
audiobook
The Smuggler of King’s Cove
CHAPTER I. OUR HERO MAKES TWO PROMISES.
CHAPTER II. A NEW LORD.
CHAPTER III. OUR HERO MEETS WITH AN ADVENTURE.
CHAPTER IV. DEAD MAN’S REEF.
CHAPTER V. OLD DONALD’S CONFESSION.
CHAPTER VI. ON WITCH’S CRAG.
CHAPTER VII. A SPECTER IN THE MONKS’ CHAPEL.
CHAPTER VIII. LORD OAKLEIGH.
CHAPTER IX. A COMPROMISE.
The rugged headlands of England’s western shore conceal a secret haven known as King’s Cove, a water‑locked inlet hidden behind tangled woods and treacherous rocks. From the storm‑torn cliffs of the Witch’s Crag to the tranquil Dale River, the landscape is both beautiful and foreboding, a place where smugglers could slip unnoticed past royal patrols. The remote cottage at the cove’s edge, half‑hidden in the forest, serves as the unlikely headquarters of a notorious smuggling ring.
Hugh Maitland, a seasoned captain in his forties, has spent half his life ferrying contraband through these shadowed waters, earning the loyalty of villagers who depend on his illicit trade. On his deathbed, wounded by a revenue cutter’s cannon, he makes two solemn promises to his devoted wife Margery and their young son Percy—pledges that will set the course for the story that follows. As his life fades, the weight of those vows begins to stir the quiet community.
Those promises awaken old secrets tied to a forgotten chapel on the cliffs, hinting at a deeper mystery that will test the resolve of those left behind. Listeners will be drawn into a tale of loyalty, danger, and the lingering echo of a smuggler’s legacy, all set against the stark beauty of England’s coast.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (338K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Denis Pronovost, Robert Cicconetti,and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2015-09-02
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1823–1887
A hugely prolific writer of 19th-century popular fiction, he helped shape the fast-moving serialized stories that kept magazine readers coming back week after week. Best known for adventure, romance, and sensation tales, he was one of the busy storytellers behind America’s early mass-market reading culture.
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