him.
He ran up the steps and pushed his way into the hall. A knot of people were surrounding someone on the floor.
“Out of the way,” someone yelled. “Give Dr. Monro room!”
Nicholas shoved his way forward. “That’s my wife,” he said, even though he couldn’t see her yet. “That’s my wife.”
Finally, he made it through the crowd, and there she was, sitting on the floor, gasping for breath.
“Lie her down!” Dr. Monro said. He spoke with the authority of a doctor who had been practicing for decades, who knew what to do.
Except the minute he lay her back, her body began to spasm.
“Stop!” Nicholas yelled. “She can’t get enough air like that.”
“Get him away from me,” the doctor snapped.
Nicholas grabbed him by the arm. “She’s my wife.”
Dr. Monro turned to him with a sharp expression. “If you value her well-being, you’ll back off and let me do my job.”
Nicholas swallowed and took a step back, watching as his professor—one of the most well-known and respected doctors in Great Britain—began his assessment.
“She has a history of spasmodic asthma,” Nicholas said, hoping it was true. Everything Georgie had told him indicated this diagnosis. And that was certainly what he saw when he looked at her now. Georgie’s inhales seemed more like gasps, her lungs convulsing as they tried desperately to fill.
Dr. Monro gave a curt nod.
“Sir,” Nicholas said, “I believe she needs to sit up.”
Georgie’s eyes met his. He could see she was trying to nod.
The doctor grunted but helped ease her into a sitting position. Georgie took a gulp of air, but Nicholas could tell it wasn’t enough.
Please, her eyes seemed to say. She thrust her hand out, toward Nicholas.
He shoved forward. Maybe the doctor needed room, but Georgie needed him.
“What did I just say?” Dr. Monro snapped.
“She wants my hand,” Nicholas replied, fighting to keep his voice calm. “She needs comfort.”
The doctor gave a single brisk nod, then said, “How often does she experience dyspnea?”
“Not often in adulthood,” Nicholas answered. “Far more frequently when she was a child.”
He looked to Georgie for confirmation. She gave a tiny nod. She was breathing more regularly now, but every exhale made a wheezy, whistling sound.
“It sounds as if she is improving, sir,” Nicholas said. He looked at her carefully as he put an arm around her shoulders to support her. “Are you getting more air?”
Again, another tiny nod. “It’s … better.”
“I’m not satisfied yet,” the doctor said grimly. “I’ve seen cases where the patient seems to improve but then relapses. Especially young women prone to hysteria.”
“She’s not prone to hysteria,” Nicholas said stiffly.
“I know—what—” Georgie tried to say something, but she was having too much trouble catching her breath.
“Don’t speak,” Nicholas said. “You need a bit more time.”
“But—he—”
“We need to bleed her,” Dr. Monro said.
“What?” Nicholas looked at him in shock. “No. She’s already improving.”
“And this will hasten her recovery.” He looked up at the crowd. “My lancets. Now!”
Several men scurried off. Dr. Monro took Georgie’s wrist and started taking her pulse.
“Sir, no,” Nicholas said. “She should not be bled.”
His professor gave him a look of utter disdain.
“She’s been bled before,” Nicholas said. “It does not work.”
He prayed this was true. He had not been there. He did not know the details. But Georgie had said it had not helped, and he owed it to her to trust her account of her own body, of her own health.
Dr. Monro ignored him. “We’re going to have to cut her sleeve to access the veins in her arm,” he said to the man next to him.
“You will not bleed her,” Nicholas said forcefully. “It does not work.”
“She’s alive, isn’t she?” Dr. Monro snapped.
“Yes, but not because she was bled. She said it made her worse.”
The doctor gave a snort. “Patients are notoriously unreliable, especially when recounting events from several years earlier.”
“My wife is not unreliable,” Nicholas said. He looked at Georgie. She was still pale, but her color had improved, and her lips had lost that terrifying bluish tint they’d acquired when the doctor had had her lie down. “Are you feeling any better?” he asked her. “You seem to be—euf!”
One of the other medical students pitched forward and knocked into him. They were all still crowded tightly around, eager to watch the great Dr. Monro at work.
“Back off!” Nicholas barked at the crowd. “She needs space.”
Georgie nodded. “They’re too close. I need—”
Another whistling wheeze.
“Everyone, take a step back,” Dr. Monro ordered. “I need room to work.”
“She needs room to breathe,” Nicholas retorted.
Dr. Monro gave him