Marie Brennan is a former anthropologist and folklorist who shamelessly leans on her academic fields for inspiration. She recently misapplied her professors' hard work to The Game of 100 Candles and the short novel Driftwood, and together with Alyc Helms as M.A. Carrick, she is the author of the Rook and Rose epic fantasy trilogy, beginning with The Mask of Mirrors. The first book of her Hugo Award-nominated Victorian adventure series The Memoirs of Lady Trent, A Natural History of Dragons, was a finalist for the World Fantasy Award. Her other works include the Doppelganger duology, the urban fantasy Wilders series, the Onyx Court historical fantasies, the Varekai novellas, several poems, and over eighty short stories, as well as the New Worlds series of worldbuilding guides. For more information and social media, including her Patreon, visit linktr.ee/swan_tower.
ABOVE
The year is 1590. The City of London flourishes, the most brilliant jewel in the crown of Elizabeth I, Gloriana, the Virgin Queen.
BELOW
The Onyx Court is London's faerie shadow. Ruled by Invidiana, its heartless queen, it reflects and distorts the glory of the mortal court.
BETWEEN
Years ago, Elizabeth forged a pact with her faerie counterpart to secure both of their thrones. Now that alliance is in danger. Michael Deven, a rising star in Elizabeth's court, seeks the "hidden player" who has influenced mortal politics for so long. Lady Lune, a faerie out of favour, must infiltrate the mortal world to protect her vicious queen. Together this pair will uncover the secret of Invidiana's power — a secret that has the potential to shatter both realms . . . .
Midnight Never Come by Marie Brennan (Hugo- and World Fantasy Award-nominated author of the Memoirs of Lady Trent) is the opening saga of her Onyx Court mirror-worlds series. The year is 1590. Above, the City of London flourishes, the brilliant jewel in the crown of Elizabeth I, Gloriana, the Virgin Queen. Below, the Onyx Court is London's faerie shadow. Ruled by Invidiana, its heartless queen, it reflects and distorts the glory of the mortal court. Years ago, Elizabeth forged a pact with her faerie counterpart to secure both of their thrones. Now that alliance is in danger. Michael Deven, a rising star in Elizabeth's court, seeks the "hidden player" who has influenced mortal politics for so long; while Lady Lune, a faerie fallen from favor, must infiltrate the mortal world to protect her vicious queen. Together this pair will uncover the secret of Invidiana's power—a secret that has the potential to shatter both realms. – Athena Andreadis
"Brennan fleshes out the primal conflict of love and honor pitted against raging ambition and lust for power in a glittering age."
– Publishers Weekly"Marie Brennan's lush and lovely tale will draw you in at once and not let you go until long after midnight."
– Lory Hess, Green Man Review"What sets Marie Brennan apart, then, is the quality of her writing, the complexities of her plot, the characterisations, the world-building… everything."
– The Book SwedePrologue
The Tower of London: March 1554
Fitful drafts of chill air blew in through the cruciform windows of the Bell Tower, and the fire did little to combat them. The chamber was ill-lit, just wan sunlight filtering in from the alcoves and flickering light from the hearth, giving a dreary, despairing cast to the stone walls and meagre furnishings. A cheerless place—but the Tower of London was not a place intended for cheer.
The young woman who sat on the floor by the fire, knees drawn up to her chin, was pale with winter and recent illness. The blanket over her shoulders was too thin keep her warm, but she seemed not to notice; her dark eyes were fixed on the dancing flames, morbidly entranced, as if imagining their touch. She would not be burned, of course; burning was for common heretics. Decapitation, most likely. Perhaps, like her mother, she would be permitted a French executioner, whose sword would do the work cleanly.
Presuming the Queen's mercy permitted her that consideration. Presuming the Queen had mercy for her at all.
The few servants she kept were not there; in a rage she had sent them away, arguing with the guards until she won these private moments for herself. As much as solitude oppressed her, she could not bear the thought of companionship in this dark moment, the risk of showing her weakness to others. And so when she woke from her reverie to sense another in the room, her anger rose again. Shedding the blanket, the young woman whirled to her feet, ready to confront the intruder.
Her words died, unspoken, and behind her the fire dipped low.
The woman she saw was no serving-maid, no lady attendant. No one she had ever seen before. A mere silhouette, barely visible in the shadows—but she stood in one of the alcoves, where a blanket had been tacked up to cover the arrow-slit window.
Not by the door. And she had entered without a sound.
"You are the Princess Elizabeth," the woman said. Her voice was a cool ghost, melodious, soft, and dark.
Tall, she was, taller than Elizabeth herself, and more slender. She wore a sleek black gown, close-fitting through the body but flaring outward into a full skirt and a high standing collar that gave her presence weight. Jewels glimmered with dark colour here and there, touching the fabric with elegance.
"I am," Elizabeth said, drawing herself up to the dignity of her full height. "I have given no orders to accept visitors." Nor was she permitted any, but in prison as in court, bravado could be all.
The stranger's voice answered levelly. "I am not a visitor. Do you think this solitude your own doing? The guards allowed it because I arranged that they should. My words are for your ears alone."
Elizabeth stiffened. "And who are you, that you presume to order my life in such fashion?"
"A friend." The word carried no warmth. "Your sister means to execute you. She cannot risk your survival; you are a focal point for every Protestant rebellion, every disaffected nobleman who hates her Spanish husband. She must dispose of you, and soon."
No more than Elizabeth herself had already calculated. To be here, in the stark confines of the Bell Tower, was an insult to her rank. Prisoner though she was, she should have received more comfortable lodgings. "No doubt you come to offer me some escape from this. I do not, however, converse with strangers who intrude on me without warning, let alone make alliances with them. Your purpose might be to lure me into some indiscretion my enemies could exploit."
"You do not believe that." The stranger came forward one step, into a patch of thin, grey light. A cruciform arrow-slit haloed her as if in painful mimicry of Heaven's blessing. "Your sister and her Catholic allies would not treat with one such as I."
Slender as a breath, she should have been skeletal, grotesque, but far from it; her face and body bore the stamp of unearthly perfection, a flawless symmetry and grace that unnerved as much as it entranced. Elizabeth had spent her childhood with scholars for her tutors, reading classical authors, but she knew the stories of her own land, too: the beautiful ones, the Fair Folk, the Good People, whose many epithets were chosen to mollify their capricious natures.
The faerie was a sight to send grown women to their knees, and Elizabeth was only twenty-one. Since childhood, though, the princess had survived the tempests of political unrest, riding from her mother's inglorious downfall to her own elevation at her brother's hands, only to plummet again when their Catholic sister took the throne. She was intelligent enough to be afraid, but stubborn enough to defy that fear, to cling to pride when nothing else remained.
"Do you think me easier to cozen than my sister? Some say your kind are fallen angels, or in league with the devil himself."
The woman's laugh echoed from the chamber walls like shattering crystal. "I do not serve the devil. I offer you a bond of mutual aid. With my help, you may be freed from the Tower and raised to your sister's throne. Your father's throne. Without it, your life will surely end soon."
Elizabeth knew too much of politics to even consider an offer without hearing it in full. "And in return? What gift—no doubt a minor, insignificant trifle—would you require from me?"
"Oh, 'tis not minor." The faintest of smiles touched the stranger's lips. "As I will raise you to your throne, you will raise me to mine. And when we both achieve power, perhaps we will be of use to each other again."
Every shrewd instinct and fibre of caution in Elizabeth warned her against this pact. Yet over her hovered the spectre of death, the growing certainty of her sister's bitterness and hatred. She had her allies, surely enough, but they were not here. Could they be relied upon to save her from the headsman?
To cover her thoughts, she said, "You have not yet told me your name."
The fae paused. At last, her tone considering, she said, "Invidiana."
When Elizabeth's servants returned soon after, they found their mistress seated in a chair by the fire, staring into its glowing heart. The air in the chamber was freezing cold, but Elizabeth sat without cloak or blanket, her long, elegant hands resting on the arms of the chair. She was quiet that day, and for many days after, and her gentlewomen worried for her, but when word came that she was to be permitted to walk at times upon the battlements and to take the air, they brightened. Surely, they hoped, their futures—and that of their mistress—were looking up at last.