Cruel as the Grave – Justin de Quincy #2
By Sharon Kay Penman
Reviewed July 31, 2022
Book 2 in Sharon Kay Penman’s Justin de Quincy medieval mystery series picks up shortly after the end of book 1. It is April of 1193, and word has reached Queen Eleanor that her son, King Richard I, the one most of us know as Lionheart, is not dead but is being held for ransom in a German prison.
Trying to take advantage of the turmoil surrounding this is Prince John. Remember him of Robin Hood fame? Or maybe you remember Runnymede and Magna Carta? Well, whether you do or not really doesn’t matter, as neither has anything to do with this story. What does matter is that John wants to declare Richard dead and with the help of the French king, usurp the English throne.
That’s where Justin de Quincy, the queen’s man, comes in. First, he is tasked with putting a stop to one of Prince John’s messengers from making it to France where treason is being plotted.
His plans thwarted, Prince John has holed himself up in Windsor Castle where he is under siege by the queen’s forces that include Will Longsword (John’s bastard half-brother who is torn between his affection for his half-brother and his loyalty to the queen) and William Marshal (who many of us have as an ancestor in our family trees).
John is woefully outnumbered, and the French invasion has been squelched before it ever got off the ground. That means it is only a matter of time before he is forced to capitulate, but Eleanor, who is not happy (to say the least) with her youngest son’s actions, doesn’t want anything to happen to him, either. So she sends Justin to infiltrate Windsor Castle and deliver a verbal message to both John, and Eleanor’s spy within John’s camp, a knight named Durand. And to say that Justin and Durand don't care much for each other is putting it mildly.
On top of all this, Justin has been asked by a friend to clear a couple brothers of murder. Daniel and Geoffrey, sons of Humphrey Aston of the Mercer’s Guild, are suspected in the death of Melangell, the daughter of a Welsh peddler, who was found in the churchyard with her head bashed in.
In addition to all this, Justin finds himself having woman trouble. He’s been having a relationship with the beautiful Claudine, one of Queen Eleanor’s ladies, only to have learned that she is in fact one of Prince John’s spies; besides, they could never marry as Justin is the unacknowledged bastard of a bishop, while she is a lady, so he tries to call off their affair. (Claudine isn't happy with this.) Also, Justin is developing tender feelings towards Nell, who runs the alehouse he frequents.
But things never run smoothly for Justin, whether it comes to solving crimes and figuring out what he should do about Nell and Claudine.
Cruel as the Grave is not only a good mystery with interesting characters, it is also a story about second sons and jealousy, whether commoners or noble born.