The cold season has arrived. Are you wearing the coat / sent you last time? Iâm just apologising for not being able to meet you in person because Iâm having a busy day due to the debutante ball.
When I untied the silk laces and opened the box, found a beautiful dress like a dream.
A rich off-shoulder dress, naturally ruffled with countless layers of pale pink tulle, was draped with hundreds of silk flowers as it went down. Delicate lace adorned the layers, and patterns were embroidered between the flowers with silver and precious stones.
It was a waste to simply attach the rhetoric of âprettyâ. When I see a work of art in real life, I feel intimidated, and this dress was just that. The maids barely let out the breath they were holding. While smothering the clothes, I listened to them as they made a fuss and praised Madame.
Just by looking at it, I could feel that more effort was put in this dress than in Helenaâs clothes. If it was pretty, I liked it. Now, or when, wonât you like to try on a pretty dress you can only see at a Paris collection show?
However, from the Madameâs point of view, Eris was like a kite that had already fallen off the string, yet she put so much effort into it.
I wanted to know if there was something behind the scenes, but I couldnât figure it out. In the original work, Madame was only treated as one of the tools to express Erisâ influence in the social circle, because later, even Madame was passed on to Helena.
Oh, come to think of it, I had to get a menâs suit. Because I decided to take Anakin as my partner instead of the prince. But Madame seemed to specialize in womenâs wear, so I was thinking about whether to take Anakin to a menâs clothing store.
âIâm coming in.â
âYou donât have to come in. Iâm going out again.â
Speaking of which, Anakin knocked on the door so! told the ladies to keep the dress safe and opened the door. While standing in front of me, I roughly assessed Anakinâs clothes and said,
âDonât you think you should wear a nice suit to the debutante ball?â
ââŠIf youâre talking about my clothes, you donât have to buy them. Because there are uniforms.â
âA uniformâŠâŠ?â
Was there anything like that? Anakin calmly addressed the story for the first time.
âI was wearing it at the ceremony as well.â
âIs that⊠huh?â
I canât remember anything during that time because wasnât particularly interested in Anakin.
Hmmmm. I was embarrassed so I coughed meaninglessly and retorted.
âI was going to buy you expensive clothes that you canât ever buy with your salary, so why donât you pretend you didnât know?â
âA uniform is enough. No matter how expensive it is, it will be less honorable than a uniform that will prove, Iâm my masterâs knight.â
How can every word you say be so pretty? Excited, I was patting Anakinâs cheek lightly, but the servant came running from afar so I paused.
The servant, who was sweating profusely, looked at me and Anakin in turn without saying a word.
âI, thereâŠâ
âWhatâs going on?â
âLord K-Kazar wants to meet youâŠâ
At this point, it was creepy. Seeing the disapproval on my face, the servantâs expression crumbled and he stuttered a little.
âGee, Iâm in trouble right now, shall I refuse?â
âNo, thatâs okay. Iâm not going to refuse.â
Even if the servant told him to leave, Jason would not be convinced and would continue to shove his way into this mansion.
I didnât even give you room to do so, so I donât know why you keep messing around.
Itâs not the gum stuck on the sole of some shoeâŠâŠ. At this point, I headed to the drawing room with the intention of putting a nail on it altogether.
As I entered the drawing room, Jason, who was sitting on the sofa, looked at me, smiled and waved his hand.
âIâm offended if you keep coming here even though you donât have any business, Sir Kazar. Please leave.â
âI heard that Alecto is taking Helena to this debutante ball, Iâm thinking of us partnering up as the people who lost their partner.â
âSorry, Sir Kazar, Iâm going to take my knight as my partner.â
Jason raised his eyebrows in surprise, then glanced at Anakin. He replied in a soft voice.
âHe must not be in the same class as you. Wasnât that why you chose me at the coming-of-age ceremony?â
It was true. At that time, I didnât want to be looked down upon, so I ran my calculations here and there to get the best number of moves. As if he knew everything, Jason added.
This was also true. No matter how beautiful and glamorous I appear, everyone in the social world will focus more on who the man next to me is. Then they will try to judge me by my manâs âclassâ. I was fed up with Jason, who came to me triumphantly after calculating all that.
âBut Iâm not going with you.â
I told him one more time in case he didnât understand
âIâm not going with you.â
Janeâs life was no different from any other womanâs. She was born as a poor aristocrat, then she married another aristocrat who was similarly poor, then she led a simple but undisturbed household.
Her husband, who served as a court attendant, would always buy her a flower when he returned home despite his tight income.
Then she put the flower in a bottle, and when it withered a little, sheâd make it into jam.
It was a sudden money plague that staggered her happy life. Her ill husband was forced to stop working and when the earnings disappeared, she had to send out even her maid, who was the only other person in her house.
Even if she tried to get her parents or in-laws to lend a hand, it did not help as both of them were from poor families.
Her chores and her husbandâs care are now hers. The sewing that she had done with her handmaiden became her way of making wages for a living, as she had to work all day long to earn her husbandâs medicine.
She would be lying if she said she didnât blame her husband. She couldnât even answer the question whether she still loved her husband, asked to her by her neighbour who saw her suffering. Because she didnât love him in the first place.
But Jane didnât want her husband to die. Like things that could not be thrown away easily even if they were broken and buried for a long time, she was attached to her husband and couldnât even run away,
â Sorry.
Her husband used to say sorry more often than thanks. Although it is rather Jane, who is sorry for him, not being able to repay him for his love for her.
Contrary to her wishes, her husband died early from illness. He said he was sorry until the end. She wished he could have said something else if it was really the last time. Jane became this type of widow.
The calluses on her hands grew.
Her wages and sewing skills increased alongside her calluses, and places calling for Jane began to appear one by one, it was enough to make a living.
It was when she happened to get a job for a Marquis, When she was about to return home after finishing her work, a servant caught Jane.
Did she do something wrong? But she couldnât remember no matter how much she thought, so she entered the room, terrified.
The maid who entrusted her with work complained that she did not have a proper outfit for going out, so it was made by tweaking the old clothes she had.
â Make it similar to this dress, but much prettier. Can you do it?
â Iâll do it.
â I heard youâre a widow? Stay here until the dress is finished. The fact that you are making these dresses should never spreadâŠâŠ. Do you understand what mean?
â Iâll keep that in mind.
â Okay, letâs go. If you need anything, ask my maid. Donât let me down.
Jane sat alone on the bed in the room, organizing her thoughts. This level of authority was a secret. Killing a couple of people wouldnât be a problem, so if sheâs unlucky, she might not be able to survive here. She had to do her best.
Jane was awake for almost three days and nights. Because the time given to her was shorter than she thought. The clothes were mended to fit her size and additional lace and decorations were made and sewn
It was a semi-forced job, but as time went by tiredness disappeared and the joy increased.
Was making clothes always this enjoyable? No, could it have been more enjoyable than that? The euphoria she felt when she finally put the finished clothes on her master and looked at itâŠâŠ! It couldnât be compared to anything else.