I always saw flowers in people's faces and eyes and the flowers told me what was inside the person, what they had done, what they would doMy take: I like a good murder mystery so add in the court of Mary, Queen of Scots and I'm there! First, I loved that this story was set in the early days of Mary, Queen of Scots reign. Here, she is a young, spoiled and moody woman ruling over a country that is foreign to her. Various nobles offer "help". Rinette Leslie was a ward in Mary of Guise's court. As Mary Guise was dying, she entrusted her with a mission to deliver a casket of papers to her daughter. Rinette takes control of her own future (escaping and marrying) before attempting to complete Mary of Guise's dying wish. Except then her husband is murdered. Rinette again takes control of her future by staying at court and holding the casket. This gives her the power to avoid forced marriage and to find her husband's killer. I liked her moxy although she did not seem politically savy enough to survive at court. She takes one step forward and two steps back throughout the book - coinciding with her being in Mary's good graces or completely out of favor.
"You are all like children." Much as I disliked and distrusted the court, I felt resentful at being outside the charmed circle of favoritesElizabeth Tudor, Catherine de Medici, the Earls - they all wanted the casket. How far would they go to get it? Rinette continues to pursue justice even when her late husband proved to be rather ambitious. I admit rather liking that, imperfect men don't deserve to be murdered either and it was believable for the time period. The ending was convoluted and one male character was written in a way that came across as too good to be true.
End Verdict: I also liked the story for the atmosphere of a young Mary's court. Mary behaved in way that makes you want to smack her upside the head, consistent with what I know about her. She is easily believable as the younger version of a woman who will self destruct. I stayed up late to finish the book because I was eager to see how it ended.

