Captain Kempton’s Christmasīuy on Amazon or read free on Kindle Unlimited. Listen on Audible or the audiobook retailer of your choice. Paperback and Large Print also available. Audio version available from Amazon or An Embroidered Spoonīuy on Amazon or read free on Kindle Unlimited. The Mrs MacKinnonsīuy from Amazon or read free on Kindle Unlimited. (If the links here do not work for your country, click on the links on the main book page.) The four full-length novels are also available as a box set (ebook and KU only). Sauce for the Gander is also available as an audio book. The full length novels are available on Kindle and Kindle Unlimited. The companion novel Molly’s Tale is currently on pre-order for release in June. From windswept Devonshire to Georgian London and revolutionary France, true love is always on the horizon and shady dealings often afoot.Įach book can be read as a standalone, but will be more enjoyable if read in sequence. Molly has her own adventures and troubles, and her own romance.Īvailable on Kindle and Kindle Unlimited.Ī duelling viscount, a courageous poor relation and an overbearing lord–just a few of the memorable cast of characters you will meet in the Marstone series. What does a romance look like from below stairs? Molly’s Tale is a parallel romance to A Suitable Match (Book 2 in the Marstone Series), covering some of the same events as the main book from the point of view of Bella’s maid, Molly. This does not affect the cost to you.* Molly’s Tale *As an Amazon Associate I may receive payment from qualifying purchases made through these links. So, if our heros/heroines are accosted in the rain, defending themselves with a pistol may not work… If the cloth around the pistol ball was waxed and fit tighly, the powder inside the barrel would be protected from the rain. Powder in the pan could be protected by rubbing beeswax around the edge of the pan – as long as the edge of the pan and the bottom part of the frizzen fitted together well without any gaps. As you can imagine, firing flintlock pistols in wet weather could be problematic. There are videos on the internet showing the loading and firing of flintlock pistols and muskets – what seems surprising to anyone used to seeing modern guns fired in films, is the small delay between the flash of the powder in the pan igniting and the actual firing of the pistol. When ready to fire, pull the cock back to the full cock position, then release it by pulling the trigger. Then close the frizzen and gently release the cock if you are not about to fire the pistol. The half-cock position allows the frizzen to be pulled back so you can put powder into the pan. ‘Going off half-cocked’ means doing something before preparations are complete. Start by pulling back the cock (the part holding the flint) a little way – to the half-cock position. The cloth stops the ball just rolling out of the barrel. Then wrap the ball in a small piece of cloth or and push it down the barrel, using the ramrod to tamp it down. In the photo, you can see the ramrod stored just under the barrel of the pistol. First, pour the correct amount of powder down the barrel and tamp it down. Loading the pistol was far more complicated than with modern guns. The sparks caused ignited power in the pan, and the flame travelled to the powder inside the barrel of the pistol.īy BBODO (Own work), via Wikimedia CommonsĪ ‘flash in the pan’ is when the sparks ignite the powder in the pan without setting off the pistol. When the gun was fired, a spring moved the flint so that it struck a metal plate called the frizzen. The little jaws in the ‘lock’ held a piece of flint. Each part was made by a different craftsman, so ‘lock, stock and barrel’ means having the whole thing, complete with all its parts. The stock is the handle and other wooden parts, the barrel is the tube the pistol ball travels down when it is fired, and the ‘lock’ is the firing mechanism. Our heros (or heroines) would have used a pistol something like this. In Regency times, guns were fired using a flintlock mechanism. The kind of gun you see in western films, where the gunman can quickly load a set of metal cartridges into his handgun, only came into use in around the 1830s. Flash in the pan – Going off half-cocked – Lock, stock and barrel
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