notice much about womenâs clothing. Barrettâs different.â
As Miriam nodded, Charlotte said, âThereâs only one answer. We have to make your green gown look like a new one. Hereâs what I thought Iâd do.â She handed Miriam the sketch sheâd made the previous night. âItâs the same dress with a few changes. Iâll use the fabric in the overskirt to make long sleeves and a fichu, and Iâll add a new overskirt of lemon yellow. It wonât be as elaborate as the original, which means itâll be more suited for dinner.â Charlotte looked at her friend. âWhat do you think?â
A smile as broad as the prairie was her answer. âOh, Charlotte, itâll be beautiful. Youâre a genius.â
Charlotte shook her head. âHardly a genius. While I was growing up, my family didnât have much money, so I learned how to make simple changes that would make an old dress look almost new.â
âI still say youâre a genius.â Miriam flung her arms around Charlotte and hugged her. âIâm so glad youâre my friend.â
âI never thought Iâd have another chance to wear this gown.â Gwen settled back in the carriage, her smile radiant. Unlike Miriam, she felt no need for a new dress and was delighted to have another occasion to wear her blue silk. âI still canât believe we were invited.â
âI donât think Barrett knows too many unmarried women,â Charlotte had told Gwen when the official invitation arrived. âHe probably wanted to balance the numbers.â She was certain Messieurs Duncan and Eberhardt would be there, along with Harrison. That meant Barrett had needed to find at least three single women in addition to Miriam.
According to Miriam, there would be fifteen guests, including four married couples, one of which was her parents. âI wonât tell Mama that youâve been invited, but Iâll make certain she has her smelling salts.â Though both Charlotte and Miriam knew that Mrs. Taggert was unlikely to be pleased by the presence of someone she considered little more than a servant, Charlotte did not regret having accepted the invitation, for it brought Gwen great pleasure.
âI donât care what the reason was,â Gwen said, her face rosy with happiness. âIâm just glad weâre going. And in this beautiful carriage too.â Ever the gentleman, Barrett had insisted on sending his carriage for Charlotte and Gwen. Though it was only six days since the October 24 snowstorm and most of the snow had melted, Barrett had declared that the women must not walk the two and a half blocks from their home to his. âMr. Bradley would be horrified,â he had told Charlotte. And though Charlotte suspected the butlerâs disapproval was a figment of Barrettâs imagination, she had agreed. Even though sheâd taken long walks both at home in Vermont and at Fort Laramie, it was one thing to stroll during the daylight, quite another to walk at night in an evening gown. That was why she had hired a carriage the night she and Gwen had gone to the opera house.
âOh, my.â Though sheâd been silent as they covered the short distance from the carriage to the double front doors,Gwen let out a deep sigh as they entered Barrettâs house. Charlotte understood the feeling. The imposing foyer with its parquet floor was as large as the room she and David shared, and yet it served as nothing more than an entry hall. To the right, she saw a spacious parlor, to the left an elegant dining room. Finely woven carpets, intricately carved mahogany furniture, and crystal chandeliers left no doubt that this was the residence of a wealthy man. Charlotte had known that from the exterior, and yet seeing the inside of Barrettâs home made her realize the width of the gulf that separated them.
âThis way, madam.â The heavyset man who
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