It is the summer of 1964 during the Far Eastern war euphemistically
called 'Confrontation'. A British Royal Marine patrol has orders to
penetrate Indonesian Borneo to locate a river thought by Allied
intelligence to be being used by the Indonesians to build up supplies
before launching a major attack on Sarawak. Charged with this mission,
Lieutenant Charles Kirton makes a most extraordinary discovery amid the
dense mangrove swamps bordering a river in Borneo. Not only does this
discovery enable Kirton to fulfill his mission but it is quite
coincidentally intensely personal and unpleasantly macabre. From this
highly-charged opening sequence, the story flashes back a century to
1867, revealing the truth behind this strange event, when young Henry
Kirton, Second Officer of the auxiliary steamship River Tay, is dumped
ashore in Singapore, badly injured by a fall from the rigging of his
ship. Woodman's compelling tale has echoes of Joseph Conrad.