This novel begins in 1591, with a group of diplomats sent to London by the Ottoman Emperor. When they leave, unlucky Turk physician, Mahmoud Ezzedine, is left behind as a gesture of good will. A decade later, as Elizabeth I lay dying, all are anxious about whether James Stuart, the likely heir, is truly Protestant. Mahmoud is now Matthew Thatcher, still a physician, and now a Christian. This transition from the Tudors to the Stuarts was fully seven decades after Henry VIII had left the Catholic church, but religion had been and would continue to be an unsettled source of conflict for another nine decades after Elizabeth's death. Indeed, it wouldn't be until the middle of the 18th century that Bonnie Prince Charlie's defeat at Culloden ended the last Catholic threat once and for all. Thatcher is sent to James VI in Scotland by Elizabeth to be his assistant and physician. It is not his health, though, but rather his religious intent, that Thatcher is assigned to monitor. He gains the King's confidence, plays chess with him and slowly poisons him. When called in to administer to him, he does and he observes the King in extremis. He prays to his Protestant God as Thatcher cures him. Thatcher delivers the wonderful news toEngland, easing the way for James I to ascend the throne upon Elizabeth's demise in 1603.
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