‘Dora,’ she said. Then wondered why she hadn’t said Dorothy. It must have been because she’d been comparing him to her brothers, who always shortened her name, in an affectionate way. And because Gregory was something of a charmer, as well as being precisely the sort of impulsive, silly boy who would try to elope with a girl who portrayed herself as a damsel in distress. She was starting to smile at him, in a somewhat bemused manner, when the door of the coffee room swung violently open, banging against the wall and bouncing back. Not that it could bounce far, because standing in the doorway, completely filling the frame, was the largest man Dorothy had ever seen. The effect was probably in part due to the coat he was wearing, which had full skirts and several tiers of capes about the shoulders. The drab-coloured garment reached fully to the man’s heels and had mother-of-pearl buttons the size of a crown piece, which led her to assume that he was the driver of some coach who had drunkenly staggered through the wrong door. But that assumption lasted only as long as it took Gregory to drop her hands and gasp out one word.