The Maid At The Gala Carried The One Invitation Miranda Feared-heuh

Miranda Sterling did not decide to invite Valerie Cross because she was feeling generous.

She decided it because cruelty looks cleaner when it is printed on thick cream card.

The idea came to her in the sitting room, just after lunch, with the windows wide to the terrace and a glass of white wine balanced between her fingers.

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Outside, Valerie was mopping the pale stone tiles in her blue housekeeping uniform.

She moved carefully, as she always did, working around the heavy garden chairs, rinsing the mop, wringing it out, and returning to the same quiet rhythm that made her almost invisible to the people who paid her wages.

Miranda watched her with the idle interest of someone considering a table centrepiece.

Then she smiled.

“Invite the girl who scrubs the bathrooms,” she said.

Chloe looked up first.

Harper followed, already sensing amusement.

“Valerie?” Chloe asked, as if the name itself were a little stain on the conversation.

“Yes,” Miranda said. “Make sure she knows it is black tie.”

She lifted her glass.

“I cannot wait to see what she shows up wearing.”

The laughter that followed was quiet enough to seem respectable from a distance.

That was how Miranda and her friends preferred it.

They never shouted.

They never used the sort of blunt words other people could object to.

They dressed contempt in silk, carried it in handbags, and called it humour once it had hurt someone.

Miranda’s birthday gala had been planned for months.

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