(A Chateau Laux Odyssey, Book #2)
by David Loux
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
This felt like one of those books where the atmosphere does as much storytelling as the plot.
The Scald Crow isn’t loud about what it’s doing. Instead, it builds slowly — almost quietly — layering unease, emotion, and fragments of meaning until you realise you’re completely inside it. It’s less about big, dramatic reveals and more about the feeling that something is shifting, just out of view.
What stood out to me most was the way the book handles uncertainty. Calla doesn’t step into Ireland with any sense of clarity or purpose — if anything, she feels slightly untethered from the start. And rather than immediately giving her answers, the story lets her sit in that uncertainty. It allows confusion, instinct, and emotion to guide her, which made everything feel far more immersive.
There’s also a strong sense that identity in this book isn’t something fixed. It’s something that’s uncovered in layers, sometimes reluctantly. Calla’s journey isn’t about becoming someone new so much as realising that parts of herself have always been there — just hidden or misunderstood. I really liked that approach, because it gives her development a quieter, more introspective feel.
Another aspect I found really interesting was how the book treats connection. Not just romantically, but more broadly — between people, between past and present, and even between the seen and unseen parts of the world. There’s this underlying suggestion that certain bonds aren’t entirely rational or explainable, and the story leans into that rather than trying to tidy it up.
The romance fits into that idea quite well. It’s immediate, but it doesn’t feel random. Instead, it has that same sense of inevitability that runs through the rest of the book — like it’s part of something larger rather than a separate storyline.
I also really appreciated the way the modern setting and folklore coexist. The story doesn’t draw a hard line between them. Instead, it lets them overlap in a way that feels natural, as though the older world has simply been waiting in the background all along.
Definitely one I’ll be thinking about — and a series I will want to continue with.
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Hanna Park
I began my writing career in the pre-dawn of a winter morning while my husband snored like a train. We could call my husband the catalyst. If it weren’t for him, I would never have gone to the kitchen to make a pot of coffee, feed the cat, and sit on the loveseat in front of the fire. It was there, in those moments of wondrous quiet, that I did something I had never thought possible. I opened my laptop, and while the coffee went cold, I wrote a story. My husband had no idea that these sojourns to the loveseat in front of the fire would become a daily occurrence, that writing would become an obsession, but the cat knew. She knows everything.
I write stories that make you laugh, make you cry, and make you love. Thank you, friends, for reading!
In the beginning, there was an empty page.
I am a writer who lives in Muskoka, Canada, with a husband who snores, a hungry cat, and an almost perfect canine––he’s an adorable little shit.
Author Links:
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'A first-rate historical thriller, full of period detail, fascinating characters, unexpected twists, mystery, intrigue and action.’
~ Peter Tonkin
1812
Britain’s war against Napoleon continues.
Will Fraser and Duncan Armstrong have served their country well as spies, exposing traitors and rescuing betrayed royalists.
Now they are asked to support military operations in the Peninsular War. The French are using a new code which is proving impossible to decipher. Will and Armstrong must work with Spanish guerrillas to intercept messages between French Commanders and pass them to Wellington’s codebreakers.
Will is reluctant, however. Portugal was where he was falsely accused of cowardice and desertion and forced to leave the army. And Captain Harcourt-Browne, the jealous and vengeful officer who caused his downfall, is still serving there.
But Will is given a compelling – and personal – reason to carry out the operation. If he does so, there’s a slim chance he could be reinstated.
Enemy agents are soon on their trail; agents who want them dead. Somehow Will and Armstrong must evade them and join the guerrillas in a daring attempt to uncover Napoleon’s battle plans.
But Will’s troubled past catches up with him. Four years ago he lied to protect the woman he loved. Now he must own up to that lie to save himself.
Rosemary Hayes has written over forty books across different genres, from historical fiction to chapter books for early readers and texts for picture books.
The History behind the Stories in the ‘Soldier Spy’ Trilogy
Sir Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington
The extent of spying, on both sides, during the Napoleonic Wars, was considerable. Not only at a diplomatic level, through overseas embassies and through the Alien Office, in London, and highly placed double agents, but among networks of ordinary people, too, who passed on maps and documents, letters, money and even arms. Smaller documents or items of intelligence could be sewn into clothing or hidden in hollowed out walking sticks or riding crops. Or even, apparently, in a hatpin! Larger items were hidden in barrels or at drop off points on the French coast such as oyster sheds. And fishermen sometimes buried items on uninhabited islets for later collection.
Both sides employed complex codes and ciphers to protect their communications. Codebooks and cipher wheels were standard kit. One captured French codebook was worth its weight in gold to the British Intelligence Service.
In 1803 Britain declared war on France, ending a fragile peace between the two countries. In 1804 Napoleon Bonaparte crowned himself Emperor of the French.
Napoleon Bonaparte
The Napoleonic Wars were global and by 1808 France dominated the majority of continental Europe. The wars finally ended in 1815 with the Duke of Wellington’s defeat of the French at Waterloo.
The ‘Soldier Spy’ trilogy is set during The Peninsular War (1808-1814) in which the British, Spanish and Portuguese fought against the French. The war started because Portugal continued to trade with Britain. French troops marched through Spain into Portugal. Spain’s uneasy alliance with France soon broke down and French troops occupied Madrid.
In May 1808 Napoleon’s brother Joseph was installed as King of Spain, causing rebellions across the country.
After the French suffered some defeats in Spain, Napoleon himself took charge and enjoyed some success, forcing British troops to withdraw.
But Napoleon did not stay long and he never returned to that theatre of war. He left in 1809 to oversee the defeat of Austria and then the disastrous invasion of Russia in 1812.
His Marshalls were left in charge of the French troops in the peninsular.
Battles continued to rage in Portugal and Spain but it was the British victory at Salamanca in 1812 that was a major factor in Napoleon’s downfall. By this time the ‘unbreakable’ Paris Cipher had been more or less cracked by the British so Wellington had advance knowledge of the battle plans of the French.
This then is the background to my three books, which begin in 1808 and end in 1812.
***
In the first book ‘Traitor’s Game’, we meet Captain Will Fraser, sent back from Portugal having been dismissed from the army in disgrace. With him is his sergeant, Duncan Armstrong, who has been severely wounded in battle. In London they go to find Will’s brother, Jack. But Jack has vanished and in their desperate search for him they become unwittingly involved in the murky world of espionage, with tragic consequences.
In the second book, The King’s Agent, Will and Armstrong are working as agents for the British Government. Despatched to France to rescue undercover spies who have been exposed by a traitor, they must embed themselves with the enemy and play a dangerous game of deception. And Will Fraser also has a very personal score to settle.
In the final book of the trilogy, Code of Honour, Will and Armstrong are back in the thick of the Peninsular War, but this time as spies. The French are using a new code which is proving impossible to decipher. Now they must work with Spanish guerrillas to intercept messages between French Commanders and pass them to Wellington’s codebreakers, putting themselves in constant danger.
And it is here that Will’s troubled past catches up with him. Four years ago he lied to protect the woman he loved. Now he must tell the truth to save himself.
Praise for Code of Honour: ‘First rate historical thriller, full of period detail, fascinating characters, unexpected twists, mystery, intrigue and action’ Peter Tonkin
Praise for Rosemary Hayes:
‘Rosemary Hayes' Soldier Spy is a first-rate historical thriller, full of period detail, fascinating characters, unexpected twists, mystery, intrigue and action. It reminds me of Berrnard Cornwell's brilliant, Regency-set Gallows Thief. I am pleased to see that it is the first of a trilogy and look forward to reading more about the dashing Will Fraser.’
~ Peter Tonkin, author of The Richard Mariner thrillers
‘One of the very best historical novels I have ever read.’
~ Sandra Robinson, Huguenot Ancestry Expert
‘An absorbing tale told with sensitivity. The forgotten struggles of Huguenot refugees come to moving, heartrending life.’
~ Steven Veerapen, author of A Dangerous Trade
Soldier Spy Series Universal Buy Links:
This series is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.
Rosemary Hayes
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The Lost Seigneur (A Chateau Laux Odyssey, Book #2) by David Loux Publication Date: October 7th, 2025 Publisher: Wire Gate Press Pages: 226 ...