Verbena looked down at the address again, then looked around at all of the cramped little houses in confusion.
"Excuse me, sir?" she called to a passing man.
"Wot?"
"I can't seem to find this address?"
"Whassit say?"
"32 Cardinal Boulevard."
"South or North?"
"Oh... it doesn't say. I can't find 32 here, so it must be the other?"
"This's south. You'd be want'n north then. Keep on this road right up till you leave the city proper and there's but one house up there just past the city. It'd be Lord Donovan's manor. Best be quick, storms a comin'."
"Thank you, sir!" she called as she hurried up the road, her eyes half on the darkening sky. She didn't make it to the middle of town before the downpour started. After a few feet of running, she knew it was useless, she was already soaked. She trudged up the road, shivering, her teeth chattering.
The walk was ridiculously long, the space between houses further and further apart as the houses got nicer and nicer. She passed through the gates as it was starting to get dark and she could see the huge house just up the road on a high hill.
The climb up the hill made her calves burn and she was panting when she made it to the door. She knew she must look like a drowned rat, but there was nothing for it. She pulled the bell with a sigh.
She had to pull three times before someone finally answered and it was a very old woman in a servants uniform that was forty years out of date with the high, crisp collar and puffy sleeves and pristine white pinafore. She even wore the white hair cap. She was a severe looking woman and her face looked disdainful as she looked Verbena over.
"What do you want, child?" she demanded.
"I... uhh... I'm not a child. I'm here for the governess position?"
"Governess?" the woman sneered. "Did you lie and write the master that you were 20? Thinking he wouldn't turn you away the moment you arrived and gave away the lie?"
"I am, 20, 22 actually. My mother was small as me and my father a diminutive man as well. It runs on both sides of the family."
"I hear you trying to cover your Miovian accent! Are you from Miovia?"
"I am, originally, but we moved to Mareshomese when I was 12. My father got a position in the library as the master scribe. I have my papers, they're all here. Signed and sealed and everything. I'm 22. Please, may I come in out of the rain? It's freezing out here."
The old maid snorted. "Wait there a moment, you'll not be coming in and dripping everywhere," she answered, then closed the door in Verbena's face.
Verbena waited, huddled in on herself and watching her breath in the frigid air. She'd never really understood why Mareshomese had taken the old Miovian capital in the war, this place was horrible. Ridiculously cold all the time! Even Summers were mild with cool everning's. She'd hated moving here from Miovia, so far south into the old capital that was Mareshomese now.
Finally, the maid opened the door and laid down a towel for Verbena to step onto, hurriedly closing the door behind her. Handing her another towel, Verbena began drying herself off, setting her sodden bag down next to her on the towel.
"Hurry up and dry off, then you may go stand in front of the fire in the parlor. I'll send the master along to see about you!"
The maid hurried away and Verbena left her bag by the door as she ran to the fireplace to finish drying off. She was still shivering when the Maid came back down.
"Stay here until he has time for you. Sit on nothing! Dry yourself and try to look presentable!" she huffed, then left.
Verbena turned back to the fire and tried to inch a bit closer, she was still so cold!
"What the damned hell is this?" a male voice roared.
Verbena spun, her mouth a surprised 'O'.
"Anne! Why is this child in my parlor? Where is the governess?"
The maid seemed to have been waiting closeby, she was there in seconds. "She claims to be 22, my lord."
"Doubtful, but even so, the letter said forty two!"
"Pardon, sir, but no," Verbena cut in. "I said 22, and I am 22. I have my papers here."
"Liar!" he hissed, then stormed away.
Verbena was at a loss for a moment as the maid, 'Anne' gave her a very smug look.
The man returned, unfolding the letter Verbena had sent him in correspondence. "Here!" he growled, then seemed to deflate some as he looked at it and scowled. "Why in the seven hells do your 't's look like god damned 'f's?
"It's the script I was taught, sir," Verbena answered softly.
"Miovian," he sneered.
"Yes. And even so, what sense would fwenty make? You misread it and that isn't my fault. Your return correspondence offered the position of governess based on my credentials, not my age. Is that not so?"
"I thought you'd be older! And larger! I TOLD you it would entail lifting and turning her!"
"Of course, sir. I have 4 younger siblings and I helped raise them all. Lifting, carrying them around."
"Did you not read the advertisement? It said for a twelve year old and she's bigger than you!"
"I'm sorry sir, it made no mention of any age, or size. It did say lifting and caring for, but I lifted my siblings up until they were four and five. I have it just here, sir," Verbena told him, unfolding her oiled cloth and pulling all of her papers out, including the original advertisement. Handing it to him, she watched his face.
It went from angry to incredulous, to furious. "That imbecile! He cut out half the advertisement! There has been a mistake here, you cannot possibly care for my daughter."
"Perhaps you could let me try for a few days. At least until you have had time to advertise and find a new governess. See if I measure up to your standards."
"You don't," he snapped, looking me over, his nostrils flaring. "I want no young women in my household!"
"I'll not be a bother, sir, you'll never see me. I AM very good at my job, I was educated at the kings library. My father is the head librarian and scribe and I was given access to all of the tutelage my heart desired. Were it allowed, I could be a medica, I have the training. And I do know how to maneuver patients larger than myself with leverage and other small tricks. I am as capable as a man three times my size."
The man scowled angrily. "You have until I hire the new one! You'll not be staying on, so don't think you'll win me over. You WILL leave when I have hired someone suitable for the job!"
"There are none more suitable or capable than I," Verbena told him angrily, lifting her chin defiantly.
"Do not unpack," he snarled, then left.
Verbena looked to Anne who was smirking at her. "I knew that would happen. Come on then," she sneered, waving Verbena to follow her.
Verbena sighed and grabbed up her bag before following Anne up the stairs. She led her all the way up to the third story to a tiny room that was almost considered a closet. It was laughable to call it a bedroom. There was just enough room to move along the wall sideways next to the bed and three hooks on the wall to hang dresses. A single table with a pitcher and bowl on it and a small basket under it to hold things.
Verbena only sighed and unpacked her bag so her clothes would dry out before morning, even the dress she was wearing.
The night was cold and she had only a single thin blanket to curl up under. Had any of them been dry, she would have worn a dress to bed since her nightgown was soaked.
When morning came, she'd hardly slept at all and she was still freezing. NONE of her dresses were dry and she waited until Anne knocked to get her before pulling the most dry one on. She'd done her hair and it was dry at least, but her dress hung limply and heavily with dampness.
Anne led her directly to a large, open room all done in pink frills and lace, bright with sunshine. Circling around in front of a chair on wheels, she stopped and Verbena stopped next to her to look at the girl in the chair. She had an inkling of what was wrong with her as the girl stared unseeing at the windows and not looking at anyone.
"Lyla!" Anne called loudly. "This is the young lady that will be spending a few days with you until your father finds someone who's actually qualified for the job! She will keep you company until then!"
Verbena moved into the girl's line of sigh and smiled at her. Speaking more softly than Anne, she leaned closer. "Hello Lyla, I love your name! And your room, it's lovely. My name is Verbena and I can't wait to tell you all about the library I grew up in and all the adventures I've had!"
Lyla looked at Verbena and her eyes shone like that had made her happy, though her face had hardly moved. She managed to rock a bit in her chair like she was excited.
"Ridiculous name," Lord Donovan snapped from the doorway. "Anne, you may go, I will direct the girl to her duties."
Anne bowed slightly, then left quickly.
The man turned back to Verbena, his expression livid as he looked her over. "You look slovenly!"
"My apologies, I had no way to dry my clothes last night, or the space to do it were I able. All of my clothes are still damp."
"I wish to see all of your papers. You will bring them to me at lunch. I refuse to believe you are 22."
"As you wish."
"Lyla isn't like other girls, she..."
"I can see that, she is much more special, isn't she?" Verbena asked, smiling at Lyla and moving to hold her hand gently. "We're going to have such fun, her and I!"
"As I was saying! She needs more deliberate care. She needs to be moved in and out of her chair and her bed. She sleeps a great deal. She does not speak at all and she understands little..."