Book Read Free

The Maclarens (The Regiment Family Saga Book 1)

Page 36

by CL Skelton


  At least there would not be the smell of stale food so common to army barracks. The Maclaren Highlanders were modern; by current standards, innovators. They had built a proper mess hall for the men where all meals were taken, something unheard of in most regiments, where the men ate sitting on their beds in the same room in which they slept.

  The men themselves would be sitting around on the ends of their beds in tight little groups, and if they said anything, it would be to the effect that at least there would be no kit inspection that morning. Of what they had witnessed, they would say not a word.

  They would talk about it eventually of course. In a week or two it would become a coarse soldier’s joke and Donald Bruce would be the butt. Donald’s lips tightened as he looked round the familiar square, gripping his letter. He hurried to the front of Headquarters Block and went in through the main entrance, returning the salute of the sentry as he passed.

  He walked on down the long corridor ‒ it was painted in exactly the same brown and black and yellow as the barrack rooms ‒ his boots echoing in its bare emptiness. Offices flanked him as he passed: the regimental sergeant-major, the Orderly Room where they did the paper work, the adjutant, and the second-in-command. But always facing him, almost threatening in its heavy dark polished oak, was the door to his father’s office, bearing the legend picked out in gold: Commanding Officer the Maclaren Highlanders, and beneath this an embossed plaque of the regimental crest, a snarling Highland wildcat’s head and their motto: Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum. He tapped on the door and went in.

  Colonel Bruce glanced up from behind the desk which was a legacy of the man who had founded the 148th Regiment of Foot, eighty years ago on the twenty-second of January. Sir Godfrey Maclaren, great-grandfather of the current holder of the title, Sir Andrew Maclaren, gazed disapprovingly down from his gilt frame on the wall flanked by similar portraits of his successors including Sir Henry Maclaren, father of both Andrew and Willie ‒ Andrew from the marriage bed and Willie from an idyllic moment in the heather. The wall was getting a little crowded and Willie was determined, if he could persuade the mess committee to accept, to present them with the portraits. Also on the wall, framed, was Willie’s personal indulgence, the badge of every rank which he had held throughout his military career, from the single stripe of a lance-corporal, through regimental sergeant-major, to the crown and single pip of lieutenant-colonel. There were also a few, a very few, personal trophies and mementos. There was a spear (or was it an assegai? Donald was never sure), a leather shield from Africa, a boomerang from Australia, a carved ivory elephant from India, and a daguerreotype of Donald’s mother, Maud Bruce.

  Donald approached the man at the desk, saluted, and stood to attention. For some moments Willie Bruce regarded his son from under his bushy, ginger eyebrows which seemed to grow more out than across. There was a sympathy and a gentleness in his father’s expression which was the last thing Donald had expected to find.

  ‘All right, Donald,’ said Willie. ‘Tak’ your hat off and sit ye doon.’ Willie still spoke with the distinct accent which he had acquired during his childhood which had been spent with his mother and stepfather in the little whitewashed cottage which nestled in the south face of the hill behind Culbrech House.

  ‘Sir,’ said Donald formally without moving, ‘before you say any more, I want to apologize for what happened this morning. I am sorry, sir, I know I behaved in an unsoldierly manner, but I couldn’t do it. I just couldn’t bring myself to say that word. And that is the reason why I have brought you this.’

  Donald held the letter out and towards his father, and when Willie made no move to take it from him, he placed it on the desk in front of him.

  Willie had not taken his eyes off his son for a moment.

  ‘I told ye to sit doon.’

  ‘Sorry, sir,’ replied Donald, obeying. He took off his feather bonnet and placed it on the floor beside the plain straight-backed wooden chair across from his father and sat there waiting as Willie slowly picked up the envelope.

  ‘I think,’ Willie said, very slowly, ‘I think I ken what is in here.’ He tapped the envelope against the tips of the fingers of his left hand. ‘I think you should take it back and tear it up.’

  ‘No, sir.’ Donald looked down, not wanting to meet his father’s gaze. ‘No, sir, my mind is made up. I’ll never be a soldier, sir.’

  ‘Wait a bittie,’ said Willie. ‘Before you say any more, there are two things I want you to know. First, you’re a Bruce. You’re my son. And secondly ‒ I had intended it as a surprise, but in the circumstances, I shall have to tell you now ‒ young Gordon will be joining the regiment next week.’

  Donald looked up sharply and met his father’s gaze. There was no vestige of expression there. The leathery weatherbeaten skin, creased with long service and increasing age, was immobile. The eyes were neither hard nor gentle, neither cruel nor compassionate; they just looked, and they seemed to look right into his mind.

  Willie Bruce waited as he looked into the young man opposite him, waited to see what sort of effect his pronouncement would have. He saw the uncertainty in his son’s eyes and he thought he saw the torment there too at the mention of Gordon’s name. Donald’s mouth was half open as if he was wanting to reply and could not find the words. The announcement had certainly come as a surprise to him, though he should have known. Young Gordon, who had gone to Sandhurst during Donald’s last term there, had aped his elder brother in fervent adulation of everything that he did. Not without cause, for Donald was one of those people who did everything well. Everything until today. Today he had failed, completely.

  Naturally Gordon would know nothing of this, but he would find out. Donald was Gordon’s god and the knowledge of what this would do to their relationship weighed heavily upon Donald, for he had a very great affection for his younger brother.

  ‘I see, sir,’ replied Donald after a long pause.

  ‘What do you see, Donald?’

  ‘Well, sir … I’m not sure.’

  ‘Do you not think that it might be a terrible thing for a young man to join his regiment on the day that his brother ran away?’ He stressed the words ‘ran away’.

  ‘But I’m not running away, sir.’

  ‘Are you quite sure, Donald?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Then I tell you that you are wrong. You are running away, my son,’ said Willie. ‘The job that you were given to do today was probably the worst job that you will ever be given in the whole of your career, unless you get command and have to order good men to what you ken well will be their deaths. This morning, there was not a man in the battalion who would have willingly changed places with you.’

  ‘But they would have done it, sir.’

  ‘I have not yet finished, Donald. There was a time, it happened only once, but I mind fine there was a time when I too would have left the regiment. I did not, through no virtue of my own, but I bless the day that I did not.’

  ‘You, sir?’ Donald was amazed.

  ‘Aye, laddie. I’ll tell you aboot it, though the telling of it still hurts. It happened thousands of miles from here in China at a place called Taku. We had just fought an action. I was in C Company. We lost a third of our men. It was a hard day. There was a wee drummer boy, Wee Alex we used to call him. I had recruited him myself. Alex came through the action untouched; we had taken the fort and he was standing on a heap of rubble cheering and shouting when he was killed by a falling rock. I remember picking up that wee body and holding him in ma arms and cursing the army which had done that to him. I tell you, Donald, if I had been an officer, I would have been out the very next day. But I was only a sergeant at the time and it is no so easy if you are in the ranks.’

  ‘But, sir, that was in the heat of an engagement. This morning was just blind violence.’ He paused. ‘I couldn’t take it, sir.’

  ‘Did Grigor deserve what he got?’

  ‘Yes, sir, I don’t dispute that.’

  ‘Donald, listen caref
ully to what I have to say. It is important to any soldier. I am not a violent man and I know fine that you are not, either. Do you think that the army wants violent men? They do not! The man who died this morning was a violent man, that was why he died, and it was why Sergeant Murdoch died; and Sergeant Murdoch was a good N.C.O., he was not a violent man. You know, Donald, violence never made a good soldier, but a man like you could, and that is why I want you to stay in the regiment.’ He picked up the letter and looked at his son.

  ‘What shall we do with this, Donald? Until I open it, it does not exist, but once I do, I am bound to act upon its contents … Well?’

  ‘Sir, I think you had better tear it up.’ He watched as his father ripped the letter deliberately and slowly into fragments and dropped it into the wastepaper basket. ‘I am not fully convinced, sir, but it may be a mistake. You will understand when I tell you that I cannot promise that I shall not resubmit it.’

  ‘Thank you, Donald, I understand.’ His tone changed:

  ‘And now, Mr Bruce.’

  ‘Sir,’ replied Donald, getting to his feet and standing at attention, his feather bonnet under his left arm.

  ‘This morning you performed your duties in a most unsoldierly manner. You will report to the adjutant and request that he give you three extra orderly officers.’

  ‘Yes, sir.’

  ‘You may go now’ ‒ and as Donald turned to leave him ‒ ‘Tell the adjutant, not tonight. We’re dining with Sir Andrew.’

  Continue reading Sweethearts and Wives by C. L. Skelton.

  Read Sweethearts and Wives now from Amazon UK

  Read Sweethearts and Wives now from Amazon.com

  Read Sweethearts and Wives now from Amazon AUS

  Wyndham Books: Timeless bestsellers for today’s readers

  Wyndham Books publishes the first ebook editions of bestselling works by some of the most popular authors of the twentieth century. Enjoy our Historical, Family Saga, Regency, Romance and Medical fiction and non-fiction.

  Join our free mailing list for news, exclusives and special deals:

  www.wyndhambooks.com

  Promises by Catherine Gaskin

  The gripping story of a remarkable woman and the promises she must keep to those she loves.

  A sweeping family saga, from the grand homes of Yorkshire and London in the Edwardian era, to the heartbreak of a French nursing station during World War I, and the glamour of American high society in the 1920s.

  Lally Leeds is just a baby when wealthy Black Jack Pollock finds her abandoned in a Yorkshire street and decides to raise her alongside his own children. As Lally blossoms into a young woman, the love and loyalty she feels towards her adoptive family bring her both happiness and heartache.

  Over time, it is Lally’s strength and devotion which hold the Pollock family together: her dashing brother, Jon; her selfish and self-destructive sister Margaret; and fragile Alice, who must been protected from herself. And the family’s fortunes become entwined with those of another foundling ‒ the mysterious, self-made businessman Brock Weymouth. Lally discovers to her cost that sometimes the most difficult promises to keep are to those we love.

  By the ‘Queen of Storytellers’ ‒ over 40 million book sales worldwide.

  Read Promises now from Amazon UK

  Read Promises now from Amazon.com

  Read Promises now from Amazon AUS

  Victoria Four-thirty by Cecil Roberts

  London, 1937. A world famous composer, a honeymooning couple, a novelist in search of a plot, a German film star, a young crown prince and a sister of charity are among the disparate group of travellers on the boat train to continental Europe.

  ‘It would be very interesting to know the life history of everybody on this train – why we are travelling on it …’

  Set amid the political upheaval of the 1930s, this is the witty, insightful and bittersweet story of the passengers on the Four-thirty from Victoria. Each is facing a different journey, with their own hopes, fears and challenges; and for some, their lives will cross in unexpected ways.

  The 80th anniversary edition of the newly rediscovered classic bestseller from the 1930s.

  A splendid achievement, with a classic quality.” Daily Telegraph

  ‘What a good novelist …’ Sunday Times

  ‘A book of considerable imaginative quality.’ The Guardian

  ‘A marvel of construction and execution …’ Yorkshire Post

  Read Victoria Four thirty by Cecil Roberts from Amazon UK

  Read Victoria Four thirty by Cecil Roberts from Amazon.com

  Read One Victoria Four thirty by Cecil Roberts from Amazon Australia

  Turn of the Tide by Margaret Skea

  ‘The quality of the writing and the research is outstanding.’ Jeffrey Archer

  Scotland 1586. A land in turmoil, a family torn apart. An ancient feud threatens Munro’s home, his family, even his life.

  Munro owes allegiance to the Cunninghames and to the Earl of Glencairn. He escapes the bloody aftermath of a massacre, but cannot escape the disdain of the wife he sought to protect, nor inner conflict, as he wrestles with his conscience, with divided loyalties and, most dangerous of all, a growing friendship with the rival Montgomerie clan.

  Set against the backdrop of the turmoil of the closing years of the sixteenth century, Turn of the Tide follows the fortunes of a fictional family trapped at the centre of a notorious historic feud. Known as the Ayrshire Vendetta, it began in the 15th century and wasn’t finally resolved until the latter part of the 17th, the Cunninghames and Montgomeries dubbed the ‘Montagues and Capulets’ of Ayrshire.

  Book 1 of the Munro Scottish Saga trilogy

  Praise for Margaret Skea – Beryl Bainbridge Best First Time Novelist 2014

  ‘I have read some wonderful debut novels this year – Turn of the Tide is one of them. I loved it … a tale of love, loyalty, tragedy and betrayal.’ BooksPlease

  ‘Munro frames the book, in at the initial kill, and centre stage in the brilliant climax, all the more shocking as the conclusion of an otherwise measured tale … a fascinating and engaging read with great visual effect.’ Between the Lines

  ‘It is hard to know where to begin, there were so many things I liked about Turn of the Tide…an emotionally gripping story about a man caught between duty and conscience at a time in history when a man’s livelihood depended upon his loyalty to family and clan.’ The History Lady

  ‘Margaret Skea brings sixteenth century Scotland to vivid life in Turn of the Tide. I enjoyed travelling back in time with her.’ Sharon K Penman

  Read Turn of the Tide by Margaret Skea from Amazon UK

  Read Turn of the Tide by Margaret Skea from Amazon.com

  Read Turn of the Tide by Margaret Skea from Amazon Australia

  The Founder of the House by Naomi Jacob

  The seven-volume family saga, spanning generations of the Gollantz family.

  Book 1: Set in nineteenth century Paris, Vienna and London, this is a novel about family ties and rivalries, love and ambition.

  The Founder of the House introduces us to Emmanuel Gollantz, the son of a Jewish antique dealer, Hermann Gollantz.

  Hermann lives his life according to the principles of loyalty, honesty and honour instilled in him as a child. But these ideals are ruthlessly exploited by his wife’s family, threatening everything that is important to him. Protecting his beloved wife, Rachel, from the truth carries a great cost.

  As a young man, Emmanuel, becomes involved with the inner circle of the Viennese Court, where his passion for the married baroness, Caroline Lukoes, has far-reaching consequences both for himself and the House of Gollantz.

  The Founder of the House is the first book in the bestselling Gollantz Saga ‒ an historical family saga tracing the lives and loves of the Gollantz family over several generations. This seven-novel series explores how one family’s destiny is shaped by the politics and attitudes of the time, as well as by the choices and actions of its own m
embers.

  What they’ve said about The Gollantz Saga:

  ‘Recommended. Ms Jacob writes skilfully and with that fine professional assurance we have come to expect of her.’ The Times

  ‘Impressive.’ London Evening Standard

  ‘A good family chronicle.’ Kirkus Reviews

  Read The Founder of the House now from Amazon UK

  Read The Founder of the House now from Amazon.com

  Read The Founder of the House now from Amazon AUS

  Wyndham Books: Timeless bestsellers for today’s readers

  Wyndham Books publishes the first ebook editions of bestselling works by some of the most popular authors of the twentieth century. Enjoy our Historical, Family Saga, Regency, Romance and Medical fiction and non-fiction.

  Join our free mailing list for news, exclusives and special deals:

  www.wyndhambooks.com

 

‹ Prev