Matilda Empress by Lise Arin Genre: Historical Fiction
Matilda, a twelfth-century Empress of the Holy Roman Empire and daughter of Henry I, is twenty-four years old and a widow. She returns to her father’s double realm of England and Normandy and is promptly married against her will to Geoffrey, a minor continental nobleman. When she is absent from England at the time of her father’s death, Matilda loses her throne to her cousin Stephen despite their ongoing and secret love affair. For almost twenty years, anarchy reins, and their passion fluctuates between hatred and obsession. The only hope in sight is Matilda and Stephen’s two sons, whose rightful claim to the throne may finally end the bloody and endless war. In the vein of Philippa Gregory’s The Other Boleyn Girl, Matilda Empress follows the real history of the early English monarchs, and what happens when a strong woman at the center of great upheaval refuses to play by the rules laid out for her. Add to GoodreadsAmazon * Apple * B&N * Kobo
Lise Arin has a PhD in English Literature from Columbia, and an undergraduate degree in History and Literature from Harvard. She has two children, and lives with her husband in New York City. This is her first novel, although it has been in the making for twenty years. Please follow @lisearin on Instagram and Twitter. Website * Facebook * Twitter * Instagram * Amazon * Goodreads
I am the Dowager Empress Matilda, twenty-four years old and a widow. I travel on a ship bound for
England, my homeland. I enjoy the sensation of speed, and relish the early morning fog that surrounds
me like a cloak. I always stand upwind from the crew’s stench and stretch my face into the gusts of fresh
air that swell our sails and tangle my veil and braids. I inhale deeply of the brisk breeze, for it is the breath
of our Heavenly Father. To keep my mind occupied, I chant the blessings of Christ: “Tranquility, amour,
purity–discipline, strength, form–rule, custom, terminus–road, counsellor, foundation–heart, blaze,
majesty–essence, lion of creation.”
Each day I scan the sky for the sea birds that will herald the coastline, as vultures are the harbingers of a
corpse. Death and upheaval are two faces of the same coin. Cancer defeated my husband at Utrecht,
revoking my whole future. If I had had a son, I would have reigned in his stead, during his minority.
Instead, the Duke of Saxony is elevated to the throne of the Holy Roman Empire. Having turned over
most of the imperial regalia, all but one seal, I am put forth on the ocean, to a new beginning. Although
many forget my English origins, I do not aspire to wed any of the minor German princes who compete for
my hand, as a means to remain in my adopted country. Neither do I wish to immure myself in any
European convent, to spend the rest of my days outside the ebb and ow of all the world’s affairs.
Over the years, my father’s letters brought me the tragic tidings of the death of my mother, and then of my
only legitimate brother, drowned in the English Channel. His Majesty remarried, in the hope of siring
another legitimate son. Unfortunately, his second queen has not born any offspring. Lately, the king
sleepwalks, troubled by nightmares. He dreams that his peasants desert their furrows and his barons
their fortresses, part of some violent revolt; he alone takes the field to reclaim the peace. In truth, his
power is well established, yet fears for the future security of his empire plague him.
Now that I return to my native land, His Majesty determines that I shall be queen of England and
Normandy. His barons must accept his daughter, if he is to have no son. This new destiny suits my
aspiring spirit. Educated to reign, I am well used to wielding authority. I will serve my father’s family, as I
did my husband’s. I will be a splendid queen, worthy of praise.
Often, I am spellbound by the waves breaking tumultuously around the prow of the ship. Do their force
and crash echo my inner strength? Will I be able to sail into my father’s kingdom, and claim my due?
Behind the stern of our vessel, the sea has been flattened so that a white trail of foam stretches out
behind us. Need I fear that I am not the boat, but the water, deflated, suppressed, made quiet again?
I berate my own ignorance of astrology, examining the stars in the wide sky above me, but unable to
decipher the meaning of the patterns in the firmament. Instead, I count the calls of the swooping gulls,
prognosticating my future wealth and fertility. I study the glistening entrails of netted fish presented to me
by the rough deck hands, and try to interpret therein the likelihood of my glorious ascendance to the
throne.
I do not have complete confidence in what is to come. For who am I? What is my worth? I am the Holy
Roman empress; there is none who sits higher, or comes between me and the throne of heaven. But I am
my father’s unmarried daughter, to be disposed of according to his will. I can walk among the English
court with my head held aloft, with none daring to meet my eyes, and yet I resume my place as an ivory
pawn upon King Henry’s chess set. On the other side of Europe, I dispensed the law with an iron st. And
now I shall be forced to sheath my mail in silk and manipulation. My face is struck from the imperial
coinage. I have lost my currency.
I am the Holy Roman empress, but my greatness tumbles overboard, into the abyss of the ocean. To the
world, I am no one, a child, a head without a crown. I must remember that I am stripped of my honors. It
will serve me no purpose to cling to my former status, to remember with pride that I was divine. This will
be a hard lesson, that of renunciation. How swiftly shall I learn it?
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Very unique, interesting cover.