Germany, spring, 1946. The Nuremberg Trials are underway. Three hundred miles north, in the Rehstadt Institute, a British "Assessment and Evaluation" centre, Alex Foster interrogates a succession of lesser war criminals, exploring their pasts and their crimes, and deciding their futures in the soon-to-be reborn Germany. But Rehstadt, a town largely untouched by the war, is a place of old hostilities and burnished hatreds; a place still not entirely at peace; a place where the certainties of the past are still weighed favourably against the deprivations of the present and the vague, uncertain promises of the future. And in the confusing geography and history of this unsettled town, Alex Foster finds love. Eva Remer, a German interpreter. Through her he sees the true nature of the world beyond the privileged military enclave which he and his companions inhabit. As spring progresses, and as events in the wider world quicken to their own closely-observed conclusion, Alex Foster finds himself at the centre of a conflict involving British, American and German interests; and for the first time in his career he also finds himself compromised â?? forced into subterfuge and deceit as he struggles to weigh personal convictions and loyalties against the greater political and military good. Eventually, the rising conflicts of that incendiary environment pass beyond his control, drawing Alex, Eva and everyone close to them into an ever-quickening tide of unforeseeable events, as inescapable and, ultimately, as destructive as anything Rehstadt has suffered during the war itself.