Mary Kathryn Barbier is an associate professor of history at Mississippi State University in Starkville, Mississippi.
Table of Contents
Editor's Acknowledgments
Editor's Preface
Author's Original Preface
I.¿Beirut to Paris, 1940-1942
II.¿Paris, 1942-1943
III.¿Madrid, 1943
IV.¿Gibraltar, 1943
V.¿England, 1943-1944
VI.¿Lisbon, 1944
VII.¿England to Paris, 1944
Editor's Notes
Editor's Bibliography
Editor's Index
During World War II Nathalie "Lily" Sergueiew, a woman of mystery, confidently seduced the German Intelligence Service into employing her as a spy against their British enemy. Little did they know that this striking woman--who turned heads when she walked into a room with her little dog Babs--would work with their enemy against them. Her diary chronicles her months-long journey to becoming a double agent for the British under the code name Treasure. From the moment she conceived the idea of becoming a double agent, Lily faced challenges on two fronts: first, she had to convince the Germans to ask her to spy for them; second, she needed the British to believe her story. Only then could she begin the perilous work of helping free her homeland--France--from the German occupier.