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“It’s like a carnival,” I said.

“Or like Romans come to watch the gladiators fight,” Slade said. “This is blood sport in the name of the law.”

Two sheriffs emerged from the prison. As they sat on the benches on the scaffold, the crowd’s noise quieted to an expectant hum. The hangman came out next and stood by the gibbet. Then the pastor appeared, escorting Lord Eastbourne.

Men cheered and booed, boys whistled; they doffed and waved their hats. Ladies and girls applauded. My attention riveted upon Lord Eastbourne. He wore a formal black suit; his wrists were tied behind his back. His jaw was tight; his ruddy complexion had gone pale. His eyes looked straight ahead as he mounted the steps to the gallows. He seemed unaware of the crowds, their jeers. I shrank from him, afraid that our gazes would meet, that I would see the hatred and anger he must feel toward me because I had played a role in his downfall.

Lord Eastbourne ignored the galleries. If he knew that Slade and I were there, he gave no indication. He stoically took his place on a trapdoor set into the platform, under the gibbet.

The crowd fell almost silent. Only a few coughs, a crying child, and the faraway sounds of the city disturbed the hush that engulfed the execution ground. My heart raced; I could hardly breathe. The pastor asked Lord Eastbourne if he had any final words.

Lord Eastbourne could have said that he was guilty of nothing except rash ambition and going behind the Queen’s back. He could have pointed out that he’d tried to put Niall Kavanagh out of action and undo the damage he’d done. He could have added that letting me rot in jail and letting the government think Slade was a traitor were not capital crimes. He could have protested that he’d been sentenced to die only because someone had to pay for the fiasco at the Great Exhibition. All these statements would have been true. But nothing he said could alter his fate.

Lord Eastbourne shook his head. He didn’t lower himself by pleading his case to the riffraff. He stood tall and proud while the pastor intoned prayers for him, but I was close enough to see him trembling. The hangman drew a white cotton nightcap over his head, bound a muslin handkerchief over his face. I saw his breath suck and puff at the cloth over his mouth. The hangman placed the rope around Lord Eastbourne’s neck and tightened the noose. He bent and withdrew the pin that held the trapdoor in place.

The trapdoor fell, opening a rectangular hole beneath Lord Eastbourne.

He dropped some two feet into the hole.

I winced as the rope pulled taut. I heard him grunt, his neck snap.

With his white-shrouded head canted at an angle, Lord Eastbourne writhed for a terrible moment. Then he was still. His clothes were limp and loose, as if the man had gone out of them. A corpse swung from the gibbet.

The crowd went wild. People cheered, stamped their feet, and howled. Police forced the mob away from the scaffold. I felt so faint that the riotous scene wavered before me.

Slade took my hand. “Let’s get out of here.”

When we were inside a carriage, riding through the crowds that streamed away from Newgate Prison, I recovered enough to say, “I thought I would feel that Lord Eastbourne got what he deserved and justice had been done. But I don’t.” There was a hollow in my heart, a sense of unfinished business rather than vindication. “It’s as if his death wasn’t punishment enough. And I feel evil because I participated in the taking of a human life, which I am beginning to doubt anyone has the right to do, even in the case of traitors or murderers.”

“I know,” Slade said. “Those have been my thoughts, too, at every execution I’ve seen. Hanging is an eye for an eye, but it doesn’t always satisfy the need for vengeance. That can persist even after the criminal is dead, when he’s beyond our reach.” A frown darkened his features, which were thin and drawn from the hardships he’d suffered. “And in this case, Lord Eastbourne wasn’t the only guilty party, or the one who most deserved punishment.”

I nodded, equally distressed. Wilhelm Stieber was still at large.

“That reminds me. I may have some news of Stieber.” Slade took from his pocket a letter that he’d received this morning. He opened the envelope and unfolded the letter. “It’s from the Foreign Office. They’ve been searching for Stieber, canvassing Whitechapel, questioning the European refugees. One of their informants sighted Stieber aboard a ship that was bound for Casablanca.” Slade added bitterly, “He’s given us the slip.”

I murmured in disappointment, but I wasn’t surprised. Slade exclaimed, “I wish I could have killed the bastard!”

“You were faced with a difficult choice,” I reminded him. He had loved me enough to sacrifice his revenge, and he’d put the good of the many ahead of his own momentary, long-desired satisfaction. “You made the right one.”

“… Yes,” Slade said.

I knew he was thinking over the events of that night, wondering what he might have done differently. I told him a deep-seated belief of mine: “If one thing had turned out differently, so might everything else. If you had killed Stieber, perhaps you couldn’t have saved us all.”

Slade looked skeptical, then resigned. “Perhaps I could have. But there’s not much use in debating; we’ll never know. It’s over.”

“It is,” I said, relieved. “If England and Russia go to war someday, we can be glad that Niall Kavanagh’s weapon won’t be used by either side. Perhaps Stieber will get his just desserts. But for now we can think about our future.” We had discussed it this past week, and we’d agreed that the first thing we must do was break the news of our marriage to my father, in person. Furthermore, I wanted a real wedding, in our church at home. “Shall we leave for Haworth today?”

Slade wasn’t listening. He continued reading his letter, and a strange expression of gladness mixed with dismay came over his face.

“What is it?” I asked.

“I’ve been reinstated. I am an agent of the Foreign Office once again.”

“But that’s good news.” I was delighted for him, because I knew this was what he wanted, his honor and the Crown’s trust in him restored. “Isn’t it?”

He put aside the letter and took my hands in his. The anguish in his eyes told me everything. Tears welled up in my eyes. “Oh, no.”

“Oh, yes, I hate to say. The bad news is that I’m being sent out on an assignment.”

I clung to him in a futile attempt to keep him with me, but duty had called; he must answer, and I knew he wanted to go. His work was in his blood, as writing was in mine. I would not ask him to give up his vocation. He’d offered to do so when he’d proposed to me three years ago, but I had refused because I couldn’t let him make the sacrifice and I couldn’t leave Haworth. The only compromise would have been to live apart, which neither of us had wanted. Now that we were married, I must brave the separation.

“An assignment where?” I asked faintly. “To do what?”

“I can’t tell you,” Slade said. “It’s supposed to be kept secret. In fact, I won’t know myself until I board the ship.”

“When is that?”

Slade exhaled in sad regret. “Tomorrow morning.”

I was alarmed. “But you’re wounded. How can they put you back to work so soon?”

“My wound isn’t serious. It’ll heal while I’m en route to wherever I’m going.”

“After everything you’ve been through for the sake of England, don’t you deserve a respite?” I said, indignant. “Couldn’t you ask for one?”

“I’m afraid not,” Slade said.

“Perhaps if we told your superiors at the Foreign Office that we are newly married, they would grant us a little time together.”

“They wouldn’t.” Slade explained, “The Queen herself ordered that I should go on this mission.”

I remembered the Queen’s barbed references to my vigil at Slade’s bedside during our night at Buckingham Palace. She was aware that we were lovers, even though she didn’t know we’d married. I also remembered her anger at me for bringing the business with Niall Kavanagh, Wilhelm Stieber, and Lord Eastbourne to a head, even though I’d done it inadvertently and things would have been worse if I hadn’t. A part of her blamed me for the near disaster at the Great Exhibition. She couldn’t forgive me, and she still couldn’t forget that I had been involved in the endangerment of her children three years ago. She’d been forced, once again, to declare me a heroine, but she had found a most personal way to punish me.