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Dorothy Dunnett’s

LYMOND CHRONICLES

“Dorothy Dunnett is one of the greatest talespinners since Dumas … breathlessly exciting.”

—Cleveland Plain Dealer

“Dunnett is a name to conjure with. Her work exemplifies the best the genre can offer. It combines the accuracy of exhaustive historical research with a gripping story to give the reader a visceral as well as cerebral understanding of an epoch.”

—Christian Science Monitor

“Dorothy Dunnett is a storyteller who could teach Scheherazade a thing or two about suspense, pace and invention.”

—The New York Times

“Dunnett evokes the sixteenth century with an amazing richness of allusion and scholarship, while keeping a firm control on an intricately twisting narrative. She has another more unusual quality … an ability to check her imagination with irony, to mix high romance with wit.”

—Sunday Times (London)

“A very stylish blend of high romance and high camp. Her hero, the enigmatic Lymond, [is] Byron crossed with Lawrence of Arabia.… He moves in an aura of intrigue, hidden menace and sheer physical daring.”

—Times Literary Supplement (London)

“First-rate … suspenseful.… Her hero, in his rococo fashion, is as polished and perceptive as Lord Peter Wimsey and as resourceful as James Bond.”

—The New York Times Book Review

“A masterpiece of historical fiction, a pyrotechnic blend of passionate scholarship and high-speed storytelling soaked with the scents and colors and sounds and combustible emotions of 16th-century feudal Scotland.”

—Washington Post Book World

“Splendidly colored scenes … always exciting, dangerous, fascinating.”

—Boston Globe

“Detailed research, baroque imagination, staggering dramatic twists, multilingual literary allusion and scenes that can be very funny.”

—The Times (London)

“Ingenious and exceptional … its effect brilliant, its pace swift and colorful and its multi-linear plot spirited and absorbing.”

—Boston Herald

FIRST VINTAGE BOOKS EDITION, SEPTEMBER 1997


Copyright © 1971 by Dorothy Dunnett

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York. Originally published in hardcover in Great Britain by Cassell & Company, Ltd., London, in 1971. First published in hardcover in the United States by G. P. Putnam’s Sons, New York, in 1972.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Dunnett, Dorothy.

The ringed castle / Dorothy Dunnett.

p. cm.

Sequel to Pawn in frankincense.

eISBN: 978-0-307-76239-9

1. Crawford, Francis (Fictitious character)—Fiction. 2. Courts and courtiers—Fiction. 3. Russia—History—1533-1584—Fiction. I. Title.

PR6054.U56R56 1997

823’.914—dc21 97-6674

Random House Web address: http://www.randomhouse.com/

v3.1_r1

With love, for

Dorothy Eveline Millard Halliday

to whom both Francis Crawford and the author

owe their present delightful existence

THE LYMOND CHRONICLES

FOREWORD BY Dorothy Dunnett

When, a generation ago, I sat down before an old Olivetti typewriter, ran through a sheet of paper, and typed a title, The Game of Kings, I had no notion of changing the course of my life. I wished to explore, within several books, the nature and experiences of a classical hero: a gifted leader whose star-crossed career, disturbing, hilarious, dangerous, I could follow in finest detail for ten years. And I wished to set him in the age of the Renaissance.

Francis Crawford of Lymond in reality did not exist, and his family, his enemies and his lovers are merely fictitious. The countries in which he practices his arts, and for whom he fights, are, however, real enough. In pursuit of a personal quest, he finds his way—or is driven—across the known world, from the palaces of the Tudor kings and queens of England to the brilliant court of Henry II and Catherine de Medici in France.

His home, however, is Scotland, where Mary Queen of Scots is a vulnerable child in a country ruled by her mother. It becomes apparent in the course of the

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