The Alice Network
By Kate Quinn
William Morrow Trade Paperback
Original ISBN: 9780062654199
Pages: 528 | Price: $16.99
Also available in eBook: ISBN:
9780062654205 | $9.99
And as an audio book: ISBN:
9780062676603 | $27.99
In an enthralling new historical novel from national bestselling
author Kate Quinn, two women—a female spy recruited to the real-life Alice
Network in France during World War I and an unconventional American socialite
searching for her cousin in 1947—are brought together in a mesmerizing story of
courage and redemption.
1947. In the
chaotic aftermath of World War II, American college girl Charlie St. Clair is
pregnant, unmarried, and on the verge of being thrown out of her very proper
family. She's also nursing a desperate hope that her beloved cousin Rose, who
disappeared in Nazi-occupied France during the war, might still be alive. So
when Charlie's parents banish her to Europe to have her "little
problem" taken care of, Charlie breaks free and heads to London, determined
to find out what happened to the cousin she loves like a sister.
1915. A year into the
Great War, Eve Gardiner burns to join the fight against the Germans and
unexpectedly gets her chance when she's recruited to work as a spy. Sent into
enemy-occupied France, she's trained by the mesmerizing Lili, the "Queen
of Spies", who manages a vast network of secret agents right under the
enemy's nose.
Thirty years later, haunted by the
betrayal that ultimately tore apart the Alice Network, Eve spends her days
drunk and secluded in her crumbling London house. Until a young American barges
in uttering a name Eve hasn't heard in decades, and launches them both on a
mission to find the truth...no matter where it leads.
Night had fallen by the time I staggered,
weary and starving, off the train in London. The city rolled out in front of me
in one huge dark smoky mass—I had no idea where 10 Hampson Street might be. I
had a few coins left in my pocketbook, and as I hailed a cab I prayed it would
be enough. I really didn’t relish having to yank a pearl off my grandmother’s
necklace just to pay for a taxi ride. Maybe
I shouldn’t have left that waitress a whole pound . . . But
I wasn’t sorry.
The driver took me to what he said was
Pimlico and dumped me at a line of tall row houses. It had started to rain in
earnest. I looked around for my hallucination, but there was no flash of blond
hair. Just a dark street, the spitting rain, the worn steps of number 10
climbing to a dingy peeling door. I hoisted my case, clambered up, and banged
the knocker before my courage deserted me.
No answer. I banged again. The rain was
falling harder, and despair rose in me like a wave. I pounded and pounded until
my fist ached, until I saw the minute twitch of the curtain beside the door.
“I know someone’s in there!” I wrenched the
door handle, blinded by rain. “Let me in!”
To my surprise the handle turned, and I
flew inside, falling at last off my impractical shoes. I hit the floor of the
dark hallway on my knees, tearing my stockings, and then the door banged shut
and I heard the click of a pistol being cocked.
Her voice was low, graveled, slurred,
ferocious. “Who are you, and what the bloody fuck are you doing in my house?”
The streetlamps sent a blurry light through
the curtains, half-illuminating the dark hallway. I could see a tall gaunt
figure, a straggle of hair, the fiery end of a lit cigarette. The gleam of
light off a pistol barrel, pointing straight at me.
I should have been terrified, recoiling
from the shock and the gun and the language. But fury had swept aside the last
piece of my feel-nothing fog, and I gathered my legs under me to stand, torn
stocking snagging. “I’m looking for Evelyn Gardiner.”
“I don’t care who you’re looking for. If you
don’t tell me why I’ve got a damned Yank breaking into my house, I’ll shoot
you. I’m old and I’m drunk, but this is a Luger nine-millimeter P08 in
excellent condition. Drunk or sober I can take the back of your skull out at
this range.”
“I’m Charlie St. Clair.” Pushing the
wet hair out of my eyes. “My cousin Rose Fournier went missing in France during
the war, and you might
know how to find her.”
Abruptly the electric wall lamp switched
on. I blinked in the rush of harsh light. Standing over me was a tall gaunt
woman in a faded print dress, her graying hair straggling around a time-ravaged
face. She could have been fifty, or she could have been seventy. She had the
Luger in one hand and a lit cigarette in the other; she kept the pistol
steadily trained on my forehead as she raised the cigarette to her lips and
took a long drag. Bile rose in my throat as I saw her hands. Good God, what had
happened to her hands?
“I’m Eve Gardiner,” she said at last. “And
I don’t know anything about this cousin of yours.”
“You might,” I said desperately. “You
might—if you’ll just talk to me.”
“That’s your plan, little Yank?” Her hooded
storm-gray eyes surveyed me like a contemptuous bird of prey. “Burst into my
house at nightfall, no plan, and I’m betting no money, on the chance I’d know
something about your m-missing friend?”
“Yes.” Faced with her gun and her scorn I
couldn’t explain why,
why the chance to find Rose had turned suddenly all-consuming in my wrecked
life. I couldn’t explain this strange savage desperation, or why I had let it
drive me here. I could only state the truth: “I had to come.”
“Well.” Eve Gardiner lowered her pistol. “I
suppose you’ll want t-tea.”
“Yes, tea would be—”
“I don’t have any.” She turned and made her
way back down the dark hall, walking long-strided and careless. Her bare feet
looked like an eagle’s claws. She weaved a little as she walked, the Luger
swinging freely at her side, and I saw she still had a finger through the
trigger. Crazy, I
thought. The old cow is crazy.
And her hands—they were monstrous knobbed
lumps, every knuckle misshapen and grotesque. They looked more like lobster
claws than hands.
“Keep up,” she said without turning, and I
scurried after her. She struck a door open and flicked on a light, and I saw a
cold sitting room—a mess of a place, grate unlit, drapes drawn so no chink of
light could come in off the street, old newspapers and dirty tea mugs lying
everywhere.
“Mrs. Gardiner—”
“Miss.” She flung herself down in a shabby
armchair overlooking the whole messy room, tossing her pistol down on the table
beside it. I winced, but the thing didn’t go off. “And you can call me Eve.
You’ve f-forced your way into my house, so that’s a level of intimacy I’m
already disliking you for. What’s a name?”
“I didn’t mean to force my way—”
“Yes, you did. You want something, and you
want it badly. What is it?”
I pulled up a hassock and sat down,
suddenly uncertain where to start. I’d been so focused on getting here, I hadn’t thought how
exactly I should begin. Two girls
times eleven summers, divided by one ocean and one war . . .
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