people.â
âWeâre free to move about within the UK as we see fit. I quite suspect youâd find it a different matter if you tried to drive from Poland to Portugal. What was it Mr. Churchill once said? About the iron curtain that had been drawn around Europe?â
âChurchill was a good man for his time,â said Viola, joining the discussion to support her husband. âThe man we needed during the war. Nobody denies that bringing us through those years was nothing if not miraculous.â Under the table, Gwendolyn squeezed Willâs hand. Unaware that she had raked an old wound, Viola plunged ahead, parroting things she had heard from her husband: âBut that was a different time. He had an outmoded, adversarial view of socialism. Itâs fortunate weâre not tied to that yoke any longer.â
âWell said, dear,â said Aubrey. To Gwendolyn, he said, âI do agree that our cousins across the Channel are not so enlightened as we in certain areas. Which is precisely why Iâve sponsored several measures over the years aimed at fostering greater openness and cultural exchange between our peoples. We stand to benefit as much as they.â
(âSurely you mean âcomrades across the Channel,ââ said Gwendolyn, sotto voce.)
âAubrey has been pushing for such reforms since before the notion of détente was in vogue,â Viola said.
âDétente? Is that what weâre calling it?â said Gwendolyn. âThe African situation strikes me as something of a stalemate. They support a revolution, or a workersâ revolt, and we counter it by supporting the opposition.â
Viola ignored her. âIn fact, he was advocating for change long before the Great Famine of â42.â
Aubrey shook his head. âDreadful, that.â
Gwendolyn squeezed Willâs hand again. This time her soothing touch lingered, and Aubreyâs disdain for open displays of affection be damned. The Great European Famine was the result of an exceptionally harsh winter. An unnatural winter. Will had been part of the team of warlocks tasked with creating that brutal weather. Heâd been cut loose before the effort succeeded (more honestly, it had succeeded because heâd been tossed out), but not before heâd done wicked things for Crown and Country. Magical acts bought with blood.
Talk of the famine dredged up haunting memories, rekindled a long-smoldering guilt. Raked a wound that was always fresh, always tender. Sometimes, late at night when the memories attacked, Will couldnât meet his own eyes in the mirror.
But of course, Viola and even Aubrey were unaware of such things. There were men in Whitehall who would be quite displeased if they knew how completely Will had confided in his future wife during his long recuperation and reintroduction to civilized society. But they could go hang. Each and every one of them.
âIâd also submit,â said Gwendolyn, âthat the Japanese donât share your views of détente.â
The Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere scraped against the eastern reaches of the Soviet Union like flint on steel. Border skirmishes flared where the sparks fell.
Viola shook her head knowingly. âWell, now, you simply canât reason with those people. Theyâre not like us, you know. Brutal. Warlike. They lack the civilizing influence of a Christian faith. Twenty years of fighting!â She shuddered. âAnd what they did in Manchuriaâ¦â
âSpeaking of cultural exchanges,â said Aubrey, nudging the conversation in a direction less upsetting to his wife, âI spoke to Ambassador Fedotov today. Heâll be hosting a reception next week.â He raised his eyebrows, looking earnestly at both Will and Gwen. âYouâre available, I hope?â His smile was of the type wielded by only the wealthiest men, and only to their peers. âI give you my word the gathering