“I don’t know. He could be on his way now. Heather didn’t say. I don’t think she knows his plans. She’s got her hands full with Brandon, Maggie and the kids arriving in London.”
Samantha got herself under control. Brandon was Justin’s younger brother, also a carpenter and the third of the Sloan siblings. He and his wife, Maggie, a caterer, had two young sons. They’d left the wedding hotel that morning for a few days in London with Brody and Heather. Samantha and Justin had slipped out last night, spending their first night as a married couple at a tiny inn an hour up the road.
“Tyler and Aidan want to meet the queen,” Justin added.
Samantha smiled, thinking of the two boys, now eight and six, on the loose in London. “Knowing Brody, he could arrange it,” she said.
“They’ll be happy seeing the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace. Maggie and Brandon figured they might as well see some sights if they were coming all the way to England for our wedding. Makes sense.”
“They love a good adventure.”
Justin slowed to let another car bypass them on a straightaway. They were in no hurry, Samantha thought. They were officially on their honeymoon. They had plenty of time to get to Edinburgh, their first stop in Scotland on their ten-day trip.
“I should have mentioned Charlotte would be house-sitting,” Samantha said, calmer. “I didn’t think of it. It’s a maybe, too. I haven’t heard from her. She could have decided to go straight to Washington and see about Max’s house.”
“Weddings can make people agree to things they later have to wriggle out of. Rawlings was beat. I don’t know when I’ve seen anyone that tired. Eric says it was fun watching him try to provoke Charlotte. She had no trouble holding her own with him.”
Of that, Samantha had no doubt. “It’s fine if Greg stays at the inn. It could be awkward if Charlotte shows up, too, but they’ll work it out. There’s loads of room.”
“Seriously, the guy was bone tired,” Justin said. “He could end up staying at the pub and sleep and drink beer all week.”
“His type gets restless after forty-eight hours. He’ll rally.”
“Then maybe he’ll stay at the pub and hike and drink beer all week.”
Samantha smiled. “Ever the optimist.”
“I wouldn’t say optimist. Realist. You saw what Greg Rawlings was like when he was in Knights Bridge last winter. He’s an adrenaline junkie who thrives on action. Not much action at an old country inn that hasn’t been in use for a few years.”
“There are cards and musty board games in the library.”
Justin grinned at her, his eyes a dark blue in the gray light. “He won’t last if he does show up in Knights Bridge. How long do you think Charlotte would last?”
“Not for days and days, maybe, but she looked ready for a real break.”
Justin nodded thoughtfully. “I agree.”
Samantha tilted her head back, eyeing this man she loved. Justin was solid, a concrete thinker who didn’t beat around the bush. She appreciated his bluntness and had seen him get better control of it in their months together, just as she’d gotten better control of her tendency to think she had to do everything herself and couldn’t trust anyone.
She trusted Justin Sloan with all her heart.
“Charlotte needs some downtime,” Samantha said. “She wouldn’t get into any details with me, because it was my wedding day, but I could tell.”
“Greg is a federal agent. If he and Charlotte end up at the inn together, it’s not as if she’d be holed up with an ax murderer. They’re adults. The inn’s got a dozen guest rooms and plenty of other rooms—way more space than I had growing up with five siblings. They can spread out. It’ll be fine.”
“You saw them dancing together yesterday?”
“I did.”
“It was her first wedding since she abandoned Tommy Ferguson at the altar.”
“She was happy for you, Sam. That’s what mattered to her.”
Justin downshifted, slowing to a near crawl as they approached another pretty English village. They were taking a scenic route north. Samantha didn’t know the details, didn’t have a map. She wanted to relax and enjoy the scenery. But here she was, worrying about her thirty-six-year-old cousin. Normally she’d never worry about Charlotte. No one did. She was ultraindependent, competent, good at so many things and yet not one to draw attention to herself. Not showing up for her wedding had been out of character in that sense. In character in the sense that Charlotte Bennett took decisive action once her mind was made up about something.
“Do you want to warn Charlotte?” Justin asked.
Samantha thought a moment. “No. There are too many variables. I don’t want to get her worked up about something that might not even happen if she’s about to get on a transatlantic flight.”
“This is what life’s like with our two families.” Justin brushed his fingertips on her cheek as they stopped for a traffic light. “Welcome to the Sloans and the Bennetts.”
“I love you, Mr. Sloan.”
“And I love you, Mrs. Sloan. Shall we enjoy our honeymoon?”
“Every minute.”
Six (#u16f08574-078b-5cce-a246-43c3ae6c6223)
Knights Bridge, Massachusetts
As Greg switched off the bedside lamp in his corner room at the Red Clover Inn, what felt like a million years after breakfast on the wet terrace of his Cotswolds pub, he could hear scurrying in the walls.
Mice.
He crawled under the top sheet and lightweight blanket on his lumpy double bed. Built in 1900 as an inn, the place nonetheless had the feel of a large, rambling house. It was run-down but not in disrepair, at least from what he’d seen so far. He’d arrived after dark and had turned on a few lights and headed upstairs to find a room. He didn’t have a good fix on the inn’s layout, but he didn’t need one. All he’d needed was to peel off his clothes and fall into bed. Everything else could wait. Red Clover Inn was about what he’d expected.
He’d chosen a corner bedroom on the second floor. Someone had left a set of sheets and a cotton blanket folded at the foot of the bed. He hadn’t minded making the bed himself. It wasn’t as if he could call housekeeping. He hadn’t bothered to get every tuck just right. Nobody cared. It wasn’t a real inn.
He’d opened a window and settled in, lying on his back in the pitch dark, relishing the late-spring breeze.
And then came the scurrying.
Whatever.
If the mice stayed in the walls, they weren’t his problem.
The scurrying stopped, at least for the moment. He’d considered changing his plans and checking into an airport hotel when he’d landed in Boston, but he’d had coffee while he waited for his luggage. Good to go. A flight delay, a guy snoring next to him for six hours, one fateful wrong turn coming out of the tunnel from Logan Airport—it’d been one of those travel days best forgotten.
He’d half hoped Charlotte had beaten him here but no sign of her. He was alone.
It was almost morning in Edinburgh.
Greg couldn’t keep his eyes open. He sank into the mattress—for all he knew, it had been new in 1982—and relaxed, letting his travel fatigue and twitchiness ooze out of his body. He didn’t hear any squeaks or telltale sounds of flapping wings that would indicate bats were about. A bat on the loose he’d have to deal with. Mice... He could go to sleep with mice doing their mice thing in the walls and ceilings.
How would Charlotte do with mice and bats?
No mystery. He knew.