It's spring 1920 in the small military town of Nandagiri in south-east
India. Colonel Aylmer, commander of the Royal Irish Kildare Rangers, is
in charge. A distance away, decently hidden from view, lies the native
part of Nandagiri with its heaving bazaar, reeking streets and brothels.
Everyone in Nandagiri knows their place and the part they were born to
play - with one exception. The local Anglo-Indians, tainted by their
mixed blood, belong . . . nowhere.
When news of the Black and Tans' atrocities back in Ireland reaches the
troops, even their priest cannot cool the men's hot-headed rage.
Politics vie with passion as Private Michael Flaherty pays court to
Rose, Mrs Aylmer's Anglo-Indian maid . . . but mutiny brings heroism and
heartbreak in equal measure. Only the arrival of Colonel Aylmer's
grandson Richard, some 60 years later, will set off the reckoning, when
those who were parted will be reunited, and those who were lost will be
found again.