The Missing Party-Girl: A Rags-to-Riches Cozy Mystery Romance Nhys Glover (books to read in a lifetime TXT) đ
- Author: Nhys Glover
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A perfectly shaped eyebrow lifted as the woman took them in.
Cage held out his hand. âYep, thatâd be me. And this is my partner, Adie Reynolds. As I said on the phone, weâre moving to London for work and thought we might buy instead of rent. A good investment.â
The big blue eyes, beautifully made up, opened a little wider, as if the amount of information he was giving her up-front was more than she expected. âAbsolutely. The London market is buoyant right now. Perfect time to buy in. Iâm Elizabeth Graham, and Iâve been working in the industry here in London for more than ten years, so I know what Iâm talking about. Youâre American?â
She looked politely from Cage to Adie, trying to determine where to put her focus. At least she was wise enough not to flutter her eyelashes at a man when his partner was at his side. Especially when she couldnât be sure who made the decisions.
Adie wished she wasnât so cynical. Forcefully, she plastered on a smile and took the hand the woman offered her.
âYes. London is very different from home,â she said, casting her eye around the neighborhood dubiously.
âThis area is quite gentrified these days,â the woman rushed to assure her. âIt just doesnât look that way from the outside. Part of its charm, in my opinion. And so well situated. The West End theatres are only a few blocks away. You couldnât get more central to the beating heart of the city if you tried.â
Elizabeth gave Adieâs hand a brief shake and then turned to lead the way into the old building.
Adie tried to imagine what it would have looked like to an eighteen-year-old girl leaving home for the first time. Minerva had been English, so it wouldnât have been as much of a culture shock as it was for Adie. But she hadnât grown up in London. The city would have to have seemed loud, crowded and overwhelming. And Minervaâs dad, the one Adie had come to know from his wartime journal, would have been hypercritical of her choice when he brought her up here for the first time. Soho would probably have had a bad reputation, but it would have been the only place an unemployed girl could find accommodation in her price-range. And only then if she shared with other girls in a similar situation.
âThe flat is three bedroom and on the second floor. Thatâs the third floor to you, I imagine. Thereâs no lift, and the stairs are a little steep and narrow, as you can see. But itâs all been tastefully renovated and refurbished in the last ten years. Do you have problems with stairs?â
Despite herself, Elizabethâs gaze had done the up-and-down thing with Cage before doing the same to Adie. It was only too apparent which one of them she assumed would have problems with stairs.
Adie could almost read the realtorâs mind. âThe stairs will be good for you. Knock off a few of those extra pounds!â
âThe stairs are no problem,â Adie snapped, surprising both herself and Cage.
Flustered, she tried to get her annoyance under control. The woman hadnât said she needed the exercise. That was just how Adie had read her body-language and tone.
When she went on, it was far more politely. âHow many floors are there?â
âFour, if you include the ground floor. Two flats on each. So, youâd have people above and below you. All soundproofed, of course. It always amazes me how much difference soundproofing makes to these old buildings. They were probably very noisy back in the past, but definitely not now.â
Adie remembered that Minervaâs flat had been 4B. So she would have been on the top floor. Young legs wouldnât have been concerned about three flights of steep stairs.
âAre all the apartments the same size in the building? The same floor plan?â Adie pressed, starting up the staircase that was, in fact, beautifully carpeted, for all its steepness.
The black, wrought-iron handrail matched the front door, looking both old-worlde and trendy. The perfect, unadorned walls, painted a pale, neutral color Adie was sure wasnât any kind of stock beige or cream, didnât distract the eye from their ornate beauty.
âPretty much. The As and Bs are mirror images of each other though. Eight apartments in all. Flats we call them. But the buildingâs owner had each decorated for uniqueness. Even their front doors are slightly different.
âAs soon as they went on the market they were snapped up, even though the London residential prices were astronomically high at the time. This is the first one that has come back onto the market since then, as far as I know. People are very happy living here. The sellers of 3B are retiring to the Azores, otherwise they would have stayed on, Iâm sure.â
Adie had no idea where the Azores were, but she assumed somewhere tropical. People tended to retire to the tropics, didnât they? If they could afford to do so.
They made the rest of the journey up the stairs, with Elizabeth filling them in on the kind of information any prospective purchaser would need to know. Adie would have felt guilty for wasting her time had she not been ogling Cage every chance she got. If Adie hadnât kept asking questions, she was sure the woman would have forgotten she was even there.
Was Cage flirting and encouraging her? Adie didnât think so. Cage tended to have a mask he put on when he was meeting new people, and it was that mask he was presenting to the realtor. If the blonde read it as interest then that was probably just wishful thinking on her part.
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