May 1941
North Weald, England
It had been almost eight weeks and the light still hadnโt returned
to Constanceโs eyes. Scarlett couldnโt push her, couldnโt advise her, couldnโt do anything but watch her sister grieve. And yet, sheโd still asked her to transfer with her to North Weald. It was the most selfish thing sheโd ever done, but she didnโt know how to simultaneously be a wife and a sister, so now both suffered.
Though she may have been on the outs with her parents since marrying Jameson against their wishes, theyโd apparently kept the rift private, since Scarlett and Constanceโs request to transfer to North Weald had been approved.
Theyโd been here for a month, and though Scarlett rented a house off- station for the nights Jameson could get a Sleeping Out pass, Constance had chosen to billet with the other WAAFs in the huts on the station.
For the first time in her life, there had been an entire week of Scarlettโs life where sheโd lived completely, utterly alone. No parents. No sister. No WAAFs. No Jameson. He was over an hour away at Martlesham-Heath but cameโฆhomeโif thatโs what this wasโwhenever he could get a pass. Between her worry over Constance and her fear that something would happen to Jameson, she lived in a constant state of nausea.
โYou really donโt need to do this,โ Scarlett told her sister as they knelt on ground only recently thawed by spring. โIt still might be a bit early.โ
โIf it dies, it dies.โ Constance shrugged, then continued digging with the small trowel, readying the space for a small rosebush sheโd taken from their parentsโ garden while on leave that weekend. โItโs better to try, right? Who knows how long weโll be at this station? Maybe Jameson gets reposted. Maybe we do. Maybe just I do. If I keep waiting for life to give me the most
opportune circumstances to live it, I never will. So fine, if it freezes and dies, then at least we tried.โ
โCan I help?โ Scarlett asked.
โNo, Iโm just about done. Youโll have to remember to water it regularly, but not too much.โ She finished tilling the soil at the edge of the patio. โThe plant will tell you. Just watch the leaves and cover her up if it gets too cold at night.โ
โYouโre so much better at this than I am.โ
โYouโre better at telling stories than I am,โ she noted. โGardening is learned, just like mathematics or history.โ
โYou write perfectly well,โ Scarlett argued. Theyโd always received similar marks in school.
โGrammar and essays, sure.โ She shrugged. โBut story lines? Plots? You are far more talented. Now, if you truly want to help, you sit there and tell me one of your tales while I put this girl in.โ She formed a mound of dirt at the bottom of the hole, then placed the crown of roots over the mound, measuring the distance to the surface.
โWell, I guess thatโs easy enough.โ Scarlett sat back and crossed her ankles in front of her. โWhich story and where were we?โ
Constance paused in thought. โThe one about the diplomatโs daughter and the prince. I think sheโd just discoveredโโ
โThe note,โ Scarlett jumped in. โRight. The one where she thinks heโs sending her father away.โ Her mind slipped back into that little world, the characters as real to her as Constance was sitting beside her.
Eventually, the two sisters lay on their backs, staring up at the clouds as Scarlett did her best to weave a story worthy of distracting Constance, if only for a few moments.
โWhy wouldnโt he simply tell her heโs sorry and move on?โ Constance asked, rolling to her side so she could face Scarlett. โWouldnโt that be the most straightforward answer?โ
โIt would,โ Scarlett agreed. โBut then our heroine wonโt see his growth, canโt really find him worthy of that second chance. The key to bringing
them the ending they deserve is to pick at their flaws until they bleed, then make them conquer that flaw, that fear, in order to prove themselves to the one they love. Otherwise itโs really just a story about falling in love.โ Scarlett laced her fingers behind her head. โWithout the potential for disaster, would we ever really know what we have?โ
โI didnโt,โ Constance whispered.
Scarlett locked eyes with her sister. โYou did. I know you loved Edward.
He knew it, too.โ
โI should have married him the way you did Jameson,โ she said softly. โAt least we would have had that beforeโฆโ She drifted off, her eyes lifting toward the trees above them.
Before he died.
โI wish I could take your pain.โ It wasnโt fair that Constance was in such misery while Scarlett counted the hours between Jamesonโs days off.
Constance swallowed. โIt doesnโt matter.โ โIt does.โ Scarlett sat up. โIt matters.โ
Constance mirrored her but didnโt meet her eyes. โIt really doesnโt. The other girls who move on, who see love affairs as temporaryโI understand. I really do. Nothing here is guaranteed. Planes go down every day. Bombing raids happen. Thereโs no point holding your heart back when thereโs a good chance youโll die tomorrow anyway. May as well live while you can.โ She glanced over the small garden. โBut I know Iโll never love anyone the way I did Edwardโthe way I still do. Iโm not sure Iโll ever have a heart to give. Seems safer to read about love in novels than it is to honestly experience it.โ
โOh, Constance.โ Scarlettโs heart broke yet again for what Constance had lost.
โItโs fine.โ Constance hopped to her feet. โWeโd better get ready, since we have watch in a little over an hour.โ
โI can make us something to eat first,โ Scarlett suggested. โIโve gotten rather good at a couple quick things.โ
Constance looked at her sister with well-deserved skepticism. โIโve got
a better idea. Letโs get dressed and run over to the officersโ mess.โ โYou donโt trust me!โ Scarlett scoffed.
โI trust you implicitly. Itโs your cooking I doubt.โ Constance shrugged, but her teasing smile was genuine, which was more than enough for Scarlett.
Dressed and fed, the girls made it to watch in plenty of time. They left their coats in the cloak room, then headed for the filter room. As busy as their boards were in their small sector, it was hard to imagine what the ones at Group Headquarters looked like.
โAh, Wright and Stanton, always the pair,โ Section Leader Robbins noted with a smile at the door. โAnything you ladies need before watch begins?โ
โNo, maโam,โ Scarlett replied. Out of all her section leaders, Robbins was turning out to be her favorite.
โNo, maโam,โ Constance echoed. โJust show me to my section of the board.โ
โExcellent. And when you both have a moment, Iโd like to talk to you about your responsibilities.โ The woman smiled, her eyes crinkling at the corners.
โAre we lacking?โ Scarlett asked slowly.
โNo, quite the opposite. Iโd like you both to train as tellers. More pressure, but I would be willing to wager that youโd both make Section Officer by the end of the year.โ She glanced between the sisters, measuring their reactions.
โThat would be wonderful!โ Scarlett answered. โThank you so much for the opportunity; we wouldโโ
โI need to think on it,โ Constance interjected, her voice dropping. Scarlett blinked back her surprise.
โNaturally,โ Robbins said with a kind smile. โI hope you have anโฆ uneventful night.โ
The sisters made their farewell, and before Scarlett could question Constance about her answer, her sister opened the door and disappeared
into the always-silent filter room.
Scarlett followed her in, then put on her headset and relieved the WAAF at her corner of the board, taking a quick sweep over her section to familiarize herself with tonightโs activities. There was a bomber raid coming across her quadrant, nearly to Constanceโs.
Would the raidsย everย end? Tens of thousands had been killed in London alone.
The radio operatorโs voice came through her headset, and she fell into the routine of work, letting the other worries wait until later.
Every so often sheโd glance at Constance. On the outside, her sister appeared normalโher hands were steady and her moves efficient. This was where Constance thrived lately, where emotion couldnโt reach her. Knowing the emptiness that swirled inside sent another wave of nausea rolling through her.
It wasnโt fair that sheโd been able to keep her love, when Constance hadnโt.
Minutes ticked by as she moved the aircraft across the board, and then her stomach pitched for an altogether different reason.
The 71st was on the move, not toward the bombing raids but the sea.
Jameson.
She moved the squadron across her quadrant in five-minute increments, noting the number of planes and the general direction, but soon they were no longer hers to keep watch over, and others took their place.
The hours flew, but she was too worried to eat during her break, too anxious to see the 71st return to do much else but hover over that board, because she knew he was flying tonight. When her fifteen minutes were up, she headed back into the filter room and took over her station once more.
She noted with no small sense of satisfaction that the number of bombers on their way out was smaller than coming in. Theyโd had a few victories tonight.
The radio operatorโs next plot came through her headpiece, and she reached for a new marker with a slight smile. The 71st was back in her
quadrant.
She placed the marker at the appropriate coordinate, then froze as the radio operator updated the number of aircraft.
Fifteen.
Scarlett stared at the marker for precious seconds as her heart lurched into her throat.ย Sheโs wrong. She has to be wrong.ย Scarlett hit the microphone switch on her headset.
โCould you give me the strength of the 71st again?โ she said. Every head in the room snapped her direction.
Plotters didnโt talk. Ever.
โFifteen strong,โ the operator repeated. โThey lost one.โ
They lost one. They lost one. They lost one.
Scarlettโs fingers trembled as she replaced the little flag on the marker to one that read fifteen. It wasnโt Jameson. It couldnโt be. She would know, wouldnโt she? If the man she loved with all her heart had gone downโhad diedโsheโd feel it. Sheโd have to. There was simply no way her heart could continue beating without his. It was an anatomical impossibility.
But Constance hadnโt knownโฆ
The next plot came through her headset, and she moved the appropriate markers, changing out the arrows to the timed color groups.
Jameson. Jameson. Jameson. Her limbs moved by muscle memory as her mind swam and her belly churned, dinner curdling as the 71st got closer to Martlesham-Heath. Even after they were hangered and officially off the board, Scarlett couldnโt kick the sick feeling in her stomach.
So far, the Eagle Squadron had been miraculously luckyโthey hadnโt lost a pilot. Sheโd almost become complacent in their luck, but that had ended tonight. Who was it? If it wasnโt Jamesonโplease, God, donโt be Jamesonโthen it was someone he knew. Howie? One of the newer Yanks?
She glanced at the clock. She had four more hours to go.
She wanted to ring Martlesham-Heath, to demand the call sign of the downed pilot, but if it was Jameson, sheโd know soon enough. Theyโd no doubt already be waiting for her at home. Howie would never let her find
out through the gossip mill.
The time passed in torturous five-minute blocks, ticking away as she moved the markers, changed the arrows, heard the orders called out from Group Headquarters. By the time their watch was over, Scarlett was a tangle of nerves with a rapid heartbeat and not much else.
โLet me drive you home. I know your bicycle is here, but I have the section car,โ Constance said after they gathered their things from the cloakroom.
โIโm fine.โ Scarlett shook her head as they walked toward their bicycles.
The last thing Constance needed was to comfortย her.
โHeโs okay,โ she said softly, touching Scarlettโs wrist. โHe has to be. I canโt believe in a God so cruel as to take both our loves. Heโs okay.โ
โAnd if heโs not?โ Scarlettโs voice was barely a whisper.
โHe will be. Come on. Get in the car; no arguments. Iโll tell the other girls to walk back to the hut.โ Constance led her to the car, then spoke to the other members of the watch before sliding behind the wheel.
The drive was shortโonly a few minutes off the stationโbut for the smallest of moments, Scarlett didnโt want to turn the corner, didnโt want to know. But they did.
There was a car parked outside her house. โOh God,โ Constance whispered.
Scarlett squared her shoulders and took in a deep breath. โWhy donโt you want to take the teller training?โ
Constance glanced her way as she pulled up behind the car, which bore the 11 Group insignia. โRight now? You want to talk about that right now?โ โI just always thought you planned to advance.โ Her heart beat so fast, it
almost blended into a steady thrum. โScarlett.โ
โThereโs more pressure, yes, but more pay with the promotion.โ Her hand gripped the handle like a vise.
โScarlett!โ Constance snapped.
She ripped her gaze away from the 11 Group insignia and looked at her
sister.
โI promise I will come over tomorrow morning and talk to you about the training, but right now, you cannot stay in the car.โ
โDo you wish youโd never opened the letter?โ Scarlett whispered.
โIt would only have delayed the inevitable.โ Constance forced a shaky smile. โCome on, Iโll walk you to the door.โ
Scarlett nodded, then pushed her door open and stepped out onto the pavement, readying herself for another set of doors opening.
The car doors didnโt open. Her front door did.
โHey, you.โ Jameson filled the doorway, and Scarlettโs knees nearly gave out.
She broke into a run, and he met her halfway, swinging her into his arms with a hug so tight, she felt the pieces of her click back into place. He was okay. He was home. He was alive.
She buried her face in his neck, breathed in his scent, and held on for dear life, because thatโs exactly what heโd becomeโher life.
โI was so worried,โ she said against his skin, unwilling to draw back for even a moment.
โฆ
โI knew you would be. Thatโs why I got a pass and drove up.โ He kept one big hand splayed on her back and held the nape of her neck with the other. Holding Scarlett was all heโd thought about since the moment theyโd lost Kolendorski. โIโm okay.โ
She just held on tighter.
Jameson looked over Scarlettโs shoulder and nodded at Constance, who watched them with a wistful smile. She nodded back, then turned away, heading for the car sheโd brought Scarlett home in.
โWho was it?โ Scarlett asked.
โKolendorski.โ Heโd liked the guy. โTurned to intercept a bomber and got taken out by two fighters. We all saw him go down in the sea.โ No
attempt to bail out. No Mayday. He went in vertically with enough force that if he hadnโt been killed before, heโd been dead on impact. No one could survive that kind of crash.
โIโm so sorry,โ she said, easing her grip a little. โIโm justโฆโ Her shoulders shook, and he gently pulled back so he could see his wife.
โItโs okay. Everything is okay,โ he assured her, swiping away her tears with the pad of his thumb.
โI donโt know why Iโm being such a ninny.โ She forced a distorted smile through her tears. โI saw the strength number change, and I knew one of you was gone.โ She shook her head. โI love you.โ
โI love you, too.โ He kissed her forehead.
โNo, thatโs not what I mean.โ She stepped out of his arms. โI love you so much that my heart feels like it beats within your body. I watched what losing Edward did to Constance, and I know that Iโm not strong enough to lose you. I wonโt survive it.โ
โScarlett,โ he whispered, wrapping his arms around her and pulling her close because there was nothing else he could do. They both knew that tomorrow it could be him. With the prevalence of the bombing raids, it could be her. Every goodbye kiss they shared held the bittersweet taste of desperation because they knew it could be their last.
And if it were herโฆ He sucked in a steadying breath to quiet the unwelcome, impossible thoughts. There was nothing for him without Scarlett. She was the reason he ran a little faster when they scrambled to intercept a bombing raid. She was the reason he pushed the newer pilots harder. She was the reason heโd stay no matter how many letters his parents sent, telling him they were proud of him in the same line that they begged for him to come home. He didnโt need to swear loyalty to the kingโheโd sworn it to Scarlett, and she was his to protect.
โCome on.โ He took her hand and led her inside, but instead of carrying her to their bedroom and making love to her as heโd planned for every minute of his drive, he took her to the living room, where he put Billie Holiday on the record player. โDance with me, Scarlett.โ
Her lips lifted, but it was too sad to be called a smile. She slid into his arms and laid her head against his chest as they swayed in small circles, steering clear of the coffee table.
This right here was where he lived. Everything else he did was to get him back safely for more of thisโmore of her. Living apart was a special kind of torture; knowing she was only an hour away, but he couldnโt get to her, caused too many sleepless nights. He missed the feel of her skin against his in the morning, missed the scent of her hair when sheโd fall asleep on his chest. He missed talking about their days, planning their future, kissing their way through yet another burned dinner. He missed everything about her.
โI have news for you,โ he said softly, brushing his lips over her temple. โHmm?โ She lifted her head, apprehension filling her eyes.
โWeโre being reposted.โ He tried to keep a straight face, but his lips didnโt obey.
โAlready?โ Her brow puckered and her lips flattened. โI donโtโโ
โAsk me where.โ Now he was grinningโso much for keeping it a surprise.
โWhere?โ
He lifted his brows.
โJameson,โ she chastised. โDonโt tease me. Wheโโ She inhaled sharply, then narrowed her eyes. โYou tell me right this very minute, because if you get my hopes up just to squash them like a bug, youโll be sleeping alone tonight.โ
โNo, I wonโt,โ he said with a smile. โYou like me too much for that.โ โNot at this moment I donโt.โ
โFine, then you like what I do to your body too much for that,โ he teased, his gaze heating.
She arched a brow.
โHere,โ he finally said as the song wrapped up. โWeโre being reposted here. In a couple weeks weโll be in the same bed every night.โ He raised his hand to her cheek. โWeโll be back to burning breakfasts and racing each
other for the shower.โ
A grin spread across her beautiful face, and his chest tightened. Just like that, she turned an absolute shit day into something truly exceptional.
โI was asked to train to be a teller,โ she admitted quietly, as if someone could hear them. Joy flashed across her eyes. โIt could mean Iโd make Section Leader before the year is out.โ
โIโm proud of you.โ Now he was the one grinning.
โAnd Iโm proud of you. Arenโt we the pair?โ She rose and brushed her mouth over his. โNow what were you saying about what you could do to my body?โ
He had her upstairs before the next song started.
โฆ
Scarlett stumbled into the kitchen the next morning to find Jameson at the stove, frying up breakfast. Her stomach flipped at the smell, then somersaulted.
โYou okay?โ Constance asked from the corner, where she was opening a jar of jam.
Right, they were supposed to talk about training this morning. Sheโd forgotten, which added another reason to be annoyed at herself.
โFine,โ Scarlett lied, trying to swallow the nausea. โI didnโt see you there. Iโm so sorry I completely abandoned you last night.โ
Constance smiled, glancing between Scarlett and Jameson. โNo need to explain. Just happy it all worked out.โ The light flickered from her eyes as she brought the jam to the table.
โWhat can I do to help?โ Scarlett asked, putting her hand between Jamesonโs shoulder blades.
โNothing, honeyโโ His brow lowered. โYou look a little green.โ
โIโm fine,โ she said slowly, hoping theyโd leave it be. Had she hoped the nerves would settle now that Jameson was due to be reposted here? Yes. Apparently her body hadnโt gotten the memo.
Constance studied her carefully. โDo you want to chat later?โ โOf course not. Iโm glad youโre here.โ
Constance nodded, but there was an odd, firm set to her mouth. She lookedโฆsomehow older this morning.
Jameson brought the fried sausages and potatoes to the table while Scarlett sliced a loaf of bread. They tucked in, and Scarlett nearly sighed with relief as her stomach settled.
โWould you two like some privacy?โ Jameson asked from his side of the square table, his gaze bouncing between the sisters.
โNo,โ Constance answered, setting her fork on a half-empty plate. It wasnโt like her to leave half her breakfast, but she hadnโt exactly been normal the last two months. โYou should hear this, too.โ
โWhat is it?โ A weight settled on Scarlettโs chest. Whatever her sister was about to say, it wasnโt good.
โIt would be a waste for me to take the teller training,โ she said, squaring her shoulders. โIโm not sure how long Iโll be allowed to keep my commission.โ
Scarlett paled. There were very few reasons a woman would be forced to resign her commission. โWhat? Why?โ
Constance fumbled her hands in her lap for a moment, then lifted her left hand to reveal a sparkling emerald ring. โBecause Iโll be married.โ
Scarlettโs fork fell from her hand, clattering against the plate. Jameson, to his credit, didnโt move a muscle.
โMarried?โ Scarlett ignored the ring and locked eyes with her sister. โYes,โ Constance said, as though Scarlett had asked if she wanted more
coffee. โMarried. And my fiancรฉ isnโt exactly supportive of my role here, so I doubt Iโll be encouraged to keep it once weโre wed.โ There was no emotion in her voice. No excitement. Nothing.
Scarlettโs mouth opened and shut twice. โI donโt understand.โ โI knew you wouldnโt,โ Constance said softly.
โYou have the same expression you wore the day our parents forbade you from marrying Edward until after the war.โ Dutifulโthat was it. She
looked resigned and dutiful. The nausea returned with a vehemence as that foreboding feeling slipped from Scarlettโs chest to her belly. โWho are you marrying?โ
โHenry Wadsworth.โ Constance lifted her chin.
No.
Silence filled the kitchen, sharper than any words could have been.
No. No. No.ย Scarlett reached for Jamesonโs hand under the table, needing an anchor.
โItโs not up to you,โ Constance argued.
Scarlett blinked, realizing sheโd spoken out loud. โYou cannot. Heโs a monster. Heโll ruin you.โ
Constance shrugged. โThen he ruins me.โ
If it dies, it dies.ย Her words as she planted the rose yesterday echoed in Scarlettโs mind. โWhy would you do this?โ Sheโd been home this last weekend. โTheyโre making you, arenโt they?โ
โNo,โ Constance rebutted softly. โMummy told me theyโre going to have to sell the rest of the land around the house at Ashby.โ
Not the London houseโฆtheir home. Scarlett pushed past the pang of regret at the news.
โThen it is their fault for not managing their own finances. Please donโt tell me you agreed to marry Wadsworth in an attempt to keep the land. Your happiness is worth far more than the property. Let them sell it.โ More importantly, Constance would never survive a marriage to Wadsworth. Heโd beat her spirit to death and body close to it.
โDonโt you see?โ Pain flickered over Constanceโs features. โTheyโd sell off the pond. The gazebo. The little hunting cottage. All of it.โ
โLet them!โ Scarlett snapped. โThat man will destroy you.โ Her hand gripped Jamesonโs.
Constance stood, then pushed her chair under the table. โI knew you wouldnโt understand, and you donโt have to. Itโs my decision to make.โ She strode from the room, her shoulders back and her head high.
Scarlett raced after her. โI know you love them, and you want to please
them, but you do not owe them your life.โ
Constance paused with her hand on the doorknob. โI have no life left for myself. All I have are memories.โ She turned slowly, losing her polished facade and letting her anguish show.
The pond. The gazebo. The hunting cabin. Scarlettโs eyes drifted shut for the length of a deep breath. โPoppet, owning those places will not bring him back.โ
โIf you lost Jameson, and you had a chance to keep the first house you lived in at Kirton-in-Lindsey, even if only to walk through the rooms to talk to his ghost, would you?โ
Scarlett wanted to argue that it wasnโt the same. But she couldnโt.
Jameson was her husband, her soul mate, the love of her life. But sheโd loved him for less than a year. Constance had loved Edward since they were children, swimming in that pond, playing games in the gazebo, stealing kisses in the hunting cabin.
โThereโs no saying the land would even be there by the time you wed.โ Which hopefully wouldnโt be this summerโonly a few weeks away.
โHeโs purchasing them now, in good faithโฆas an engagement gift. It was all settled this weekend. I know youโre disappointed in meโโ
โNo, never that. Iโm frightened for you. Iโm terrified that youโre throwing away your life instead ofโโ
โInstead of what?โ Constance cried. โI will never love again. My chance for happiness is gone, so what does it matter?โ She opened the front door and stormed out, leaving Scarlett to scramble after her.
โYou donโt know that!โ Scarlett yelled from the pavement, stopping her sister before she reached the street. โYou do know what heโll do to you. Weโve seen it. Can you honestly give yourself to a man like that? You are worth so much more!โ
โI do know!โ Constanceโs face crumpled. โI know it in the same way you do. I saw your face last night. Had it been Howie at your door, telling you it was Jameson whoโd been lost, you would have been decimated. Can you look me in the eye and tell me youโll ever love again if he dies?โ
Bile rose in Scarlettโs throat. โPlease donโt do this.โ
โI have the power to save our family, to keep our land, to perhaps teach my children to swim in that very pond. We are not the same, you and I. You had a reason to fight the match. I have a reason to accept it.โ
Scarlettโs mouth watered, and her stomach convulsed. She hit her knees and lost her breakfast into one of the bushes that framed their doorway. She felt Jamesonโs hand at the nape of her neck, gathering her unpinned hair as she heaved, emptying her belly.
โHoney,โ he murmured, rubbing circles on her back. The nausea subsided, gone as quickly as it had come.
Oh God.ย Her mind scurried, trying to trace an invisible calendar. She hadnโt had a momentโs peace since March. Theyโd moved in Aprilโฆand it was May.
Scarlett stood slowly, her gaze meeting Constanceโs wide, compassionate one.
โOh, Scarlett,โ she whispered. โNeither of us will be Section Leader by the end of the year, will we?โ
โWhat is that supposed to mean?โ Jameson asked, his hand steady when Scarlett felt like the slightest breeze might send her back to the ground.
Scarlett looked up at him, taking in those beautiful green eyes, the strong set of his chin, and the worried lines of his mouth. He was about to worry a lot more.
โIโm pregnant.โ