January 30th, 1891 - Hogsmeade Memorial Ballroom
Her conversation with Antigone last month had solidified it: Camilla desperately needed to get married. And she did not want to be desperate about it, did not want to be one of those debutantes who fretted endlessly about Men and What They Thought and their Mothers - but she was twenty-five. She was twenty-five and if she had not solidified a man
So tonight at the Exhibition of Art she had a bit of a scheme to get more men on her dance card. With a flick of her wrist, she set her dance card fluttering through the air - and then followed after it as it fluttered and eventually landed between a man and one of the paintings.
She should have planned the scheme better, though - Mr. Selwyn was not necessarily a bachelor she would have tried to target. He was older, and his family was a bit interesting in a way that Camilla did not appreciate.
But he was sort of handsome, and he was single.
And she needed her dance card back besides. Maybe this had not been one of her better-thought-out schemes.
"Do you mind, Mr. Selwyn?" Camilla said, striding up to him. "My dance card has made a bit of an escape." She pointed - the piece of paper rested on the floor between his shoes and the painting.
So tonight at the Exhibition of Art she had a bit of a scheme to get more men on her dance card. With a flick of her wrist, she set her dance card fluttering through the air - and then followed after it as it fluttered and eventually landed between a man and one of the paintings.
She should have planned the scheme better, though - Mr. Selwyn was not necessarily a bachelor she would have tried to target. He was older, and his family was a bit interesting in a way that Camilla did not appreciate.
But he was sort of handsome, and he was single.
And she needed her dance card back besides. Maybe this had not been one of her better-thought-out schemes.
"Do you mind, Mr. Selwyn?" Camilla said, striding up to him. "My dance card has made a bit of an escape." She pointed - the piece of paper rested on the floor between his shoes and the painting.