Writing
Distant Shadows was a joy. My way of paying tribute to the lost agents
of SOE in the second world war.
I
have long been interested in the brave actions of the FANYs (First Aid Nursing
Yeomanry) in WW2. The women agents who carried on their tradecraft under the
noses of the Gestapo and, in France, the Milice, the French political
paramilitary organisation formed to fight against the French Resistance.
These
brave women suffered in the torture chambers of Nazi concentration camps.
Beaten, tortured, worked to death on starvation rations, they often ended their
lives by being shot in the back of the head or given lethal injections and their bodies burned. For this, they were, in the
main, awarded MBEs, apart from Noor Inayat Khan, Codename Madeleine, who was
still regarded as “missing” in 1946.
Despite
opposition from Whitehall, Vera Atkins, from SOE F Section, insisted on going to
France and Germany to find out what had happened to “her” girls. It was also at
her insistence that the War Office agreed to award the agents honours and for
them to be regarded as “killed in action”. She also persuaded the authorities
to honour Noor Inayat Khan with a George Cross in 1949. These agents were incredibly brave, while being incredibly modest about their part in the allied victory. And even when security restrictions were eased, few ever spoke about their time as agents.
This
was my starting point for Distant Shadows. And the more research I did,
the more determined I became to write a book with an ex-SOE agent, who had
escaped from Paris, as its protagonist.
Distant
Shadows
grew from the usual what-if?s that drop into writers’ heads. What if
one agent escaped, aided by her superior in England? What if her
accusations of treachery and betrayal were covered up by the top brass and she
was hustled out of SOE? What if she knew her life was in peril from the
traitor, so decided to change her name and disappear? And then the final what
if? What if she recognised a pattern of fraudulent activity in the
bestowal of government building contracts and decided, nine years after going into obscurity, to stand up for her principles at the start of a new
Elizabethan age, and bring the fraud to light?
For
anyone interested in reading about the FANYs and Vera Atkins, I can recommend:
Sarah
Helm: A Life in Secrets: the story of Vera Atkins and the lost agents of
SOE.
Marcus
Binney: The Women Who Lived For Danger: The Women Agents of SOE in the
Second World War.
There
is a memorial to the lost FANYs at St Paul’s Church in Knightsbridge, London.
More information here: Women's
Transport Service (FANY) : London Remembers, Aiming to capture all memorials in
London
And
here is the precis of the book that came out of all those what-ifs!
Distant
Shadows:
It’s
the day before the 1953 coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. The dawn of a new
Elizabethan era. It is also the day Peggy Palmer, formerly Agent Claudette sent
to Paris by the Special Operations Executive, decides she has no option but to bring
the corrupt building scam by Knowles Bros. into the light of day. Who can she
ask to help? Who will believe an almost 30-something spinster, firmly on the
shelf by most people’s standards?
Peggy
decides to contact her old SOE supervisor, now Sir Andrew Kingsley, put to work
in an out of the way government department. Peggy’s anonymous letter starts a
chain reaction that brings the distant shadows of her time as a radio operator
in Paris in 1944 back into her current life. And with shadows come memories she
has tried to forget. Of her lover, taken by the Gestapo, tortured and murdered.
Of the traitor in the ranks she is still convinced betrayed them all.
She
has made a point of becoming unmemorable in the 9 years since her accusations
of treachery were dismissed by the top brass. 9 years since she decided it was
safer to disappear, change her name and her job. More than once. Distant
shadows fed by long memories.
And
will those distant shadows revive the spectre of the traitor who betrayed her
Paris cell; who condemned the love of her life to end his on the end of a Gestapo
butcher’s hook? Can Peggy trust Sir Andrew who seems almost too anxious to stay
close to her? What is he afraid of? And why is successful thriller writer Noah
Keyes, another of her SOE trainers, equally anxious to be at the centre of the
action?
What
avalanche has Peggy’s decision to write that letter begun? And will she survive
the fallout?
Distant
Shadows
is available here: - https://bookgoodies.com/a/B09CQ1G9GY
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