Cameila Author's Note: Cameila's
boarding school has changed a bit since Ella's days in it. Ella's
Madam Edith was a different person than Madam Edna. *g* Also,
this is later, there will be no mention of Ella, and somewhere along the
way they developed mirrors and a more advanced form of sink & chamber
pot. ^_^ So, just a warning so I don't get attacked for taking
out the Lime Room or something. I knew it was there, I read the finishing
school section of Ella Enchanted three times over and took notes. I just gave myself the liberty of making changes. ^_^ Now,
read on ..
The girl's
eyes turned dark. Cerulean bursts of flame receded into the black
of her pupils, leaving only the soft lavender color her eyes were when
she was alarmed or disappointed.
Or both. "Finishing school?" she asked with distaste.
"Yes,"
her mother ordered firmly. "You must learn to live the life of a
proper lady, my dear, and stop dissolving yourself into all this work."
Cameila
snorted. "What's wrong with work?"
"And
you simply must learn Kyrrian," her mother continued loudly, ignoring
her challenge. Cameila sensed that the battle was over, and fell
silent. There was a reason her mother was the manager of an
Ayorthaian singing troupe, and not merely an underling. "So, my darling,"
the small-nosed, black-haired woman continued sweetly, sensing her victory,
"toddle down to your room and pack. Rupert will ride with you in
the carriage tomorrow -- I must go with my troupe to sing at an inn."
There
it is, Cameila thought. Once she gets her way she's all sugar-sweet. I detest it.
The girl
with angry purple eyes said nothing, but curtsied stiffly and left with
the least genuine smile she could muster.
By the
next day, Cameila had calmed down enough so that her eyes had turned back
to the pretty bluish-turquoise they usually were. She still hated
the idea of finishing school, where she would be away from all the action
-- and yes, work! -- of the respectable farm she and her cousins managed
with the help of their fairy godfather, Rupert. Rupert was one of
the last fairies left in Ayortha, but that didn't make his rules about
magic any less strict. He barely ever used it, and Cameila
and her cousins were often exasperated by his miserly attitude towards
using it.
"It's
as if you're not even a fairy!" Cousin Kayara had exclaimed when Rupert
had refused to milk the cows by magic a few mornings ago. Cameila
privately was of the opinion that fairies probably had their reasons; she
didn't bother Rupert about it much. He was a good godfather to her.
You would
think, she thought sullenly to herself, as the carriage jarred across the
dirt roads through Ayortha's countryside, that Mother would want me at
the farm with Cousin Kayara and Cousin Jerahnu and all the others, since
Mother's always away with her troupe. But that isn't so with Mother,
is it? She doesn't think logically, Mother. She doesn't worry
that I won't be there when Saladei has her babies -- and the poor rabbit's
even named after her!
Cameila
let out a deep sigh and brought her knees up so that her feet rested on
the cushion of the carriage, curling her arms around her legs comfortably. Rupert, next to her, was asleep, so nobody would rat at her about being
a proper lady of breeding. I am a lady of breeding, she always
wanted to yell back, I breed all the rabbits on our farm -- but she never
did. She'd bite her lip and lower her head and say yes, yes, I'm
a lady, you're right, ladies don't manage things, ladies marry. Husbands
do the managing ..
Cameila
only screamed in indignation and kicked her bed in disgust when nobody
was within earshot.
"Lady
Cameila?" she heard Rupert's voice ask. "Do proper ladies of breeding
place their muddy shoes on carriage cushions?"
She rolled
her eyes and grudgingly took her shoes off. "When did I become a
lady, anyway?" she asked stubbornly. "If I'm a lady, why do we live
on a farm?"
"Haven't
I told you this already?" he asked wearily. "You must tire of the
story at some point."
"No,"
she replied, jutting her chin out. "Tell me again."
Rupert
sighed. "Your mother's house was an influential title without money
to back it. Your father's house was rich, but without a significant
standing in court. A marriage between the two was simply a strategic
move by their parents, and the instant they were dead your father left
without a trace. So you are still a lady because of your mother's
title, but your father has her money."
Cameila
shuddered. "Awful."
"Yes."
"Rupert,
why do I have to go to finishing school?"
"Because
--" here her godfather sighed and adjusted his position on the seat --
"your mother wants you to remember that you are a lady, and that
your house is still an important one to the royal family."
"Disgraced
though we are?"
Rupert
wasn't going to give her that one, Cameila realized. He settled back
into the cushions, leaning his head against the poorly crafted glass window,
and closed his eyes. She stretched; it had been a long ride. Her words echoed back and rattled her brain, haunting her: "Disgraced
though we are .." For in fact they were disgraced. Shuddering
again, Cameila looked at her hands and told herself that she was a product
of a forced marriage. Her creation was not an act of love -- it was
something that had to be done to continue the reign of the Bileu line. She sighed deeply and pressed her nose to the window until she fell asleep.
Finishing
school was a tiny little cottage at the edge of Jenn. Cozy, was Cameila's
first thought -- a prison, was her second. It was a gigantic wooden
house with extensive gardens and shady, calming trees, but for all Cameila
knew there were bars on the windows and guards patrolling the grounds. Her face twitched in disgust as her eyes alighted on a pair of decorative
bushes by the front doors; they were sheared to the shape of hoop-skirted
ladies with très petite figures.
Rupert
stepped out of the carriage and looked around, hiding feelings that were
quite similar to Cameila's. As the two of them stood, absorbing the
scene, a slouching man with ponytailed brown hair opened the front door
of the school, peering out with sleep-deprived eyes. Recognizing
them, he slid over lazily and grabbed Cameila's suitcases out of the carriage.
"Yer
t'see Ma'am Eddie," he mumbled as he pulled Cameila's small pack from her
seat. It held Cousin Kayara's ring, Cousin Jerahnu's prized ebony
pen, and Rupert's fairy book, all parting gifts. It also held her
journal.
"Wait,
I can take that!" she nearly shouted. Hastily, she added, "It's no
trouble, really." Shrugging, the man handed her the bag, and she
hugged it briefly before looking up at Rupert, red-cheeked.
He pretended
not to notice her affectionate embrace with a pack. "This Madam Edna
is inside?"
"Yeh,"
the unfamiliar man told them, head hanging as if he lacked the strength
to hold it up. Cameila thought he was trying to look at Rupert through
his eyelids. "She dere."
"My thanks,"
Rupert told him, with a small bow. As they followed, the man trudged
up to the school, luggage in hand, and disappeared up a dark oak stairwell
at the end of the hall.
"Where
are we supposed to go?" Cameila asked Rupert, looking up expectantly.
Rupert
glanced at the bronze plaques on the doors. "Find one of these that
says 'Madam Edna' on it." The two headed up the hallway, Rupert searching
for Madam Edna, Cameila curiously exploring the place where she would be
spending at least the next year. The door to Madam Edna's office
was at the far end of the hall on the left, past the oak staircase and
coat racks. Opposite the headmistress's door was a uniform line of
five doors with 'Manners Mistress,' 'Music Mistress,' 'Sewing Mistress,'
'Writing Mistress,' and 'Dancing Mistress' engraved in bronze. Cameila
raised her eyebrows -- these names were what the teachers liked to be called? -- and the door to Madam Edna's office opened.
"Come
in," said a stern voice; Cameila couldn't see its owner past Rupert, an
odd thing since her godfather was so short. Once they walked in,
however, Cameila saw that Madam Edna clearly fit her imaginings: she was
a slightly stocky elderly lady in a very fancy black dress with a tight
knot at the top of her head. Her lips were thin and strict, her eyes
had the cold look of someone who always told the harsh truth, and her long
hands were perfect for piano-playing -- and strangling disobedient students,
Cameila thought morosely.
There
was a locked cabinet just to the right of the door with no sign or glass
window to give the viewer a clue about what lay inside. Cameila wondered
if she was safeguarding something, or if that was just where she kept her
personal belongings. Thinking of belongings made her clutch her little
bag tighter, and she wondered if she would have a place to keep things
from the other girls at the school.
"Cameila
Bileu?" Madam Edna asked at once, and Rupert nodded calmly. The apathetic,
cool-headed man didn't seem intimidated at all by this businesslike woman. "I thought as much. You sent a letter ahead." She scrutinized
the girl from her cerulean eyes to the booted feet, uncovered by her too-small
farm dress, and back up to her practical, shoulder-length locks of black
hair. "Do not think we will pamper you here because of your family
line," the headmistress told her sternly. Cameila forced herself
to match that stern brown gaze. She thought, but did not say, How
could you not? I am alive because of the Bileu line.
Rupert
cleared his throat loudly, making her eyes jump to him, and he glared at
her, obviously knowing what she was thinking. Cameila scowled at
him as Madam Edna continued her lecture.
"You
are not to cause trouble among the other girls," she proclaimed. "You are not to disobey your teachers. You are not to be rude to
the servants. You are not to be a discredit to this school. You are not to commit unladylike actions. Consequences are severe." Cameila believed her, the mental picture of strangling fresh in her mind. "On weekdays you are to rise at seven o'clock, and not a moment after." No problem. I'm used to waking with the sun. Next requirement? "You are not to primp for more than half an hour. Looking good is
a delicate art, and one that must be quickly managed." It took a
lot of effort for Cameila's eyes to keep from rolling at the "delicate
art" comment. As it was, her treacherous eyes were hastily turning
her fiery purple color to display her dissatisfaction. "You will
have classes, grouped with the girls in your room and the girls in one
other room, until 3:30 in the afternoon. You will have free time
and activity time until teatime and then until supper. Lights out
is at 9 pm. Girls are not permitted in other rooms until weekends,
and then only by specific invitation.
"On the
weekends you will be permitted to go into town, and you must eat all meals
in town except for tea. Servants are off-duty on weekends, so do
not ask them to perform chores for you. Teatime on weekends will
be prepared by a different girl every week and served by a different girl. All the girls will sit together in the dining room and talk without the
supervision of any teachers." Cameila was puzzled. No supervision! What must happen at that time! What awful things would be done to
the new students? She felt fear rise in her throat, and -- not for
the first time -- she was glad of her strength as a farm girl.
"Do you
have any questions, Miss Cameila?" Madam Edna inquired, snapping her back
to attention. Cameila looked up and shook her head, and then realized
that the headmistress wanted to hear her voice.
"No,
mum," she answered softly.
"Good,"
Madam Edna said with finality, and led them out of her office and back
down the hall to the room closest to the front door. The room was
on their right this time. Before the short, strict headmistress pushed
open the door, Cameila peered up at it and read the bronze plaque -- 'SEWING
ROOM,' it read. Inside, she counted nine girls sitting in armchairs,
working diligently at embroidery.
"Margaret,"
Madam Edna called, nodding to the frail, petite figure of the sewing teacher. A rosy-cheeked, well-dressed, slightly overweight student who looked to
be about fifteen -- my age, thought Cameila -- looked up, hastily dropped
her sewing, and went to Madam Edna. Out of the corner of her eye,
Cameila spotted another richly clothed girl, this time perfectly thin,
give her headmistress a glowing smile. Madam Edna either pretended
not to notice or truly did not see the girl, and closed the door.
Margaret
waited prettily, hands folded at her waist, for Madam Edna's instructions. She was ordered to show Cameila to the Cerulean Room, and with that Madam
Edna walked purposefully back to her office. Rupert cleared his throat
pointedly, and Cameila knew it was time for him to go. He wouldn't
appreciate a hug, she had learned from experience, so she simply forced
a smile and turned away, following Margaret up the elegant oak staircase. Her insides were in consternation.
"We're
both in the Cerulean Room, that's why Eddie picked me to show you around,"
Margaret informed her, as if she had much practice leading new students
to their deaths. By strangling. Cameila gulped as she continued. "What's your name? Cameila Bileu, she said?"
"Yes." Cameila nodded. "Call me Cam, though. Only Rupert -- my godfather
-- and my mother call me Cameila." She wrinkled her nose, and Margaret
laughed.
"I'm
Meg, to normal people," she said. "You're funny."
"Who's
Eddie?" Cam wondered, feeling rather better now that this other girl had
laughed.
"That's
our little name for Madam Edna. Don't ever call her that to her face,
though, she'll have you skinned," Meg warned with a knowing air. "She can be worse than an ogre sometimes. Last week Delinda got caught
snooping in Music Mistress's letters and got a letter sent home and detention
in the school for a week. She's not even allowed to go into town
this weekend, and that means no meals." Cameila shuddered. "Not that it matters," Meg added as they finished climbing the second set
of stairs and walked onto the third floor. "Delinda's an awful snot. She's in the Ruby Room, which means we have to have classes with her." Both girls scowled, and Meg turned down a hallway to the right and opened
the farthest door down. Its plaque read 'CERULEAN ROOM,' and the
name certainly fit the decor.
Cam roved
her eyes around the room curiously, taking in the comfy armchairs and gauzy
curtains and fancy beds, all in the same bluish-turquoise. There
were different tints of the color, but the overall effect was overwhelming rather
than beautiful in Cam's opinion. Meg pointed to a bed at the far
corner of the room, under a window that overlooked a gigantic flower garden. It had Cam's luggage piled at the bottom.
"Hey,
is that your stuff?" she asked. Cam nodded. "Your bed's next
to mine," she remarked, smiling slowly. Cam grinned at her and plopped
down on her bed.
"This
is comfy!" she exclaimed.
"Yeah,
but don't let Eddie see you doing that. Or any of the teachers, for
that matter." Meg mimicked Madam Edna's stern voice. "Ladies,
I do not want to see you clamber onto your sleeping places with the dignity
of a hunting dog!"
Cam giggled. "Is she that bad?" Meg nodded emphatically, eyes wide.
"You'd
better make your bed every morning, too," she told Cam. "When I first
got here last year I almost got killed for not making my bed." As an afterthought, she added, "Are you Ayorthaian?"
Closing
her eyes briefly, Cam nodded. "I always thought I could beat that
stupid accent out of me .." she muttered. "Are there any other Ayorthaians
here?"
Meg bit
her lip in thought. "Umm .. Reena from the Emerald Room. She's
a commoner. Are you?"
"No,"
Cam answered. And I'll never forget it. "I'm the Bileu line,
where all the dukes and duchesses and everybody used to be." When
they had money, she added silently. Meg noticed the bitter 'used
to be' and decided not to question her further.
"So,
I guess you should unpack," Meg suggested.
"I guess
so," Cam replied, sighing, and pushed off the bed. "What do we do
after that?" She opened the first of her two small bags and began
to pile a few clothes in the cerulean dresser by her bed. There was
a mirror on top of it, and Cam noticed that she looked tired and mussed. Not surprising, she told herself with a shrug, and returned to her luggage.
Meg told
Cam to wait a moment and ran out to check the grandfather clock in the
hall. As she re-entered the room, she announced, "It's one-thirty,
so we have a half hour left of sewing and then we go to writing. After that it's free time, teatime, more free time, and supper."
"Oh,"
Cam answered, bewildered. She moved on to her second bag. The
unpacking wouldn't take long -- she hadn't had much to bring. Remembering
the pack slung around her shoulder, she looked over at Meg and asked, "Is
there -- somewhere I can keep this where nobody will find it?" She
felt stupid translating her wishes to words, and hoped Meg wouldn't be
offended -- or worse, amused -- by her request.
"Under
your pillow?" Meg returned, shrugging. "I have no idea. Good
ladies have no privacy." She grinned, inviting Cam to share her joke,
and Cam smiled ruefully back, relieved. The angry lavender had again
disappeared, and the haze of cerulean was back in her eyes now. She
wasn't so unsettled anymore, now that she knew the name and description
of her fate.
Once
Cam had finished with her bags, the two girls clattered back downstairs
to the Sewing Room. Meg and Cam settled down very elegantly on two
armchairs in one corner, and Cam managed to stitch a rough flower in the
thirty minutes of class she had to endure. At least another year
of this, Cam reminded herself. And it will be a long one ..