Heiress in Red Silk (Duke's Heiress #2) - Madeline Hunter Page 0,13
so whatever you order is not only practical, but also fashionable. For your sister as well as you. The other girls at that school may wear simple gray while in the schoolroom but will arrive and leave in far better.” She tapped her jaw while thinking. “I believe I know just the place. We will go tomorrow.”
“Mr. Radnor spoke of calling again tomorrow, to escort me to the warehouses. Perhaps if we leave before he arrives—”
“No, no. Let him come along. I will send a note to him to be here early, so we have enough time. We will take our coach, so we all can ride together.” She leaned in and grinned. “We will bore him senseless. He will not be so quick to try to keep a close watch on your movements after sitting for hours in a modiste’s reception chamber.”
Was that what he was doing? Keeping her in his sights? How silly of her not to have realized it. Of course Minerva was right. Kevin Radnor was not simply being friendly. He wanted to make sure she was not meeting with investors who wanted to purchase her share of his company. Of their company.
Perhaps she had been wrong about that male interest she thought she saw in him too. No doubt he had only been calculating how to manage her. To him, she was merely a problem complicating his plans. In that case, what a relief—she had enough trouble just being in business with him, let alone having to fend off unwelcome advances.
She looked over at Minerva, who sat so comfortably with her now. Minerva had never, not once, done or said anything that implied they were not equals, even if they weren’t.
“We met because you and your husband do inquiries,” Rosamund ventured. “Do you find that interesting?”
“Each one is a puzzle to be solved. It can be very engaging, and sometimes exciting.”
“Do people tell you secrets in order to receive your services?”
“At times it is necessary. Hence our profession being one of discreet inquiries. Other times the search is very simple, and all I ask is that I be warned if it might be dangerous.” Minerva eyed Rosamund with curiosity. “Do you have an inquiry that you want me to conduct for you? It sounds as if you do.”
“Perhaps . . . Could be I do.”
“Rest assured that any confidences regarding it, and even the request itself, will never be spoken of to anyone else.”
Rosamund decided to trust Minerva. “I do want your help. You will know how to go about it, while I will spin meself in circles.” She took her biggest step yet toward the dream. “I want you to find someone, or at least learn what became of him.”
Chapter Four
Kevin found it entirely exasperating that Minerva had inserted herself into his scheme to befriend Miss Jameson. Yet here he was, handing them both down from the coach on New Bond Street after enduring all that chatter about fashion and fabric.
He gazed up at the first story, where this modiste plied her trade.
“Come along, Kevin,” Minerva said. “We may want a man’s opinion. If so, you will have to do.”
His face impassive, he followed them up the stairs and entered the modiste’s salon. Madame Tissot knew Minerva and, upon learning two wardrobes were required, swept the ladies away, leaving him to pass the time in a room with uncomfortable furniture.
It occurred to him while he surveyed the feminine chamber, with its frail tables and chairs, that this was what Minerva meant by making his life unpleasant. Well, she would have to do better than this. She did not know with whom she dealt.
He tried the one upholstered chair. It had not been built for a man with his height, but after sprawling this way and that he managed to find some accommodation. He then closed his eyes and retreated into his mind. His last thought before giving all of it over to his probability calculations was curiosity on whom the second wardrobe was for.
Some time later, he emerged from his reverie and checked his pocket watch. They had already been here over an hour. He could hear feminine laughter and conversation behind one of the doors. He considered leaving a note and taking himself off, but he was on a campaign to win over Miss Jameson’s trust and friendship. That required he spend time with her. Which, if Minerva had not waylaid his plans, he would be doing now.