Mossingdene, 1944
A remote village in England, filled with Allied soldiers far from home, all of them poised on the brink of invading Europe. Into this volatile mix come three strangers: Eddie, bad boy from the wrong side of the tracks in Los Angeles, who avoids jail by signing up as a gunner in an American bomber unit. Dot and her two singer sisters are bombed out of the family’s London home and evacuated to work on their aunt’s farm. Scotsman Duncan, his mother held by the Nazis in Dachau, is blackmailed to spy on Allied invasion plans.
Inevitably, their lives become entangled. Both Duncan and Eddie fall in love with Dorothy. Eddie’s bombing flights become ever more dangerous, and he knows he can’t live for much longer. Dot’s career takes off when the trio’s first record becomes a hit, and suddenly they’re “the voices of World War Two.” Duncan is increasingly desperate to uncover something to placate Berlin before he and his family are annihilated.
And the authorities know someone is transmitting from the village.
WWII writer