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with the curate.”

      The smile deepened. “Then you’re in luck. You have found him. I’m the curate, Mr. Hobbs.”

      I blinked. “I’m sorry, I mean the other curate, Mr. Cantrip.”

      “There is no other curate, miss. I am the only curate for this parish.”

      I shook my head. “No, I’m sorry, but there was a Mr. Cantrip here. He said he was—” I broke off, thinking furiously. Had Sebastian said he was the curate? Or had I simply inferred it from the dog collar?

      Mr. Hobbs’ gentle expression turned thoughtful. “I say, aren’t you Miss Hammond? The young lady—”

      “Who ran out on her wedding to the heir to Viscount Madderley? Yes,” I said automatically.

      “I was going to phrase it a little more delicately than that,” he told me with only the mildest hint of reproach.

      “Oh, it’s all right, I understand it’s what everyone is saying.” I was still thinking hard. Perhaps I had misunderstood. Sebastian might not be curate of this parish, but he must be associated with another.

      “Mr. Hobbs, do vicars ever lend their curates?”

      The smile was back, this time a shade rueful. “Well, we are men of the cloth, you know, not books in a lending library, but I regret to say some vicars do indeed treat us as such.”

      “You mean a vicar who had an important service to perform might request help from another parish?”

      “Yes, these things do happen.”

      I brightened. “That must be it. Sebastian Cantrip is another parish’s curate and he was simply borrowed for the wedding.”

      “I beg your pardon, Miss Hammond, but if you are referring to your—er, wedding,” he said with a cough, “there was no borrowed curate. It was my job to assist the vicar at your nuptials.”

      I resisted the urge to light a cigarette. “Do you mean no one from outside your parish was expected?”

      “No indeed,” he said proudly. “We took great pride in our ability to execute everything to the viscountess’s specifications.”

      His last remark proved his involvement, I thought grimly. Mother had planned everything to the smallest detail, but Gerald’s mother had come from a family populated with bishops and her pet hobby was all matters ecclesiastical. The viscountess had expressed no interest in the wedding whatsoever except when it came to texts and hymns and vestments.

      “And you don’t know a Mr. Cantrip?” I persisted.

      “Indeed not, although if I did, I should think it a very great joke,” he said, the smile once more in evidence.

      “Oh, why?”

      “Well, as it happens, I am a fancier of unusual names. I collect them, as it were, and Cantrip is most singular.”

      “In what way?”

      He shrugged. “I should presume it was a pseudonym. Have you never heard the word before? A cantrip is an old Scots word. It means a witch’s trick, a spell. The very word means deception.”

      I rose slowly from the pew and fished in my bag for a note. “For the collection plate, Mr. Hobbs. Thank you for your time.”

      I went out into the street, blinking at the weak sunlight. The church had been a haven of cool security, but now I felt oddly off balance, as if someone had just proven the sky was green. I walked slowly across to the park and sat on a bench, thinking hard.

      “Private reflection my eye,” said Masterman as she slid onto the bench next to me.

      “I beg your pardon?”

      “If you wanted a nap, there’s many a place better than that,” she told me.

      I shrugged. “I nodded off. It’s been a very trying time,” I replied to her, but my mind was elsewhere.

      I had been overwrought that day, but it wasn’t as if I had imagined him. In the first place, too many other people had seen him. And in the second, how had I got myself down to Devonshire without him driving me?

      “Of course he drove you,” Masterman was saying.

      I blinked. “Was I talking aloud?”

      “Muttering more like. Something about that Mr. Cantrip and imagining. What’s this all about?” she demanded.

      I took a deep breath and plunged in. “I came to London today to thank Mr. Cantrip for the spot of rescuing he did when he drove me down to Devon. But I cannot find him. In fact, the curate in the church seems to think no such person exists.”

      Masterman pursed her lips. “Of course he does. We all saw him.”

      “Exactly. But who was he, if not Sebastian Cantrip, curate of this parish? And more to the point, what was he doing at my wedding?”

      Masterman was thoughtful. “My money is on reporter. They’re a nasty lot, those journalists. Probably infiltrated the wedding party to get some exclusive information to publish in his newspaper.”

      “He is not one of those filthy reporters,” I countered with some warmth.

      “How would you know?”

      “Because he just isn’t,” I retorted stubbornly. “He’s kind.”

      Her eyes narrowed. “You’re smitten with him.”

      “Don’t be vulgar. I’m nothing of the sort. It’s only good manners to thank people when they do you a good turn, and he might have got into real trouble helping me run away.” I paused, horrified. “You don’t think that’s why he’s disappeared, do you?”

      Masterman gave a short bark of a laugh, the first I’d ever heard from her. “I hardly think so. What do you expect, miss, that the Archbishop of Canterbury keeps a special prison just for wayward priests? Locks them up with only bread and water, never to see the light of day?”

      She laughed again and I gave her a sour look. “You needn’t be so foul, Masterman. It was an idea. I never said it was a good one.”

      She sobered and her expression was a little kinder. “Miss, don’t take it like that. I was only having a bit of fun.”

      “At my expense.”

      “Well, you were the one being silly,” she pointed out reasonably. “Now, why don’t you work backwards? That’s what I do whenever I’ve misplaced something. Where was the last place I know it was, and where before that?”

      “He isn’t a misplaced hat or bit of knitting, you know.” It felt pointless, but I hadn’t a better idea, so I obliged her. “The last place we saw him was in the cottage. He said he was returning to London.”

      “And where before that?”

      “In the motorcar,” I began, but as soon as the words were out of my mouth, I knew. “Oh, Masterman, you utter genius!” I clasped her hand in excitement. “I saw a garage ticket in the glovebox when I was looking for a packet of cigarettes. A garage ticket fell out, a ticket with a—oh, drat. I can’t remember the name now.”

      “Of course you can,” Masterman said confidently. “It only requires a bit of concentration. Close your eyes.”

      I obeyed, burrowing in my memory for the name. Something Irish, of that I was certain. And an address in Hampstead.

      “O’Loughlin’s,” I said, my eyes popping open. I regarded Masterman with real admiration. “You are quite useful.”

      She gave me a thin smile. “You are not the first to make that observation, miss. Shall we go?”

      In a very short while we found ourselves in Hampstead, standing on a main road. It seemed logical that a shop or post

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