Demon looked at Barnaby. “Are you willing to return to London and, with the others, see what you can turn up?”
Barnaby was eager. “I’ll drop a word in the pater’s ear, too.” His father was involved with the new police force. “Some of the inspectors might have heard something. I’ll head down this afternoon.”
“Meanwhile, I’ll keep my ear to the ground here.” Demon turned to Dillon. “As for you…” His predatory grin flashed. “Apropos of Flick’s direction, I doubt she’ll make any headway with Miss Dalling. A social connection, however, should give you more opportunity to persuade the lady to our cause.”
Dillon pulled a face. “If she would only tell me what she wants to know about the register-or better yet, why-” He broke off, then shook his head. “I’m convinced she knows something, but-”
“But,” Demon cut in, “she’s frightened to reveal what she knows, first because she doesn’t understand what it means, and second because she’s protecting someone.” He held Dillon’s gaze. “What you have to do is gain Miss Dalling’s trust. Without that, you’ll get nothing out of her-with that, she’ll tell you all.”
Demon smiled, but there was no lightness in the gesture, only a fell intent. “Simple.”
Dillon held his gaze, unimpressed. “Simple?” He allowed his skepticism full rein. “We’ll see.”
Pris chafed and swore, but forced herself to wait, to let the rest of the day, then another go by before she once again rose with the dawn and slipped out to find Lord Cromarty’s string.
She kept her eyes peeled as she streaked through the misty landscape, but detected no pursuit. If Caxton was waiting out on the Heath, with any luck he wouldn’t recognize her. Mounted on a solid but unremarkable bay gelding, she was riding astride, dressed in breeches, boots, and jacket, with her wide-brimmed hat pulled low and a muffler wound about her chin. Once she found Cromarty’s string, she intended to follow them to Rus; much easier to amble in a stable’s wake if she looked like any other stable lad.
To her relief, Cromarty’s string was exercising close to where she’d last seen them. She watched from the cover of a stand of trees, scanning the riders; Rus was not among them.
She didn’t know precisely what Rus did as assistant stableman; his duties in Newmarket might not include the morning exercises.
While Harkness put his racers through an exacting series of gallops, she thought of Rus, let his face fill her mind, remembered shared exploits that made her smile. At last Harkness called a halt. The string formed up in a long line and headed off.
She fell in, not directly behind but as far back as she dared, and to the right, always at an angle to the string’s line of travel; if anyone glanced back, she wouldn’t be obviously following them.
The string walked, jogged, then walked again. Eventually they crossed a road and turned up a lane. Pris stopped to read the signpost; SWAFFAM PRIOR was lettered on it. If she was seen, she would appear to be heading for the village; entering the lane, she ambled on.
She kept her distance from the stragglers of the string. Finally the string turned right down a narrower lane; buildings lay grouped at its end.
They appeared to be substantial. Leaving the lanes, Pris cut through the fields; circling, she found a low, wooded rise beyond the buildings and pulled up. Screened by the trees, she looked down on the establishment; it was clear this was where Lord Cromarty was stabling his horses.
Her heart lifting with anticipation, she watched the horses being unsaddled, walked, brushed down, watered. She squinted, studying every man who walked through the yard.
Not one of them was Rus.
Lord Cromarty came out of the house to speak with Harkness. After considerable discussion, Harkness sent a lad for a horse-a high-spirited black mare. The lad paraded her before Harkness and Cromarty, then at Cromarty’s nod, returned the horse to her stall.
Pris remained mounted in the shadow of the trees, anticipation fading, anxiety burgeoning as a sense of unease rose and whispered through her. Cold, chill fingers trailed her nape.
Rus wasn’t there.
She knew it in her heart, even without the evidence of her eyes.
After another futile hour, she drew away. Returning to the lane to Swaffam Prior, she debated, then turned the gelding’s nose toward the village.
She had to learn if Rus was still somewhere, somehow, in Cromarty’s domain.
Patrick Dooley, Eugenia’s devoted and trusted factotum, spent the evening in the tavern at Swaffam Prior. He returned late, with disquieting news.
Pris hadn’t even considered retiring, too strung up to relax; Eugenia had settled on the chaise in the drawing room to keep her company, and Adelaide had remained, too.
Patrick joined them. He reported that, as Pris had guessed, the stable hands from Cromarty’s stable did indeed spend their evenings at the tiny tavern. He hadn’t even had to ask after Rus; his disappearance had been the main topic of conversation. According to the stable hands, “the toff,” as they affectionately called him, had been going about his business as usual until about ten days ago. Then one morning, he simply hadn’t been there.
Their description of Rus rang true-pernickity manners but a great one with horses. None of Cromarty’s crew knew anything of any falling-out with Cromarty or Harkness; to a man they were mystified by Rus’s abrupt departure.
But what had excited their interest and kept it on the boil was Harkness’s reaction; when he’d discovered Rus gone, he’d flown into a towering rage. Cromarty, too, had been furious. The upshot was Cromarty had offered a reward for any news of Rus, saying he knew too much about the stable’s runners, their quirks, and what made them run poorly, and they wanted to make sure he didn’t sell such secrets to their competitors.
“So he’s gone,” Patrick concluded, “but no one knows where to.”
Patrick was Irish, a stalwart of Eugenia’s small house hold. Although only six years older than Pris, his devotion to her aunt was beyond question.
She studied his impassive countenance. “Rus has to be alive. If he wasn’t, Harkness and Cromarty wouldn’t have posted a reward. Rus realized something was amiss and escaped before they could stop him. He got free and went into hiding.”
Patrick nodded. “That would be my guess.”
“Where would he hide?”
Patrick’s gaze turned rueful. “As to that, you’d have the best idea.”
Pris grimaced. Through the years Eugenia had spent at Dalloway Hall, Patrick had come to know Rus and her well; beyond herself and Albert, she would have said Patrick had the greatest understanding of her twin.
“I don’t know much about the racing business, but…” Patrick met her eyes. “Would he have stayed around here or gone to London?”
She blinked. “I don’t know. He was here three nights ago, but now? Hiding in London would be easier, and he has acquaintances there, friends from Eton and Oxford. He might think to get help with what ever he’s discovered in town.”
“I’ll check the coaches, see if he caught one to London or anywhere else.” Patrick glanced at Eugenia. “I’ll need to go to Cambridge and check there, too, in case he went across country and caught a coach from there.”
Eugenia nodded. “Go tomorrow. You concentrate on that avenue. Meanwhile, we’ll see what we can do closer to home.” She looked at Pris. Her soft voice took on a steely note. “This is clearly no lark, not a matter of your outrageous brother kicking up his heels, but something truly serious. We must do all we can to assist Rus with what ever matter he’s embroiled in. So-what can we do?”
Pris thought, then uttered a sound of frustration. “It all comes back to that bloody register!” She glanced at Eugenia. “Sorry, but without knowing what that damned register contains, we have no clue as to what Rus might have stumbled on. We know he’s after the register, or was. Learning what’s in it should give us some idea of the sort of illicit doings he might have uncovered.”