Skirts swirled around her knees, and it kept making her pause as if she'd fall. The street urchin could scale a rooftop, fearless and grinning. She didn't worry about falling from that then, so she wasn't going to fall from this today. She still could've used a mirror under her feet to see where they were!
The idea almost made her spit. She hardly recognized herself again in the mirror, looking more a young lady in a dress today than she had in almost a year. Gosh ding, she couldn't have been in britches that long already! Charley felt more out of practice in skirts than in a role, barely sidestepping her polished shoes away to avoid someone marching past her like a storm.
It was the perfect excuse to step out of line, just before the searing argument battered her ears from afar. She winced, ducking her head involuntarily in sympathy for the auctioneer. It rustled her hair in a slight, self-made breeze that reminded the dolled-up urchin that her head was bare save for a single ribbon to keep her brushed locks behind her ears. Braids still could have done it better! Charley brushed the earlier argument away, this one not tangling on the knots that had been painfully excised from her head today.
"Excuse me, sir?" She tugged on the bottom of his waistcoat. It was actual tweed, not seersucker or linen. For a moment, Charley lost herself in dreams of a tweed waistcoat to replace her vest. Her eyes blinked open to find the queued-up man, an old book under his arm, peering down at her like a crumb on his nice, tweed waistcoat. She flicked them down, remembering her role today. "Can you help me find my sister?"
Biting the inside of her lip helped draw the tears she needed to sell it. And what man in a tweed waistcoat wouldn't buy the sad tale of the little girl in a tear-sodden dress, looking for her dearest sister?
The idea almost made her spit. She hardly recognized herself again in the mirror, looking more a young lady in a dress today than she had in almost a year. Gosh ding, she couldn't have been in britches that long already! Charley felt more out of practice in skirts than in a role, barely sidestepping her polished shoes away to avoid someone marching past her like a storm.
It was the perfect excuse to step out of line, just before the searing argument battered her ears from afar. She winced, ducking her head involuntarily in sympathy for the auctioneer. It rustled her hair in a slight, self-made breeze that reminded the dolled-up urchin that her head was bare save for a single ribbon to keep her brushed locks behind her ears. Braids still could have done it better! Charley brushed the earlier argument away, this one not tangling on the knots that had been painfully excised from her head today.
"Excuse me, sir?" She tugged on the bottom of his waistcoat. It was actual tweed, not seersucker or linen. For a moment, Charley lost herself in dreams of a tweed waistcoat to replace her vest. Her eyes blinked open to find the queued-up man, an old book under his arm, peering down at her like a crumb on his nice, tweed waistcoat. She flicked them down, remembering her role today. "Can you help me find my sister?"
Biting the inside of her lip helped draw the tears she needed to sell it. And what man in a tweed waistcoat wouldn't buy the sad tale of the little girl in a tear-sodden dress, looking for her dearest sister?