Partner can not have much. If declarer only has 14 hcp for bidding game, the most partner can have is another JACK, he can have the queen of hearts only if East bid game with 13 hcp, and the heart queen is the only queen HE could have.
First question, was partner trying to tell us he could ruff a club when he played the
♥2? The answer is, probably no unless he is a very good player and he truly respects our ability. Most people will play a low heart all the time here out of fear that a high heart might convince us he has a spade honor (which we know he can't possibly have). A great partner will realize that from our own holding we will know that he can not have a spade honor (assumption if we are beating this, I must have all our side points). So a great partner would play a high heart suggest a spade honor IF he couldn't ruff a club. This game can get tough,
So with a partner who would play a high heart in this situation anytime he couldn;t ruff the third round of clubs, I would return a club. So let's assume that we can't be certain what partners low heart meant.
If partner has the
♥Queen, this is down, we get
♠A, two hearts and the club already in the pocket. This does not even require me to cash the spade ace, because declarer can come to four hearts, a club, and three diamonds. Partner ruffs the fourth diamond and leads a spade.
So lets ignore partner having the heart queen. Can we set this without a club ruff if partner lacks the heart queen? There is one case. Declarer has a singleton diamond. We can exit with the
♦Ten and declarer wins in dummy. Now he has a problem. If he ruffs a club to pull trumps, he has to lose a couple of spades at least. If he runs diamonds, partner ruffs the fourth one and he overruffs, but comes to five hearts, 1 club, and three diamonds for only nine tricks. The problem with this defense is it fails if diamonds are 2=2, but only when partner can not ruff a club anyway, because declarer has no entry to his hand. So, it is diamond Ten for me to trick FIVE, if my partner is not, well, me.
or someone who is on the same page as me about signalling.