Synopsis
Julia is a young art expert in Madrid. Her specialty is
the restoration of paintings about to go up for auction.
But her latest project could also be her last. A fifteenth-century
masterpiece, the painting depicts a chess game between
the Duke of Flanders and his knight, as a lady in black
velvet sits in the background. What makes this project
different is the hidden inscription Julia discovers in
the corner: Quis Necavit Equitem. Translation: Who killed
the knight?
Breaking
the silence of five centuries, Julia's hunt for a Renaissance
murderer leads her into a modern-day game of sin, betrayal,
and death--every move calculated with devilish precision.
And as the stakes rise, Julia finds herself exposed and
vulnerable to attack from everywhere. Unsure whether she
is a player or just a pawn, all she knows for certain
is that her passion for art has made her an object of
deadly obsession. In a mystery of eloquence, wit, seduction,
and suspense which marks the debut of a writer Europeans
are already comparing to Umberto Eco, the solution is
a tour de force of intrigue.