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The book is set in 1912, during Napoleon’s retreat from Russia. It’s not a period of history that I’m very familiar with, and anything related to war and armies tends to go slightly over my head. So it’s a testament to the author’s writing and characterisation that I read and - on the whole - liked this book despite so much war talk.
Sonia is the main protagonist. She’s a feisty young woman, just about finished with her schooling, and very fond of her governess Miss Elizabeth Barrymore. We meet her as Elizabeth - or ‘Barry’, as Sonia calls her - is trying to find her. Sonia is hiding in a barn, and hears her governess talking to her father. She is still grieving for her only brother, who was coerced into signing up for Napoleon's army a year earlier, and was killed.
There’s sudden pounding at the door, with angry, wounded French soldiers bursting in… and the massacre that I remembered begins. Thankfully there’s no gratuitous detail, and Sonia manages to keep her presence a secret since she knows there is nothing she can do. Hot on the heels of the French come an army of Cossacks, who proceed to destroy whatever is left.
When all is quiet and the soldiers have left, Sonia surveys the devastation. It looks as though everyone is dead, and the house ransacked. She knows that she can’t stay there, and is relieved to find that her pony is still in its paddock. So she dresses in her brother’s clothes and hacks off her hair. Then she collects a few supplies, saddles the pony, and sets off to try to reach the safety of her aunt’s house. She doesn’t like her aunt, but as far as she knows, she’s her only possible refuge.
Then she loses her way, and has to stop at an inn. She meets another traveller, Charles Vincent, and agrees to partner him in a game of whist against some other patrons of the inn. She’s a very good player, and they manage to win quite a bit of money. Inevitably he discovers that she is not a boy, but suggests that they travel together, pretending to be cousins. He says she will be safer with him, and instinctively she trusts him.
That’s just the first couple of chapters; most of the book covers their travels, along with another companion whose presence is a happy surprise to Sonia (and to me, when I came across it). Charles is quite generous, but evidently has more to him than mere adventuring. He won’t say who he’s working for, and is often rather scathing about Sonia - and she, in her turn, is quite rude to him. Evidently, I thought, according to the principles of romantic fiction (even though the romance is a small part of the story) they would eventually fall in love with each other.
It’s an exciting story, with a lot of tension and narrow escapes. Sonia is plagued by memories of the massacre, which forced her to grow up in a very short period. Charles sees her as his responsibility, but loyalty to his chiefs comes first, and she finds this difficult to take.
The book is set firmly in historical context, with famous characters from the era being involved alongside the fictional ones, and they blend harmoniously, so much that I didn’t always know whether someone was a historical personality, or someone from the author’s imagination. She had a gift of characterisation, making likeable but flawed people who feel very real. She also leaves us to guess, along with Sonia and her companion, whether Charles really can be trusted.
Later in the book there are some rather unlikely coincidences: two people meet, who once had a close relationship that was severed. And, even more unlikely, one of the characters turns out to be the son of another… But while I was reading, it all feels believable and almost inevitable. The writing is excellent, the research impeccable. There’s sufficient conversation and character interaction that I didn’t have to understand all the war news and why there was so much danger, although I did take a break to read up, briefly, about this period of history.
All in all, I enjoyed rereading this, and would recommend it to anyone who likes realistic historical fiction. Sadly Jane Aiken Hodge’s books are long out of print, but they can sometimes be found in second-hand shops - which is where I acquired most of mine, over many years.
Review copyright 2025 Sue's Book Reviews




