A reluctant spy is pulled back to Nazi-occupied Paris, where there’s a price on her head.
Kate Rees is a young war widow, an American living in Great Britain. Her husband and young daughter were killed during German shelling of the small town where they lived, and she was devastated by the loss. She found a purpose when her skills as a sharpshooter were noticed by Colonel Stepney of British Intelligence, who recruited her for a mission. She received minimal training and was thrust into the field, tasked with the impossible. Had her own instincts and wits not been so sharp, she never would have made it back to England. She has spent the two years since that first mission in the Scottish Highlands as a shooting instructor to new agent recruits, but has not left the spy game completely behind her…or rather, it hasn’t forgotten her. Kate is summoned again by Stepney, to be sent back to Paris (where there is a price on her head) and charged with three tasks: deliver a package of penicillin, assassinate an unnamed person, and extract an agent who is in a compromised position. As was her first assignment, this mission is sadly lacking in details. Where and to whom the penicillin should be delivered? She’ll find out when she gets to Paris. Who is the person whom she is targeting? She’ll be told later. Kate learned only too well that her handlers care only for the success of a mission; what happens to individual agents is not of paramount importance. She may be given incorrect information, vague or misleading instructions, and even be sent deliberately into danger, if that is what is required for a mission to succeed. Her inclination is to refuse the mission, but her hatred towards the Nazis is strong…when she finds out that her friend Margo is the agent in danger, and has specifically requested Kate for this mission, she agrees to go. From the moment she gets off the plane in France, nothing goes according to plan. She relies again on the lessons of her childhood in Oregon, her intelligence and her stubbornness to get to Paris, deliver the medicine, and establish contact with the resistance network. Finding Margo proves more elusive, as does pinning down her target for assassination. Before this mission is done, innocent blood will be shed, betrayals and shifting alliances will be exposed, and Kate will find herself in Cairo to tie up more loose ends…and Northern Africa may be the end of the line for her.
Author Cara Black took a piece of historical fact (that Hitler spent 3 hours in Paris in June of 1940 when the city fell to the Nazis, but left abruptly and never returned) as the seed for the story in the first Kate Rees novel, Three Days in Paris. The same is true for this, the second outing in the series; first, two doctors at a hospital in Paris created a map of the quarries deep below their hospital and distributed them to members of the French resistance, and second, a diplomatic plane crashed in North Africa shortly before a planned invasion by the Allies. From these seeds grew the adventures of Kate Rees in Night Flight to Paris. It was a quick read, full of plot twists and quick witted actions. Kate is a strong female protagonist, smart, stubborn and focused. She does spend a bit too much time complaining about the lack of full disclosure from her handlers (surely after her first mission, it became clear that this is the way the game is played), which detracts from the pace of the story. Hopefully in future outings she will have come to terms with the flaws in the system, and just get down to business. That said, it was a fun read and I will be looking forward to the next installment. Readers of Ms Black’s other books, as well as fans of Susan Elia MacNeal and Jacqueline Winspear will likely enjoy the book.