A Soldier of Substance
A Soldier of Substance
by D.W. Bradbridge
First Kindle edition
© 2014 D. W. Bradbridge
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Contents
Map: Bolton, 1644
Map: Chester, 1644
Key Characters
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Author’s Note
Acknowledgements
Bibliographical Notes
Glossary
Map: Bolton, 1644
Map: Chester, 1644
Key Characters
In Nantwich:
Daniel Cheswis - Wich house owner, cheese merchant, and reluctant constable of Nantwich
Elizabeth Brett - Daniel’s sweetheart
Ralph Brett - Elizabeth’s son from her first marriage
Cecilia Padgett - Daniel’s housekeeper
Amy Padgett - Cecilia’s granddaughter
Jack Wade - Daniel’s apprentice
Alexander Clowes - Chandler, bellman, and Daniel’s best friend
Marjery Clowes - Alexander’s wife
Simon Cheswis - Daniel’s headstrong younger brother
Rose Bailey - Simon’s sweetheart
George Simkins - Shoemaker and master of Simon Cheswis
Arthur Sawyer - Constable
Jack and Robert Skinner - Brothers to Daniel’s former apprentice, James Skinner
Ezekiel Green - Nantwich’s court clerk
Sir William Brereton - Commander of parliamentary forces in Cheshire
Colonel Thomas Croxton - Deputy lieutenant and responsible for the payment of Brereton’s army
Colonel George Booth - Nantwich garrison commander
In Chester and around:
Thomas Corbett - Landlord of The Boot, a tavern-cum-bawdy house
Charles Corbett - Thomas’ son
Annie - Madam of the brothel in The Boot
Roisin Byrne - A whore
James Skinner - Daniel’s ex-apprentice, kidnapped by the royalists at the Battle of Nantwich
Jem Bressy - Royalist spy. Skinner’s captor
William Seaman - Cheese and general goods merchant
Isabel Seaman - William’s wife
Katherine Seaman - William’s sister
Roberts - Footman in William Seaman’s household
John Gibbons - A servant
Martha Woodcock - A cook / housekeeper
Captain Edward Chisnall - (See also under royalist forces at Lathom) Royalist officer. Messenger to the Earl of Derby
Francis Gamull - Chester merchant and commander of the town guard
Robert Whitby - Merchant and close relative of Gamull
Jack Taylor - A glover
William Ainsworth - A divinity lecturer and preacher
Samuel Challinor - Blacksmith and farrier at Mickle Trafford
Randle Holmes - Mayor of Chester
James Stanley - Seventh Earl of Derby
In Ormskirk and around:
John Bootle - Brother of William Bootle
Jane Bootle - John’s wife
Marc Le Croix - A Frenchman, and cousin to the Seaman family
Beatrice Le Croix - Marc’s half sister
Jenny Reade - A young girl, daughter of Mary Reade, a midwife, who died under torture after being caught smuggling messages into Lathom House
Old Isaac - A drunkard
William Nutt - Vicar of Ormskirk
Inside Lathom House:
Lady Charlotte de Tremouille - Countess of Derby
Reverend Samuel Rutter - Private chaplain and close confidant of the Lady Charlotte
William Farrington - Advisor to the Lady Charlotte
Captain William Farmer - Major of the House. In charge of the garrison
Captain Edward Chisnall - (See under Chester) Royalist officer
Captain Henry Ogle - Royalist officer
Captain Edward Rawsthorne - Royalist officer
Captain Molyneux Ratcliffe - Royalist officer
Captain Richard Fox - Royalist officer
Ensign Edward Halsall - Junior officer
Broome - Chief Steward
Parliamentary Forces at Lathom:
Sir Thomas Fairfax - Initially in charge of the siege, previously in charge of the parliamentary army at the Battle of Nantwich
Colonel Alexander Rigby - Siege commander and MP for Wigan. Sworn enemy of the Earl of Derby
Colonel Ralph Assheton - Parliamentary commander
Colonel John Moore - Parliamentary commander
Colonel Peter Egerton - Parliamentary commander
Colonel Richard Holland - Head of the Parliamentary Committee in Manchester
Major Thomas Morgan - Welshman, in charge of the artillery at Lathom
Browne - Chief Engineer to Colonel Rigby
Major Edward Robinson - Parliamentary officer
Captain William Bootle - Parliamentary officer, ex-porter within Lord Derby’s household and advisor to Rigby on the interior of Lathom House.
Captain John Ashurst - Parliamentary officer
Captain George Sharples - Parliamentary officer
Captain Duddell - Parliamentary officer
Captain Richard Davie - Parliamentary officer
Captain William Dandie - Parliamentary officer
Lieutenant Dandie - William Dandie’s son
Lieutenant Lawrence Seaman - Parliamentary officer and son of William Seaman
In Newark
Colonel Henry Tillier - Royalist commander of green-coated foot regiment (also at Bolton)
Sir John Meldrum - Commander of parliamentary forces at Newark
Major John Lilburne - Well-known political activist and writer – a parliamentary officer at Newark
In Bolton:
Henry Oulton - A wealthy merchant
Horrocks - Oulton’s steward
Colonel Shuttleworth - Parliamentary Commander of Horse
Prince Rupert of The Rhine - Much-feared cavalry commander in charge of the royalist forces at Bolton
Colonel Henry Warren - Royalist infantry commander. Had previously been presen
t at Nantwich
Sir Thomas Tyldesley - Royalist commander in charge of red-coated regiment of foot
Colonel Robert Broughton - Royalist commander in command of green-coated infantry regiment
Where they raised midst sap and siege
The banners of their rightful liege
At their she-captain’s call
Who, miracle of womankind,
Lent mettle to the meanest hind
That mann’d her castle wall.
Discourse of the Warr in Lancashire, p xiii – E. Robinson and W. Beamont, Chatham Society, 1864
On Saturday December 6th after the house was up, there came letters to the Speaker of the Commons’ House of the surrender of Lathom House in Lancashire, belonging to the Earl of Derby, which his lady, the Comtesse of Derby, in proving herself of the two a better souldier, hath above these two years kept in opposition to our forces.
The Perfect Diurnall, December 8th, 1645
Chapter 1
Ormskirk, Lancashire – Friday April 26th, 1644
The Frenchman was woken from fitful slumber by the sound of gunfire. Or at least, that’s what it seemed like to his tired and blunted senses.
In the confines of the dismal, poorly-lit cellar, which had become the centre of his universe, he had grown so used to silence that the sharp report of the pistol had come as something of a shock, jolting him awake as though he had been poked with a sharp stick. True, he had occasionally heard the distant boom of cannon fire, which told him he was still close to Lathom, but the noise which had just assaulted his eardrums was something different. A bone-rattling crack, so close at hand that it seemed to reverberate through his very being, shaking him free from the stupor brought on by the interminable days of monotony. Despite the sudden and rude awakening, it was a welcome sound, for it told him he was still alive.
“Merde alors, qu’est-ce qui se passe?” he rasped, the words catching in his parched throat. Blinking rapidly, he puffed out his cheeks and stumbled unsteadily to his feet. “C’est bien quelqu’un qui vient pour me tuer, n’est-ce pas?”
In truth, he had little idea where he was or how he had got there. He remembered, a long time ago it seemed now, the convivial atmosphere in the tavern and the company of the small group of soldiers from the siege, who had teased him because of his accent. Swiss, they had thought, for he had told them he was from Geneva. After all, to be a Frenchman in England was to run the risk of being held for a papist. It was only partially untrue, for his adopted home town of Bolton had become known as “the Geneva of the North.” He also remembered the smiles of the comely serving wench who had given him the eye and from whom he had hoped to receive a warm and willing reception later that evening. But after that, he remembered nothing.
He had woken to find himself stripped to his shirt and breeches, robbed of his coin, and sprawled on the floor of this godforsaken prison. At first, he had been tied with shackles to the wall, but after a couple of days, his captor, who always took great care to keep his face hidden with a scarf, had relented, freeing him from his bonds on the understanding that the prisoner was to stand back against the far wall whenever he entered the cell.
Not that he was there often. Once a day, watery-looking pottage or mouldy cheese and bread had been slipped unceremoniously through the door; but that was all he saw of his gaoler. Indeed, for the last two days, no-one had been to see him at all. Fortunately, the room contained an old, decrepit-looking barrel full of brackish water and a wooden ladle, which had stopped him dying of thirst, but he was desperately hungry and was beginning to wonder whether he would ever get out alive. Sliding over to the door, he counted the notches that he had gouged out of the wood with the end of one of the shackles that he had managed to rip out of the wall. Fifty-two. He had been incarcerated for almost two months. What a mistake it had been to leave Bolton.
Looking back, it had seemed like a good idea at the time. The town where he had spent his teenage years had taught him to speak fluent English, but, having survived a concerted royalist attack little more than a year ago, it had been becoming a dangerous place to live, especially for a Frenchman with the kind of jet black hair and olive skin that tended to get you mistaken for a Spaniard.
Those with suspicious minds in that Puritan stronghold had already marked him out as a closet papist, so when it became clear that the Englishman who had brought him up was in fact dying, he had grasped the opportunity to visit his cousins in Ormskirk with open arms. He had been told that the people in West Lancashire adhered more to the old faith than they did in Bolton and that being French would not pose so much of a problem. After all, Lady Derby herself was a Frenchwoman, albeit of Protestant faith. Nonetheless, he had taken no chances. He had arrived at his cousins’ house in sombre Puritan garb. It was ironic, he reflected, that his new black doublet had been stolen, and his plain white shirt was now a filthy shade of grey.
He was being kept in a cellar – that much he had worked out – for the metal grille located just below the ceiling in one corner of the room, his only source of light, was just above ground level. He knew this because, one day, he had seen a pair of boots walk past; not the simple boots of a farm worker, but high quality bucket-top boots that might be worn by an army officer.
He knew that the cellar had been used for storing grain at some point, for the stone floor was littered with kernels. He also knew it was facing south-west, because on bright days, the room would be filled with a warm amber glow for twenty minutes in the evening. He looked forward to such days and had taken to bathing in the sun’s rays for as long as the sunlight lasted and until the room was once more pitched into semi-darkness.
The Frenchman looked up at the grille, and thought he could perceive a slight lightening of the sky, which indicated that dawn was breaking. Alert now, he put his ear to the door. He thought he could hear raised voices above him, but couldn’t be sure. He looked around the room and wondered if there was any way he could position himself to hear better. It sounded like the voices were coming from a room directly above the grille. The Frenchman thought about it for a moment and smiled. If he could re-position the water barrel and climb up so he could put his ear close to the grille, he might be able to ascertain what was going on.
Wiping the sweat from his hands, he gripped the rim of the barrel and heaved with all his strength. The result was spectacular. The rotting wood of the barrel split with a loud crack, spilling water over the stone floor in a swirling torrent and depositing the Frenchman onto his back, a moment before the barrel, now nearly empty, flipped over onto its side and landed across his legs. The Frenchman howled in pain and frustration.
Suddenly, there was a second bang up above, like that which had woken him, followed by a door slamming and the sound of feet retreating at speed. The Frenchman wheeled round to see a pair of boots flashing past the grille in the half light. He couldn’t be sure, but they looked like the same pair of bucket-top boots he had seen before.
It was then that he realised that, although the voices above had ceased, the ominous sound of footsteps could be heard descending the steps to the wooden door of the cellar.
Groaning, the Frenchman rubbed his shins and pulled himself gingerly to his feet. Grabbing one of the timbers from the barrel as a makeshift weapon, he hobbled over to the door and positioned himself behind it just as the key started to rattle in the lock.
“Bon,” he said to himself. “C’est ma seule chance. Je devrais en profiter.” It was better to die trying to escape than to perish in this miserable hole.
As the door opened, he had just enough time to register the fact that he was at a disadvantage of four-to-one before launching himself into the fray, with two months of pent-up aggression.
Chapter 2
Three months earlier.
Nantwich – Thursday February 1st, 1644
It had never occurred to me that the role I played in solving the series of grim murders that had taken place in Nantwich during the freezing winter of 1643-44 wo
uld mark me out as anything more than a mere petty constable. I had certainly never considered the possibility that simply doing my duty would result in me being known as ‘Sir William Brereton’s man’. But if you were to ask me to identify the day when my life truly changed forever, then it would have to be the day that we cleared out the church.
During the week following Sir Thomas Fairfax’s victory, St Mary’s, the magnificent sandstone edifice which dominated Nantwich’s main square, had been used as a makeshift prison to house the two hundred and fifty officers, a hundred and twenty women, and fifteen hundred common soldiers taken captive on the battlefield at Acton. Understandably, this had been much to the annoyance of the town’s recently installed Puritan minister, Joshua Welch, who had been mortified at the prospect of hordes of papists desecrating the interior of his church. Not only that; St Mary’s was the town’s only designated place of worship, and so Welch had been forced to preach his twice-daily sermons in Townsend House on Welsh Row, in the gallery of The Crown, and in Lady Norton’s house on Beam Street. Welch was not best pleased, and it showed.