Which Man Will She Marry??
Written by Charles Todd and published by William Morrow, an imprint of Harper Collins Publishers, in 2012, this novel is set at the beginning of, and during, World War I. Lady Elspeth Douglas is a member of Scottish royalty. Her father, before he passed, was Lord Douglas, and Elspeth is his only heir. Although most of her relatives are redheads, Elspeth is a “Black Scot,” and has dark hair. Her cousin, Kenneth, has inherited her guardianship, which will, unfortunately, last until her thirtieth birthday.
As a younger woman. Elspeth was sent to France to learn to speak French without a Scots accent. There she met her former classmate and very good friend, Madeleine Villard, who is now pregnant with her first child. Elspeth has traveled to Paris to be with her friend at the time of the birth. It is 1914, and the Germans are threatening to cross the border into Belgium, and thence into France. War seems to be imminent. The French Army has been mobilized and Madeleine’s husband, Henri, will probably be called to duty. That makes it even more important for Elspeth to be in Paris to assist her friend. Meanwhile, the British have joined the War effort on the side of France and have sent troops to Belgium and Northern France. They are guarding the coastal roads.
When Elspeth was attending school in France, she developed a schoolgirl crush on Madeleine’s very handsome brother, Alain. She finds that she still has a romantic interest in him. Unfortunately for both women, the Germans have invaded Belgium and Alain is called up to serve, as is Henri. Before he leaves, Alain takes Elspeth to dinner, where he states his intention to marry her, and he gives her his mother’s ring as a token of his love. He will not be able to formally ask Cousin Kenneth for Elspeth’s hand in marriage until the war is over, which many believe will be by Christmas. Elspeth is thrilled at this development.
As Belgium falls to the Germans, Madeleine goes into labor. Elspeth goes out to find a taxi to take her to fetch the doctor but can find none. They are all being used to ferry troops to the front. When she finally makes it to the doctor’s home and surgery, she discovers him packing to move himself and his entire family south, beyond the reach of the Germans. When she, the doctor, and a nurse reach Madeliene’s home, they discover her in heavy labor, and she shortly delivers a baby boy. Elspeth convinces Madeliene to travel south to the family’s house on the Loire to get away from the war. Before Madeleine is able to leave, however, Elspeth tells her that she, Elspeth, must return home to Great Britain, because her country is now also at war.
Elspeth has now become homesick for her home in Cornwall, and even for Scotland. With the entry of the British into the war, the Germans have been stopped before they can reach Paris. Madeleine has decided not to move herself and her newborn to Loire, so she tries to persuade Elspeth to stay in Paris with her. Elspeth is adamant, however, and prepares to travel back to Britain. She takes the train to Calais, where she is not able to find a taxi to take her to the port. She must walk. On the way, she sees scores of wounded British soldiers on bloody stretchers waiting to be evacuated to Great Britain. They are crying out for water, and there is none. Elspeth goes to a café where she purchases a jug of water and a tin cup. She begins giving drinks of water to the injured soldiers, refilling the jug several times.
As she walks among the stretchers, she meets a young corporal who knows her guardian cousin’s son, Major Rory Douglas, and she speaks briefly with him. She also runs into Peter Gilchrist, the head of a branch of one of the Scottish Clans, and they recognize each other. Unfortunately, she has moved a bit closer to Ypres, and there, a pitched battle is raging at Passchendaele Ridge. The British are retreating. A ranging German artillery shell lands nearby, and Peter quickly hustles Elspeth away from the danger. Then, however, he must return to the fighting and is discovered by another Scottish major who puts her on a lorry bound for the port at Rouen, where she will board a ship to England. After a few well-placed bribes, Elspeth is able to secure passage to Portsmouth, England, and then a train to London.
While in London, she looks up an old family friend who has influence. She tells him she wants to do her part for the war effort. Specifically, she wants to join Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service. She wants to become a nurse. Eventually, she succeeds in entering nursing school and then becoming a certified army nurse. Her initial posting is in Dover, treating wounded soldiers returning from France, but she is soon assigned to duty near the front lines in France. There, she soon meets Peter Gilchrist again, and they renew their acquaintance. In fact, Elspeth developed a romantic interest in him. She has now fallen in love with two different men, and both are in France fighting the Germans.
Bess Crawford, another protagonist in the author’s series of novels about her life as a WWI army nurse, is mentioned in passing, for those of you who have read this excellent series.
In France, one of the other nurses gives Elspeth a slip of paper with the address of a cottage in Sussex that her mother had lived in before her death. She asks Elspeth to stay in it whenever she is resting in England, and Elspeth agrees. It had been empty for three years but is small enough for Elspeth to manage on her own. There is a walnut tree in the front garden of the cottage, and that is the source for the title of this novel.
Back in France, Elspeth discovers a seriously wounded Peter Gilchrist and arranges to have him shipped back to England for treatment. He has been shot through the chest and is not in very good shape. Back in England, their romance blooms, and Elspeth now has a dilemma. She is in love with two different men, both of whom expect her to marry them. Which should she choose? How should she tell the other one?
Read the book to find out. It is a very good story, and it moves along at a good pace. Like all this author’s works, the story is well written, and loose ends are tied up. It also appears to be historically and geographically accurate. I enjoyed it, and I believe that you will, too. I award all five of the five stars available for this work.