The Daughter of Time

The Daughter of Time Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: The Daughter of Time Read Online Free PDF
Author: Josephine Tey
Tags: Mystery
puzzled consideration (it piqued him to have mistaken one of the most notorious murderers of all time for a judge; to have transferred a subject from the dock to the bench was a shocking piece of ineptitude) that it occurred to Grant that the portrait had been provided as the illustration to a piece of detection.
    What mystery was there about Richard III?
    And then he remembered. Richard had murdered his two boy nephews, but no one knew how. They had merely disappeared. They had disappeared, if he remembered rightly, while Richard was away from London. Richard had sent someone to do the deed. But the mystery of the children's actual fate had never been solved. Two skeletons had turned up – under some stairs? – in Charles II's day, and had been buried. It was taken for granted that the skeletons were the remains of the young princes, but nothing had ever been proved.
    It was shocking how little history remained with one after a good education. All he knew about Richard III was that he was the younger brother of Edward IV. That Edward was a blond six-footer with remarkable good looks and a still more remarkable way with women; and that Richard was a hunchback who usurped the throne on his brother's death in place of the boy heir, and arranged the death of that heir and his small brother to save himself any further trouble. He also knew that Richard had died at the battle of Bosworth yelling for a horse, and that he was the last of his line. The last Plantagenet.
    Every schoolboy turned over the final page of Richard III with relief, because now at last the Wars of the Roses were over and they could get on to the Tudors, who were dull but easy to follow.
    When The Midget came to tidy him up for the night Grant said: 'You don't happen to have a history book, by any chance, do you?'
    'A history book? No. What would I be doing with a history book.' It was not a question, so Grant did not try to provide an answer. His silence seemed to fret her.
    'If you really want a history book,' she said presently, 'you could ask Nurse Darroll when she brings your supper. She has all her schoolbooks on a shelf in her room and it's quite possible she has a history among them.'
    How like The Amazon to keep her schoolbooks! he thought. She was still homesick for school as she was homesick for Gloucestershire every time the daffodils bloomed. When she lumbered into the room, bearing his cheese pudding and stewed rhubarb, he looked at her with a tolerance that bordered on the benevolent. She ceased to be a large female who breathed like a suction-pump and became a potential dispenser of delight.
    Oh yes, she had a history book, she said. Indeed, she rather thought that she had two. She had kept all her schoolbooks because she had loved school.
    It was on the tip of Grant's tongue to ask her if she had kept her dolls, but he stopped himself in time.
    'And of course I loved history,' she said. 'It was my favourite subject. Richard the Lionheart was my hero.'
    'An intolerable bounder,' Grant said.
    'Oh, no!' she said, looking wounded.
    'A hyperthyroid type,' Grant said pitilessly. 'Rocketing to and fro about the earth like a badly made firework. Are you going off duty now?'
    'Whenever I've finished my trays.'
    'Could you find that book for me tonight?'
    'You're supposed to be going to sleep, not staying awake over history books.'
    'I might as well read some history as look at the ceiling which is the alternative. Will you get it for me?'
    'I don't think I could go all the way up to the Nurses' Block and back again tonight for someone who is rude about the Lionheart.'
    'All right,' he said. 'I'm not the stuff that martyrs are made of. As far as I'm concerned Coeur-de-Lion is the pattern of chivalry, the chevalier sans peur et sans reproche , a faultless commander and a triple D.S.O. Now will you get the book?'
    'It seems to me you've sore need to read a little history,' she said, smoothing a mitred sheet-corner with a large admiring hand, 'so I'll
Read Online Free Pdf

Similar Books

Suck It Up

Emma Hillman

Eye Spy

Tessa Buckley

Seduction in Mind

Susan Johnson

Shadow Hawk

Jill Shalvis

The Dutch

Richard E. Schultz

The Wellstone

Wil McCarthy

Claws for Alarm

T.C. LoTempio

Twelve Red Herrings

Jeffrey Archer