November 1915. For young housemaid, Anwen Rhys, life is hard in the Welsh mining village of Dorcalon, deep in the Rhymney Valley. She cares for her ill mother and beloved younger sister Sara, all while shielding them from her father’s drunken, violent temper. Anwen comforts herself with her love for childhood sweetheart, Idris Hughes, away fighting in the Great War.Yet when Idris returns, he is a changed man; no longer the innocent boy she loved, he is harder, more distant, quickly breaking off their engagement. And when tragedy once again strikes her family, Anwen’s heart is completely broken.But when an explosion at the pit brings unimaginable heartache to Dorcalon, Anwen and Idris put their feelings aside to unite their mining community.In the midst of despair, can Anwen find hope again? And will she ever find the happiness she deserves?The Rhymney Valley is one of the South Wales valleys, with the Rhymney River forming the border between the historic counties of Glamorgan and Monmouthshire.The valley encompasses the villages of Abertysswg, Fochriw, Pontlottyn, Tir-Phil, New Tredegar, Aberbargoed, Rhymney, Ystrad Mynach and Llanbradach, and the towns of Bargoed and Caerphilly.The Defence of the Realm Act was passed in the UK on 8 August 1914, and was added to as WWI progressed. It gave the government wide-ranging powers, such as the power to requisition buildings or land needed for the war effort, or to make regulations creating criminal offences.The Derby Scheme was introduced in 1915 by Edward Stanley, 17th Earl of Derby.The scheme would demonstrate whether British manpower goals could be met with volunteerism or conscription.The Increase of Rent and Mortgage Interest (War Restrictions) Act, 1915 restricted increases in occupied housing during WWI.After decades of bitter labour disputes with private coal barons, WWI brought government control of the mines, and with it substantially improved wages and safety conditions.Nevertheless,1/5 miners volunteered to "do their bit", so many in fact that the government soon barred them from enlisting in order to safeguard badly-needed coal supplies.