The
penal colony in Western Australia is escape-proof---but that is about
to change. Sentenced to seven years transportation, Mary Claire O'Dwyer
is determined to free the Fenian rebels. She will find allies in
unexpected places, where a Royal Marine's scarlet coat can be another
deception.
On the voyage to Western Australia, she is pressured
by Simon Plowman to work for him as a covert spy, but the man who
crushed the Fenian uprising in 1867 will inadvertently train her in the
art of espionage and deception. She wastes no time in organizing a jail
break.
In the U.K., Simon is seen to undermine every important
Irish movement. Whether he is manipulating Charles Stuart Parnell or
blackmailing Lord Salisbury, he appears to be an agent for the Crown,
and when he casts his lot with Edward Carson's Ulster Volunteers, his
loyalty goes unquestioned. At the same time, his daughter develops into a
radical revolutionary, sneaking around behind her father's back to
support the workers during the Dublin Lockout of 1913 and expanding into
gun-running for the Citizen Army.
Aware that her mother left a
record of her time in Fremantle, Eireann never stops searching, while
her father never stops holding her at arm's length. What she perceives
as political differences or lack of love is far removed from Simon's
real motives. Only when she believes that she may soon face her father
across battle lines will Simon introduce her to her parents, and
demonstrate just how deceiving appearances can be.
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