Teresa Pi eiro knew no fear.
In 1960, thirty-one years old and pregnant, she is arrested alongside a group of men for attempting to hijack an airplane bound for Miami. The local newspaper splashes her image across its pages: a young woman defying convention, the daughter of a retired Army first lieutenant and professor, and the granddaughter of one of the pioneering Spanish families who had founded the town of La Palma in western Cuba. For her boldness, Teresa is confined to a maximum-security prison, where she eventually stands face-to-face with Cuba's Comandante en Jefe, Fidel Castro.