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Captain Lucy in France

Chapter 2: Introduction
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About This Book

A young woman from an army family leaves home to join relief and service work near the Allied front during the Great War. She takes on hospital and support duties, copes with fear for relatives who are fighting or imprisoned, and grows from a sheltered girl into a determined volunteer. Encounters with friends, prisoners, and local civilians draw her into rescue attempts, reconnaissance, and risky plans behind enemy lines; the narrative follows her courage, sacrifices, and the emotional reunions and costs that attend wartime victory.

Introduction

To those who made friends with Lucy Gordon on Governor’s Island it will seem a great change to find her, in this second story, so far away from home. She is only one of thousands, though, to whom a few months of the great war brought more changes than they ever thought could be crowded into a lifetime.

Lucy can look back over less than a year to her old life at the army post in New York Harbor before the Colonel was ordered overseas. To that brief summer time when the Gordon family was united during her brother Bob’s West Point graduation leave, and to the dark days of the winter of 1917 when Bob was in a German prison.

Even then Lucy never lost hope, and her brave confidence was gloriously rewarded with Bob’s freedom. But in those dreadful weeks of waiting she outgrew her childhood, as though even in that pleasant home on Governor’s Island she knew that peace and content could never come back to her and to those she loved until America had fired her final shot at Germany’s crumbling lines.

She could not guess what lay before her,—what old friends she was to meet again in strange new places. Yet she had resolved, even before she had any hope of crossing to the other side, that, come what might, she would serve in her own way as steadfastly as her father served, as valiantly as Bob.