Mrs. Crescent started her breathing, and Chloe hustled to the wash table.

“Do put on a pair of latex gloves,” Henry instructed.

“Latex gloves?” The hot water scalded her hands and the soapsuds felt—real. She snapped the gloves on. She whispered to Henry, “When were these invented? Not during the Regency, I’m sure.”

Henry lowered his voice. “If you must know, Miss Parker, it was 1964. Now please come and help Mrs. Crescent relax.”

Relax? Nothing could’ve prepared Chloe for what she saw when she turned around, except gory hospital and crime shows that she never watched because she didn’t have cable.

Chloe rocked back on her boots, reaching behind her for something to lean on. Her hand awkwardly bumped Henry right on his tight ass. All manners, he pretended nothing happened.

“I offered her a sheet for modesty as they would’ve done in the Regency, but she refused.”

Chloe knew there was no modesty in childbirth. She watched Henry unroll a suede package on the dressing table.

“Obstetric kit.”

It was an obstetric kit from the Regency era. The instruments, tucked in the suede kit with a strip of leather, looked more like pruning shears, great big tongs, some sort of a spatula, and the biggest fishhook she’d ever seen.

One glance would’ve been enough to get anyone—maybe even Grace—to sign on for a life of spinsterhood and celibacy. “You’re not really going to—”

“To use these? Hardly!” He lowered his voice to a whisper as he pulled out the wooden forceps. “But this is what the OB or ‘accoucheur’ would’ve used. We’ve come such a long way in just two hundred years. No wonder one in three women died in childbirth.”

“What?! One in three—”

“Uggggggggggh!” Mrs. Crescent’s face contorted into a grimace. Red splotches and sweat covered her face and neck.

Henry handed Chloe a stack of cool, damp washcloths. She hadn’t known that one in three women died during childbirth in the Regency. It was hard to reconcile the gowns and the glitz and the romance with this horrific statistic.

She scissor-stepped over to the bedside and dabbed Mrs. Crescent’s forehead with a washcloth. Her voice wavered. “Just think, Mrs. Crescent, soon you’ll be holding your beautiful, healthy, happy baby. Your baby will know you just by your heartbeat, your voice. It’ll look up at you—”

“It’s a wonder you know so much about childbirth!” Mrs. Crescent exhaled deeply, focusing on Chloe’s torn gown barely covered by a hastily buttoned pelisse. “Whatever happened to your gown this time? It’s a fright. An absolute fright! And your hair is down!”

A warm and glowing feeling came over Chloe, just knowing that Mrs. Crescent was still herself. She brushed Mrs. Crescent’s hair out of her face.

Henry scanned Chloe from her slightly askew amber necklace to her muddied hemline.

Chloe looked away and her eyes fell on her fan and reticule at the washstand. “Mrs. Crescent, you’ll be happy to know I remembered my fan and reticule.”

Mrs. Crescent clenched the stiff sheets on her sleigh bed.

Chloe’s knees went wobbly. She couldn’t do this. She wasn’t a nurse and this wasn’t a hospital.

“Time to push again,” Henry said with the utmost calm.

Mrs. Crescent banged her fists on the bed. “Ugh!”

Chloe let go of the wet washrag.

“One, two—” Henry counted, easing Mrs. Crescent into a more comfortable position.

Chloe’s head throbbed and she couldn’t breathe, she couldn’t take it anymore. “Henry! We need to get her to a hospital. It’s not really 1812 here, you know. She needs an epidural—now. Who the hell has a baby without an epidural?”

The cameraman aimed at Chloe. Henry dropped his watch and it dangled from his watch fob.

“Sorry. That was very unladylike.”

Henry looked with affection and sympathy at Mrs. Crescent. “Three. And breathe.”

Mrs. Crescent could breathe, but Chloe couldn’t. She broke out in a sweat.

Henry massaged Mrs. Crescent as he glared at Chloe. “Miss Parker, this is what Mrs. Crescent wants. A natural birth. It’s too late for the epidural now. Please. Get ahold of yourself. You’ll upset our rhythm.”

She gulped. She didn’t know Henry could’ve been so—type A.

Mrs. Crescent leaned over and picked up a brown medicine bottle from the night table. “Should she have a dram?”

Henry shook his head. “If you don’t need it, she doesn’t. I just concocted it for fun in my lab.”

Chloe straightened and clenched her Empire waist. “What is it? Maybe I could use it.”

“It’s laudanum, and no, you can’t have any. You don’t have any medical reason.” Henry handed the bottle to a servant. “Take it away.” The servant hid it behind Mrs. Crescent’s dressing-table mirror and then hurried to change Mrs. Crescent’s bed linens.

Mrs. Crescent huffed and puffed. “It’s an opiate.”

Chloe tilted her head. “As in opium?” Great. She had drugged Sebastian with opium.

“Yes.” Henry continued to massage Mrs. Crescent’s back. “It’s used for everything from headaches to liven up an evening in a drawing room. It’s a sort of cure-all.”

Chloe put another cool washrag on Mrs. Crescent’s forehead.

“Look.” Henry reached for a shelf above Mrs. Crescent. He lowered his voice. “We have a mobile phone in case of emergency. An ambulance is at the ready.” The phone glistened in his latex-gloved hand. Without thinking, Chloe took it from him. She squeezed it in her hand, held it close to her chest. If only she could call Abby. Emma. But knowing she or Henry could call the ambulance made her feel better, and she put the phone back on the shelf.

Henry’s valet burst into the room. “Ice shards, sir.”

“Set them near Miss Parker. Thank you.”

The valet took one look at Mrs. Crescent and bolted out the door.

“Miss Parker, please give Mrs. Crescent an ice shard—”

Mrs. Crescent opened her dry mouth and Chloe put a piece of ice on her tongue. The ice brought it all back to her. So much swirled around her. Birthing Abigail. The ice-house. Sebastian. The look on Henry’s face before he rode off.

Henry looked at his watch. “In just a bit, we’ll push again.”

The camerawoman readied for another dramatic scene.

Mrs. Crescent pushed, exhaled deeply, until at last the baby crowned.

“My baby!” Mrs. Crescent sweated and squealed with joy.

Chloe’s eyes teared up, remembering her first sight of Abigail’s face. She’d do anything for Abigail. Anything. Even this. Even marry the on-again off-again Sebastian in a fake ceremony.

Henry turned to Chloe with a list of instructions as he supported the baby’s head and eased it into the world. He lowered his voice to a whisper. “A shoulder is stuck. I need to guide it out. Here. Hold the head.”

Hold the head?! Chloe cradled the baby’s head with her slippery gloved hands.

“Should I call the ambulance?” Chloe cringed as she watched Henry work the tiny shoulder out.

“We’ll be fine. We can do it.”

A split second later he slid the shoulder out and the hot little baby slipped into Chloe’s hands. Her heart throbbed.

Henry swooped in, wiping the baby’s mouth and eyes clean. Then he lifted the baby like a prize for Mrs. Crescent to see. “It’s a girl! A girl, Mrs. Crescent!” The baby cried.

Chloe would never, ever again romanticize the Regency. Every single love that culminated in marriage would end like this: with natural childbirth. Because there wasn’t any reliable birth control. The mother would be lucky to survive, and probably become pregnant within a year, and every year thereafter. No wonder all of Jane Austen’s novels ended with the wedding!

Mrs. Crescent quivered with happiness and exhaustion. Chloe covered her with a blanket. Mrs. Crescent held her arms out for the baby.

“You’ll have her in a minute. Just a minute,” Henry said. “Miss Parker, I need you to hold the baby now.”

Chloe took the baby in her arms. She looked away as Henry cut the umbilical cord.

“Well done, Miss Parker.” He took the baby from her, and his face beamed. The room seemed to light up. “Go soothe her. Give her water. I’ll clean up the baby. Unless you want to, of course.”

Chloe laughed. “I’ll let you do that.”

Mrs. Crescent gave Chloe a little squeeze.

“Thank you, Miss Parker. You were wonderful—”

Chloe shook her head. “No—you were. The baby’s perfect. She’s beautiful. It’s the girl you always wanted.” She pulled off the soiled latex gloves, washed her hands, and poured Mrs. Crescent a glass of water. She couldn’t believe they did it. Without a hospital. Without an epidural. But she’d never want to help with a nineteenth-century birth again, that was for sure.

Henry brought the cleaned and swaddled baby toward Mrs. Crescent. But before he handed her to her mother, for just a moment, he put his arm around Chloe, and she leaned against him. She saw their shadows, the two of them, together, and a tiny profile of a baby reflected on the wall. Then he stepped away and handed the baby to Mrs. Crescent.

Henry stood right near Chloe, their arms brushed up against each other.

“Mrs. Crescent, we need to do a little stitching,” he said. “Please give the baby to Miss Parker for a moment.”

Chloe couldn’t believe it. Stitching? Without painkillers?

Mrs. Crescent kissed the baby and handed her off to Chloe, who rocked her like an old pro. Because she was an old pro! For the first time in a long time, Chloe knew where she belonged, and that was at home with her own daughter, in the land of cell phones and ambulances, hospitals, painkillers, computers, and e-mail.