Whitticombe raised his hand in a gracious gesture. "You need not concern yourself with us, cousin. Alice and I can entertain ourselves well enough." He glanced at Alice, all in black. At no time since she'd entered the room had she looked anywhere but at her plate. "With your permission," Whitticombe continued, "we'll leave immediately. The weather looks like turning, and we have no reason to dally." He glanced at Minnie, then looked up at Masters, standing behind her chair. "Our boxes could be sent on."
Minnie nodded. Tight-lipped, she glanced up at Masters, who bowed. "I'll arrange it, ma'am."
Bestowing a last unctuous, ingratiating smile on Minnie, Whitticombe rose. "Come, Alice. You'll need to pack."
Without a word, without a glance, Alice rose and preceded Whitticombe from the room.
The instant the door closed behind them, Patience looked at Minnie. Who waved her to silence. To some semblance of discretion.
Patience bit her lip, and munched her toast, and waited.
A few minutes later, Minnie heaved a sigh and pushed back her chair. "Ah, me. I'm going to rest for the morning. All these unexpected happenings." Shaking her head, she rose and looked down the table. "Patience?"
She didn't need to be summoned twice. Dropping her napkin on her plate, Patience hurried to assist Timms help Minnie from the room. They went straight to Minnie's bedchamber, summoning Sligo on the way.
He arrived as Minnie sank into her chair.
"Whitticombe's making a dash for the Hall." Minnie pointed her cane at Sligo. "Go fetch that godson of mine-fast!" She shot a glance at Patience. "I don't care if you have to drag him from his bed, just tell him our hare has finally bolted."
"Indeed, ma'am. Right away, ma'am." Sligo headed for the door. "Even in his nightshirt."
Minnie grinned grimly. "Right!" She thumped the floor with her cane. "And not before time." She looked up at Patience. "If it does turn out to be that worm, Whitticombe, behind it all, I'll disown him utterly."
Patience gripped the hand Minnie held out to her. "Let's wait and see what Vane thinks."
There was one problem with that-Vane couldn't be found.
Sligo returned to Aldford Street an hour later, with the news Vane was not at any of his habitual haunts. Minnie sent Sligo back out with a flea in his ear and a dire warning not to return without Vane.
"Where could he be?" Minnie looked at Patience.
Mystified, Patience shook her head. "I'd assumed he'd gone home-to Curzon Street."
She frowned. He couldn't possibly be walking the streets with a creased, reused cravat. Not Vane Cynster.
"He gave you no hint as to any lead he might be following?" Timms asked.
Patience grimaced. "I was under the impression he'd run out of possiblities."
Minnie humphed. "So was I. So where is he?"
No one answered. And
Sligo didn't return.
Not until late afternoon, by which time Minnie, Timms, and Patience had reached the end of their collective tether. Whitticombe and Alice had departed at noon in a hired carriage. Their boxes were piled in the front hall, awaiting the carter. Lunch had come and gone, the household marginally more relaxed. Edmond and Henry were playing billiards. The General and Edgar had taken their usual constitutional to Tattersalls. Edith was tatting with Mrs. Chadwick and Angela for company in the drawing room.
In Minnie's room, Patience and Timms took turns by the window; it was Patience who saw Vane's curricle bowl up and stop before the door. "He's here!"
"Well you can't run downstairs," Minnie admonished her. "Just contain your transports until he gets here. I want to hear where he's been."
Minutes later, Vane strolled in, smoothly elegant as ever.
His eyes went straight to Patience, then he bent and kissed Minnie's cheek.
"Where, by all that's holy, have you been?" she demanded.
Vane raised his brows. "Out. Sligo told me Whitticombe's left. What did you want to see me for?"