Erhalten Sie Zugang zu diesem und mehr als 300000 Büchern ab EUR 5,99 monatlich.
Staying at the British Ambassador's exquisite Bay of Naples Villa, beautiful young Cordelia and her brother David, the Earl of Hunstanton, are far from the Berkshire estate that is their home. But since the death of their parents there has been nothing to stop David realising his dream – to go to Malta and become a Knight of St. John. Except, that is, the money to finance a ship to take him there. So when, out of the blue, a handsome, English buccaneer appears, who turns out to be none other than their cousin, Mark Stanton, he seems Heaven-sent. As Captain of a ship en route to Malta, he is in position to offer them passage to the island. To their chagrin, however, he attempts to dissuade David from his Pilgrimage and Cordelia from her notion of joining a Convent. But, when the siblings resist his appeals and press ahead, Mark vows to protect them both from the perils not only of David's Maltese Crusade but also of the Napoleonic War, Barbary pirates in the Mediterranean and the scheming snobbery of Neapolitan Society. Valiant Mark saves Cordelia from the lecherous clutches of the Duca di Belina and from the terrors or war against the French, but he cannot protect David from a noble death in battle protecting Malta, nor his own heart from falling hopelessly in love.
Sie lesen das E-Book in den Legimi-Apps auf:
Seitenzahl: 241
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2016
Das E-Book (TTS) können Sie hören im Abo „Legimi Premium” in Legimi-Apps auf:
On September 19th 1798 the British Fleet, after their triumphant victory at the Battle of the Nile, blockaded the French in Malta. The siege continued for exactly a year.
Napoleon Bonaparte had forced the Knights of St. John to leave Malta, but the Order was not destroyed and its valiant spirit remained as invincible and dedicated as it had been since the Crusades.
It was revived in England in 1831 and in 1877 the St. John Ambulance Brigade was finally established.
The Ophthalmic Hospital in Jerusalem was opened in 1882.
Today Priories of the British Order are active in Scotland, Wales, South Africa, Canada, New Zealand and Australia. There are Commanderies in Western Australia, Northern Ireland and Central Africa. There is also an American society of the Order.
The great ideal and the spirit of selfless dedication started by a few monks at the Pilgrim Hostel in Jerusalem in A.D. 800 has carried on down the ages until today there are 263,267 members of the St. John Ambulance Brigade working in thirty-one countries of the world.
Few people realise that Master Mariners and Policemen must qualify for a First Aid Certificate and that the Ambulance and Nursing Members in their black and white uniforms who man the First Aid posts in factories and theatres and who are present at all sports rallies, football matches, protest marches, riots and public demonstrations are unpaid.
For the Service of Mankind these men and women give their most valuable possessions – themselves and their time.
This is the vision and the dream for which the Knights of the Order have lived and died for a thousand years and through their inspiration and example there will always be young idealists to follow the Eight-Pointed Cross.
“How much longer will we have to stay here?”
There was a note of impatience in the man’s voice as he stood looking out over the Bay of Naples.
It was impossible to imagine that anything could be lovelier than the view from the Palazzo Sessa where the British Ambassador lived.
The flat façades of peach and cream-coloured plaster rising from the terraces, the stately walls of the Royal Palace to the left, the Castel dell’Ovo supposed to have been built on a magic egg supplied by the wizard Vergil, all looked as if they were part of a Fairytale.
And ahead was the misty blue island of Capri and the exquisite coastline fading away into the distance beneath the smouldering cone of Mount Vesuvius.
“They expect a ship any day,” a soft voice replied and Lady Cordelia Stanton moved across the marble-paved terrace to stand beside her brother looking out onto the Bay.
She knew that she could never be discontented with the azure sky reflected in the blue-green sea and with the light gilding the crowded shipping in the Harbour and black cypress trees standing like sentinels on the slopes above the town.
She had never dreamt, Cordelia thought, that there could be such a profusion of colour as she had found in the gardens of Naples.
The purity of the orange blossoms, the mass of roses, syringa and oleander vied with the star-shaped white flowers of the myrtle, the scented rosemary and the purple bougainvillea.
She had expected Naples to be beautiful, but not to contain all the elements of magic that she had thought existed only in her imagination.
“We have been here for nearly three weeks,” her brother declared in an irritated tone.
“It is unlike you to complain, David,” Cordelia said gently, “and Sir William and Lady Hamilton have been so kind.”
“I appreciate that, but you know, Cordelia, how much I long to reach Malta. To me every inch of the journey here has been a crusade, and now my Holy Land is within reach.”
The throb of emotion in his voice made Cordelia put out her hand and lay it on his arm.
“I know what you are feeling, dearest,” she said, “but I cannot help remembering that when you are a Knight of St. John you will leave me behind.”
There was a moment's silence, before the young Earl of Hunstanton asked in a very different tone,
“Am I being incredibly selfish in not looking after you?”
“No, of course not,” Cordelia replied hastily. “We have discussed that many times and we agreed that we both have our own lives to lead. That you should be a Knight has been your ambition ever since you were a tiny child.”
“That is true,” the Earl said. “I can remember Mama telling me stories about the Crusades. How valiantly the Crusaders fought against the Saracens, then in all humility the Knights Hospitallers nursed the wounded of both Armies in their hospital in Jerusalem. ”
There was a pause before he added,
“That is true Christianity, Cordelia, and that is the ideal I have dedicated myself to ever since I can remember.”
“Yes, I know, but if I return to England, Malta will seem very far away.”
“If – ?”
Her brother turned to look at her.
“You said ‘if’. Are you considering what I suggested?”
“Yes, David, but I don’t wish to speak about it now. We were talking about you and you are waiting for a ship.”
He smiled at her and it seemed to illuminate his young face.
“I have been waiting for what has seemed to me to be centuries,” he replied, “although actually it is only three years, first to hear if my application to the Grand Master had been accepted, then for Papal approval, and now just for ordinary transportation to carry me to where I can make my vows.”
He turned away from his sister as he finished speaking to look once again over the shimmering sea, as if he expected to see a ship coming into Port bearing on its sails the great Eight-Pointed Cross of the Knights of the Order of St. John.
However, although there were many ships moving in and out of one of the busiest Ports in the Mediterranean, there was no sign of the one he sought.
Cordelia gave a sigh and walked a little way from her brother to touch with gentle fingers the pink camellias that were peeping through the stone balustrade.
She resembled a flower herself in her white muslin gown with its soft frilled fichu and her small waist encircled with a blue sash.
Despite the warmth of the sunshine she was not wearing a hat and the sunlight glinted on the pale gold hair that framed her small pointed face in fashionable curls.
Her eyes were very large and dark-fringed and unexpectedly when they should have been blue they were grey with a touch of purple.
They were unusual eyes, which gave her face a piquancy and a mystery that is often lacking in a very young girl’s expression.
Ever since she had come to Naples Cordelia had been complimented and fêted by the black-eyed Patricians who lived in elaborate Palaces carved with ornate Cats of arms.
They could only be glimpsed through high gilt traceried gates that separated the flower-filled courtyards from the curious populace.
Fountains splashed in the marble basins and carved Tritons blew conches beneath the cool and elegant salons whose occupants discussed nothing but conspiracies, treachery and the French warships in Toulon.
Cordelia thought sometimes that it had been a mistake to come to Naples when all Europe was in a fever of anxiety and England was now alone and with no allies opposing Napoleon Bonaparte.
He was like a monster darkening every land with his shadow.
But once her brother knew that his application to become a Knight of St. John had been accepted nothing short of death would have kept him away from his ‘Promised Land’.
It seemed strange that as the Earl of Hunstanton with a great estate in Berkshire, with a family home in London and several other properties scattered over the British Isles, he should wish to renounce everything to become a Knight.
But, as he had said himself, it had been his goal and ambition ever since a child.
Now with both their parents dead, he was his own Master and nothing could have prevented the Earl reaching Malta.
It had been an opportunity for Cordelia to experience the fashionable world that she had been excluded from through mourning until the beginning of the year.
She found herself enjoying the balls, the theatres, Assemblies and Receptions that she had attended since reaching Naples.
She had been afraid of meeting Lady Hamilton, the British Ambassadress who she had heard so many fantastic stories about and whose beauty was a legend.
But Emma Hamilton had shown her only kindness and her irresistible vitality had swept aside Cordelia’s shyness from the moment she arrived at the Palazzo Sessa.
Nearing forty, Lady Hamilton, whose life story had caused a great deal of whispering and speculation amongst the aristocratic Neapolitans, was still overwhelmingly lovely.
Whilst at Cordelia’s age she had been slim, graceful and with an angelic beauty that only the artist George Romney could depict in its perfection, now her figure had lost its fawn-like slimness.
But she was still amazingly beautiful and her Grecian attitudes, which had been one of the attractions of the Capital, were just as compelling.
“She is fascinating, absolutely fascinating!” Cordelia had said to her brother a dozen times.
But she had known that David would not allow his mind to linger on the beauty of any woman when he was about to take the vow of chastity together with those of poverty and obedience.
Cordelia was entranced by everything she found in this fantastic world of fashion.
There was the Queen of Naples with her smooth pink-and-white Hapsburg complexion, who made up for what she lacked in looks by her stupendous jewels, elaborate gowns, feathers and furs, combined with a Royal air that overawed most people, especially her ineffective rather stupid husband.
His Majesty King Ferdinand IV paid Cordelia extravagant compliments, which amused rather than embarrassed her.
She realised that he cared nothing for what happened to anyone else as long as he was left undisturbed to enjoy his appetite for food and to indulge in any pleasure that caught his fancy.
He was quite unlike any King that Cordelia had ever imagined.
He liked to catch fish in the Bay and sell them in the marketplace in Naples, haggling shrewdly over the price with the local fishermen.
He especially enjoyed macaroni, which he ate with his fingers. Cordelia had seen him throw a handful of it from his box at the Opera onto the crowd below.
But he was afraid of his Queen and in order to escape from her passionate hysterics and her scathing tongue he had handed every Department of State over to her and was not in the least ashamed of it.
The person whom Cordelia liked best in Naples was Sir William Hamilton.
Growing old he found that the tension of politics and the rumours that swept Naples into a sense of frenzy every other day bored him.
Instead he spent his time enjoying the treasures of antiquity that he had accumulated in the Embassy and was utterly absorbed in his Grecian urns and the new discoveries at Pompeii, which were ignored by the majority of the upper class Neapolitans.
Sir Willian had been only too pleased to have a new pupil in the shape of Cordelia.
It seemed years now since he had instructed the lovely Emma when she had been sent to him as his mistress and whom, because she was the most perfect treasure in all his collection, he had made her his wife.
Cordelia exclaimed with delight over his collection of old bronzes and his cabinets of ivories and coins.
“Tell me about the Greeks when they came to Naples,” Cordelia would ask.
She would bring the light of youth back into the Ambassador’s eyes and a note of excitement into his tired old voice as he told her everything she wanted to hear.
Immersed though he was in the past, even Sir William could not ignore the rising tension within Naples and his anxiety had communicated itself to Cordelia so that now she glanced at her brother nervously, wondering if she dare tell him of her fears.
“David – ” she began with an urgent note in her voice.
Then at that moment they were interrupted.
A man came through the open windows of the salon onto the terrace and stood for a moment looking first at Cordelia and then at her brother.
David was still staring out to sea and was unaware that anyone had joined them, but Cordelia moved forward politely.
She realised that, as Lady Hamilton was at the Palace with the Queen, she must play the part of hostess.
She noticed that the new arrival was tall and square-shouldered. He was fashionably, if somewhat carelessly dressed, and she was sure as she approached him that he was English.
There was no mistaking his air of superiority. Or was it one of command?
He had fair hair above a face burnt so brown by the sun that she might in fact have questioned his English blood had it not been that in contrast his eyes were vividly, dazzlingly blue.
He had, she thought, looked a little stern when he first appeared, but as she curtseyed he smiled and it made him look extremely attractive.
Yet at the same time she was aware that he had a raffish almost mocking expression that for the moment she could not quite place.
Then, as he took her hand in his, she knew what it was.
He looked like a buccaneer, a man such as Drake and Hawkins who had dominated the seas in their ships and whose modern counterparts still were harrying the Barbary pirates.
“Good afternoon,” Cordelia began. “I am afraid that Lady Hamilton is not at home, but she will be returning shortly.”
“I think it is really you I have come to see,” the stranger replied.
She had been right. He was English and he had a deep voice that was arresting and was in fact a relief to listen to after the high quick chatter of the Neapolitans.
Cordelia looked at him in surprise and he continued,
“Can you possibly be the freckle-nosed little cousin I remember storming at me in a passionate rage because accidentally I had shot one of her doves?”
“Mark!” Cordelia exclaimed. “Cousin Mark!”
“I see you have remembered.”
He put out his hand and she laid her fingers in his. Mark Stanton, she thought incredulously, was the last person she would have expected to see at this moment, for they had not met for at least nine years.
The Earl of Hunstanton turned from his contemplation of the sea and then he gave a shout of delight.
“Mark!” he cried. “How splendid that you are here! I had no idea you were in the Mediterranean.”
“I was far more surprised to hear that you require my services,” his cousin answered. “I have often thought of you in England, safe and secure at Stanton Park, but now I learn that you wish to visit Malta.”
“Not visit,” the Earl corrected him quickly. “I am to be a Knight, Mark. They have accepted me! ”
For a moment the blue eyes looked astonished and then Mark Stanton put his hand on his cousin’s shoulder.
“I remember you saying when you were a boy that that was what you wished to be. But I thought perhaps it was one of those things that you would forget as you grew older.”
He paused to add with a twinkle in his eye,
“Or find yourself side-tracked by more alluring amusements.”
“This is not in the nature of an amusement, Mark,” the Earl responded a little stiffly. “I wish to dedicate myself to the service of Christ and how could I do it better than by being a Knight of St. John?”
Cordelia, watching their cousin, thought that he was about to reply somewhat frivolously, but instead he said with what she thought was a beguiling smile,
“Suppose we sit down and you tell me about it?”
His words made her remember her manners.
“Will you come into the salon?” she asked. “It is very hot out here and I am sure that the servants have refreshments ready for you.”
There was wine, which was poured into large crystal glasses engraved with the British Coat of Arms, and there were small cakes, sandwiches and other delicacies that were always provided at the Palazzo Sessa.
They seated themselves on comfortable satin sofas that embellished the huge salon where Lady Hamilton performed.
There was a piano where she was accompanied while she sang duets with the King and there were several of Sir William’s priceless Etruscan vases which she stood or knelt against to become in that moment as classical and memorable as the vases themselves.
Mark Stanton was looking at Cordelia and the expression in his blue eyes made her feel shy.
“Tell me why you are here – ” he began, only to be interrupted by the Earl.
“Am I to understand from what you said when you arrived,” he asked, “that you can take us to Malta?”
“I have brought my ship into Port for a small repair,” Mark Stanton replied.
“Your ship?”
“I speak as the Captain of it. It is actually the property of a Knight.”
“A ship of the Order!” the Earl exclaimed excitedly. “Do you hear, Cordelia? Mark has a ship here at this moment in which he can carry us to Malta! ”
Cordelia looked at her cousin and he said,
“I am afraid you will have to wait a day or so. The Turks have made a hole in the hull, which must be repaired before we can go any further.”
“You have been in an engagement?” the Earl asked. “What happened?”
Captain Mark Stanton smiled.
“What do you think? We took a number of prisoners and a valuable cargo.”
David Hunstanton gave a sigh of sheer happiness.
“Another blow against the Infidel!” he said. “How I wish I had been with you!”
“It was not a very glorious victory,” Captain Stanton said with a mocking note in his voice. “The Turkish ship was smaller than ours, but he did try to disguise his nationality.”
“Why should he do that?”
‘The Great Powers have made a number of Treaties and contracts with our traditional enemies,” Mark Stanton explained. “At one time every boat licensed in Malta was allowed to attack Moslem shipping.”
“And quite right!” the Earl interposed.
“The Order,” Captain Stanton continued, “provided the basic facilities on the island for vessels of many nationalities apart from their own. In return all the booty was sold in Malta and the Order took ten per cent of the proceeds.”
“It sounds very commercial,” the Earl commented doubtfully.
“The Knights of St. John are heroes not saints!” his cousin replied and now there was no mistaking the laughter in his voice.
Cordelia glanced at him quickly.
She fervently hoped that he would not tease David or indeed argue with him about his determination to be a Knight.
They had gone over the whole idea so often, they had endured a great deal of opposition from their relatives, but nothing and nobody, she knew, would divert her brother from his intended course.
‘I could not bear to have it discussed all over again,’ she thought to herself. ‘Besides it upsets David.’
“Now things are very different,” Mark Stanton was saying. “French ships trading in the Levant are immune from attack by the Knights of St. John even if they are carrying Turkish goods. The Turks make every effort to acquire French passports.”
“But you still sail along the African coast?” the Earl asked quickly.
“We do,” his cousin agreed, “and we never cease in our efforts to rescue Christian slaves.”
“Are there still thousands in Algiers and Tangier?” Cordelia asked.
“I am afraid so,” Mark Stanton replied. “But you will find an enormous number of slaves in Malta as well.”
Cordelia looked startled and he added,
“Malta was at one time one of the biggest slave markets in Europe. Two hundred slaves or more are still captured almost every year. The Sultan buys back a large number of them at one hundred louis a time! ”
“I am not interested in slaves,” the Earl interrupted, “although I understand that they are part of the booty. But tell me about your ship. How can you be the Captain of one that belongs to the Order if you are not yourself a Knight?”
“The ship I am commanding at the moment is the private property of Baron Ludwig von Wütenstein of the Anglo-Bavarian League, which I imagine you yourself are joining?”
“Yes, of course!” the Earl exclaimed.
“The Baron is only twenty-one,” Captain Stanton went on. “As I expect you know already, David, a Knight cannot be in command of a ship until he is twenty-four and has done four ‘caravans’.”
There was no need to explain to Cordelia, who had heard her brother talk of it so often, that a ‘caravan’ was a cruise in the galleys lasting at least six months.
These ‘caravans’ ensured that every Knight had experience of practical Naval matters and had resulted in the Knights of Malta being recognised as the finest and most experienced Naval Captains in the world.
A Knight was not only a valiant fighter, dauntless and with a spirit of adventure that commanded admiration wherever he went, he was also so knowledgeable at sea that the Knights were greatly in demand as instructors.
“My ship, the St. Jude,” Mark Stanton was explaining, “belongs to the Baron and as the Order is at the moment short of vessels they welcome Knights who will provide their own.”
“Perhaps that is something I can do later,” the Earl suggested with glowing eyes.
“I see no reason why not if you can afford it,” his cousin answered.
“It is certainly an idea and one that did not occur to me before,” the Earl said. “When can I see your ship?”
“Any time you wish,” Mark Stanton replied. “But, as I have only just arrived here, I would like, if you will allow me, to talk to you both for a little while before we go to the dockyard.”
“Yes, of course,” David replied, while Cordelia with a smile explained,
“David dislikes Naples and is longing to reach Malta. He grudges every moment that we must spend in this beautiful City.”
“And you?” Mark Stanton asked.
“It’s so lovely that I feel at times I must be dreaming!”
He sipped his wine before he said reflectively,
“When I want to think of somewhere lovely and peaceful I remember Stanton Park.”
The Earl rose to his feet.
“I will go and get ready so that when you are prepared to show me your ship I shall not keep you waiting.”
“I am in no hurry,” Mark Stanton answered.
The Earl, however, moved quickly across the polished floor with its magnificent Persian rugs and Cordelia said with a smile,
“I am so glad you have come. David has been eating his heart out for fear that he would not reach Malta in the next few days.”
Mark Stanton was still for a moment and then he said slowly,
“Have you really thought this over sensibly? David is not yet of age, is he wise to give up his English way of life?”
“I beg of you not to argue with him,” Cordelia replied. “This has always been his vision and his dream and nothing you or anyone else can say could dissuade him from the conviction that he has been called to the service of God in this special way.”
Mark Stanton did not answer and after a moment she went on,
“I cannot tell you how nervous I was that he might not be accepted. It would have been a blow that he would never have recovered from.”
“I see no reason why he should not have been accepted.”
“We certainly have the requisite eight quarterings to prove our Nobility and the Stantons are a Catholic family. But I am sure that one of our relatives who lives in Rome was trying to persuade His Holiness the Pope to refuse David’s application. In fact he more or less said so when he was in England.”
“Have you any idea why he should do that?”
“He thought that David was too young to know his own mind and that he would doubtless fall in love and regret that he could not be married. I think he also resented so much of the Stanton fortune going to Malta.”
“I should have thought that those were all strong and valid arguments,” Mark Stanton remarked.
“It is not your place to try to interfere!” Cordelia retorted.
Even as she spoke she knew that it sounded rude, but she had a feeling that she must protect her brother from this large somehow overwhelming cousin.
She did not know why she felt that way, except that she remembered Mark had always upset her when she was a child.
He had teased her and since he was so much older she had been a little afraid of him. What was more, she admitted to herself, she had been jealous.
David, two years her senior, had been a close companion and she had imagined that he was happy in her company when he was home from school.
The moment Mark appeared, however, he had run after him, fagged for him and found his company infinitely preferable to that of his small sister.
“I think I have every right to try to stop David doing this,” Mark said. “In fact I am the one person who should do it.”
“Why should you think that?” Cordelia asked and now there was no doubt of the hostility in her voice.
“Quite simply because I am his heir!”
Cordelia looked at her cousin in a startled fashion.
“Are you? I did not realise that?”
“Unless David marries and has a son,” he replied, “I shall on his death inherit the title. A very unlikely contingency, seeing that I am eight years older than he is.”
He paused and then went on,
“At the same time, although undoubtedly I would be defrauding my son, if I ever have one, I consider that I should point out to David the disadvantages of his becoming a Knight of St. John.”
Cordelia rose to her feet.
“I beg of you to do nothing of the sort. David has suffered quite enough criticism and opposition and interference by people who quite frankly should mind their own business!”
“Which, of course, includes me?”
“We did not expect to find you here,” Cordelia pointed out. “It is just by chance that you should have come into Naples at this moment and be the Captain of a ship that is proceeding to Malta. All I can beg you is that you will carry us as if we were ordinary passengers and not relatives.”
“You know that is impossible,” he replied. “Quite frankly, Cordelia, I am delighted to have such distinguished passengers and, may I say, one such lovely relative.”
“And yet you intend to harass David and make him unhappy?”
Mark Stanton rose slowly to his feet. There was, Cordelia thought, an athletic litheness about him that she would not have expected in such a big man.
“Let’s talk about this coolly and sensibly,” he suggested. “Does David believe that he will be able to withstand the temptations of the flesh for the rest of his life?”
He was being cynical, Cordelia thought, and she replied hotly,
“Some men can find something better to do than to pursue, as the Neapolitans do, every pretty face they see!”
“Most Englishmen as it happens are more discriminating,” Mark Stanton smiled.
She knew that he was laughing at her and hated him for it.
She remembered how he teased her for having a freckled nose when she was a child and how there was always something about him that had made her feel small, insignificant and unsure of herself.
“You are to leave David alone,” she asserted angrily.
She knew even as she spoke that it was the wrong approach.
Young though she was and ignorant of the world, she knew instantly that to give orders to a man of Captain Stanton’s calibre was to get nowhere.
But there was something about him that made her angry as it always had and now because she felt that she was making no impression on him she stamped her foot.
“Oh, do go away!” she cried. “The last thing either David or I require at this moment is a fault-finding relative. Forget you have come here and let’s find another ship.”
“You are not very complimentary, Cordelia,” Mark Stanton said. “At the same time I cannot help feeling that your anger comes not so much from anything I have said but simply because your common sense, or do you call it your conscience, tells you that I am right?”
“It tells me nothing of the sort!” Cordelia snapped. “I want David to be happy. I know that is possible only if he is true to his ideals and he dedicates himself, as he wishes to do, to his faith.”
To her surprise Mark Stanton did not reply immediately.
Instead he walked across the salon to stand with his back to her, contemplating a portrait of Lady Hamilton painted by Madame Le Brun when she first came to Naples.
In her favourite ‘attitude’ of Bacchante she looked very lovely and there was something very young and vulnerable about her that reminded him of Cordelia.