It is, all things considered, a very nice drawing room. Portraits adorn the walls and the heavy drapes are open to let starlight from the moonless night through. There's a table far too small for the large room with a pot of tea, a set of tea cups and an arrangement of cookies and fruit. Two oaken doors are firmly closed to one side, and to the other a single door is slightly ajar, the sound of sobbing coming from past it. Every once in a while it's possible to hear a page being turned in the other room as well. The drawing room on its own is silent, save for the ticking of a grandfather clock and then, with no prelude, an exclamation.
Haru meets a regency superhero Lucien
stage-manager
Lucette moves on as well, to someone who she thought might be interested in shipping but turns out to just think piracy sounds like it would be fun.
traceless
Between dances Haru needs to duck out to (what passes in the eighteenth century for) the bathroom, where he does intend to pee but mostly needs to check up on a wardrobe malfunction he can't be seen acting this confused about; something's come untied.