Greenwich, Connecticut, 1922. Newspaper man Joe Henry finds himself the
primary suspect when his friend, fellow reporter Wynton Gresham, is
murdered. Both were veterans of French battles during WWI--the war that
was supposed to end all wars.
Unanswered questions pile up in the wake of a violent night: Gresham
lies dead in his home, a manuscript he had just completed has gone
missing, three Frenchmen lie dead in a car accident less than a mile
from Gresham's home, and a trunk full of Gresham's clothes lies neatly
packed in his bedroom. Hours after his friend's death, Henry discovers
in Gresham's desk drawer a one-way ticket reserved in his friend's name
aboard a steamer ship to France. The ticket is dated for the next day.
Henry steals away under Gresham's identity, escaping the heated
interrogation of the town sheriff, to Paris in the roaring '20s. In the
city of light, he becomes a hunted man. To clear his name he must find
the man responsible for his friend's murder while evading his own and
discover the deadly secret revealed in the lost manuscript. In the
process, with the help of other broken veteran expats of Hemingway's
lost generation living in Paris, he finds hope in a world irrevocably
altered by war.