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1.1396 "Kate Big Devil" version of "White Rat" Nancy Wake

The plot of "The Heaven of Love in Troubled Times" is not complicated: In 1942, the 25-year-old heroine Charlotte met a handsome French pilot Peter on a train to London. The two fell in love at first sight and soon fell in love. However, the bad luck of the war came. The plane Pitt was shot down by the German army, and the whereabouts were unknown. In order to find her lover, Charlotte changed her name and arrived alone on the southern front of France. There, she joined the underground resistance organization and met Julian Charlotte's backbone of the underground organization. So she became the new British housekeeper of the Julian family, "Dominique", who secretly engaged in underground resistance activities with him. She was brave and strong in the action and saved many Jews who were persecuted by the Nazis...

It should be pointed out that the original form of the heroine of "The Heaven of Troubled Times" is Nancy Wake.

Nancy Wake, full name Nancy Grace Augusta Wake, a legendary beauty spy in World War II, and the Nazi German head of state Hitler wanted to get rid of the "white rat" that he could never catch. Nancy Wake was originally a reporter and later joined the resistance organization. After the war, Nancy Wake won many honors. The United States, Britain, France and Australia awarded her national medals respectively. Her legendary story was later written into the novel and brought to the screen. She was also the battlefield woman who awarded the most medals to the allies in World War II. In her later years, she had to sell her medals in exchange for living expenses due to life difficulties. Prince Charles of the United Kingdom once paid for her hotel room fee; her legendary story was made into the movie "The Heaven of Love in Troubled Times" by Hollywood.

On August 30, 1912, Nancy Wake was born in Wellington, New Zealand. He is the little sister of six children in the family. His mother is a stubborn and rigorous believer, and his father is an unreliable journalist. He wanted to shoot a movie about Maori people, but for this reason he sold his house privately and never returned. Nancy, his brother, sister and mother were later expelled from the house. Nancy's rebellious personality is more or less related to this family background.

.At over 1 year old, Nancy moved to Sydney, Australia with her family, where she spent nearly 20 years of teenage years. She left home at the age of 16 and worked as a nurse in a hospital. At that time, she was already very independent. After graduating from college, pie fell from the sky at the age of 20: she received a £200 inheritance from a New Zealand aunt. With this "huge sum", Nancy immediately decided to start her adventure: take a train to London, England to wait for Europe

Urban Tourism in London. She began her career as a journalist and soon moved to Paris, France, as a correspondent for the European Union of Hirst Publishing Group. "I was very isolated at that time, but my imagination was very good." Nancy Wake said in an interview. She was young and had a strong rebellious spirit. Soon, she got an opportunity to interview the Nazi leader Hitler in Vienna and saw the cruelty of the Nazis treating the Jews with her own eyes. This scene made her feel sincerely disgusted with the Nazis, and eventually made her bravely embark on the anti-fascist road. She recalled: "The commandos of the German Nazi Party tied the Jews, hung them on big wheels, rolled the wheels and whipped them. I was stunned and didn't know what to do, just thinking, 'If one day I could do something, I would do it'. During World War II, that kind of picture always appeared in my mind."

In 1939, the German army invaded Poland, Britain, France was forced to declare war on Germany, and Nancy soon returned to France from Britain. On November 30, Nancy Wake married French industrialist Henry Feoga, and they lived in a luxury house in Marseille. In Nancy's eyes, her husband was "very handsome, and it was great to dance tango. He is my love for this life." It is said that Nancy looks very fashionable. She wears red nail polish, a fur coat, and likes gin.

In 1940, six months after Nancy Wake's marriage, the Nazis in Germany occupied France. Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg had all fallen, and Western European countries were almost completely lost, and only Britain was still struggling. Nancy joined the Free French Resistance Organization, which was established by Frenchmen in exile in London, and they were incompatible with the fascists. From then on, Nancy Wake began to resist the Nazis and became a strong anti-fascist warrior and organizer. She ventured across the German blockade and entered the budding anti-fascist movement. As a messenger, she managed to

He sent information and food to underground organizations in southern France. Later, using the identity of the wealthy businessman's wife, she got a fake document and was able to stay in the occupied area. She bought an ambulance and used it to help more than 1,000 absconded prisoners of war and Allied pilots fleeing across the French border to Spain. Later, the Nazis offered a reward to hunt Nancy Wake. She felt that the situation in France was too dangerous, so she managed to cross the Pyrenees to escape to Spain, and finally came to England. Because of her extraordinary escape skills, the Gestapos were in awe of her and called her "white rat".

In 1943, Nancy became the person Hitler wanted to get rid of the most. On the Gestapo wanted list, the "White Rat" ranked first and offered a huge bounty of up to 5 million francs. In November of the same year, due to the traitors of the Free French Resistance Organization, Nancy moved to work underground. The organization believed that the risk was too great and repeatedly asked Nancy to leave France and return to the UK. After 6 difficult attempts, Nancy finally crossed the Pyrenees and went from France.

The country arrived in Spain to avoid Nazi hunting. Once, she was arrested by militias from the French puppet government and detained for four days, and only escaped with the assistance of an ally. Nancy said that before she left France, "(husband) Henry said 'you have to leave'. I remember saying to him when he went out, 'I'll buy something and will come back soon', but I never saw him again." Henry, who stayed in France, was killed by the Nazis because he did not want to reveal Nancy's whereabouts.

This chapter is not over, please click on the next page to continue reading! At this time, Nancy Wake was 31 years old. She joined the anti-fascist British Special Operations Team. At that time, the special operation team of more than 500 people had only 39 women, including Wake. Their mission was to destroy as many facilities as possible in the Nazi occupied land. She also received spy training conducted by the British Ministry of Defense, including survival, assassination, explosion, password transmission and the use of various guns. Then, Nancy Wake returned to France again. In April 1944, Nancy Wake and another special operation team member sneaked back to O'Central France in central France.

Vigne, responsible for recruiting and organizing resistance forces locally, establishing a secret ammunition arsenal, and contacting the British radio. Nancy Wake led the resistance army's attack targets of the local German army's weapons and personnel, with the aim of weakening the German army's resistance before the Normandy landing day. Faced with more than 22,000 German soldiers, Nancy Wake's subordinates slowly grew from more than 3,000 at the beginning to more than 7,000 at the end. Their resistance caused an effective blow to the German army. She said: "Someone asked me like this, 'have you ever been afraid? My answer was 'never'."

The resistance army led by her grew from more than 3,000 at the beginning to more than 7,000 at the end. Once, 22,000 German troops surrounded Nancy's resistance army. After the fierce battle, 1,400 German troops died, and the resistance army only suffered more than 100 casualties.

A comrade later described Nancy as saying, "She is the most feminine woman I have ever seen, but once the battle begins, she can beat five men." Nancy said that she hopes that the historical record of herself is such a woman: she has "rejected the pursuit of 7,000 'hungry' French male soldiers."

In the battle, Nancy always took the lead and rushed to the front. During a delivery of weapons and other supplies to the front, Nancy's team's radio was lost in the German attack, which meant that Nancy and her teammates had to march 250 kilometers to reach another radio station to get new instructions. Nancy rode her bicycle alone, crossed several German checkpoints to complete the mission, and completed 500 kilometers of round trip within 71 hours.

"I returned to the camp after completing the mission, and they asked 'Are you okay', and I cried. I couldn't stand, sit down, do nothing, and could only cry. Those guys thought I would never complete the mission. I was not brave, but I was the only one who could complete the mission." Nancy recalled that this marathon march was the most proud thing she had in World War II. Nancy and her teammates continued to attack the invading French and German troops, creating conditions for the Allied forces to open a second battlefield, and to a certain extent laid the foundation for the Normandy landing in June 1944. Germany was defeated in April 1945, and Hitler committed suicide. After the end of World War II, Nancy won many honors: the highest honor for soldiers from France, the French Legion of Honor, etc., the United States' Medal of Freedom, the British Medal of George... and praised her as the "most beautiful spy hero."

Western media named Nancy as the "Top Ten Spies in World War II", and her story also became the inspiration for writers. British novelist Sebastian Fox created the novel "Charlotti Grey" based on her experience. The novel was made into the movie "The Heaven of Troubled Times" by Hollywood in 2001, and Oscar-winning actress Cate Blanchett interpreted Nancy's legendary life.

As the prototype character, Nancy Wake not only possesses "extraordinary escape skills", but also received spy training conducted by the British Ministry of Defense, including survival, assassination, explosion, password transmission and the use of various guns.

In other words, the "Kate Great Devil" version of "White Rat" also replicates all the abilities of the real world historical figure Nancy Wake.

Please note that it is all abilities.
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