London Dawn
February 27th, 2014It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!
You never know when I might play a wild card on you!
Murray Pura earned his Master of Divinity degree from Acadia University in Wolfville, Nova Scotia, and his ThM degree in theology and interdisciplinary studies from Regent College in Vancouver, British Columbia. For more than 25 years, in addition to his writing, he has pastored churches in Nova Scotia, British Columbia, and Alberta. Murrayâs writings have been shortlisted for the Dartmouth Book Award, the John Spencer Hill Literary Award, the Paraclete Fiction Award, and Toronto’s Kobzar Literary Award. His novels for Harvest House include Face of Heaven, The Wings of Morning, and Ashton Park. Murray pastors and writes in southern Alberta near the Rocky Mountains. He and his wife, Linda, have a son and a daughter.
Visit the author’s website.
Product Details:
List Price: $13.99
Publisher: Harvest House
Language: English
ISBN-13:978-0-7369-5887-5
ISLAND BREEZES
The Danforths are a large family that kept me going back to the list of characters for awhile until I got them all sorted out. It’s a family I grew to love and admire. This is a family filled with love, honor and integrity.
This story starts in the spring of 1934, and takes us through to November of 1941. Of course, you know that WWII starts in that time frame. Just about every emotion you can think of comes into play – including love, hate, fear, suspense and desperation.
There are things you knew just had to happen, but there are surprises, too. Tissue alert! You’re going to need them.
I hadn’t met the Danforths previously, but now I want to go back in their history and read the first two books of The Danforths of Lancashire series.
Please, Mr. Pura, consider another book with this family.
***A special thanks to Ginger Chen of Harvest House for providing a review copy.***
AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:
Ashton Park
âThere you go! There you go!â
Lord Preston threw the ball as far as he could. The three Belgian shepherds raced after it, yipping with excitement, and vanished among the tall ash trees. The leaves were fully open after two days of rain followed by two days of sunshine.
âTop of the morning, mâlord.â Harrison lifted the fedora off his head. âThose three are hard at it.â
âGood day, Harrison. They need a strong run. Iâve been absent for weeks and Iâm not sure old Todd Turpin ever gets the fire out of them. Too many parliamentary sessions tie me down in London. Well, if they catch scent of a hare I shall not see them again in a fortnight.â He put his hands behind his back. âI have renamed them, you know.â
Harrison shifted his staff from one hand to the other. âIâd heard that.â
âWynken, Blynken, and Nod. From the American poem.â
âVery good. How are they responding?â
âBadly. If at all. But I shall keep it up. Something had to be done to address the baronâs treachery.â
âYes, mâlord.â
âThe dogs and I needed a fresh start.â
âI expect you did.â
âI saw him, you know, Harrison. On a newsreel from Berlin. Hopping and stomping in a black SS uniform with Herr Hitler and his stooges. Ghastly. I thought I knew the man.â
âA chance at power changes many a good soul.â
âIs that what he considers power? I suppose it is power after a fashion. The way a freak windstorm knocks off chimney pots and tears brick walls to pieces and hurls trash bins down an alleyâraw force, out of control, of no benefit to man or beast.â
âHave you heard from Lady Catherine or her husband, the theologian? Are they well?â
Lord Preston listened a moment to the distant barking of the dogs. âI believe they have caught the scent of something. No ball ever rolled that far.â He began to stride into the ash forest. âNo, Harrison. Not a word. You might pray about that, please.â
Across the English Channel in Germany, Catherine was well aware she was behind in her letter writing. She had finally finished one to her sister Victoria, who was living in Africa with her husband Ben and their two sons. Now she felt guilty she hadnât sent so much as a note to her mother and father in more than a month. She pulled a fresh sheet of paper toward her and lifted her fountain pen.
Dear Mama and Papa,
You will wonder at my long silence, and you have, I suppose, fretted a good deal over it. I apologize. Life has been a mad rush here in Tubingen. But let me set your minds at rest about your grandchildrenâSean is doing very well indeed at school, and baby Angelika has never been better.
A soft knocking sounded at the front door.
Catherine was seated at the dining room table on the ground floor. Albrecht was upstairs chatting with Sean and Angelika while he worked on his university lectures for the next day. She knew she should be the one answering the door, but she hesitated. It was past nine oâclock and dark, and she was not expecting anyone. Clutching her pen, she waited.
The knocking sounded a second time.
âAre you going to get that?â Her husbandâs voice came down the staircase. âPlease?â
âJa, ja, Albrecht,â she replied. âI was just working on a letter to my parents.â
She got up and went to the door, continuing to hope the knocking would stop and whoever it was would walk away. Risking Albrechtâs annoyance, she stood facing the door but did not open it. The knocking came a third timeâsoft but rapid. Certain her husband would call from his office again, she took hold of the door handle.
âI have it, Albrecht. You neednât worry.â
A smell of rain on pavement rushed in as she swung the door back, surprising her. She hadnât noticed any drops against the windowpanes.
âJa?â she asked the figure on the sidewalk.
The man slipped into the house and shut the door behind him.
âWas?â exclaimed Catherine. âWhat are you doing? Get out of here!â
The man took off his hat.
âBaron!â She didnât know what to say next. âOf all people I did not expect to see you!â
âWhere is Albrecht?â
âUpstairs.â
âThe children?â
âTheyâre with him. Heâs working at his morning lectures.â
âThere will be no morning lectures. The Gestapo will arrive here at two in the morning. You must be well gone by then.â
Cold air seemed to fill the room, pouring off his trench coat.
âThe Gestapo! Gone where? Where can we go?â
âMy plan is to get you to France or Switzerland. But first we must get you into a hiding place outside of Tubingen. If they donât find you here they will go to all of your friendsâ homes. They will go to the university professors. Comb the city from one end to another. I have a car around back. You have half an hour, and then you must be in it and we must be gone.â
âWe canât be ready in half an hour. Angelika is only four. There is so much we must prepare.â
âHalf an hour. We cannot take the risk they may come earlier.â
âThis is mad. You canât come raging in here and demand we load our children into a car with you. Why should we trust you? You betrayed us once.â
âI saved Albrechtâs life. He would have died in that house with the others.â
âYouâre SS.â
âItâs just as well I am. Otherwise I would have no idea of the movements of the police. If you donât trust me, you will die here just as Albrecht would have died in that house with the Brotherhood of the Oak. Last time I used a gun on Albrecht to work my will. If you force my hand I will do so again.â He patted the pocket of his trench coat. âGet your husband. Get your children. Get what you need and get in the car.â
Catherine started up the staircase, her face whitening. She turned her head. âYou can say what you want about the Gestapo. Itâs you I donât trust.â
âIâm fine with that so long as we drive away from here at ten oâclock.â
âYou could have been followed.â
âI wasnât followed.â
âThey could be watching you.â
âThen weâll all die together. Will you trust me if that happens?â
Albrecht stood at the head of the staircase. âWhat are you doing here?â
âHe says the Gestapo are going to arrest us,â said Catherine.
âArrest us? Because of my lectures?â
The baron looked up at him. âYour lectures. Your protests against the firing of Jewish professors. Your refusal to join the Nazi Party. Most of all, your books. Oh, yesâthey know you are the author of those anonymous books and pamphlets popping up all over Germany.â
âHow do they know that?â
âThe SS found the men who do your printing last night. Smashed the presses. Shot them in the street.â
Albrecht started to say something and stopped.
âGet what you need, Albrecht.â The baronâs voice was quiet and flat. âLeave what is superfluous. We have twenty-five minutes left.â
Two days later
Ashton Park
Tavy received a telegram at the door and took it to Lord and Lady Preston, who were having tea in the library.
âWhere is it from, William?â Lady Preston asked her husband. âAfrica?â
âNo, itâs not from Africa. Itâs from Germany.â
âWhat is it? Is it Catherine? Is everything all right?â
âThe telegram is not from Catherine. Itâs from the baron.â
âThe baron! Why on earth would he write us? He knows how we feel about him!â
LORD PRESTON
YOUR DAUGHTER CATHERINE IS SAFE. SO ARE HER CHILDREN. SO IS HER HUSBAND ALBRECHT. YOU WILL NOT HEAR FROM THEM IN A VERY LONG TIME. BUT THEY ARE NOT PRISONERS AND THEY HAVE NOT BEEN HARMED.
THE BARON
As Lord Preston was reading the telegram to his wife in England, small pieces of chocolate were being handed to Sean and Angelika in a cold, dark cellar in Germany.
âHappy birthday, my son,â whispered Albrecht. âI had this in my briefcase. You are eleven today. Blessings.â
Sean took the chocolate but didnât eat it. âThank you, Father.â
Mimicking the mood and actions of her big brother, Angelika clutched her square of chocolate but didnât smile or put it in her mouth.
âGo ahead,â urged Albrecht. âItâs Swiss.â
âYou said we were going there.â Sean spoke without emotion. âHow long will it take?â
âWe will stay at this house today. Tonight we will move again. And the night after that. Never longer than a day in each house. But each house brings us closer to the Swiss border.â
âSo we are going to the chalet in Pura?â
âJa.â
âAnd both of you are staying with us?â
Albrecht put his arm around Catherine. âYour mother and I will be with you. Wherever we go, we go as a family.â
âAre you sure?â
âI am.â
âWhat if the police find us?â
âThe baron has very good friends. They will not betray us.â
âItâs because of your writing, isnât it, Papa?â Again, no tone of accusation, just a question that was a statement of fact.
âSean, it is because the Nazis are what they are.â
Sean put the chocolate in a pocket in his shirt. âI will eat it once weâve crossed the border.â
âVery well.â
âMe too.â Angelika placed hers in a small red leather purse she carried with her everywhere.
âMake sure it doesnât melt,â said Catherine. âYou wouldnât want it to melt in a shirt pocket or purse, would you? Such a waste. And such a mess.â
Sean finally smiled a very small smile. âIâll be careful.â
âWeâll all be careful.â Albrecht put a hand on Seanâs shoulder. âNow each of us must take a nap. We didnât get a great deal of sleep last night, and tonight will be no different.â
âHow many nights will it be, Father?â asked Sean. âTen or twelve?â
âI donât know. That sounds right, but weâre still a good ways from the border.â
âBut Switzerland is not that far.â
Albrecht nodded. âNo, not so far from Tubingen. But we must move slowly and carefully because the SS and Gestapo will be hunting us. Theyâre aware we have a home in Switzerland. The border crossings will be closely watched.â
âWhat if we canât get into Switzerland?â
âWeâre just as near to France as we are to Switzerland. If we cannot get to the chalet safely we will cross over into Alsace-Lorraine and make our way to the English Channel.â
Catherine smiled. âThen you will see all your cousins, Sean. And Grandmother and Grandfather Danforth too.â
âI would like that.â Seanâs eyes were large in the darkness of the cellar. âBut I will miss Grandfather Hartmann. And Grandmother Hartmann as well.â
âOf course you will.â Catherine smoothed back her sonâs hair from his forehead. âBut the Nazis will not be in power forever. The German people will come to their senses and reject them. That will be the time to see Grandmother and Grandfather Hartmann again.â
âHow soon?â asked Angelika.
âA year. Or two. No more.â
âIâll be a big girl then.â
âJa. But not so big Grandfather and Grandmother Hartmann canât fuss over you and give you dolls and baskets of sweets.â
A smile, bright in the gloom, darted onto Angelikaâs face.
âNow we need to nap.â Albrecht handed each of them a woolen blanket. âNight is not far off.â
âIâm hungry,â Angelika said.
âThere will be food when you wake up,â promised Catherine, wrapping the blanket around the little girlâs shoulders. âOr you can eat your chocolate now.â
âIâm saving it for a special day.â
âAll right, you save it for a special day. Meanwhile, after you have had your nap, there will be a bowl of noodle soup for you.â
âAre you sure?â
âVery sure. The lady of the house told me so herself.â
June 5, 1934
The Parliament buildings, Westminster, London
âWhatâs bothering you? We must do our part to get things ready for the rally.â
âIâm well aware of that, Buchanan.â Edward glanced at the traffic moving up and down in front of the Parliament buildings. âIâll be ready.â
âThe rally at Olympia is in two days, Danforth. We intend to set London on its ear. Fill the Grand Hall. The British Union of Fascists is at its peak.â
âI said Iâd be ready.â
Buchanan tapped the silver head of his cane against his leg. âItâs the matter of your sister, isnât it? Lady Catherine? I thought the embassy was sorting that out.â
âThe embassy has no idea where Catherine and her family are. They simply vanished without a trace.â
âMightnât they have fled? Sir Oswald asked you to write that Hartmann fellow and get him to stop penning those anti-Nazi books and pamphlets. They were infuriating fascists in Spain and Italy and England as well as Germany and Austria.â
âI wrote him. He never responded.â Edward looked up at the sky as drops of rain fell on the sidewalk. âThey could have been abducted and shot.â
âYes, well, thereâs that.â Buchanan opened a black umbrella. âYouâre not getting cold feet about the rally, are you? Sir Oswald counts on you creating quite a stir with your appearance. And your announcement.â
âI donât have cold feet, Buchanan. But it will be a shock to my father and mother when their son stands on a platform with the leader of the British fascists. Not to mention Iâll be drummed out of the Conservative Party. Iâd like to spare them all that with Catherine missing.â
âTheyâll bear up. Especially once youâre a success. You have everything to gain by going public with your fascist beliefs. Yes, youâll have to sit as an independent. But in the next election weâll take a majority of the seats. The Daily Mirror and Daily Mail are on our side, and we have well over 50,000 supporters now. Remember how easily Herr Hitler got in and took over.â
âHe was appointed chancellor. He never got in by popular vote. I wish we could appoint Sir Oswald like that, but thatâs not the way a British democracy runs.â
âWell, weâll change all that, wonât we? You always chafed at the slow and awkward movements of democracy, didnât you? Look at Hitler. See what a strong man in power can get done and done swiftly? Why, Berlin has the Olympics in thirty-six, doesnât it? All sorts of buildings are being erected at an absolutely feverish pace. You really must pop over to Berlin with the lot of us next time and see for yourself. Thatâs what we want for the British Empire.â
Edward nodded. âI believe a strong man at the top would be for the best.â He continued to look out over the traffic, avoiding eye contact with Buchanan. âBut look here, what about the danger of a riot? What are we prepared to do about those hecklers who follow Sir Oswald about from speech to speech? All the Jews and Communists? Itâs enough I have to drive penny nails into my mother and fatherâs coffins while theyâre grieving over Catherine and the grandchildren. Canât we put on a class affair? At least give my parents something to take comfort in?â
âYouâre worrying far too much for your own good, Danforth. Get home to your wife and have a glass of port. Have two. This will be a major rally, comparable to the finest rally in Berlin. Music, flags, marching, chantsâit will be a spectacle. A lot of Jews and Reds are not going to spoil that for us, believe me. Weâve recruited hundreds more Blackshirts. Theyâll be stationed strategically throughout the Grand Hall and outside on the grounds as well. One look at them and our enemies will shrink away. Your parents will open up the morning paper and read about a well-run show. A nationalist show with a good deal of pride in Britain and Britainâs future.â
Buchanan lifted his umbrella sharply, and a black cab pulled over in front of them. âThere you are, Danforth. Enough chitchat. We donât want too many to take notice of us. Home to your beautiful wife and that glass of port. Weâll see you at Olympia on Thursday.â
âRight.â Edward entered the back of the cab after the driver came out and opened the door. âThank you for dropping by Parliament to have a word with me, Buchanan. I hope everything will come off according to plan.â
âIt will. Remain calm.â
âI stand to lose a great deal,â said Edward.
Buchanan didnât respond until after the cab had sped away. âIndeed you do, Danforth.â
âGood evening, my dear.â Edward came up behind his wife as she was brushing her long black hair and kissed her on the cheek. âWhere are Owen and Colm?â
She smiled and turned around, slipping her arms about his neck. âAt Jeremy and Emmaâs with their cousins. The rectory has quite the biggest yard this part of London.â
Edward kissed her again, this time on the mouth. âBetter than the postage stamp of a yard we have here, in other words.â
âDonât be upset. Kipp and Carolineâs townhouse has a smaller yard than ours, and your fatherâs new townhouse is certainly not Ashton Park, is it?â
Edward tossed his top hat on a sofa and lit a cigarette. âIâm not upset. Just sorry they donât have the property to run around in I had when I was a child.â
âSummer is just around the corner. Then they can play at Dover Sky all they like.â
Edward sank down on the sofa next to his hat. âDadâs planning on renovations this summer, Char. I donât think the house can be occupied.â
She sat on the sofa with him, moving his hat onto a small table. âWell, Ashton Park is splendid enough, donât you think? Theyâll have even more room to run about.â
âSo long as they stay away from the sea cliff.â
âOh, heavens, Edward, whatâs gotten into you today? Youâre fretting like a mother hen. Thatâs my job, isnât it?â She moved so that she was able to get in behind him and began to rub his shoulders and neck. âYouâre tight as a drum.â
He blew out a lungful of smoke and said nothing.
âIs there a big speech coming up? Some piece of legislation you need to introduce? A bill to vote on? Is that what has you wound up like a grandfather clock?â
âI expect.â
âWhen is this coming to pass?â
âThursday.â
âWell, then, Friday evening we should take the boys for a boat ride on the Thames. You know how Owen loves anything to do with ships. Gets it from you, I imagine, his naval officer father.â
âThe war was a long time ago.â
âIt doesnât matter how long ago it was. You served king and country, and heâs very proud of you. So is Colm. We all are.â
âKing and country, eh?â He drew in on his cigarette. âMy patriotism hasnât done much for me, has it?â
âWhat do you mean?â She stopped rubbing his neck a moment and rested her chin on his shoulder. âYouâre an MP and youâre on the ladder of success in the Conservative Party.â
âAm I? If I were ignored any more than I am by the Party Iâd be as much a pariah as Churchill.â
âOh, my goodness, youâre quite a long ways off from anything like that.â She took his jaw in her fingers. âI thought you liked Winston. You got along famously when your father had him up to Ashton Park at Christmas.â
âI admire his fight. And his national pride. But I donât wish to be banished to the wilderness anytime soon and join him in solitary confinement.â
âYouâre Lord Prestonâs son. No oneâs going to do that.â
âNot yet.â
âWhat do you mean, not yet? Not ever.â She kissed him lightly on the lips. âYou really have got yourself tied up in knots. I shall have to unravel them.â
He stubbed out his cigarette in an ashtray. âHow will Charlotte Squire do that, I wonder?â
âOh, I have a tried and true Lancashire method.â
âWhich is?â
âMe. Just me.â
She kissed him with a strength and passion that pushed him back farther and farther into the sofa. Her blue eyes glittering, she paused and looked down at his face.
âHowâs that?â she asked.
âItâll do for a start.â
âWill it?â
She placed both hands on his shoulders and kissed him much longer and with even more vigor. A tear slipped from the corner of his eye, and she drew back.
âWhateverâs the matter? Have I hurt you somehow?â
âI want you to be proud of me. I want you and the boys to be proud of me.â
âMy goodness, Edward, we are proud of you, Iâve told you that. Youâre a fine husband and a brilliant father. No one could ask for more.â
âI dread the day youâre disappointed with me. I dread it like the grave.â
âEdward. Stop it. Thatâs never going to happen. I adore you. Owen and Colm adore you.â She put her arms tightly around his back and hugged him to herself. âWhatâs gone wrong, love? Whatâs put a knife in your heart? You could never do anything that would turn the boys or me against you. Itâs impossible.â