Young Ben Stone is fleeing for his life over the bleak Yorkshire Moors. From being a
child, he has been besotted by the local landowner’s daughter Ruth, but after her
wicked brother is accidentally killed, Ben fears that he will be blamed. Ruth
convinces him he should run; otherwise, her father who is also the local magistrate
will probably have him hanged for murder.
Trying to keep out of the way of the law, he runs into a wandering band of thieves.
They take him as a prisoner and he is forced to endure a desperate winter in their
secret lair. When he does escape their clutches, his fortune changes, and he is
taken in by a friendly parson, who runs an orphanage in Cartmel, where Ben finds a
new life.
A brief spell working at a chandler’s shop in Barrow in Furness is rudely interrupted
when Ben is pressed into the navy. The year is 1801 and the Royal Navy is
desperate for men.
Ben takes to life in the navy, and quickly gains promotion. He is set for a promising
career, when his past returns to haunt him, in the person of Ruth, who has been
married off to the new Governor of Jamaica and needs transporting out to the
Caribbean on Ben’s ship. During the voyage, Ruth takes the opportunity to revive
Ben’s feelings for her.
When he returns to England, he is confronted by his past and has to face a court-
martial over the death of Ruth’s brother. Can he clear his name? What part will Lady
Ruth play in his future? Ben is in for many varied adventures before his life is settled.
Guilty of Honour