Ballingarry, County Limerick.
A dispatch has been torn, bloodied, hidden, and carried through mud, hedges, ditches, and fear. What began as a single message has become something far more dangerous: proof, suspicion, and a test of every person forced to touch it.
Ireland is in rebellion, but in Ballingarry the war does not arrive as speeches, flags, or glory. It arrives at the kitchen door. It moves through shuttered rooms, back lanes, cattle crossings, fields, lofts, and houses where ordinary people must decide how much silence they can bear, and how much danger they are willing to carry for others.
Michael Enright is not looking for heroism. He has been trusted with a message, and that trust becomes a burden heavier than any weapon. Mary, wounded and hunted, must keep moving when pain tries to turn her into a liability. Molly must make a house look ordinary while fear presses against every wall. Around them, neighbours, messengers, watchers, and informers are drawn into a chain where one mistake may expose an entire hidden network.
The dispatch itself is damaged almost beyond use. Some words survive. Others are lost to mud, blood, water, and panic. Yet even broken paper can carry consequence. A fragment in the wrong hand can betray a route. A missing word can delay a column. A name half-hidden can condemn a house. As the message passes from hand to hand, every act of loyalty becomes harder to separate from fear.
In Dublin Castle, Captain Edward Harcourt reads each report with cold precision. To him, violence is not merely punishment. Pain is a method. Delay is a clue. A wounded courier is not a victim but an address waiting to reveal itself. While men and women in Ballingarry struggle to preserve the meaning of the dispatch, Harcourt studies the pattern of their resistance, looking for the weak point where courage, exhaustion, and betrayal meet.
Severance is a tense historical novel set against Ireland's struggle for independence, a story of loyalty under pressure, betrayal carried in silence, and ordinary lives forced into extraordinary danger.
It is a novel about what survives when a message is broken, what is lost when trust is divided, and what people become when history enters the room and leaves no one untouched.