St. Ives
by Robert Louis Stevenson
A tireless story revolves around the abuses of Captain Jacques St. Ives, who was captured and imprisoned by the British. While there, she meets Ms. Gilchrist's beautiful niece Flora, who takes care of the drone and the prisoners. For Jacques and Flora, this is love at first sight – although Major Chevening was the first to look at him. Soon after, Jacques escapes and makes an enemy out of his long-lost brother Alain, who lives in Scotland and is trying to seize the family fortune after the death of his grandfather. Jacques believed that Alain had been killed along with his parents during the French Revolution. The fugitive prisoner poses a threat to his brother and the major, and now the conspiracy thickens ... St. Ives is one of Stevenson's last novels, remaining unfinished after his death, but still exhibits the same basic qualities as his previous work. It was completed in 1898 by Arthur Quiller-Coach.