Rogue meets hero in group of musketeers, for example (9)
I believe the answer is:
threesome
'group of musketeers for example' is the definition.
I can't judge whether this defines the answer.
'rogue meets hero' is the wordplay.
'rogue' is an anagram indicator (letters go rogue).
'meets'+'hero'='meetshero'
'meetshero' anagrammed gives 'THREESOME'.
'in' acts as a link.
Can you help me to learn more?
(Other definitions for threesome that I've seen before include "Those wise men could be" , "One more than a couple" , "Trio" , "Freeman Hardy Willis, say" , "triplets, perhaps?" .)