Francine Agazarian traveled to France on a clandestine flight of a
Lysander which landed on a farm field on the night 17/18 March 1943.
Claude de Baissac and
France Antelme arrived on the same airplane. She was joining her husband
Jack Agazarian and the
Prosper network as a courier based in Paris. It was unusual for a married couple to work for the same network; after the war Francine clarified the situation: Although in the same network, my husband and I were not working together; as a radio operator he worked alone and transmitted from different locations every day. I was only responsible to Prosper (Francis Suttill) whom we all called Francois. He liked to use me for special errands because, France being my native land, I could get away from difficulties easily enough, particularly when dealing with officialdom. Francois was an outstanding leader, clear-headed, precise, confident. I liked working on his instructions, and I enjoyed the small challenges he was placing in front of me. For instance calling at town halls in various districts of Paris to exchange the network's expired ration cards (manufactured in London) for genuine new ones. Mainly I was delivering his messages to his helpers: in Paris, in villages, or isolated houses in the countryside. From time to time I was also delivering demolition material received from England. And once, with hand-grenades in my shopping bag, I travelled in a train so full that I had to stand against a German NCO. This odd situation was not new to me. I had already experienced it for the first time on the day of my arrival on French soil, when I had to travel by train from Poitiers to Paris. A very full train also. I sat on my small suitcase in the corridor, a uniformed German standing close against me. But, that first time, tied to my waist, under my clothes, was a wide black cloth belt containing bank-notes for Prosper, a number of blank identity cards and a number of ration cards; while tucked into the sleeves of my coat were crystals for Prosper's radio transmitters; the crystals had been skillfully secured to my sleeves by
Vera Atkins herself, before my departure from
Orchard Court. My .32 revolver and ammunition were in my suitcase. The ludicrousness of the situation somehow eliminated any thoughts of danger. In any case, I believe none of us in the field ever gave one thought to danger. Germans were everywhere, especially in Paris; one absorbed the sight of them and went on with the job of living as ordinarily as possible and applying oneself to one's work. Because I worked alone, the times I liked best were when we could be together, Prosper (
Francis Suttill), Denise (
Andrée Borrel), Archambaud (
Gilbert Norman), Marcel (Jack Agazarian) and I, sitting round a table, while I was decoding radio messages from London; we were always hoping to read the exciting warning to stand by, which would have meant that the liberating invasion from England was imminent. Despite Agazarian's favorable recollections of her work and her colleagues, she was frail and exhausted after less than three months in France. Moreover, her husband Jack and Francis Suttill were at odds with each other. Suttill believed that Agazarian was encroaching on his authority. Agazarian on his part questioned the loyalty of Suttill's air operations officer,
Henri Déricourt. (He was later proven correct.) On the night of 16/17 June 1943, the couple returned to England on a Lysander flight. It was fortunate timing as the Germans began arresting SOE agents associated with Prosper less than a week later. However, Jack Agazarian returned to France in July and was captured and later executed by the Germans. ==Post war==