the letters being sent by Mr. Dishforth and passing them along to Daphne, had made the very same argument. Twice.
“You won’t tell Lady Essex, will you?” she’d begged. Lady Essex did not take her role as their chaperone in London lightly. If she caught wind of this illicit correspondence—given the spinster’s strict notions of suitable partis and proper courtship—Daphne’s chance to discover Mr. Dishforth’s identity would be lost.
Forever.
But luckily for Daphne, her friends, who were more like sisters to her, had agreed to keep her secret as long as she allowed them to have the final say in Mr. Dishforth’s suitability before Daphne did anything rash.
As if she, a proper and respectable Dale, of the Kempton Dales, would do anything less.
Still, Daphne shivered slightly as she recalled that last line from Mr. Dishforth’s recent missive. The one she hadn’t read aloud to her friends.
I will be the most insensible gentleman in the room. Insensible with desire for you.
Smiling to herself, she stole another glance around the room, hoping beyond hopes to find some way to distinguish the man she sought from the press of handsome lords and gentlemen who filled out the distinguished guest list.
“Daphne, don’t look now, but there is someone ahead who is paying you close heed,” Tabitha whispered.
Indeed there was. Daphne tried to be subtle as she looked up, well aware that any gentleman in this room could be him.
But immediately she shook her head. “Oh, heavens no!”
“Why not?” Tabitha asked.
“Look at the cut of that coat. It is not Weston,” Daphne said. No, complained. For if any of the three of them knew fashion, it was Daphne. “My Mr. Dishforth”—for he was her Dishforth—“would never use that much lace. And look at the overdone falls of that cravat.” She shuddered. “Why, with all those wrinkles it looks as if it has been tied by a stevedore.”
Tabitha laughed, for she was well used to Daphne’s discerning and mostly biting opinions on fashion. “No, no, you are correct,” she agreed as the rake sidled past them, casting an appreciative glance at Daphne’s décolletage.
Not that such a glance wasn’t to be expected. The gown was a bit scandalous and Daphne had ordered it in a moment of passion, wondering what Dishforth would think of her, so elegantly and daringly attired.
Lady Essex came to a stop to gossip with an old friend, and Harriet drifted back toward them. “Now quickly, who is on your list, Daphne? Let’s find your Dishforth.”
Daphne plucked the list from her reticule. From the moment she’d learned that Mr. Dishforth was attending Tabitha’s engagement ball, the trio had scoured the invitation list for possible suspects.
“Lord Burstow,” Tabitha read over her shoulder.
The three of them glanced over at the man and discovered their information hadn’t been entirely correct.
“However did we get him so wrong?” Harriet whispered.
“He is well over eighty,” Tabitha said, making a tsk, tsk sound.
“And the way he shakes, well, he’d never be able to compose a legible note, let alone a letter,” Harriet pointed out.
They all agreed and struck him from their list, once again going back to their investigation.
“Tell us again what you do know,” Tabitha prodded.
Daphne, with Harriet’s help, had assembled a thick dossier on everything she knew about Dishforth. A compilation that would have rivaled the best produced by Harriet’s brother, Chaunce, who worked for the Home Office.
“First and foremost, he is a gentleman,” Daphne said. “He went to Eton—” a point he had mentioned in passing. “And his handwriting, spelling and composition all speak of a well-educated man.”
That fit most of the men in the room.
Daphne continued on. “He lives in London proper. Most likely Mayfair, given the regularity of his posts.”
“Or at the very least,” Harriet added, “has been in London since the appearance of his advertisement.”
“Nor did he quit Town at the end of the Season,” Tabitha pointed out.
Daphne suspected he might be a full-time resident of the city. “His letters are all delivered by a footman in a plain livery.”
“Sneaky fellow,” Harriet said. “Livery would be so helpful.”
Oh, yes, Mr. Dishforth was a wily adversary to track down. The address his letters were sent to had turned out to be a rented house situated quite nicely at Cumberland Place—something the trio had discovered while they’d been purportedly walking in the park.
“It is too bad we have yet to meet Lady Taft,” Tabitha mused, glancing around the room, referring to the current occupant at that address. They had been able to learn—with the help of Lady Essex’s well-thumbed