Road.â
âFor heavenâs sake, thatâs just round the corner. The Bacchus at one?â
Rona sighed. Lindsey always wore her down. âIâll be there,â she said.
Lindsey was already seated at an alcove table.
âWhereâs Gus?â she asked, as Rona joined her.
âSpending the day with Max. I canât cope with him when Iâm working.â
âYou fixed yourself up with the Willows, then?â
âYes; Iâm based at their home in Oak Avenue. Down past the station,â she added, in response to her twinâs enquiring eyebrow.
Lindsey picked up the wine bottle and filled Ronaâs glass. âIt was arranged at the Kingstonsâ dinner party?â
Rona nodded. âThis is my first full day.â
âAnd Iâve scuppered it. Well, sorry and all that, but I wanted you to see this.â
She reached in her handbag, produced a page from a society magazine, and passed it across the table.
It was filled with photographs taken at some function, and Rona wondered what she was supposed to be looking at. Not recognizing anyone, she turned to the text for elucidation. And found it.
Under a shot of a smiling couple seated at a table ran the caption: Lady Miranda Barrington-Selby and Mr Dominic Frayne.
Rona studied the faces with interest. So this was the famous Dominic. The picture was too small to distinguish features, but her eyes moved critically over the thick hair, the confident smile. And the girl with her hand possessively on his arm looked young enough to be his daughter.
Unwillingly, Rona looked up to meet her sisterâs eyes.
âThe magazineâs dated the ninth of April,â Lindsey said unsteadily. âThatâs after we met.â
âBut you hadnât been out with him then,â Rona pointed out reasonably. âPerhaps he dumped her after meeting you. You didnât think heâd been living in a monastery, did you?â
âOr perhaps he hasnât dumped her,â Lindsey said darkly, âand thatâs how he spends all those weeks when I donât hear from him. Lady Miranda, for Godâs sake! I canât compete with that! And just look at her, Ro! She looks about twelve! If Iâd seen that photo without knowing either of them, Iâd have taken him for a dirty old man!â
âOh, come on! Heâs not that old. Where did you find this?â
âAt the dentistâs, where else? I had my six-monthly check this morning.â
âPity they donât update their magazines.â
âThat wouldnât have changed anything. And donât say âWhat the eye doesnât seeâ, because it wonât wash.â
A waiter approached and they broke off to choose and order their meal.
âSo what do you expect me to do?â Rona asked, when heâd gone.
âAdvise me.â
âOn what? Linz, thereâs only one option; forget you ever saw it.â
Lindsey stared moodily at the photograph. Then, very deliberately, she tore the page in half, then into quarters, then into still smaller pieces, and stuffed them in the ashtray.
âFeel better?â
âPity I canât do that to him!â Lindsey sighed. âOK, maybe Iâm overreacting. But I canât help wondering if he took her to France.â
âShe was then and you are now,â Rona said firmly, hoping she was right. âNow, stop being evasive about your own trip, and tell me everything that happened.â
While Rona and Lindsey were discussing him, Dominic was being shown into the dining room of the London club. During the journey, heâd been attempting to formulate the best approach to Mirandaâs father. He could hardly claim sheâd made all the running, even though it was true. Better, heâd decided, to sit tight and judge the prevailing mood.
At least his greeting was cordial enough.
âFrayne! Good of you to come.â Rupert Barrington-Selby,
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