LONDON — On D-Day, Marie Scott experienced British forces landing on the Normandy coast through her earphones.
Stationed in an underground tunnel 100 feet (30 meters) below the south coast of England, Scott was safe from the carnage. But she heard it all.
As a 17-year-old radio operator in the Women's Royal Naval Service, she relayed messages to the Normandy beaches and waited for the recipient to open his channel and reply.
''And when he did, in my earphones, in my head, I was in the war because what I heard was machine gun fire going continuously. The heavier ones, like cannons. Men shouting. Men shouting orders. Men screaming,'' she told The Associated Press. ''It must have been horrifying on those beaches. The Germans had machine gun nests that were very well concealed and they just mowed them down as they went on the beaches, and I could hear all that.''
Scott was one of some 700 people who worked at Fort Southwick, the communications center for D-Day, where military personnel gathered information about the landings and kept senior officers informed about what was happening on the beaches and in the English Channel.
Operating a radio set on the most important day of the war was a big job for a teenager who had joined the Wrens less than three months earlier.
Scott's formal education ended when Nazi bombers began pounding London. She soon went to work for the General Post Office, which ran Britain's telephone system, and was trained as a switchboard operator.
That gave her skills the military needed as Britain prepared for D-Day, and the Wrens snapped her up even though she wasn't yet 18, the normal age of enlistment.