Jack Steel Adventure Series Books 1-3: Man of Honour, Rules of War, Brothers in Arms. Iain Gale

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Jack Steel Adventure Series Books 1-3: Man of Honour, Rules of War, Brothers in Arms - Iain  Gale

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      IAIN GALE

      JACK STEEL ADVENTURE SERIES BOOKS 1-3:

      Man of Honour, Rules of War, Brothers in Arms

      Contents

       Cover

       Title Page

       Rules of War

       Brothers in Arms

       Keep Reading

       About the Author

       Also by Iain Gale

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

      

      IAIN GALE

       Man of Honour

       Jack Steel and the Blenheim Campaign,July to August 1704

       Dedication

       For Sarah

       Map

      Contents

       Cover

       Title Page

       Chapter Nine

       Chapter Ten

       Chapter Eleven

       Epilogue

       Historical Note

       Copyright

       PROLOGUE

       Upper Bavaria, July 1704

      They had come here by stealth to carry the war deep into the south. An army of many nations: English and Scots, Hanoverians and Prussians, Hessians, Danes and Dutch. They had but one purpose: the defeat of France and her ally, Bavaria. The French King, Louis XIV, they knew to be a power-mad maniac, styling himself the Sun King. It was clear that he would not be content until he possessed all Europe, from Spain to Poland. And so it was, on this sultry day in early July, as afternoon drifted into evening, that fate brought these many thousands of men to Donauwörth, a little Bavarian town with its ancient high walls and ramparts.

      Above it, at the top of a steep slope, stood a fort whose hill, inspired by its distinctive shape, the local people had long ago christened ‘Schellenberg’ – The Hill of the Bell. It was abundantly and worryingly clear to all the soldiers who now stood in its shadow, that before any decisive victory could be won, before they could bring the French to battle, drive them back to Paris and remove forever the Sun King’s threat, that this hill and its little fort would have to be taken.

       ONE

      The tall young officer stood a few yards out in front of the company of redcoats and stared up at the fort that towered above them on the hill. For two hours now he had been awaiting the order to advance and with every passing moment the enemy position looked more forbidding. Like almost every man in the army, he had the greatest admiration and respect for his Commander-in-Chief. But at this precise moment he had begun to wonder whether, truly, this entire enterprise might not be doomed to failure. He tried to banish the thought. To maintain some degree of sang-froid before his men. But as he did so, the first cannonball fell in front of the three ranks of red-coated infantry,

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