Джеймс Филип - Remember Brave Achilles

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The British Empire has sleepwalked, unprepared into war with the Triple Alliance, the Spanish colonies of the Caribbean and Central America.
But this is not to be a war like those which have gone before it; wars decided by crushing British sea power and eventually, on land by the superiority of the logistics and tactics of relatively small colonial armies in the South Western badlands.
No, this time it is the enemy, the Triple Alliance of Nuevo Granada, Cuba and Santo Domingo, allied to a miscellany of old Spanish crown colonies ringing the Caribbean and the Gulf of Spain, which seizes the initiative and in the opening days of the war deliver a series of hammer blows.
It began with a sneak invasion of Jamaica, the key strategic British base in the Caribbean, and the ambush of the light cruiser Achilles in the Windward Passage.
‘Remember Brave Achilles’ becomes the call to arms.
Yet this is not a war to be fought just in the West Indies or down in the contested borderlands.
In Spain – wracked by civil war Melody Danson, Henrietta De L’Isle and the Manhattan Globe man Albert Stanton are on the run from the Inquisition.
On Little Inagua Island in the West Indies Surgeon Lieutenant Abe Lincoln and his navigator, Ted Forest of the Royal Naval Air Service, both wounded, must fight for survival.
At sea the Atlantic Fleet, on paper invincible, must suddenly come to terms with that most vile of weapons – banned by treaty with the German Empire a decade ago – submarines. And while disaster beckons; still New England slumbers, and everybody knows that when it awakens, rudely as it must, that there will be all Hell to pay!
The New England Series continues next year with Book 5: George Washington’s Ghost, and Book 6: The Imperial Crisis.

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Albert Stanton had angrily accused the kids of betraying them.

Melody had stepped in to avoid an unpleasant scene.

The boys had families up river, they needed to know what had happened to them in the fighting at El Barco de Ávila , after the Cortez family convoy had been attacked and the survivors scattered. Whereas, in the heat of the moment it had been everybody for themselves; understandably, the boys needed to know if their loved ones and dependents were still alive.

Henrietta had followed Melody’s conciliatory lead. The women had hugged the boys – young men for all that they could not have been more than thirteen or fourteen – and thanked them for coming this far.

‘God rewards men of good heart,’ Melody had told Jesus and Felipe and shortly thereafter, the party had split up on good terms, mutual goodwill fortified by her insistence that Albert Stanton surrender both the hand guns to the kids as a token of their thanks for rescuing them from the previous day’s battle.

The man had been fuming as he watched the boys disappear into the night.

‘They didn’t have to help us, Albert,’ Melody had gently reminded him. ‘We’re still alive because they risked their lives to help us, strangers.’

Actually, she had been more than a little vexed by the newspaperman’s attitude, realising then how much better she understood the people of this benighted country. She had after all, spent over three years in Spain as a child, watching, learning, exposed to the rhythms and nuances of many aspects of the daily lives of ‘ordinary’ people. Very few Spaniards of the country were likely to bear them, even if they knew them to be foreigners in a time of civil war, any particular malice. To the contrary, the reaction of most of the people they were likely to encounter might be to offer what, little, hospitality they could afford. Particularly, to two women with a small child in their care…

‘These people owe us nothing,’ she reminded the Manhattan Globe man. ‘We have no right to demand anything of them.’

A little later Albert Stanton had apologised.

‘Look. I feel responsible for your safety. I feel as if I have let you down.’ The man still had the German sub-machine gun but after a brief discourse, the women prevailed upon him to throw it in the river.

‘Honestly, Albert,’ Melody had comforted him, ‘if you ever had to use it, we’d already be well… screwed.’

Now, in the light of the new day, she was looking meaningfully at his wristwatch.

“That has to go, too. Sorry. It shouts NEW YORK and people around here don’t have any kind of timepiece smaller than a dinner plate…”

Albert Stanton did not argue.

The designer watch, expensively personalised by an Albany jeweller disappeared into the river along with the evil-looking gun.

“So,” the man had asked, “what’s the plan?”

“I don’t have a plan,” Melody had confessed, too tired to think straight anymore.

They had no food, the wrong clothes – Henrietta and she were dressed like boy farm labourers, from a distance with their shorn heads they had to look decidedly androgynous but that was not going to work close up – no documents, no friends, strangers in a strange land…

“Pilgrims,” she yawned. ‘’You,’ she had decided patting Albert Stanton’s arm, “and Henrietta are in mourning, travelling under an oath of silence to seek comfort for the loss of your daughter to small pox, at Santiago de Compostela.’

‘What about you?’ The Manhattan Globe man had, not unreasonably, asked.

“I am your sister. I will do all the speaking from now on.”

The others had been too tired to argue.

“We can’t stay here,” Albert Stanton hissed.

Melody sat up.

“Yes, we can. We’re pilgrims, remember? We have placed ourselves in God’s hands for so long as we walk the Camino de Santiago , the way of Saint James, in humility, poverty and penitence.”

Henrietta had sat up, hugging Pedro to her breast.

The child was still traumatised, clinging desperately, uncomplaining to Henrietta, despite the hunger which had to be gnawing at his belly the way it was with the three adults.

Melody reached over and ruffled the kid’s hair.

Henrietta kissed the top of Pedro’s head and he clung on harder, shivering.

Albert Stanton pulled off his jacket and gallantly spread it about the younger woman’s shoulders. She gathered it tight about herself and the boy.

“Thank you…’

The man blushed, feeling horribly guilty for not having offered the jacket sooner.

“Okay,” he decided, fixing Melody with a determined look. “You’re in charge. What next?”

Melody Danson frowned.

“I’m not ‘in charge’,” she objected. “All I did was suggest what I believe might be a way to go…”

Her voice trailed off.

Why deny it?

She was in charge and she was pushing at an open door. By stepping in to the ‘situation’ with the two boys last night she had taken upon herself the slim mantle of authority which the Manhattan Globe man had previously been hanging onto like grim death – almost entirely for the benefit of Henrietta and her – and now it was up to her to step up to the mark.

It made sense for her to ‘take over’.

She knew the country better than they did; understood ‘the Spanish’, something of the ways of the ‘ordinary people’, even a little of the rhythms of life outside the big cities, albeit her experience was of travelling on her parents’ coat tails as a child and young adolescent and more than twenty years out of date.

“Pilgrims,” she announced, this time with modicum of certainty. “People go on pilgrimage for all sorts of reasons, and in all sorts of ways. Practically anything will seem plausible to many of the people we meet on the road. Any of the people we meet may once have been, plan to be, or simply will be, pilgrims. Catholicism is at its purest out here in the rural heartlands.”

Without consciously thinking about it she was conducting an abbreviated case briefing; bringing the others up to speed in a crashing hurry because, self-evidently, time was short.

Tomorrow, there would be a new case, new priorities for the detectives she was leading today…

A wry half-smile quirked at her lips.

“What is it?” Henrietta asked.

“Nothing, I just had a really weird moment,” Melody shrugged apologetically. “Sorry, I must be getting a little light-headed.”

Hunger was cramping her stomach.

Melody touched her head.

“Hen and I look like supplicants who have had their heads shaved in penitence, that works well on two counts. One, women on pilgrimage frequently put themselves through that sort of thing as a sign of humility. Two, if anybody ever gets photographs of the two missing British-New England women the authorities want to speak to that might be circulated out here in the back of nowhere, or even in any of the towns and cities we will need to go through, neither of us will look remotely like the women in the pictures.”

The other man and woman nodded.

“Santiago de Compostela,” Albert Stanton murmured. “Why there?”

“Because the line between here and there, so far as I can remember, goes within a few miles of the north-eastern corner of Portugal,” Melody retorted. “Well, when we get past Salamanca, anyway, which has to be our first aim. Hopefully, once we get to the city we can rest up, be anonymous for a few days. We might even be able to catch up with what’s going on in the rest of the World. I think we need to try to do that.”

“Salamanca?” Henrietta chimed in, softly. “Won’t that be dangerous?”

Melody contemplated complete frankness.

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