Young widow Lady
Elizabeth Grey puts herself in the path of King
Edward IV to seek his assistance in reclaiming her late husband's estate for her sons, but it is
love at first sight for both of them. They marry in secret, which later puts Edward, Elizabeth and Elizabeth's entire family at odds with
Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick, who had helped place Edward on the throne while expecting to control the young king. Masterminded by Elizabeth's mother
Jacquetta, an experienced courtier formerly allied with the ousted queen
Margaret of Anjou, Edward and Elizabeth secure strategic marriages and positions for Elizabeth's siblings and other relatives to bolster Edward's power and alliances against Warwick. Edward and Elizabeth have three daughters, and Warwick rebels, attempting to put Edward's malleable younger brother
George, Duke of Clarence on the throne instead. Edward foils their plan and reconciles with Warwick and George to consolidate his power, but not before Warwick executes Elizabeth's father,
Richard Woodville, Earl Rivers and brother,
John Woodville. Elizabeth vows revenge. Warwick marries his elder daughter
Isabel to George and rebels again, luring Edward into an arranged uprising where he plans to kill Edward. The plot fails, and Warwick and George flee to France. Isabel gives birth during the journey, but the child dies. Warwick marries his second daughter
Anne to
Edward of Lancaster, son and heir to the deposed king
Henry VI, to secure Warwick's new alliance with Henry's exiled queen, Margaret of Anjou. Warwick invades England. Caught off guard, Edward is forced to flee to
Flanders with Elizabeth's brother
Anthony. Warwick arrests Jacquetta on charges of
witchcraft, but she is soon released on the orders of her old friend Margaret. Jacquetta joins a pregnant Elizabeth and her children in sanctuary in
Westminster Abbey, where they are left unmolested by Warwick. Elizabeth gives birth to Edward's son, also named
Edward. Returning to England, Edward is reunited with George and first defeats the forces of Warwick, who is killed, and then Margaret's army. Her son Edward of Lancaster is killed on the battlefield, and Edward murders the captive
simpleton Henry VI to end the Lancastrian claim to the throne once and for all. England is at peace, but a covetous George continues his plotting to undermine Edward's rule. Their younger brother
Richard marries the widowed Anne Neville, and disapproves of Edward's choice to broker peace with France, rather than
fight for English holdings there. Isabel's death drives George over the edge, and his plots and slanders against Edward and Elizabeth result in his conviction for treason. Despite the protestations of their mother
Cecily, Edward has George executed. Edward later dies himself, leaving his brother Richard as guardian to his surviving sons Edward and
Richard despite Elizabeth's protestations. Richard seizes young Edward from the custody of Elizabeth's brother Anthony, and from sanctuary Elizabeth eventually relinquishes to Richard a page boy posing as her younger son, whom she actually sends to Flanders to be raised in secret under an
assumed name. Believing he has both of Edward's heirs under his control in the
Tower of London, Richard has Edward and Elizabeth's marriage declared invalid, and accedes the throne himself as Richard III. Meanwhile, Elizabeth plots with her brother-in-law and former ward, the
Duke of Buckingham, and
Margaret Beaufort, the mother of the exiled Lancastrian claimant
Henry Tudor, to overthrow Richard and free the young
princes in the Tower. They betroth Tudor to
Elizabeth of York, Edward and Elizabeth's eldest daughter, in part to seek the support of Yorkists for Tudor's cause. The young princes vanish and are presumed murdered, and though Elizabeth has not forgiven Richard for his execution of her brother Anthony and her son
Richard Grey, she suspects that Buckingham, Margaret and Henry are more likely responsible for the disappearance of the boys as part of their own plotting to wrest the throne from Richard. Elizabeth leaves sanctuary and sends her older daughters to Richard's court as
ladies-in-waiting to Queen Anne. Richard's and Anne's son
Edward dies, followed by Anne herself. In the meantime, Richard and the younger Elizabeth have fallen in love, but he fears losing the support of the northern lords loyal to Anne's family if he marries Elizabeth right away. Henry Tudor's forces arrive in England. == Critical reception ==