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“Aha!” I said. “You admit you are John Slade. What took you so long?”

He made shushing motions while he looked around to see if anyone was listening. “Be quiet! You don’t know what you’ve gotten yourself into!”

“You’re right, John Slade, I don’t. Until I do, I won’t be quiet. Now tell me, why were you in Bedlam? Did you murder the nurses? Or those women in Whitechapel? Why did you come back to England? Do you remember who I am?”

When he frowned and didn’t reply, I shouted, “Tell me, John Slade!”

Repeating his name was like chanting a magic spell that gave me power over him. Annoyed resignation settled over his features. I’d seen that same look in the past, whenever I’d determined upon doing things he thought I shouldn’t. “All right,” he said, but in a manner so cold that it was like an icicle driven into my heart. “Yes, I remember you, Miss Charlotte Bronte.” He spoke my name as formally as if we were little more than strangers. “I’ll tell you everything, on one condition-that you never breathe a word of it to anyone.”

I glared and kept silent, letting him think I agreed to his bargain; later, I would decide whether to renege. Eyeing me cautiously, he began his story: “The Foreign Office sent me to Russia. My mission was to aid and abet Russian intellectuals who are trying to bring about a revolution, and to discover what actions the Tsar plans to take against Britain.”

That corresponded to what Lord Eastbourne had told me. “Go on.” Although I began to relax because I could believe Slade so far, I warned myself against taking him at his word: deception was his trade, and I had good reason for doubt.

“While I was there, I infiltrated the Tsar’s court. The Tsar anticipates a war with Britain in the near future,” Slade said. “He’s been searching for a way to ensure his victory, and he thinks he’s found it at last.”

Here, Slade’s story departed from Lord Eastbourne’s. I listened with suspicion.

“His spies abroad learned of a scientist named Niall Kavanagh, a British citizen, Irish by birth. Dr. Kavanagh has apparently invented a device that could give its possessor a crucial advantage in a war. He is currently building a model of his device for the British government, which is keeping him hidden. The Tsar means to have the device.”

“How do you know this?” I asked.

“From eavesdropping on the Tsar’s private conversations in the Kremlin,” Slade said. “The Tsar has sent his favorite spy to fetch Dr. Kavanagh to Moscow. The spy is a man named Wilhelm Stieber.” Darkness pooled in the depths of Slade’s crystalline gray eyes. “Wilhelm Stieber also serves as chief spy to the King of Prussia. He is an expert at espionage, with his own agents all over Europe.” His tone indicated a strong personal dislike for Stieber, and perhaps a rivalry between two expert spies pitted against each other in a deadly game. “I came back to England to find Kavanagh before Stieber does and keep him out of the Tsar’s hands.”

I wished to believe Slade. How I wished it with all my heart! But his story about the scientist and the secret device seemed fantastic, and I had no corroboration for it. “How does this explain why you were arrested for murder and committed to Bedlam?”

“Stieber employs agents among the staff at Bedlam. He has turned the asylum to his own purposes. He kidnaps political refugees, smuggles them into Bedlam, and tortures them to extract information about anti-Tsarist plots among the immigrant community. He has begun using the same tactics on British officials, trying to learn where Niall Kavanagh is.”

Such audacious behavior by a foreign mastermind was credible to me. I’d gained intimate knowledge of another foreign mastermind, in 1848. But my distrust of Slade deepened: perhaps he’d invented the story because he thought I would believe it based on our past experiences. “You didn’t answer my question.”

Slade narrowed his eyes; he knew I suspected he was lying. “I’m getting to that. When I arrived in England, I searched for Kavanagh. I tapped all my usual sources, but it was as if he’d dropped off the earth. I wondered if Stieber had already spirited him out of England. I went to Whitechapel to get news of Stieber from the European refugees there. They pass around news about their homelands and the authorities who drove them out. I posed as Josef Typinski, a Polish immigrant. I heard that Stieber had been seen at Bedlam. I obtained a position as a janitor there. I watched for Stieber, and when he showed up, I spied on him.”

“You weren’t spying or working as a janitor when I saw you,” I said. “You were an inmate in the criminal lunatics’ ward. Explain that.”

Memory and anger suffused Slade’s expression, all the while he watched me, trying to predict what I might do next. “Stieber found me out. I don’t know how. He must have tipped the police onto me. One minute I was asleep in bed; the next, I was locked up in Bedlam for the murders of three women I’d never heard of, that I didn’t commit. Two nurses in the criminal lunatics’ ward were in Stieber’s pay. So was the doctor. He and Stieber tortured me in an attempt to learn what I was up to and what I knew about Niall Kavanagh.”

This was the scene I had witnessed. Wilhelm Stieber was the sinister, foreign-looking man who’d presided over Slade’s torture. Or so Slade said. “Did you kill the nurses?”

“I had to.” Slade spoke with a combination of guilt and defiance. “Stieber was going to kill me. It was the only way I could escape.”

He’d explained everything logically, but not to my satisfaction. “I don’t believe you.” I was all the angrier because he’d tried to dupe me.

“Why not? It’s the truth.” His gaze steadfastly held mine.

I fired the shot that would pierce his tissue of lies: “Because you’re not on a mission for the Foreign Office. You’re no longer in their employ. You’re a traitor!”

He blinked. “Where did you get that idea?”

“From Lord Eastbourne.”

“You spoke with Lord Eastbourne?” Alarm resonated in Slade’s voice.

“This very morning. After I saw you last night.” With Katerina. I bit my tongue before I could utter the words. My pride refused to let Slade know his that unfaithfulness had hurt me more than his betrayal of our country.

“What else did Lord Eastbourne tell you?” Slade asked.

“That you were executed for treason. He thinks you’re dead.”

“Well, that’s obviously not the case.” Slade spread his hands. “Here I am.”

“Are you?” My voice and my heart filled with raw anguish. “Are you the John Slade I used to know?”

He brushed off my words with an impatient gesture. “I am not a traitor. The fact that I’m not dead should convince you that Lord Eastbourne is wrong.” He began to pace, and I sensed his thoughts speeding through his mind. “Did you tell Lord Eastbourne you saw me?”

“Yes,” I admitted.

Slade grimaced in displeasure. He ran his hand through his unruly black hair. I remembered the feel of its silky tangles. My heart clenched painfully. “What did Lord Eastbourne say?” Slade asked.

“He didn’t believe me. He said I was mistaken. He advised me to forget you.”

“Have you told anyone else anything about me?”

“I told Dr. Forbes, my acquaintance who showed me round Bedlam the day I saw you. And George Smith, my publisher. He accompanied me to Whitechapel to look for you. Your landlady gave us a tour of your lodgings. I found a playbill for the Royal Pavilion Theater. That’s how I happened to be there last night.”

“Damnation!” Slade said. “You always were an obstinate, inquisitive woman who went places where she had no business!”

This was the first sign of personal emotion Slade had expressed toward me. These were his first words that revealed he knew me better than he purported. Although they weren’t flattering, my heart leapt. “So you do remember me! You haven’t forgotten!”

I was too proud to beg him to say he recalled wanting to marry me. Instead, I willed him to remember what we’d once been to each other. I extended my hand in a mute plea.