31st October 2019 sees the publication of the second book in
Lynn Bryant’s Manxman series. The first book, An Unwilling Alliance was
recently shortlisted for the Society for Army Historical Research 2019 fiction
prize. Its sequel, This Blighted Expedition, tells the story of the Walcheren
campaign of 1809.
Hugh waited, feeling oddly nervous. He had last seen his son
as a small baby of four months. After their marriage in Denmark almost two
years earlier, Roseen remained with him, even when his ship, the Iris, was sent
to Gibraltar as part of a squadron to defend the island, which was a major supply
base for the war against Bonaparte in Spain.
Roseen adapted to shipboard life with typical Manx
practicality and Hugh loved having her with him although the times he had to
leave her on shore worried him. Gibraltar was known to be an unhealthy place
with regular outbreaks of disease and after Roseen’s brush with death on a
fever-ridden ship going to Denmark, Hugh was permanently on edge about her
health. Hugh was overjoyed when Roseen announced that she was with child and
she had sailed through both pregnancy and childbirth without difficulty but
Hugh knew that his wife and son could not remain with the Iris or on the
fever-ridden shores of Gibraltar.
Parting from her tore a piece from Hugh’s heart, and he had
lived the last eight months waiting for her letters and dreaming of her at
night. He was shocked at how much his happiness had come to depend upon her,
but the knowledge that she was safe and well back on Mann was a comfort through
the long months.
Orders had brought Hugh back to England, ready to join a new
expedition. There was no official destination yet, although navy gossip
suggested it was likely to be somewhere in the low countries. Hugh, who had his
own sources of information, summoned his first officer and asked for news.
“It’s not official yet, sir,” Lieutenant Durrell said.
“Clearly not, or I’d be telling you, not asking you. Sit
down, pour the wine, and remove the stuffed owl expression from your face, I’m
not going to write to the London Gazette with the information. Where are we
going?”
Alfred Durrell folded his lanky frame into the chair in
Hugh’s dining cabin and poured for both of them. “The island of Walcheren,” he
said. “My brother writes that the government wishes to support Austria in its
new campaign against Bonaparte, with more than just money.”
The Walcheren campaign was the largest British operation of
the war, with 40,000 men and around 600 ships heading to the Scheldt for a
lightning strike against Bonaparte’s dockyards at Vlissingen and Antwerp, yet
most people have never heard of it. Possibly this is because it turned out to
be one of Britain’s greatest military disasters. Vlissingen was almost
destroyed by a bombardment, but the progress of the operation was so slow that
the French had time to pour in reinforcements while the navy spent a good deal
of its time pegged down by contrary winds. By the time Lord Chatham’s army was
ready to march on Antwerp, the French had improved their defences and the
British army were beginning to show signs of the dreaded Walcheren fever which
killed over four thousand men and left many more on the sick list for years to
come.
This Blighted Expedition follows the story of six people
through the horror of the Walcheren campaign and its aftermath. Captain Hugh
Kelly of the Iris, the Manx hero of An Unwilling Alliance is enjoying a brief
reunion with his wife and baby son when he receives new orders to join the
expedition on the south coast, along with his first lieutenant, Alfred Durrell.
In the meantime, the second battalion of the 110th infantry is waiting to
embark for Walcheren. Among them are a young lieutenant of the seventh company,
Giles Fenwick, who is a permanently broke younger son of the aristocracy and
Captain Ross Mackenzie, who is recovering from the tragic deaths of his wife and
daughter and has recently transferred in to command the light company.
Meanwhile, in Walcheren, Katja de Groot, a young Dutch widow is raising three
children while managing her husband’s textile business, and worrying about the
impact of a British invasion on her workshops, her family and her home.
The interaction of these six people with each other and with
a host of secondary characters, both fictional and real is at the heart of the
novel. In particular, Lieutenant Durrell finds himself torn between old family
loyalties to the Earl of Chatham, who commands the army, and the clever,
manipulative Sir Home Popham who serves the interests of the navy – and
himself.
I love every one of my six protagonists. Hugh and Roseen are
old friends, and it has been fun to revisit them two years into married life
and in particular, to see how much Roseen has grown up from the shy, awkward
tomboy that Hugh fell in love with. It is also interesting to see how much Hugh
still has to learn about his wife.
Ross Mackenzie and Katja de Groot are both new characters,
and have a lot in common. Both are widowed and have experienced the loss of a
child to illness and both have become used to managing alone, not sharing their
feelings. They are on opposite sides of a war, and the book explores what that
means to them and whether friendship can develop in spite of it.
Giles Fenwick is the hero of The Reluctant Debutante, and
features in the Peninsular War Saga and in one of my short stories, An
Exploring Officer. I’m going back in time with Giles here, exploring his early
history with the regiment, before he arrives in Portugal and it’s fascinating
to be able to weave in his story to show how Giles became the man he is in
later books.
But of all my characters, this book belongs to Alfred
Durrell. Durrell was a secondary character in the previous book, a gangly,
awkward young man who provided a comic foil to Hugh’s Manx directness. Durrell
had the education and the political connections while Hugh was the man of
action who “had the reputation of a man who could snatch a prize out of thin
air and could keep any leaky old bucket afloat.”
Durrell isn’t a typical hero, but Walcheren isn’t a typical
campaign. He’s very intelligent, well educated and very confident in his own
abilities, but has no idea how to gossip, flirt or stop talking once he’s
started. While Hugh Kelly managed to kiss Roseen on their second ‘date’ poor
Durrell is more likely to give a girl a lecture on the physiology of crying.
What Durrell has is integrity, and honesty and a good deal of kindness. He is
incapable of being a bystander, he’s always the man who steps up and takes
responsibility. Your brother and sister would take the mickey out of you if you
brought Durrell home for dinner, but your Mum would be very pleased.
This Blighted Expedition is available on Amazon kindle here and will be out in paperback by the end of November.
To celebrate publication,
the first book, An Unwilling Alliance is available from 1st to 5th November
2019 FREE on Amazon here.
In the meantime, I am about to embark on book six of the
Peninsular War Saga. It’s called An Unrelenting Enmity and to give myself a
kick start with the writing process, I am attempting NaNaWriMo for the first
time ever.
To follow my progress why not join me on my blog over at Writing
with Labradors, or on Facebook or Twitter?
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