![]() ![]() It’s vital the spy should be uncovered – the whole war depends on it! The operation is top secret and no one must know he’s going, not even Tuppence. But they don’t know who – all they know is that it’s one of two people known only by their code initials, one male, one female – N or M. But when Tuppence leaves the room, Mr Grant tells Tommy this is a cover story – really the Secret Service want him to go undercover to a boarding house in the South of England from where they believe a top Nazi spy is operating. And then a Mr Grant shows up, ostensibly offering Tommy a dull but useful clerical role in Scotland. Tommy gets in touch with Mr Carter, now retired from the Secret Service, and asks if he can pull any strings. ![]() But they’re in their forties now, and Tommy is seen as too old for the armed services while Tuppence’s old skills from her days as a nurse in WW1 don’t seem to be in demand either. ![]() It’s 1940, and Tommy and Tuppence are desperate to help the war effort in any way they can. ![]()
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