystery. I look forward to more.” — Meritorious Mysteries “Maureen Ash’s series will be very popular if the future novels are the quality of The Alehouse Murders. ” — Midwest Book Review “Interesting reading.” — San Jose Mercury News Berkley Prime Crime titles by Maureen Ash the alehouse murders DEATH OF A SQUIRE A PLAGUE OF POISON THE BERKLEY PUBLISHING GROUP Published by the Penguin Group Penguin Group (USA) Inc. 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, USA Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario M4P 2Y3, Canada (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.) Penguin Books Ltd., 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England Penguin Group Ireland, 25 St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd.) Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell, Victoria 3124, Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty. Ltd.) Penguin Books India Pvt. Ltd., 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi—110 017, India Penguin Group (NZ), 67 Apollo Drive, Rosedale, North Shore 0632, New Zealand (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd.) Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty.) Ltd., 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa Penguin Books Ltd., Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content. A PLAGUE OF POISON A Berkley Prime Crime Book / published by arrangement with the author PRINTING HISTORY Berkley Prime Crime mass-market edition / March 2009 Copyright © 2009 by Maureen Ash. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions. For information, address: The Berkley Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014. eISBN : 978-1-101-02460-7 BERKLEY® PRIME CRIME Berkley Prime Crime Books are published by The Berkley Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014. BERKLEY® PRIME CRIME and the PRIME CRIME logo are trademarks of Penguin Group (USA) Inc. For my grandchildren, Chloe and Christopher, with fondest love Prologue Lincoln Early Spring 1201 A.D. W ITH THE CELEBRATION Of EASTERTIDE AT THE END of March, a warm spring radiance had descended on Lincoln. As the month of April began, only brief showers of gentle rain marred its brilliance. In the countryside, young lambs frolicked beside their mothers and villeins sent prayers of thanksgiving heavenward as the pliable earth turned easily beneath their ploughs. The townspeople, too, welcomed such a providential heralding of the summer to come. Goodwives threw out old rushes from the floors of their homes and replaced them with ones that were new and sweet smelling, linens soiled during the long months of winter were washed and hung out to dry and the walls of houses were given fresh coats of lime. Only in the squalid suburb of Butwerk, which lay just outside the city walls, was there no sign of rejoicing, for the ditch called Werkdyke bordered the area and the accumulated rubbish in its depths had begun to steam as the temperature rose. It was a deep cavity, filled with detritus collected from streets within the town, and was comprised of offal, old bones, the contents of soil pots and glutinous blobs of decomposing vegetable matter. The stench of its noxious fumes drifted up and spread into Whore’s Alley, where the prostitutes plied their trade, and floated above the gravestones in the cemetery of St. Bavon’s, the dilapidated church that served the parish. Rats darted among the piles of refuse, vying with stray cats and dogs in their scavenging, while crows hopped and fluttered in their midst, cawing stridently. The earliness of the hour and the miasmic atmosphere kept all who had the misfortune to live in Butwerk inside their dwellings, and so there was no one to remark the presence of the man that tramped beside the ditch. He walked with a purposeful stride, not heeding the loathsome odours that assailed his nostrils, and now that he was alone, he allowed the rage that he had kept hidden behind a pretence of genial civility to bubble up and come to the surface. After so many long months, it was almost time for him to carry out his plan for revenge. Only one final step remained, and that was to test the means by which he intended to extract it. He searched among the carrion eaters for a suitable victim. Eventually, he spied a large dog with a matted black coat and ears that were mangled and torn. The animal was cowering near the edge of the ditch, trying to wriggle closer to a lump of maggot-infested meat that was being ferociously guarded by a feral tomcat. Ignoring the feline, the man approached the dog. He spoke to it in soft tones, proffering a large chunk of salted pork. The cur was timorous at first but, unable to resist the food that was so tantalisingly near its nose, finally gave a tentative wag of its bedraggled tail and crept closer, its whole body quivering with expectation. When the animal came to a halt near the man’s feet, its benefactor smeared the meat with a substance he took from the scrip at his belt and laid it on the ground. The dog quickly gulped the tidbit down and then raised its head hopefully, looking for more. “One portion is all that will be necessary to sate your hunger, my ugly friend,” the man said gravely. “You should have been less hasty and savoured the sweetness of its taste.” When it seemed that no further largesse would be forthcoming, the dog moved away from the man and resumed its envious contemplation of the tomcat. Within a few minutes the dog began to whine and hunkered down on its belly. Its distress became more evident as the animal’s body began to tremble, and soon it was retching copiously and appeared to be in great pain. The man kept watch over the animal until, eventually, the exhausted dog fell onto its side and lay panting on the ground. It made one last feeble attempt to stand upright before a final shudder wracked its frame and it died. The man felt no regret for the dog’s death, only a sense of triumph. The poison was more effective than he had hoped. He raised his head and looked at the delicate white clouds scudding across the blueness of the April sky then dropped his gaze to the castle battlements and the spire of the Minster, their outlines standing stark on the horizon above the houses of the town spread out below. Soon all of those who had destroyed innocent lives would pay for the sins they had committed. With a mirthless smile of bitter anticipation, he raised his booted foot and pushed the dog’s lifeless body over the edge of the ditch and into the foul depths of the Werkdyke. One Lincoln Spring 1201 A.D. T HE CASTLE AT LINCOLN SITS HIGH ATOP A HILL that overlooks the town, and it is built on the site of the old Roman fort called Lindum, hard by the broad highway of Ermine Street. Sharing the height with the castle is the Minster, and to the east, on the shoulder of the hill, is the Lincoln preceptory of the religious military order of the Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and the Temple of Solomon, commonly called the Knights Templar. The enclave is moderate in size and encircled by a stout stone wall. Within its confines are a round chapel, refectory, dormitory, kitchen, storehouse, forge and stable, with a central open space used as a training ground. On the hillside below the compound is a stretch of grassland where the Order’s horses are exercised. On the morning of the day the poisoner claimed his first human victim, the preceptor of the commandery, Everard d’Arderon, an older knight of some sixty years, was seated at a small table in the room that he used for his private quarters. Across from him, standing by the one window the room possessed, was Bascot de Marins, a Templar knight. “So, Bascot, you have made your decision, have you?” d’Arderon asked. “Yes, Preceptor. I have not much choice in the matter. The king’s proposal is one that any man would find difficult to refuse. I must leave the Order.” D’Arderon got up from his chair and paced to the far end of the room. He paused and turned to face Bascot. The younger knight looked tired, his attitude one of dejection. The preceptor remembered when de Marins had first come to Lincoln, some eighteen months before. The London master of the Templars, Thomas Berard, had sent him north, requesting the hereditary castellan of Lincoln castle, Nicolaa de la Haye, to give him a temporary place in her retinue so that he might have a space of time to heal from the rigors of eight long years spent as a captive of the infidels in the Holy Land. His bodily injuries—an eye put out by the Saracens and an ankle badly damaged during his escape from a Muslim pirate ship—were not all that afflicted him. The news, on his return to England, that his entire immediate family—father, mother, brother and sister-by-marriage—had perished in a pestilence during his absence had caused his faith to waver and he had announced his wish to resign from the Order. Berard, knowing that Bascot had conducted himself with valour prior to his capture, was loath to lose him and so had hoped that in the familiar routine of an English castle Bascot would recover his strength and his devotion to God. The master’s remedy had worked, but not in the manner that he had hoped. ”Tell me again of the king’s promise,” the preceptor said. He already knew well the terms of the pledge King John had made to the Templar knight, but he was trying to find time to think of some way to dissuade de Marins from his course. “He will restore to me my father’s fief—as you know it has been in the possession of the Crown since he and my older brother died—on the condition that I resign from the Order and take up service in the Haye retinue.” Bascot paused and then added, “He has also said I will be allowed to select an heir of my own choosing if I do not marry and have sons of my own.” “And that last part is why you are doing this, is it not? For your waif?” Bascot’s one remaining eye, the pale blue of a cold winter sky, grew hard and seemed to turn to ice. “He is no longer a waif. He is my servant and I am responsible for his welfare. Without my protection he will return to what he once was, a homeless beggar.” D’Arderon heaved a sigh and went back to his seat at the table. The boy they had been speaking of was Gianni, a mute urchin that Bascot had picked up two years before as he had journeyed back to England after his escape from the Saracens. Bascot had, over time, become as fond of the boy as if he had been his own true son, and he was now concerned that, if he rejoined the ranks of the Order, not only would the boy be rendered destitute but also that the affection between them would be lost forever. “Forgive me, Bascot, for my harsh words,” d’Arderon said in a placatory tone. “I do not mean to denigrate the boy, but forswearing the vows you took when you joined the Order is no light matter. I do not wish you to embark on a course you will later regret.” Bascot’s manner softened. He had a great liking for d’Arderon and knew his sentiments were genuine. “I know, Preceptor, and I appreciate your concern.” D’Arderon reached out and took a small leather bag from a pile of similar pouches stacked in a corner of the room. They contained al-Kandiq , boiled sweets made from canes that grew in the Holy Land and were imported to England by the Templars. The anglicised version of their name was candi . The preceptor knew that Bascot was fond of them, as he was himself, and he opened the sack and tossed one to his companion. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • New in the ?terrific?(
  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLING AUTHOR JAYNE ANN KRENTZ) Templar Knight mystery series.
  • When a cake kills a squire, the castle governor enlists the help of Templar Bascot de Marins. But as murder spreads beyond the castle walls, he wonders if it is in fact the work of a lethal master of poisons.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(126)
★★★★
25%
(105)
★★★
15%
(63)
★★
7%
(29)
23%
(97)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Mixed emotions

I wanted very much to like this book. I found the protagonist and his young ward engaging, the writing fluid, the setting one of my favorite historical periods.

Unfortunately, knowing too much worked against me. Some rather startlingly inauthentic elements jarred me from engagement, the secondary characters were far too flat, and the almost comical "conclusion jumping" of many of the characters, including the protagonist Templar, made it hard to really believe in what was happening. Other reviewers have claimed the first two in the series were better. I'll have to give those books a chance and read them. The author and her main character are strong enough to cause me to do that, but I can't commend this book to a first time reader of the author. Start with something else.
7 people found this helpful
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A bitter honey

First Sentence: With the celebration of Eastertide at the end of March, a warm spring radiance had descended on Lincoln.

Templar Knight Bascot de Marins is recovering in the castle at Lincoln after eight years captivity and torture in the Holy Lands. Someone has poisoned a scribe of the castle and the family of a merchant in the town. The poison is traced to a high-grade honey and the poisonings were deliberate. It is also realized that the victims where not those intended. The first victim was to have been the castle's castellan, who asks for Bascot's help in finding the killer.

I very much enjoyed the first two books of this series, but the third wore a bit thin. It is a classic investigative mystery, which was well done, but short on dialogue and contained very little suspense. Although we know something of the primary characters, there is not a lot of depth provided to them. The sense of time and place was adequate but not rich or terribly evocative. In all, I'd have to say this was a good read, but not much more than that.

In all, I'd have to say this was a good read, but not much more than that.
7 people found this helpful
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A bitter honey

First Sentence: With the celebration of Eastertide at the end of March, a warm spring radiance had descended on Lincoln.

Templar Knight Bascot de Marins is recovering in the castle at Lincoln after eight years captivity and torture in the Holy Lands. Someone has poisoned a scribe of the castle and the family of a merchant in the town. The poison is traced to a high-grade honey and the poisonings were deliberate. It is also realized that the victims where not those intended. The first victim was to have been the castle's castellan, who asks for Bascot's help in finding the killer.

I very much enjoyed the first two books of this series, but the third wore a bit thin. It is a classic investigative mystery, which was well done, but short on dialogue and contained very little suspense. Although we know something of the primary characters, there is not a lot of depth provided to them. The sense of time and place was adequate but not rich or terribly evocative. In all, I'd have to say this was a good read, but not much more than that.

In all, I'd have to say this was a good read, but not much more than that.
7 people found this helpful
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Even the Seasoned Mystery Reader Will Have a Hard Time Guessing the Murderer

"'Sweet Jesu, it was terrible. The man and his wife covered in vomit, their eyes open and staring as though they had witnessed the depths of hell, and the little girl ...La pauvre petite, she was curled up at her mother's side clutching at the arm of her maman, as though beseeching the poor woman to save her...Only a man without a soul would willingly cause the death of such an innocent." (page 53, @2009 Berkeley Prime Crime, New York)

As spring approaches full flower in the medieval town of Lincoln a serial killer arrives. Dormant plans seeded by rage have now come to fruition in the warm sun and soft rains of April. Both castle and town are horrorstruck as seemingly unconnected individuals die savagely, victims of a stealthy poisoner. From castellan to merchant, many citizens look constantly over their shoulders, fearful it was they who were intended as victim. Others under suspicion face the loss of their livelihoods and risk violent reprisal from incensed townspeople.

The sadistic murderer, sufficiently bold and knowledgable, is himself victimized by a curious ill luck. Through the typical waywardness of human behavior he sometimes misses his intended victim. In order to reach his correct victim the murderer is forced to continue his attacks and thereby risk showing more of his hand with every murder. Can he outsmart an entire town, including the man given to the task of detection, worldly wise and intuitive Knight's Templar Bascot de Marins? Or will the merciless killer be brought to justice and meet his own unnatural end, swinging from rope and scaffold?

Familiar characters continue to develop and reveal more of themselves to the reader which makes up for a somewhat slow start as the author completes the necessary retelling of the backstory. New characters are also introduced and several interesting pairings both illuminate and deflect de Marins quest for the truth. The quirky ratcatcher cousins, the brooding Severtsson brothers and the impulsive Rivelar sons all explore the various nature of familial loyalty and love, the very things that detective de Marins comes to decide are at the heart of the mystery.

Once past the very unsettling murders the story returns to the comfortable distance mystery readers expect and we can once again engage in the enjoyable intellectual exercise of pondering motivation and method. The identity of the murderer is truly a surprise and my only complaint being that I would have liked to see more of that character in the incognito impersonation, not just in psychotic asides.

Often we mystery lovers so enjoy the puzzle that the victims become secondary to our concern; contrivances created for the enjoyment of our mental faculties. Although we the reader are let into the workings of the murderer's mind through anonymous asides, none of the killer's crazed rationalizations are as chilling as the death of the little girl. Unlike so many mysteries where characters are often characterless - paperboard figures with no believably real human connections - Ash's town of Lincoln is peopled by those whose everyday existence is underpinned by the natural bonds of community and family. There is evil, but there is also genuine affection and love. Once I got a sense of the love for this child and her family I was struck by how such a loss would effect my own life. I was disgusted and deeply saddened by that death in a way that is counter to my usual experience of the cozy mystery.

Maureen Ash has stretched to incorporate some liteary devices not in her previous works, along with fleshing out her generally optimistic characters with a greater sense of darkness and sorrow. There is an experimental quality, a sense that something new is emerging that the writer has yet to fully execute. I hope that she continues polishing and honing her style and I expectantly wonder what will be the next adventure in this enjoyable series.
3 people found this helpful
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Losing steam?

Follows on quite nicely from the first two but isn't as good.

People start dying and the Templar goes on the investigation but it never really gathers steam and never touches on the murderer until right at the end. The reader doesn't get any chances to discover who the murderer is as he isn't in the story very much at all.

Hopefully, the next one will be an improvement and a true whodunit.
1 people found this helpful
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I like Maureen Ash’s historical mysteries set in 13th century England ...

I like Maureen Ash’s historical mysteries set in 13th century England during the reign of King John. Her books are historically accurate and her characters are good examples of the values and beliefs of the times. Bascot de Marin is a Templar who was imprisoned for 8 years by the Saracens (Muslims) during the Crusades. He returns to England to recover physically and spiritually. (Ash treats both the Crusades and the Templar order kindly – a refreshing change from the current fashion of Crusade/Templar bashing.) Not only do were learn the history and beliefs of the time, her books are fast paced, interesting murder mysteries. Each book is part of a series that moves through the times. Each can be read separately, but the fun is to read the series from the beginning. A Plague of Poison involves several deaths by poison.
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Not as good as the first two

I enjoyed the first two books in this series very much, and was looking forward to this one. I have to say it was something of a disappointment. It reads almost as if different parts were written by different people. A good editor could have helped -- I noted one sentence with the word "had" in it SIX times.
Still, it wasn't without its moments... the description of the ratcatchers at work (Yes, that was a real profession) was good.

Let's hope that this book turns out to to be the exception, and that the next one is more like the first two.