It’s 1802 and the Anglo-French war is over. I thoroughly enjoyed Leeward, first in the Nightingale & Courtney historical naval series by Katie Daysh, so was keen to read the next book. In The Devil to Pay, though the enamoured sailors set sail for the Mediterranean on the same ship they are soon separated.
Leeward was Hiram Nightingale’s story, The Devil to Pay is told from the perspective of Lieutenant Arthur Courtney. The forbidden relationship of these two men, separated by social conventions, the law and nautical miles, is the skeleton of these books. Courtney is not like Nightingale; he was born into rural poverty and is still uncomfortable dining at the captain’s table. When HMS Loyal goes missing on route to Malta with two important diplomats aboard, Courtney and Nightingale are enlisted on the ship sent to find her. Their secret mission involves working closely with their one-time enemy, France. As the HMS Lysander sails south, accompanied by French frigate, the Fantôme, their journey is marred by the discovery of two Lysanders, crew members, having sex. An onboard punishment involving pain and humiliation turns into a naval tribunal in Gibraltar. With the Lysander stuck in dock, the Fantôme, with Nightingale on board, sets sail to continue the search for the Loyal. Shipwreck and piracy are suspected and Courtney, following on belatedly from Gibraltar, doesn’t know if Hiram is alive or dead, free or enslaved.
Can love survive separation, pirates, shipwreck, doubts and treachery? Daysh handles the emotions of the separated lovers with a light hand. Just when Courtney is distraught at Nightingale’s departure, he must once again take responsibility for a ship without a direct order to do so. Should he follow his instincts, or naval law? There are so many twists and turns in this plot that it’s impossible to forsee the ending, its a rollercoaster of emotions just as stormy as the waves that the sailors face.
Excellent. This is a series to read in order, so be sure to read Leeward first. The English and the French may not be enemies in this book, as they were in Leeward, but war between the two will be rekindled a year after The Devil to Pay ends.
Next in the series is A Merciful Sea.
Here’s my review of the first book in this series:-
LEEWARD #1NIGHTINGALE&COURTNEY
If you like this, try:-
‘The Blue Afternoon’ by William Boyd
‘A Rustle of Silk’ by Alys Clare #1GABRIELTAVERNER
‘Rush Oh!’ by Shirley Barrett
And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE DEVIL TO PAY by Katie Daysh https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-8Wd via @SandraDanby

