Success to the Brave Read online




  SUCCESS TO

  THE BRAVE

  Selected Historical Fiction Published by McBooks Press

  BY ALEXANDER KENT

  The Complete Midshipman Bolitho

  Stand Into Danger

  In Gallant Company

  Sloop of War

  To Glory We Steer

  Command a King’s Ship

  Passage to Mutiny

  With All Despatch

  Form Line of Battle!

  Enemy in Sight!

  The Flag Captain

  Signal–Close Action!

  The Inshore Squadron

  A Tradition of Victory

  Success to the Brave

  Colours Aloft!

  Honour This Day

  The Only Victor

  Beyond the Reef

  The Darkening Sea

  For My Country’s Freedom

  Cross of St George

  Sword of Honour

  Second to None

  Relentless Pursuit

  Man of War

  Heart of Oak

  BY PHILIP MCCUTCHAN

  Halfhyde at the Bight of Benin

  Halfhyde’s Island

  Halfhyde and the Guns of Arrest

  Halfhyde to the Narrows

  Halfhyde for the Queen

  Halfhyde Ordered South

  Halfhyde on Zanatu

  BY DEWEY LAMBDIN

  The French Admiral

  The Gun Ketch

  Jester’s Fortune

  What Lies Buried

  BY ALEXANDER FULLERTON

  Storm Force to Narvik

  Last Lift from Crete

  All the Drowning Seas

  A Share of Honour

  The Torch Bearers

  The Gatecrashers

  BY JULIAN STOCKWIN

  Mutiny

  Quarterdeck

  Tenacious

  Command

  BY JAN NEEDLE

  A Fine Boy for Killing

  The Wicked Trade

  The Spithead Nymph

  BY DUDLEY POPE

  Ramage

  Ramage & The Drumbeat

  Ramage & The Freebooters

  Governor Ramage R.N.

  Ramage’s Prize

  Ramage & The Guillotine

  Ramage’s Diamond

  Ramage’s Mutiny

  Ramage & The Rebels

  The Ramage Touch

  Ramage’s Signal

  Ramage & The Renegades

  Ramage’s Devil

  Ramage’s Trial

  Ramage’s Challenge

  Ramage at Trafalgar

  Ramage & The Saracens

  Ramage & The Dido

  BY FREDERICK MARRYAT

  Frank Mildmay OR

  The Naval Officer

  Mr Midshipman Easy

  Newton Forster OR

  The Merchant Service

  Snarleyyow OR

  The Dog Fiend

  The Privateersman

  BY V.A. STUART

  Victors and Lords

  The Sepoy Mutiny

  Massacre at Cawnpore

  The Cannons of Lucknow

  The Heroic Garrison

  The Valiant Sailors

  The Brave Captains

  Hazard’s Command

  Hazard of Huntress

  Hazard in Circassia

  Victory at Sebastopol

  Guns to the Far East

  Escape from Hell

  BY JAMES DUFFY

  Sand of the Arena

  BY JOHN BIGGINS

  A Sailor of Austria

  The Emperor’s Coloured Coat

  The Two-Headed Eagle

  Tomorrow the World

  BY R.F. DELDERFIELD

  Too Few for Drums

  Seven Men of Gascony

  BY JAMES L. NELSON

  The Only Life That Mattered

  BY C.N. PARKINSON

  The Guernseyman

  Devil to Pay

  The Fireship

  Touch and Go

  So Near So Far

  Dead Reckoning

  The Life and Times of Horatio Hornblower

  BY NICHOLAS NICASTRO

  The Eighteenth Captain

  Between Two Fires

  BY DOUGLAS REEMAN

  Badge of Glory

  First to Land

  The Horizon

  Dust on the Sea

  Knife Edge

  Twelve Seconds to Live

  Battlecruiser

  The White Guns

  A Prayer for the Ship

  For Valour

  BY DAVID DONACHIE

  The Devil’s Own Luck

  The Dying Trade

  A Hanging Matter

  An Element of Chance

  The Scent of Betrayal

  A Game of Bones

  On a Making Tide

  Tested by Fate

  Breaking the Line

  BY BROOS CAMPBELL

  No Quarter

  The War of Knives

  Alexander Kent

  SUCCESS TO THE BRAVE

  the Bolitho novels: 15

  McBooks Press, Inc.

  www.mcbooks.com

  ITHACA, NY

  Published by McBooks Press 2000

  Copyright © 1970 by Alexander Kent

  First published in the United Kingdom by Hutchinson 1971

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or any

  portion thereof in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,

  without the written permission of the publisher. Requests for such

  permissions should be addressed to McBooks Press, Inc.,

  ID Booth Building, 520 North Meadow St., Ithaca, NY 14850.

  Cover painting by Geoffrey Huband.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Kent, Alexander.

  Success to the brave / by Alexander Kent.

  p. cm. — (Richard Bolitho novels ; 15)

  ISBN 0-935526-71-4 (pbk. : alk. paper)

  1. Great Britain—History, Naval— 19 th century—Fiction.

  2. Bolitho, Richard (Fictitious character)—Fiction. I. Title

  PR6061.E63 S9 2000

  823’.914—dc21

  00-021603

  All McBooks Press publications can be ordered by

  calling toll-free 1-888- BOOKS 11 (1-888-266-5711).

  Please call to request a free catalog.

  Visit the McBooks Press website at www.mcbooks.com.

  Printed in the United States of America

  9 8 7

  How sleep the brave, who sink to rest,

  By all their country’s wishes blest!

  WILLIAM COLLINS, 1746

  1 FLAG AT THE FORE

  RICHARD BOLITHO leaned his palms on the sill of an open window and stared across the courtyard to the far wall and the sea beyond.

  It should have been a perfect May day, and even the squat silhouette of Pendennis Castle which guarded the approaches and the entrance to Carrick Roads seemed less formidable. After nine years of war with France and her allies England was at peace. It was still hard to accept. When a strange sail appeared off the coast the young men of Falmouth no longer stood to arms in case it was an enemy raider, or hurried inland with less enthusiasm if the newcomer proved to be a King’s ship. The latter always meant the arrival of hated press-gangs and men snatched from their homes to serve at sea, perhaps never to return. No wonder it was hard to believe it was all over.

  He watched the carriage resting in the shadows near the stables. It was nearly time. Soon the horses would be led and harnessed. It was no longer next week or even tomorrow. It was now.

  Bolitho turned and waited for his eyes to grow accustom
ed to the room after the reflected sunlight. The big grey house which had served the Bolitho family for generations was very still, as if it too was holding its breath, trying to hold back the inevitable.

  It had been seven months since he had returned here after the battle which had destroyed the enemy’s hopes of an invasion and had equally crippled the French bargaining power at the peace negotiations. Seven months since he had married and had known a sublime happiness which he had never expected.

  He walked to the foot of the great staircase and glanced at the shadowy family portraits. They must all have stood here at such a moment, he thought. Wondering when or if they would ever see the house again. His great, great grandfather, Captain Daniel Bolitho, on the deck of his blazing ship. He had died in the War of the Protestant Alliance. The Bolitho features were very clear in the portrait. Like Bolitho’s father and his brother Hugh, also dead, and all the others.

  Now he was off to sea again and the past few months seemed to have gone in the turning of an hour-glass. When he had been summoned to the Admiralty in London he had not known what to expect. With the Peace of Amiens signed and apparently holding, it seemed as if all the bitterly won lessons had been thrown aside. Most of the fleet had been laid up and thousands of officers and men discharged to fend as best they could.

  Posts for junior flag-officers would be few and handed out as favours by the Lords of Admiralty. Bolitho had been astonished when he had been told of his orders to sail with a minimum of delay for America and then the Caribbean. Not in command of another squadron, but in a small two-decker with a mere frigate for communications and general escort.

  He had been courteously if formally received by Admiral Sir Hayward Sheaffe who had succeeded old Admiral Beauchamp. He had seemed to stamp the difference between war and peace, Bolitho thought. Beauchamp, worn out by illness, had died in harness without knowing his last strategy had succeeded with the French invasion fleet’s destruction. Sheaffe was cool, practical, the perfect administrator. It had been hard to imagine his ever being through the mill from midshipman to his present lofty appointment.

  In this quiet room Bolitho could recall Sheaffe’s words as if they had just been uttered.

  “I know this must seem a hard decision, Bolitho. After your escape from an enemy prison and your subsequent victory over the French admiral, Remond, you will have been expecting, and many would say rightly so, a more stable appointment. However . . .” His voice had lingered on the word. “War does not end with the last ball fired. Their lordships require a man of tact as well as action for this task. It is not without reward, I think. You are to be promoted to Vice-Admiral of the Red.” His eyes had studied Bolitho’s features to seek his reaction. “The youngest and most junior on the Navy List.” He had added dryly, “Apart from Nelson, that is, the nation’s darling.”

  So that was it. Sheaffe was jealous of those who had become known and admired by friend and enemy alike. In spite of his status and power, Sheaffe still envied them.

  Perhaps that was why he had failed to mention that the real reason for Bolitho’s concern was that Belinda would be having their first child in just a matter of weeks. Sheaffe knew about it; it had even reached the London newspapers that the church here in Falmouth had been packed to the doors with officers and men of Bolitho’s squadron on that special October day in 1801, last year. Perhaps he was jealous of that fact also?

  Bolitho had said nothing. If Sheaffe wanted him to explain, to plead for a delay in the sailing date, he had not understood him at all.

  He heard her steps on the flagged floor beyond the entrance and straightened his back.

  Even with the sunlight behind her, and her face part hidden in shadow, she was beautiful. He never got tired of watching her, of the longing she roused in him. The sunlight touched her chestnut-coloured hair and the soft curve of her throat.

  She said, “It’s time.”

  Her voice was low and level, and Bolitho knew what the effort was costing her.

  As if to mock their emotions he heard the hoofs of the two horses on the cobbles, the untroubled voices of the grooms.

  She moved towards him and placed her hands on his shoulders. “I am so proud of you, dearest. My husband, a vice-admiral—” Her lips quivered and a new brightness in her eyes betrayed her distress.

  He held her gently, her once slender body pressing against his as if the child was already with them.

  “You must take every care while I am away, Belinda.”

  She leaned back in his arms and looked at him searchingly as if she needed to remember every detail.

  “You are the one who must take care. You have seen to all my wants. Everyone is so kind, wanting to help, to be near, when all I need is you.” She shook her head as he made to speak. “Don’t worry, I will not break down. In spite of your leaving, I am happy, can you understand that? Each day in the past months has been like the first time. When you hold me it seems a new experience. When you enter me and we are one, I am filled with love for you. But I am not a fool and would never wish to stand between you and your other world. I see your eyes as you watch a ship sail into Carrick Roads, your expression when Thomas or Allday mentions some place or experience I can never share. When you return I shall be waiting, but wherever you are, we shall remain as one.”

  There was a tap at the door and Allday stood watching them, his homely face grave and uncertain.

  “All ready, sir.”

  Allday, like an oak, who represented so much of that other world which Belinda had described. Now in his best blue coat and nankeen breeches he looked every inch a sailor, the coxswain of a vice-admiral. He had stayed at Bolitho’s side since he had been a junior captain. Together they had seen fine and terrible sights, had suffered and rejoiced in equal proportions.

  When he had been told of the unexpected and advanced promotion, Allday had remarked cheerfully, “Flag at the fore at last, eh, sir? Quite right too, in my opinion. Don’t know what took ’em so long.”

  “Thank you.”

  He saw Allday open the new coat for him to slip his arms into the sleeves. Once the impossible dream when he had paced the deck as a harassed lieutenant, or even when he had taken command of his first ship.

  She was watching him, her chin raised, her fingers clasped as if to contain her thoughts and words.

  “You look so handsome, Richard.”

  “That ’e does, ma’am.” Allday patted the lapels into place and made certain that each bright epaulette with the twin silver stars was exactly right.

  At sea it would be different, Allday thought. But here in the big house they had given him a real home. He looked away, unable to watch their faces. He was one of the family. Almost.

  She said quietly, “I could come as far as Hampshire with you.”

  Bolitho held her again. “No. The ride to the Beaulieu River would take a lot out of you. Then there is the return journey. I’d be sick with worry.”

  This time she did not argue. Although neither mentioned it, each knew that a wrecked coach had once destroyed his happiness, another such accident had given both of them this new life.

  Bolitho was grateful that he had to join his ship where it was too far for her to follow and risk an accident with their first child. It was bad enough to be leaving her when she most needed him, without that. Ferguson, his trusted steward, would be here in the house, and the doctor was within easy call. Bolitho’s sister Nancy had been more at the house than in her own palatial residence with her husband the squire, who was known throughout the country as the King of Cornwall.

  And next week Thomas Herrick’s wife Dulcie would be coming all the way from Kent to keep Belinda company at the time of the birth.

  Herrick, almost embarrassed by his promotion to rear-admiral, had been given command of a small squadron and had already sailed to Gibraltar for orders.

  There would not be many familiar faces this time, Bolitho thought. Maybe it was just as well. No reminders. The doubts, like the successes, we
re best left in the past.

  She said, “Take good care of yourself, Richard. I hate your leaving, but at the same time I understand why you must go.”

  Bolitho held her against him. Why were there never the right words until it was too late?

  Ever since his return from the Admiralty with his secret orders she had somehow contained her disappointment, her dismay. Only once during the night had she exclaimed, “Why you? Must you go?” Then, like part of a bad dream, she had lapsed into an uneasy sleep, her question still unanswered.

  He heard Allday’s voice beyond the door, supervising the loading of some final piece of luggage aboard the carriage. Poor Allday, he thought. Off again after all he had endured with him as a prisoner of war in France. He was always there when he was needed, the relationship stronger than ever, and when Bolitho needed someone to confide in outside of his officers and the chain of command, Allday would be ready to speak out.

  Often Bolitho had felt badly about Allday’s loyalty. Beyond his service as his coxswain and friend he had nothing. No wife to keep house for him and await his return from the sea, no home beyond these walls. It did not seem fair to drag him off yet again when he had more than earned the right to put his feet firmly ashore for all time. But Bolitho understood that Allday would be resentful and hurt by the suggestion he should not accompany him.

  I must leave now.

  They walked together to the big double doors, quietly determined, dreading the actual moment.

  The sunlight engulfed them like an enemy, and Bolitho looked at the carriage with something like hatred. He had already said his farewells to his sister, to Ferguson, his one-armed steward, to the many familiar faces who worked in and around the big grey house below Pendennis Castle.

  He said, “I shall send word by the first available courier-brig. When I reach America I shall probably be required to return home immediately.”

  He felt her arm stiffen against his and despised himself for giving her hope.

  Admiral Sheaffe had left him in doubt that the mission was important. To sail for Boston, “neutral ground,” as he had called it, and there meet French and American officials to formalize the handing over of an island as part of the agreement made under the Peace of Amiens.

  It all seemed wrong to Bolitho. To hand back an island to the old enemy which had been won with British blood. He had blurted out as much to Admiral Sheaffe. “We gained a peace, Sir Hayward, we did not lose the war!”