one that Scarlett and Jameson deserved, but the knowledge that I’d failed to convince Georgia she could have that same happiness in her own life. I breathed through the pain and managed to type out a text that wasn’t a thousand apologies and a plea to take me back.
NOAH: Are you sure? The happy one is better written.
Because it had my heart and soul in it. It was the right one.
GEORGIA: I’m sure. This one is trademark you. Don’t doubt your ability to rip someone’s heart out.
Ouch. She was freezing over again, not that I blamed her. Hell, I’d caused it.
NOAH: I love you, Georgia.
She didn’t reply. I hadn’t expected her to.
“I’ll prove it,” I said to myself, to her, to the world.
Chapter Thirty
May 1942
Ipswich, England
Clack. Clack. Clack. The sound of typing filled the kitchen as Scarlett broke the heart of the diplomat’s daughter.
Her heart clenched, as if she could feel the very pain she was putting her character through. She reminded herself that she would put them back together once they had both grown enough to deserve the other. This wasn’t a permanent heartbreak. This was a lesson.
The knocks at the door nearly blended into the monotonous clicks of the typewriter.
Nearly.
She glanced up at the clock. It was after eleven, but it was also the first night Constance was scheduled to be back from her honeymoon.
Scarlett pushed away from the table and walked to the door barefoot, steeling her heart for whatever she might find on the other side. Who knew what that monster could have done to her little sister in the last week?
She plastered a smile on her face, then opened the front door.
She blinked in confusion.
Howard stood on her doorstep, dressed in uniform, his face drawn and pale.
He wasn’t the only one. Behind him stood other faces she recognized, all in uniform with eagles on their shoulders.
Her stomach pitched, and she gripped the doorframe with white knuckles. How many? How many of them were here?
“Scarlett,” Howie said, clearing his throat when his voice broke.
How many?
Her eyes jumped from one hat to the next as she counted. Eleven. There were eleven pilots outside her door.
“Scarlett,” Howie tried again, but she could barely make out the words.
Jameson usually flew in a formation of twelve. Three flights of four.
Eleven of them were here.
No. No. No. This wasn’t happening. It wasn’t possible.
“Don’t say it,” she whispered as gravity shifted beneath her feet. There would only be one reason they were here.
Howie removed his hat, and the others followed suit.
Oh God. This was really happening.
She had the instant, overwhelming urge to slam the door in their faces, to un-open the letter, but the words were already written, weren’t they? There was nothing she could do to stop this from becoming what it already was.
Her eyes squeezed shut, and she leaned in to the sturdy wood of the doorframe as her heart caught up to what her brain already knew. Jameson hadn’t come home.
“Scarlett, I’m so sorry,” Howie said softly.
She took a fortifying breath, then straightened her spine, lifted her chin, and opened her eyes. “Is he dead?”
There were words she’d asked herself hundreds of times over the past two years. Words that haunted her brain, amplifying her worst fear every time he’d be late. Words that taunted her sanity while she’d been a plotter. Words she’d never before spoken aloud.
“We don’t know.” Howard shook his head.
“You don’t know?” Scarlett’s knees trembled, but she stayed standing. Maybe he wasn’t dead. Maybe there was hope.
“He went down somewhere around the coast of the Netherlands. From what he said on the radio, and what some of us saw, he took a hit to the fuel tank.”
Heads nodded, but there weren’t many eyes willing to meet hers.
“So there’s a chance he’s alive.” She stated it as fact, and the fraying edges of her composure latched on to the possibility with a ferocity she hadn’t known she was capable of.
“The cloud cover was thick,” Howard said.
There was a mumble of agreement among the pilots.
“None of you saw him crash?” she asked, a dull roar filling her ears.
They all shook their heads.
“He said he was going down.” Howie’s face crumpled for a heartbeat, but he sucked in a deep breath and pulled himself together. “He said to tell you that he loves you. That was the last thing he said before he disappeared.” He ended in a whisper.
Her breaths came faster and faster, and it was all she could do to keep the panic at bay. He