Born in Invergordon, Ross-shire, in the Highlands of Scotland, to parents utter opposites in cultural and social backgrounds, education, heredity, and race—and further, tragically, in conflict since the very day of their wedding— Anne Angelo’s world until the age of 20 was one of hatred and heartbreak, fear, and disillusionment and despair.
Released at that age, by entirely fortuitous circumstances over which she had no control, Anne enjoyed a period of blissful living in France. The coming of the war brought an end to that.
The actions of the German Forces of Occupation against her drove her into her activities with the French Resistance.
It was inevitable Anne would be betrayed. She was forced to flee to the only place where she could be sure enemy agents could not reach her—her father’s house in the Scottish Highlands, where the security for the old naval base was still effective, but where she had no protection from her father’s wiles and hostile intentions.
In many ways, Anne’s story outdoes that of Hatter’s Castle. Clinging to the slender thread of the love she found in France, she endures. Until the sun shines and, in a surprising revelation, shows that motives and intents are not always what they are thought to be.