April 5th, 1890 — Diagon Alley -Dressmakers
Gwen’s trip to town today had been hadn’t had much of a purpose, boredom more than anything else, she had been invited to take with Mrs Lowestoff but she found the woman drab and boring and frankly her home spelled of cat. How it was even possible for a palatial London townhouse to stink of cat but it did - always. As such Gwen had concocted any excuse not to have to accept the invitation.
The fact that Verity’s birthday was only a few weeks away had functioned as a reasonable, if weak excuse. She could have sent the houseboy to the music store to buy some books of fine new music she had ordered, but going herself allowed her to miss Mrs Lowestoffs frightful luncheon and instead make herself scarce until the Afternoon Tea at the Lady Morgana that afternoon. After all – who held luncheons these days anyway, it was very middle class.
After procuring her music, her next stop was the dressmakers. She did not ordinarily go into the dressmakers, preferring to have them come to her, but as a pretense of prolonging her day in town she decided to go and choose a few fabrics to be included in some new dressing robes she was having made. A simple task, and a way of killing 20 minutes. As she flitted into the store, her maid trailing behind her, the two footmen taking their place at the door she was sure to draw attention - but then that was rather the point.
The seamstress buzzed around her and dispatched shop girls to procure the bolts of fabric for her to peruse. In a break in the hubub, she noted the pretty blonde, also in attendance. She dismissed the shop keeper for the moment. 'Who are you my dear?' she asked, 'why don't I know you?' she remarked playing with the long chain at her throat. She prided herself on knowing most of the notable faces on the season and the fact that this girl was a mystery meant one of two things- she wasn't in the season, or she wasn't notable - but pretty faces were seldom the latter.
@'Liliana Selwyn' //@'acacia ruskin'
MJ is queen
Gwen is referred to as Countess of Adinbury by others, but as Lady Adinbury when you are speaking to her