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  “Ah, well. If not for our ‘trifling with nature,’ your wife might not be with us today.”

  His head jerked back to the formidable woman who funded this clinic and the doctor’s work out of her own pockets. She watched him, seeming to see into the very heart of his worry and fear. “You’re very correct, Mrs. Campbell. I apologize if my comment sounded…intolerant.” He coughed. “I assure you, I’m very grateful for everything you and Dr. Helmholtz have done for my wife.”

  She took a small sip of tea before placing the delicate willowware back on the small table. “Not to worry, Colonel. It is a sad truth that society will disapprove of what it does not comprehend, and our dear doctor’s advancements are still received with great wariness by most. We are only grateful that the fine men and women who serve Britain’s greater interests are helped by Dr. Helmholtz’s skill.”

  “That is very true.” Helmholtz had been working strictly for the War Office for the last year, and it was lucky for Jasper that it had offered the doctor’s help after Callie’s attack. He got to his feet. “I apologize for my rudeness, madam, but if you will be so good as to excuse me, I would see Calliandra now.”

  “Yes, of course. When you’re ready to turn in for the night, we’ve made up a room for your use. Your man can show you which one, and hopefully you will be able to entice Lady Carlisle to the breakfast table in the morning.”

  “I look forward to it. Thank you.”

  She clasped her hands together crisply. “Now, go on. Don’t let me keep you any longer. Lady Carlisle has been informed of your arrival and awaits you upstairs. You know the way, I believe.”

  He nodded. Apprehension and elation warred within him. At the doorway of the drawing room he stopped to look back over his shoulder. “Does she… Will she…?”

  “Your lady wife is Calliandra, the most celebrated danseuse of the age, is she not?”

  He nodded.

  “A woman who could achieve the level of celebrity on the stage that she did from such humble beginnings and in such a short time has already proven she has the kind of strength and determination that will get her through something like this. Give her a chance.” The formidable woman’s tone was surprisingly gentle, although that was the only soft thing about her.

  He knew she’d been the victim of a railway accident eight years ago that resulted in the loss of her hand. Thanks to Dr. Helmholtz and what must be an inner core of steel, she’d not only survived, but now lived with a fully functioning mechanical appendage. To thank the doctor properly, she had put her not inconsequential inheritance to good use giving him a place to practice his not inconsequential skill on others.

  In fact, Jasper had heard of the clinic last year when his own sergeant had lost a leg to infection and been sent here to have an artificial limb fitted. The man had apparently recovered well, although he’d subsequently been reassigned to another unit. Jasper had thought then that a doctor who could accomplish such miracles might be both a magician and a devil.

  He had thought it again when the lieutenant from the War Office had offered Dr. Helmholtz’s expertise to save Callie’s life, but by that time he’d been desperate and would have tried anything—even surrendering his own freedom to the War Office.

  “Physically, Dr. Helmholtz says she has completely recovered.”

  “Will she be able to dance?” Jasper knew how important that would be to her.

  “For that, you would be better to ask the doctor.” The woman pressed her lips together and frowned. “Lady Carlisle may experience some restrictions of movement, but in many ways the new limbs should perform even better—” She paused at Jasper’s look and sighed. “I don’t know to what extent she might be able to dance again, but I think the likelihood would be low. In any case, although her recovery has been very quick…this is only my own untrained opinion, you understand…but there is still much healing for her to do.”

  Yes, there was likely to be quite a bit of healing for the both of them to do. But he swore that from this moment forward, they would at least do it together. He wouldn’t leave her again.

  Jasper bowed politely before he took his leave and returned to the large entrance hall.

  At the top of the stairs, he automatically turned left. One of the things he liked about Mrs. Campbell’s clinic was that it was her home. As forbidding as it looked from the outside, inside ancestral portraits graced the walls, threadbare rugs covered highly polished oak floors that released the comforting smell of lemon oils into the air, and tea was served in the salon. Granted, specific areas had been stripped of such things and equipped with the doctor’s necessary surgical instruments, but otherwise it felt much like his own home. Formal, but lived-in. Intimate, and welcoming. Distinctly un-hospital-like in decoration.

  He hadn’t wanted to leave Callie in one of those monstrosities with echoing caverns for hallways and hopeless, impersonal rooms that made a person want to bleed just to get some color on the walls. He shivered at the thought.

  He walked slowly down the hall. It was easy enough to remember where everything was even though he’d stayed at Callie’s side almost exclusively until the moment they had forced him to leave. It still hurt to think of. The pain and desolation in her eyes had almost broken him. They’d had to drug her to get her settled down again, and then the doctor had come out and explained what needed to be done. Jasper’s horror had escalated with every new procedure proposed, but then he’d pictured Callie’s still, white face, her broken body hovering on the edge of death, and he’d said yes.

  He’d said yes to everything.

  Chapter Three

  A uniformed man stood at attention in front of the door to Callie’s room. He lifted a hand in formal salute at Jasper’s approach. “Colonel, I’m glad to see that you made it through the storm without undue delay.”

  Malcolm and Murphy were his most trusted men. He’d taken bullets meant for each of them, and they’d done the same for him in the line of duty. Things like that forged bonds that were about more than duty, and over the years the three of them had become very good friends.

  He approached and clapped Malcolm on the shoulder, giving his other hand up for a firm shake. “How has she been?”

  Just as Jasper would have expected, the captain got right to business and didn’t reveal his true feelings either by expression or deed. “All the physical components of Lady Carlisle’s rehabilitation are complete. The doctor has cleared her to leave the clinic whenever you’re ready to return home.”

  Jasper’s gaze strayed to the door. It was the only thing that remained between him and his wife. “And what of her…psychological recovery?”

  Malcolm paused. When he spoke, his tone hadn’t changed, was still completely professional, but Jasper knew the man well enough to be able to tell when something was bothering him. “Since my arrival two weeks ago, I don’t believe she’s spoken to anyone, and certainly not to me. I can’t be sure she even knows who I am.”

  It was through Malcolm that Jasper and Callie had been introduced. They were childhood friends who had kept in touch after Callie started her dancing career and Malcolm left to serve his first tour under Colonel Wyndham. Before long she was renowned far and wide as a beautiful and talented prima ballerina, and Malcolm had eventually come under Jasper’s command.

  Jasper had used the connection to meet the famous Calliandra, surprised and impressed to discover that the hauntingly beautiful and mysterious dancer was a bright woman full of vibrancy who made him feel ten feet tall. He’d pursued her relentlessly until she finally agreed to marry him.

  And the rest was history.

  So when Jasper had finally received word that Callie was recovered enough to return home, he’d only trusted Malcolm to go on ahead to the clinic while he took care of the last bit of business, the last loose end before he would feel safe enough to fetch her. “The doctor said her throat had been badly damaged—”

  “It’s not that she can’t speak, because she screams well enough in the
middle of the night.”

  Jasper’s fists clenched at his side, but he nodded. “What else?” There was more. He could tell there was more.

  “She’s become more withdrawn since she learned you were on your way. Hasn’t come out of her room for three days.”

  “All right.” He took a deep breath and looked past the big soldier. “Thank you for watching over her until I could get here.”

  Malcolm paused. “There’s still more.”

  “What is it?”

  “You weren’t the only visitor expected this week.”

  “What do you mean? A new patient for the doctor?”

  His expression turned fierce. “Apparently, General Black is coming. He’s coming here to see Callie.” Malcolm hated the general almost as much as Jasper did himself. “The storm might have delayed his arrival for another couple of days, but he’ll be here before Yuletide.”

  “Then we’ll be gone before Yuletide.” Jasper deliberately pushed aside his anger to deal with later. He wouldn’t be any good to Callie if he walked into her room seething with rage. “Let me know if you hear anything more.”

  He stepped past the captain.

  “Colonel.” Malcolm dropped a hand on his shoulder to stop him. “Did you know this was going to happen?”

  He turned back around, meeting his friend’s hard gaze. “I had been told from the start that there would be a price for saving Callie. The War Office’s involvement practically guaranteed it. Although, at the time I believed that I would be the one to pay it. And you know I would have gladly paid anything.”

  “But they can’t mean to… You’re not going to let him take her, are you?”

  His hand clenched into a tight fist at his side at just the thought of that bastard getting anywhere near what was his. “Not without a fight.”

  “Good. I want in on that fight.”

  Jasper nodded, grateful to have the experienced captain in his corner. “I wouldn’t have it any other way.”

  Before he could enter Callie’s room, Malcolm stopped him again. “Did you find the third?”

  “Dead.”

  “Good.”

  “Now there’s only one more.” The bastard behind it all. The traitor. “And we’ll find him too.”

  “Count on it.”

  It was warm as he entered Callie’s room. The fire looked like it had been stoked recently. It crackled and popped with energetic vigor.

  His gaze found her in the window seat staring out at the deepening twilight. Her knees were bent and she rested her chin on them. He was glad to see it because it meant she had control of and flexibility in her artificial legs.

  How long had she been sitting there? Long enough to have been watching the snow fall while he did the same back on the train?

  She didn’t look up and seemed lost in thought, but he could tell she knew he was there from the tightening of her shoulders. After stepping across the threshold, he stopped in his tracks and drank in as much of her as he could. With the firelight causing the shadows to flicker and dance, she seemed naught more than a dream. Insubstantial. If he blinked, she might be gone. Gone for good.

  Her hair was so short, shorter than she’d ever worn it. After their arrival at the clinic, the doctor had shaved her long silky hair to bore a hole into her head. She’d been unconscious for a whole day by then and the quack had said her brain was swelling, that the pressure on her skull needed to be eased immediately or she would never wake up. At the time, Jasper hadn’t been able to credit what he was hearing, but Cassie had looked so pale, so close to death. There’d been no choice but to let him try it.

  He hadn’t handled it well. It hadn’t mattered that he’d once dug a bullet from his own thigh or that he’d watched men die in all sorts of horrible ways, right in front of him. It hadn’t mattered that Callie had always been so strong, completely capable of handling herself. This had been different.

  Miracle of miracles, the procedure had actually worked. The doctor had proven himself more than just a quack after all. Still, later Jasper had collapsed in a chair by Callie’s bedside and wept for hours and hours. He wanted to weep again now for all she’d suffered, but knew he couldn’t do that.

  Her glossy dark locks were growing back in, with thick curls that went every which way. It lent her a gamine quality that complemented the pensive, faraway look on the face reflected in the glass of the window. He searched for the other changes, but besides being much too thin, the shadows quickly invading the room prevented him from seeing more of her face—until she finally turned to look at him.

  And then it was impossible not to see all the differences. They bludgeoned him in the head and gut. They hit so hard, he almost took a step back, but caught himself at the last minute.

  Ah God, her poor eye…

  He squeezed his own eyes closed, unable to keep from imagining the agony she must have endured at the hands of those monsters.

  His only consolation, however minor, was that he’d spent the long months of her recuperation tracking down every one of the three spies who’d crept into their home and hurt her. He’d hunted them down. Tied them down. And repeated to them every violent, bloody, agonizing injury they had forced on her. Including taking their eyes.

  Before he’d killed them.

  When he looked at her, she’d already turned back to the window, shoulders stiff.

  “Oh, Callie, I’m sorry.” He was afraid his momentary lapse had hurt her. That she’d seen his involuntary horror before he’d been able to push it back down. “Please don’t turn away from me.”

  She didn’t acknowledge him, but he watched a small shiver move through her and stifled a wince at her visible rejection. After a long moment, he realized he remained standing just inside the doorway like a dumbstruck idiot.

  This wasn’t the reunion he’d expected. He didn’t know what he’d expected, but not this painful, absolute silence.

  Suddenly, the barrier between them was so much greater than a physical door, as he’d believed only a few minutes ago out in the hall. The barrier between them was built out of anger and pain and guilt. He’d thought he could handle it, but now that he was here he realized how wrong he’d been. He didn’t know what to do to bring the wall down.

  In the two years they’d been husband and wife, Jasper had never come into a room where Callie was waiting and not taken her into his arms. He’d never hesitated to greet her with a scorching kiss, and she’d always welcomed him with bright smiles and laughter.

  But now he was afraid.

  He pushed his feet into motion. When he reached her side, he touched her shoulder.

  She whipped around so fast he didn’t even see her fist smack him in the chest, could only feel the impact of it as she sent him stumbling back a half dozen steps.

  When he regained his balance, Callie had come down from the window seat and retreated to a corner of the room, her back against the wall. He stepped toward her, but she hissed and raised her hand to ward him off. Her mechanical hand.

  Jasper held back. Although he’d prepared himself, the sight of that unnatural gray iron in place of Callie’s warm, smooth skin shocked him more than he thought it would. He hesitated for half a heartbeat before shaking off the unworthy feeling.

  It’s Callie. And she’s alive.

  He reached for her again. “Calliandra, please.”

  Although no actual fear showed in her face—no fear, no anger, no nothing—her body was pressed so closely to the wall she might go right through it if he dared take another step toward her.

  He drew in a deep breath, hoping he projected all the reassuring things he wanted to say out loud, but for some reason couldn’t. God, he was going to lose her.

  Just take it slow. Take it slow. Give her time.

  He didn’t approach her again. He didn’t speak to her again. Instead, he backed off and took a seat in a chair across the room.

  Callie remained standing in the corner, watching him. He wondered what was going through her hea
d. Did she hate him for what had happened, for not being there to protect her? Did she even remember him and what they’d meant to each other? Or was it as the doctor had implied and she’d been forced to eradicate certain memories in order to survive the trauma? Maybe the memories of him had been too closely connected to those of her torture and near death? Maybe she’d talked herself into forgetting everything, including the years of happiness and love, in order to start over with a clean slate.

  After a few minutes, her shoulders relaxed and she carefully returned to the window seat, settling back in as if he wasn’t even there, to watch the snow falling heavily on the other side of the glass.

  They stayed like that for hours. Callie ignoring him. Jasper looking at her, trying to project strength and calm. Neither of them managed perfectly.

  When a long set of reverberant gongs echoed from the standing clock out in the hall, he realized it was midnight and reluctantly got to his feet. He didn’t want to leave her, but guessed that she wouldn’t sleep until he did. “Good night, Callie,” he said gently. “I’ll see you in the morning.”

  She didn’t turn or acknowledge him in any way as he walked across the room, but as he pulled open the door, he thought she whispered his name. “Jasper.”

  It was something. It was a start. Whether the start of the end for them, or maybe a new beginning, he just couldn’t be sure.

  Unable to sleep, he’d been nursing a brandy for the last two hours and chewing over all the mistakes he’d made. Then. Now. So many mistakes.

  He’d been here for two days and made very little progress. He worried that General Black would show up any minute, but Callie still refused to speak. She refused to acknowledge him, touch him, or even leave her room, and he refused to force her after all she’d already been through.

  The only thing that kept him going were the brief moments when he said or did something and a flash of emotion broke over her face, as if she wanted to respond, but didn’t dare. As if to do so would put a crack in her armor, and she might just fall apart.