2023-05-17
emotional, intense read
The Silk code is packed with action, deceit, treason and "Oh My Gosh" moments. The author grabbed my interest from the beginning. I became invested in the story and many of the characters. At times I had to pause a few before going on, fearing what was going to happen next to Nancy.
Nancy ended up in London, staying with her brother (not my favorite character). She thought she was going for a typing job at one of the war divisions on Baker Street. Her knowledge of French, German, Dutch and English makes her very desirable for more than typing. Her ability with puzzles has her standing out among other applicants. Soon she is knee deep in decoding for agents sent to Holland.
Nancy fled Scotland after a nasty breakup. Yet soon she finds her self drawn to Tom, the man that had taught her about coding. The chemistry between them heats up the pages. The tensions between Tom and her brother add fuel to the fire.
Tom has noticed problems in the coding. Something is wrong. It doesn't feel right. With Nancy's help he comes up with a solution but he has to sell his idea to others. At the same time someone is trying to take him down. What an eyeopening story. I didn't want to believe that it was so easy to infiltrate and influence others. How did they get anything done when everything, everyone was under suspicion?
War makes for strange bed fellows. War makes for dramatic stories. War makes for stories packed with action. War makes people grab a connection wherever they can. The Silk Code brought all of this out in a story that was difficult to put down and very easy to pick back up.
I am not sure about the ending. I am hoping that there will be a lot more stories. I hate being left hanging, but I guess it is something that many experienced during WW2.