July 1941
North Weald, England
โItโs better, right?โ Scarlett asked as she forced the buttons of her uniform jacket through the holes. She wasnโt going to be able to hide it much longer. She wasnโt sure she was even effectively hiding itย now.
Jameson leaned against the doorframe to their bedroom, his mouth pressed in a firm line.
โIโve taken out every spare quarter inch,โ Constance murmured, tugging the hem lightly. โPerhaps we could request a larger size?โ
โAgain?โ Scarlettโs eyebrows rose as she took in her reflection in the oval mirror that topped their dresser.
Constance winced. โTrue. The first time, the supply clerk looked at me as though Iโd been stealing her rations.โ
The uniform was tight, straining at seams not only over her belly but also her hips and chest.
โI have an idea,โ Jameson said from the doorway, crossing his arms over his chest.
โLetโs hear it,โ Scarlett responded, tugging the sides of her jacket together near the bottom, where there werenโt any buttons.
โYou could tell them youโre five months pregnant.โ She met his gaze in the mirror with an arched eyebrow. He didnโt smile.
Constance looked between the two of them. โRight. Iโll just beโฆ somewhere else!โ
Jameson moved so she could slide by, and then he shut the bedroom door, leaning against it. โIโm serious.โ
โI know,โ she said softly, running her hand over the swell of her belly. โBut you know what theyโll do.โ
He leaned his head back, thunking it against the door. โScarlett, honey. I know your work is important, but can you honestly tell me that being on your feet for eight hours straight isnโt killing you? The stress? The schedule?โ
He was right. She was already exhausted every morning when she opened her eyes. It didnโt matter how tired she was; there was no time to rest.
But if she came cleanโresigned her commissionโwhat would she be then?
โWhat would I do all day?โ Scarlett asked, her fingers tracing the raised lines of the rank on her shoulder. โFor the last two years Iโve had direction. Iโve had meaning and purpose. Iโve accomplished things and dedicated myself to the war effort. So what am I supposed to do? Iโve never been a housewife.โ She swallowed, hoping to dislodge the knot there. โIโve certainly never been a mother. I donโt know how to be either of those things.โ
Jameson crossed the room, then sat on the edge of the bed, gripped his wifeโs hips, and pulled her between his spread knees. โWeโll figure it out together.โ
โWe,โ she said softly, her face falling. โBut nothing changes for you,โ she whispered. โYou still go to work, still fly, still fight in this war.โ
โI know this isnโt what you wantedโโ His face fell.
โItโs not that,โ she promised in a rush, lacing her fingers behind her husbandโs neck. โI was just hoping Iโd be ready. I hoped the war would be over, that we wouldnโt have to bring a child into a world where I worry if youโll come home every night or fear a bomb may fall on our house while he slept.โ She took his hands and covered the swell of her belly. โI want this baby, Jameson. I want our family. I just wanted to be ready, and Iโm not.โ
Jamesonโs hands stroked over her stomach as they did every day when he said goodbye to their child as he headed off to fly. โI donโt think anyone is ever ready. And no, this world isnโt safe forย her. Not yet. But she has two parents fighting like hell to change that. To make it safe for her.โ The corner
of his lips twitched upward as he looked at his wife. โIโm incredibly proud of you, Scarlett. Youโve done everything you can. You canโt change the regulations. All you can do is bring that fight home. I know youโll be a wonderful mother. I know my schedule is unpredictable, and that I never know when Iโll actually make it home.โย If he makes it home, she thought. โI know the majority of this will fall on you, but I also know youโre up for the challenge.โ
She cocked a brow. โThere you go again, thinking our babyโs a girl.
Your son wonโt take kindly to that when heโs born.โ
Jameson laughed. โAnd there you go again, thinking our daughter is a boy.โ He leaned forward and placed his mouth just above her belly. โYou hear that, sunshine? Mommy thinks youโre a boy.โ
โMommy knows youโre a boy,โ Scarlett challenged.
Jameson kissed her belly, then tugged Scarlett closer so he could brush a kiss over her lips. โI love you, Scarlett Stanton. I love every single thing about you. I canโt wait to hold a piece of both of us, to see these gorgeous blue eyes in our child.โ
She ran her hands through his hair. โAnd what if he has your eyes?โ
Jameson smiled. โHaving seen both you and your sister, Iโd say you might have some dominant genetics in the eye department.โ He kissed her again, slowly. โYou have the most beautiful eyes Iโve ever seen. It would be a shame not to see them carried down. Weโd call them Wright blue.โ
โStanton blue,โ she corrected, something inside her shifting, preparing for the change she could no longer avoid through denial. โI still canโt cook. Even after all these months, youโre still better than I am. All I know how to do is throw an excellent party and plot aircraft for incoming raids. I donโt want to fail.โ
โYou wonโt. We wonโt. As much as you and I love each other, can you imagine how much weโre going to love this kid?โ His smile was brighter than ever and just as contagious.
โOnly a few more months,โ she whispered.
โOnly a few more months,โ he repeated. โThen weโll have a new
adventure.โ
โEverything will change.โ โNot the way I love you.โ
โYou promise?โ she asked, her fingers trailing the line of his collar. โYou fell in love with a WAAF officer, which, from the fit of this uniform, wonโt be true in the next week. Hardly seems like you got the good end of this bargain.โ How was he going to love her if she wasnโt even herself?
He pulled her even closer, so he could feel the curves of her body against his. โI love you in whatever role you play. Whatever uniform you want to wear. Whoever you want to be. I will love you.โ
That was a promise she would hold on to later that day as she faced Section Leader Robbins in her office, fidgeting with her cap after her watch. โI was wondering when youโd come to see me,โ Robbins said,
motioning to the chair in front of her desk.
Scarlett took it, adjusting her skirts as she sat.
โHonestly, Iโm surprised you lasted this long.โ Robbins gave her an understanding smile. โI thought youโd be here a month ago.โ
โYou knew?โ Scarlettโs hands flew to her belly.
Robbins lifted an eyebrow. โYou threw up for two months straight. I knew. I just thought it best to let you come to this conclusion on your own, and selfishly, I wanted to keep you. Youโre one of my best girls. That being said, I was only giving you two more weeks before I said something myself.โ She opened a desk drawer and pulled out some papers. โI have your discharge papers ready. You just need to take them up to headquarters.โ
โI donโt want to be discharged,โ Scarlett admitted quietly. โI want to do my job.โ
Robbins studied her carefully and sighed. โAnd I wish you could.โ โThere is nothing I can do?โ Her heart lurched, feeling as though she
was being cleaved in two.
โYou can be a wonderful mother, Scarlett. Britain needs more babies.โ She slid the papers across the desktop. โYouโll be sorely missed.โ
โThank you.โ Scarlett squared her shoulders, then took her discharge papers.
Just like that, it was over.
There was a steady, dull hum in her ears as she turned in her discharge papers. It didnโt fade until she stood in front of that same oval mirror in her bedroom, staring at a reflection that was no longer rightfully hers.
She took off her hat first and placed it on the dresser. The shoes came next. Then the stockings.
She raised her hands to the belt of her jacket twice before she managed to get it undone.
This uniform had given her freedom she never would have experienced without it. She never would have stood up to her parents without the confidence sheโd earned over the long days and nights of watches. She never would have seen her worth as more than a pretty showpiece.
She never would have met Jameson.
Her fingers trembled at the first button. Once she took it off, that was it. There were no more watches. No more briefings. No more smiling as she walked down the street, proud that she was doing her part. They werenโt just clothesโthey were the physical manifestation of the woman sheโd become, the sisterhood she belonged to.
She heard a shuffle behind her and lifted her eyes in the mirror to see Jameson standing exactly where heโd been that morning, leaning in the doorway, but instead of his pressed uniform, he still wore his flying suit.
โฆ
His hands clenched with the need to hold her, but he kept his arms folded across his chest. He didnโt say anything as he watched her struggle with the buttons of her jacket. His chest ached at the pain, the loss in her eyes as she finally got them undone. She must have told her section leader today. She wasnโt just getting undressed; she was being unmade.
As much as he wanted to cross the room and ease her, this was
something she had to do for herself, by herself. Besides, he was already responsible for taking so much from her that he couldnโt bear to be a part of this, too.
Tears filled her eyes as she slid free of the jacket, folding it carefully before placing it on the dresser. Next came the tie, then the shirt, and finally she stepped out of the skirt. Her hands were steady as she placed it on the pile, standing in nothing but the civilian underwear sheโd always insisted on.
She swallowed, then lifted her chin. โAnd thatโsโฆthat.โ
โIโm so sorry.โ His words came out like theyโd been scraped over broken bottles.
She walked to him, all lush curves and sad eyes, but when their gazes met, hers was steady. โIโm not.โ
โYouโre not?โ He palmed her cheek, needing to touch her. โIโm not sorry about anything thatโs led me to you.โ
He carried her to their bed and showed her with his body exactly how lucky he felt to have found her.
โฆ
One month later, Scarlett marveled at the freedom the simple wrap dress afforded her as she and Jameson shopped in a small London store that specialized in childrenโs clothes.
There were some parts of civilian lifeโsuch as not melting in her uniform in the August heatโthat more than agreed with her.
โI wish weโd done this two months ago,โ Jameson muttered as they took in the scant racks of infant garments.
โIt will be okay,โ she assured him. โHe wonโt need much to start out with.โ
โShe.โ Jameson grinned, then bent to kiss her temple.
As of June, clothing was now rationed, which meant she was going to need to get creative in a few monthsโand do a lot more wash. Blankets,
gowns, and nappiesโthey had a lot to acquire before November.
โHe,โ she argued with a shake of her head. โLetโs get these to start with.โ She handed Jameson two gowns that would work for both a girl or a boy.
โOkay.โ
Her face puckered slightly as she stared at the small selection of nappies.
โWhatโs wrong?โ he asked.
โIโve never put on a nappy beforeโa diaper,โ she clarified for him. โI know I need pins, but I donโt have anyone I can ask.โ She still hadnโt spoken to her parents, and it wasnโt like her mother had done the child- rearing herself, anyway.
โYou can always hire a nappy service,โ a young clerk with a quick smile suggested from the end of the aisle. โTheyโre becoming quite popular.โ
Jameson nodded in consideration. โIt would leave us with less laundry, and probably ease a little of your weโre-never-going-to-be-able-to-buy- enough stress.โ
Scarlett rolled her eyes. โWe can talk about it after dinner. Iโm starving.โ โYes, maโam.โ He gave her a smile and took their items to the counter.
Of all the things to talk about while he had a precious forty-eight hours of leave, nappies were not on her list.
A few moments later, they were out on the bustling street, walking hand in hand. The bombings had ceasedโฆfor now, but the evidence was everywhere she looked.
โAnywhere you want to eat?โ Jameson asked, adjusting his hat with one hand.
Scarlett swore she saw at least three women swoon from the sight, not that she blamed them. Her husband was incredible from the top of his head to the tips of his toes. โNot particularly. Though I wouldnโt mind going back to the hotel and having you for dinner.โ She kept her face as straight as she could manage.
He stopped in the middle of the pavement, forcing the crowd to flow
around them. โIโll get a taxi right now.โ His smile was pure hedonism. โScarlett?โ
Scarlett froze at the sound of her motherโs voice, her grip tightening on Jamesonโs hand as she turned slowly to face her.
She wasnโt alone. Scarlettโs father stood at her side, looking as shocked as Scarlett felt for all of a heartbeat before he managed to school his features into the stone she knew so well.
โJameson, these are my parents, Nigel and Margaret, but Iโm sure theyโd rather you call them Baron and Lady Wright.โ Finally, she had a real use for all the comportment lessons sheโd been forced into.
โฆ
โSir.โ Jameson stepped forward, offering his hand to Nigel but losing Scarlettโs in the process. So this was the infamous father his wife and her sister had such mixed feelings about. He was dressed in a neatly pressed suit, his pepper and silver hair slicked back with minimal fuss.
Her father looked at Jamesonโs hand, then brought his gaze back up. โYouโre the Yank.โ
โIโm American, yes.โ Jameson bristled but managed a smile as he lowered his hand, taking Scarlettโs again. He couldnโt imagine having this kind of rift with his own parents, and if he could ease the tension, he would. Itโs the least his mother would expect from him. โMaโam, your daughters speak very highly of you.โ
Scarlett squeezed his fingers at his lie.
Margaret had the same dark hair and piercing blue eyes as her daughters. In fact, the resemblance was so close that he couldnโt shake the feeling he was getting a glimpse at what Scarlett would look like in thirty years. Scarlett wouldnโt have that cold, firm set to her mouth, though. His wife was far too warm for that.
โYouโreโฆgoing to have a child,โ her mother said quietly, her eyes round as they locked on Scarlettโs stomach.
The irrational impulse to stand in front of his wife was instant.
โWe are,โ Scarlett said, her voice firm and chin high. Heโd always been in awe of her self-control, but this was an all-time high. โI understand you convinced Constance to throw her life away?โ She asked the question with the same tone sheโd used to request he pass the milk this morning.
Jameson blinked, realizing heโd entered an entirely different arena of warfare where he wasnโt the expertโhis wife was.
โConstanceโs choices are her own,โ Margaret said just as politely.
โIs it a boy?โ Nigel asked, staring at Scarlett with a spark of something in his eyes that looked a little too close to desperation for Jamesonโs comfort.
โI could hardly know, as I am still pregnant.โ Scarlett tilted her head. โAnd if he is, that is none of your business.โ
This was the strangest family heโd ever encounteredโฆand somehow he was a part of it.
Scarlett turned her attention back to her mother. โConstanceโs choices are her own, but you took advantage of her broken heart. You and I both know what heโll do to her. You willingly sent a lamb to the slaughter, and I will do everything in my power to convince her not to go through with it.โ
As shots across the bow went, that one was a direct hit.
โAs far as Iโm concerned, you made the choice for her when you refused him,โ her mother replied unemotionally.
And that one was an entire bombing raid.
Scarlettโs sharp intake of breath was enough for him to know her motherโs words had found their mark.
โIt was nice to meet you both, but weโre going to go now,โ Jameson said, tipping his hat.
โIf thatโs a boy, he can be my heir,โ Nigel blurted.
Every muscle in Jamesonโs body tensed, preparing for the fight. โIf our baby is a boy, heโsย ourย son,โ he said.
โHeโs not your anything,โ Scarlett said to her father through gritted teeth, her hand rising protectively over their child.
โIf Constance doesnโt marry Wadsworthโas you are hell-bent on stopping it,โ her father mused with a scheming gleam in his eyes, โand you have the only heir, the line is clear. If she does marry him, and they have children, thatโs a different matter.โ
โUnbelievable.โ Scarlett shook her head. โIโll sign over my claim right now. Here, in the middle of the street. I donโt want it.โ
Nigelโs gaze flickered between Scarlett and him, then narrowed on Scarlett. โWhat are you going to do when your Yank gets himself killed?โ
Scarlettโs spine stiffened.
Jameson couldnโt argue against the possibility. The life expectancy of a pilot wasnโt years, or even months. The odds werenโt exactly in his favor, especially at the rate the 71st was flying missions. Since getting issued Spitfires a few weeks ago, they were one of the top squadrons for enemy kills.
He was one battle away from making aceโฆor crashing.
โYouโll have a baby to support on a widowโs stipend, since Iโm assuming you no longer wear the uniform or have income of your own.โ
โSheโll be fine,โ Jameson interjected. Changing his will already made sure Scarlett would inherit what land was his if he didnโt make it home, but he wasnโt telling her parents that.
โWhen that happens, youโll come home.โ Her father ignored Jameson entirely. โThink about it. You have no real skill. Can you honestly say youโd go to the factories? What would you do with your child?โ
โNigel,โ Margaret chastised softly.
โYouโll come home. And not for youโyouโd rather starve than give us the pleasure. But for your child?โ
The color ran from Scarlettโs face.
โWeโre leaving. Now.โ Jameson turned his back on her parents, cutting directly in front of them instead of letting Scarlettโs hand go.
โShe doesnโt even have a country!โ Nigel called after them.
โSheโll be American soon enough!โ Jameson said over his shoulder as they walked away.
Scarlett held her head high as Jameson stepped into the street, hailing a taxi. A black car pulled to the curb, and Jameson opened the door, ushering Scarlett in first. Rage raced through his veins, hot and thick.
โWhere to?โ the driver asked.
โThe U.S. Embassy,โ Jameson replied.
โWhat?โ Scarlett twisted in her seat as the cab lurched forward into traffic.
โYou have to get a visa. You canโt stay here. Our baby canโt stay here.โ He shook his head. โYou told me they were cold and monstrous, but that wasโฆโ His jaw flexed. โI donโt have the words to describe what happened back there.โ
โSo youโre taking me to the embassy.โ She lifted a brow. โYes!โ
โLove, we donโt have our marriage records or any of my personal identification. Theyโre not just going to give me a visa because you say so,โ she said, calmly stroking his hand.
โShit!โ
The driver glanced back at them but continued on.
โI know theyโreโฆupsetting. But they donโt have any power over me anymoreโover us. Jameson, look at me.โ
โIf something happens to me, I need to know that you can get to Colorado.โ Just the thought of her going back to herย familyย sent another hot pulse of anger through him. โWeโre not poorโat least not in landโand Iโve already changed my will. If I die, you have options, but going back to those two isnโt one of them.โ
โI know.โ She nodded slowly. โI wonโt. Nothing will happen to youโโ โYou donโt know that.โ
โโbut if it does, Iโll never go back there. I promise.โ
His eyes searched hers. โPromise me weโll start the visa process.โ โIโm not leaving you!โ
โPromise. Me. If nothing else, youโd have it if I die.โ He wasnโt giving on this one, wasnโt being the sensible, sensitive husband. She had to belong
somewhereย if he went down.
โOkay. Fine. Weโll start the process. But we canโt do anything about it today. We have to get an appointmentโโ
He kissed her hard and quick, not giving a shit that they were in public or potentially scandalizing the cab driver.
โThank you,โ he whispered, his forehead against hers. โCan we go back to the hotel now?โ
He gave the driver the destination change with a grin that didnโt fade as they made their way to the hotel. It didnโt even fade as they climbed the wide staircase up to their room or as he unlocked their door.
Even if he didnโt survive this war, she wouldโtheir child would.
โฆ
โWhat is that?โ Scarlett asked, gesturing to a large box on the desk as they walked into the room. She was completely, utterly drained, not only from walking miles while they shopped but from the encounter with her parents on the street.
โI bought you a present while you were sleeping this morning and arranged to have it delivered. Go on.โ He motioned her toward the box.
โA present?โ She put the bag with the baby clothes on their bed, then looked over her shoulder at him with skepticism. โWhat are you about?โ
โJust open it.โ He shut the door, then came up beside her, half sitting on the desk to face her.
โItโs not my birthday.โ She tugged one flap open. โNo, but itโs the start of a new era for you.โ
She opened the next flap, and again, peering down into the wide box as it opened.
Then she gasped, her chest constricting at what she found. โJameson,โ she whispered.
โDo you like it?โ he asked with a grin.
She ran her fingers lightly over the cool metal casing. โItโsโฆโย Amazing.
Wonderful. Thoughtful. Too much.
โI thought maybe you could write down some of those stories youโre always thinking up inside that beautiful brain of yours.โ
A joyful laugh burst from her throat, and she flung herself into his arms, holding him tight. โThank you. Thank you. Thank you.โ
Heโd bought her a typewriter.