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CHAPTER THREE

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ROWAN entered the Steward’s Room feeling much as she had on her first visit to Almack’s—convinced that she would break all kinds of rules, most of them incomprehensible. On the other hand she was now twenty-four, and she had entertained the Duke of Wellington and virtually every notable at the Congress as her father’s hostess. She ought to be able to manage Pug’s Parlour, as irreverent lower servants everywhere referred to the rooms of the upper staff.

The evening dress she was wearing had once been hers, and had been passed to Alice, her own dresser, the year before. Now she had borrowed it back, noting that the heavy lace at neck and hem had gone—doubtless sold on as one of the dresser’s perks—and had been replaced with a more modest braid. Alice had maintained the heavy moss-green silk in good order and had let in long sleeves in a fine gauze.

Worn with plain kid slippers and a simple pearl cross at her throat, the gown presented the picture of modestly respectable elegance, suitable for her position. Dressing to be inconspicuous was a new skill—one she had never had to master before, Rowan realised with an inner grin.

The Steward’s Room was crowded, the guests’ valets and dressers chattering away, all apparently known to each other. A tall man in a black swallowtail coat approached her. ‘Good evening. I am Mr Evesham, Steward here. You will be Miss Maylin’s dresser. Miss …?’

A Mistletoe Masquerade

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