StoryGraph Easy Reading Challenge 2025: All Alone – Read a stand-alone book
Thanks to NetGalley and Sourcebooks Landmark for this ARC. My opinions are my own.
It is 1613 and Prince Henry, James I’s eldest son and heir has tragically died. Rumours whisper that it might not have been by natural causes. Queen Anna is distraught, and King James is determined to punish the guilty.
Andrew Logan is one of the king’s messengers and he’s tasked with going to Scotland to apprehend Sir David Moray, Prince Henry’s closest companion, and bring him safely to London to face ‘trial’. Logan will not be travelling alone, along for the journey will also be an experienced scribe, Lawrence Westaway, who will write down anything that Moray says or does during the trip. Because Lawrence is elderly and of ill health, Westaway’s daughter Phoebe will also accompany them. Complicating matters somewhat is the secret Logan needs to keep from everyone around him. He has the Second Sight, and can occasionally catch glimpses of things that will happen. In a time where the least unusual behaviour could have you accused of witchcraft, Logan dares not tell Phoebe that he can see her father’s poor health will shortly lead to his death.
While the queen is mourning her son, she doesn’t necessarily believe Sir David is responsible for his death. She wants him brought safely to her so she can speak with him, Logan’s orders are to bring him directly to the king. Logan suspects that by arresting Moray, he may be complicit in the man’s demise. It doesn’t help matters that Logan and Phoebe don’t exactly get along. She believes him to be a brutish and uncivilised man, swayed by the words of others in her acquaintance. He believes her to be a judgemental snob who has coldly rejected any of his overtures of friendship since they were younger.
The journey from Edinburgh to London is long, however, and the travellers spend a lot of time in each other’s company. Logan arrests Sir David as his ship from France arrives in the port in Leith, and on their return journey to London, the group are also joined by a young stablehand who idolises Logan and wants to become a royal messenger like him. Sir David is obviously grieving the loss of Prince Henry deeply and it becomes obvious to everyone in the group almost immediately that he is an innocent man, and that taking him to London would be to commit an act of injustice. Their return to London will also be dangerous, as one of Sir David’s Scottish kinsmen is pursuing them with a large band of his soldiers, determined to spirit his cousin away to safety.
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