Chapter 73 - Interlude - Visiting Miss Corinna’s House
Ascendance of a Bookworm
My name is Tuuli! Iâm eight years old.
When my little sister Ma?ne said she got everything figured out at the temple about becoming a sister-in-training, I was super relieved. Sheâs not going to die because of the devouring, and sheâs not going to be a gray-robed priestess and get treated like an orphan. I was really scared that sheâd go away and Iâd never see her again, but thatâs not going to happen, and Iâm super happy about that!
The day after Mom and Dad got called out to the temple, Ma?ne headed out to go to Mister Bennoâs shop. She said that she needed to ask him some things about how she should be dealing with the head priest, and that while she was there she was going to figure out what day she was going to meet with Miss Corinna. Last time she met with her, she went all by herself, and I was stuck at home. This time, though, Ma?ne said that sheâd ask Miss Corinna if I could come too.
Aaahh, Iâm really looking forward to this! My Ma?ne is such a good girl, always thinking of her big sister! Iâm gonna get to brag to all my friends at the workshop about how I got to go to Miss Corinnaâs house.
Miss Corinnaâs really amazing! When she came of age, she got her own workshop, and then she started getting orders from the nobility to make clothes for them. To apprentice seamstresses like me, sheâs like a shining star in the sky, someone that one day we want to be just like.
The story of how her amazing husband proposed to her super dramatically is like a legend youâd hear from a minstrel. All the apprentice seamstresses talk about it. For the sake of his love, he cast aside his dreams of being a merchant, spent all of the money heâd saved up, and then proposed to her! Hearing rumors like that, itâs really obvious to see that he really loves her a lot. Itâs the kind of story that every girl wants to be part of.
I wonder what kind of person Miss Corinna is? All I know is that Ma?ne said that she was really nice, and also really pretty.
***
The front door opens, and Ma?ne comes leaping in. âIâm home, Tuuli!â she says, beaming. âMiss Corinna said that she definitely wants to see you and Mom too. Tomorrow afternoon, she said.â
From how hard sheâs panting, it looks like she was kinda hurrying home. Immediately after she tells me about this, she collapses on the spot.
âMa?ne?!â I say.
âUrgh⦠I really wanted to come home and tell you as quick as I could, maybe I over did it? Sorry.â
âItâll be a big problem if you canât actually make it out there tomorrow. Come sit down and take a break.â
Ma?ne flops limply into a chair, and her glossy, dark blue hair falls down behind her. Sheâs always trying her best at a lot of different things, so sheâs gotten a little bit healthier, but sheâs definitely still not actually strong, and sheâs still not getting any bigger. She still looks like sheâs four years old, and I really canât help but worry about her.
When she stands next to Lutz, whoâs the same age as her, she looks like his little sister, and lately when she goes to the forest, kids two years younger than her offer to help her out, which always makes her slump over dejectedly. Sheâs not weak just because she has the devouring. Even when she got cured, she was still really frail. She said that Freida, who has the same disease, doesnât have that problem.
Ma?ne rubs at her temples. ââ¦Hmm, am I doing better now?â she says.
She stands up, then starts slowly moving around. She carefully folds up her nice dress and puts it in the bag that she made herself and really likes, making sure that it doesnât get dirty, then puts her hairpin in as well. As soon as I realize that sheâs getting her things ready for tomorrow, I ask her a question.
âMa?ne, what about me? Do I need to do anything to get ready?â
âNo, I canât think of anything⦠but since itâs such a special occasion, maybe we should wash our hair with rinsham?â
âYeah!â
Ma?ne and I start washing our hair with the rinsham I made. I didnât used to wash it this much, but lately I guess Iâve started thinking that I need to keep myself looking nice. Even at a workshop, the only people who can talk to customers and show them around are people who make sure theyâre dressed very neatly.
âHey, Ma?ne,â I say. âToday, they let me sit at the front desk for the first time!â
âWow, really? Thatâs great, Tuuli!â
âItâs all thanks to you,â I say.
A while back, when I was grumbling to Ma?ne about how only pretty people got to meet with the customers at work, she said to me, âItâs because first impressions are vital when dealing with customers. It is absolutely something that merchants pay attention to. If you want to go from someone who only works in the back room making things to someone who gets to work publicly with customers, then you have to make sure to keep yourself clean, pay attention to your manners, and so on.â It was cautionary advice about a merchantâs viewpoint.
She also said that I should make sure that my work clothes are nice enough that customers can see me in, and in order to make sure that they donât get dirty I should wear an apron that even covers my sleeves. That way, if I have to talk to a customer, then I can take off the apron, and be wearing clean clothes. I took her advice to heart, and now Iâm in a place where I can do work that involves talking to customers, too.
âIâm home,â says Mom, as she comes through the front door.
She arrives as Ma?ne and I are in the middle of talking about what weâve gotten done today as we carefully wash our hair. When she sees us drying our hair and thoroughly combing it out, her eyes widen slightly.
âOh my, youâre using rinsham? â¦Does that meanâ¦?â
âYep!â says Ma?ne. âTomorrow, we get to go to Miss Corinnaâs house.â
Mom, when she hears this, immediately tells me and Ma?ne that weâre on dinner duty today and starts washing her hair. Since we definitely understand that she wants to make herself as pretty as possible before meeting with Miss Corinna, Ma?ne and I just shrug at each other and give up our seats.
âIâm going to wear the new summer dress you just finished making for me tomorrow,â I say to Mom.
âGood idea. Thatâll keep you cool, and you look good in it, too.â
The cloth that we didnât need to use to make Ma?neâs dress has turned into a new summer dress for me, instead. Unlike Ma?ne, Iâm actually growing healthily, so Iâm always getting too big for my clothes really quickly.
There wasnât enough cloth to make the entire dress, so the skirt part was actually sewn together patchwork-style out of a few different colors of cloth in order to be long enough. It wound up looking like itâs decorative, so it looks really cute. Itâs my favorite dress.
I wonder if Miss Corinna is going to think it looks cute, too?
***
The next day, the three of us leave the house fairly early, making sure that weâll be able to get there in time even going at Ma?neâs walking speed. As we pass through the central plaza and enter the north side of town, the clothes of the people around us start to get more colorful, and I start seeing people who are wearing clothes with lots of cloth. Since itâs rare for me to come to the north part of town, I look down self-consciously at my own clothes, wondering if Iâm sticking out too much. When I look up at Mom, I see that she looks a little worried about how other people are looking at her too. Ma?ne, however, doesnât look the least bit worried. In fact, she seems really energetic! Sheâs still really slow, though.
âMiss Corinnaâs house is right above Mister Bennoâs shop,â she says.
When she says that, it starts to make sense. Mom and I have only heard Ma?ne talk about these things. We havenât seen them ourselves. Ma?ne, though, comes this way with Lutz a lot. Thereâs no way sheâd be worried.
âOh no, how should I introduce myself?â says Mom.
âYou could start with âitâs nice to meet youâ, right?â says Ma?ne. âThen maybe something like 'thank you for inviting us hereâ? And then when you meet Mister Benno and Mister Mark, you could say 'thank you for looking after my daughterâ, I think.â
Ma?ne immediately has an answer ready for our very stressed-out Mom. We donât usually need to formally introduce ourselves, but maybe when working at the gates or at a shop, this is the kind of thing you need to be able to bring out immediately, I wonder? She didnât hesitate at all.
âMa?ne, how about me? How do I introduce yourself?â
âJust put on your cutest smile!â she says, beaming. âI canât think of anyone who wouldnât be happy if you smile and say how much youâve been looking forward to meeting them.â
Mom and I start practicing our introductions as we walk. Ma?ne watches us, looking amused. Since sheâs wearing her apprenticeâs clothes, she really blends in here, unlike me and Mom. I suddenly feel like thereâs a side of her that we donât know about. Itâs a strange, uncomfortable, almost frustrating sort of feeling.
***
âMiss Corinna, hello~!â
Ma?ne is completely unperturbed as she knocks on the door. Mom and I, on the other hand, are not. With every floor we passed as we climbed the stairs, Mom started shivering more and more, and I couldnât stop my legs from wobbling with every step.
Wait a bit, Ma?ne! Iâm still not ready!
Before I have a chance to settle my nerves, the door opens. âMa?ne, hello, come in!â says Corinna. She looks up at us. âYou must be Ma?neâs mother and sister. Welcome! Iâm Corinna. Please, come in.â
The door has opened to reveal a beautiful, charming woman. She is way younger and prettier than I even imagined. Her glossy, pale, cream-colored hair shines like moonlight, and her thin, gentle eyes are a gray that gleams like silver as she looks at us with the kindest expression. Even though her colors are make her look almost ephemeral, she also has a really good figure. The parts of her that are supposed to stick out stick way out, and her waist is very narrow. Her body is the womanly ideal.
âMiss Corinna, itâs nice to meet you,â says Mom. âMy name is Eva; Iâm Ma?neâs mother. Thank you very much for inviting us here today.â
Mom delivers her rehearsed introduction, slightly bending her knees and lowering her chest in a small curtsey. I copy what she did, and introduce myself too.
âItâs nice to meet you, Miss Corinna! My nameâs Tuuli. Iâve been really looking forward to coming here. Iâm happy I get to meet you!â
âIâve been looking forward to meeting you as well. When I saw Ma?neâs dress, even from far away, it stood out a lot to me. I thought I definitely had to see it up close. Sorry if Iâm being a little selfish, calling you all the way out here.â
Corinnaâs gentle smile is infectious, and I canât stop myself from smiling too. Her smile is as warm as a clear spring day.
âPlease, wait here for a moment. Iâll go get some tea ready.â
The room that Miss Corinna brings us to looks like itâs a room that she uses for work, filled with embroidered cloth and samples of the clothing that sheâs made. Thereâs so many decorations, this is a really wonderful-looking room. Thereâs a couple of tables in the room; one in the middle, that looks like itâs for talking, and one off to the side that looks like itâs for working. The table weâve got in our kitchen that we use for literally everything doesnât even come close.
Aaaaaa!! This is so amazing~!
Both Mom and me canât keep our eyes off of all of the clothing set up around the room and the colorful tapestries hung up on the walls. I never thought that Iâd ever see something this beautiful. I slowly spin around, taking it all in, one thing at a time. Every single thing is sewn neatly, colored brilliantly, richly decorated, and sewn into designs that are completely different from anything Iâve ever worn. I sigh in complete wonder, looking at these decorations.
âSo prettyâ¦â I murmur. âhow in the world do I learn how to make things like this? Iâd never think to make any of these designs. Is it really just practice?â
âSkill is very important, yeah,â says Ma?ne. âbut if you want to come up ideas like those, looking at lots of good examples is just as important, too.â
I wasnât expecting her to say anything, so I turn to look at her. She seems tired, sitting all alone in her chair, legs lazily dangling as she looks at me with her golden eyes.
âWhat do you mean?â
âIf youâre not paying attention to what rich people are wearing, what kind of fads and trends there are, and so on, then you wonât have any ideas like this. Miss Corinna was born into money, so sheâs naturally surrounded by good examples. Thatâs why she knows about whatâs good to make.â
âSo, then, itâs impossible for me?â
I slump my shoulders, having been told that I can never get there no matter how hard I try. Ma?ne, though, shakes her head, saying âno, thatâs not it.â
âI know that going to the forest on your days off is still really important, but whenever you can, you should head past the central plaza and take a walk in the northern parts of town. Thereâs lots of rich people walking around there, and thereâs lots of shops where those kinds of people shop, you know? Lots of different kinds of clothes on display. If you compare them, then you can figure out what kinds of colors and designs are fashionable right now, and use those as reference, I think.â
On my days off, Iâve been going to the forest, but have never gone to the north part of town. I actually think I can count the number of times Iâve gone north past the central plaza on one hand. I hadnât realized that going someplace where rich people are would be a good source of information about the kinds of things rich people liked to wear.
âAnd then, the patterns on these tapestries and the flowers on this embroidery⦠this is all stuff you can find in the forest, you know? If you take a good look around you at things like that, when you have to come up with a design Iâm sure youâll think of something useful.â
ââ¦Okay. Iâll try that!â
It looks like Ma?ne looks at this clothing and these decorations completely differently compared to me. I wonder if the difference between me, who was swept away by how pretty everything is, and her is the difference between a craftswoman and a merchant? I try to keep my feelings in check as I stare intently at Miss Corinnaâs work, focusing on trying to find some sort of new technique that I can borrow, even how I am now.
âOh my, Tuuli,â says Miss Corinna, entering the room with a servant woman in tow. âIâm a little embarrassed that youâre looking so closely.â
âI never see clothes like this anywhere, so I donât get any chance to look at them like this. Iâm an apprentice seamstress, but they still donât let me work on big things like clothing yetâ¦â
Lately, Iâve finally started to be given work to do on small accessories and stitchery in places that wonât be noticed, but Iâm still a long ways away from being able to make clothes all by myself.
âPracticing the basics is very important! You need to be able to make a nice, straight stitch if you want to make beautiful clothing.â
âIâll try my hardest! Um, Miss Corinna? How did you sew this part here?â
âOh, this? Wellâ¦â
As the servant woman sets up some tea and sweets on the table, Miss Corinna explains a few things about the various pieces of clothing around the room. At some point, Mom joins in, listening along with me. Ma?ne is the only one left out, looking uninterested as she sits at the table.
âPlease, eat!â
âThank you very much.â
At Miss Corinnaâs urging, I take a sip of tea. Itâs amazing, completely unlike the tea we drink at home. It feels like the flavorâs spreading out all through my mouth.
âThis is really good!â
âIâm glad that you like it,â says Miss Corinna, smiling sweetly.
I glance at my family to see if they agree. Momâs making a face that looks like she thinks itâs good, but canât stop thinking about how much it costs, and Ma?ne has her eyes closed, entranced by the flavor.
âPlease, have some of this too.â
Miss Corinna pushes a plate towards me, on which is a pastry made of a thin, bread-like dough topped with fruit and honey. I pick up a slice of it, then take a bite.
Hmmm, itâs good, but compared to this I like the recipes that Ma?neâs been teaching me even better.
A little while ago, Ma?ne went to Friedaâs house to teach her a recipe, and came back with a bag of sugar in exchange. Then she started teaching me how to make all sorts of sweets Iâd never even heard of, like âcrepesâ, âcompoteâ, and âpseudo-cookiesâ. She even says that when it gets colder out she wants to make something called âpuddingâ, but it seems like it needs to be cooled so it wonât work during the summer. She also put some fruit, some sugar, and some alcohol in a pot and sealed it up. She says that sheâs making something thatâll be full of summer flavor by the time winter comes around. I canât wait!
âThis is delicious, and so sweet,â says Ma?ne, taking another bite. âIâm so envious that you can use so much honey on theseâ¦â
Corinna smiles wryly. âIf thatâs how you feel, why donât you buy some yourself? Youâve certainly made Benno bitter enough to afford it.â
âIâm keeping my workshopâs funds separate from my own personal spending money.â
After we finish eating, we immediately take out Ma?neâs dress. Mom and Ma?ne show it to Miss Corinna, and they explain all the alterations that we made. Miss Corinna picks it up and looks over it carefully, inspecting the backs of the seams and rolling up the hems.
âI never would have guessed this was an alteration,â she says.
âIt would have been much easier to make something from scratch,â agrees Ma?ne.
As Ma?ne explains, Miss Corinna writes something on a little wooden board. She looks just like Ma?ne does when sheâs writing on her slate or on her paper. I start to wonder if maybe I should learn how to read and write, too. Being able to write like that is actually kinda cool, I think.
âAnd this is the hairpin, hmâ¦â murmurs Miss Corinna, picking up the hairpin. The strands of small white flowers sway as she turns it over in her hands. âThis is the first time Iâve seen anything like it.â
âI made the big white one here,â I say, proudly.
âOh! Itâs very beautiful, Tuuli,â she replies.
Being praised by Miss Corinna makes my heart melt.
She traces a pale fingertip along the flower. âThis hairpin is really beautiful. â¦I think I might want to make ones like these at my workshop; would that be alright?â
She smiles, gently tilting her head. This is the most amazingly astounding thing that could possibly happen. I hadnât even dreamed that Miss Corinna would like the hairpin so much that sheâd want to make something like it herself! Overjoyed, I open my mouth, ready to say âOf course!!â, but before the words leave my mouth Ma?ne shakes her head.
âThere are terms,â she says.
I choke. âM⦠Ma⦠Ma?ne?!â
I absolutely can not believe that Ma?ne, after having finally been called all the way out to Miss Corinnaâs house, would make demands! My eyes nearly pop out of my head. Ma?ne looks at me, raising her hand to calm me down.
âThese hairpins are our winterâs handiwork, one of our most important sources of income. We canât just give away permission to anyone we want. No matter how much they say they want to make it, if they donât buy the rights to do so, then that only hurts us.â
Ma?neâs words are like cold water thrown in my face. Itâs true, these hairpins are a very, very good source of income for us. I suddenly remember just how much money weâd made last winter, and lose interest in stopping her.
âAlright, then, please talk with my brother about that.â
Miss Corinna rings a bell. The servant lady appears, and Miss Corinna tells her to go get her brother. Soon, I hear footsteps coming up the stairs.
âCorinna, I got your message, whatâs⦠Ah, you must be Ma?neâs family? Itâs a pleasure to meet you. Iâm Benno, Corinnaâs older brother.â
So, then, is this the Mister Benno thatâs done so much for Ma?ne?
His light, curly hair, the color of milk tea, frames his kind looking face and his reddish-brown eyes. The way he smiles so sociably makes him look very much like Miss Corinna, and his easy, friendly introduction leaves me with the impression that heâs a very good person.
âIâm Eva, Ma?neâs mother. Thank you for looking after my daughter.â
âIâm Tuuli! Hello.â
My mother introduces herself, and I frantically follow suit. Mister Benno smiles broadly, nodding at the two of us in turn, then looks down at Ma?ne, quirking an eyebrow.
âMa?ne, what is it this time?â
âA request from Miss Corinna. She wants the rights to make my hairpins. How much are you willing to buy them for?â
âBusiness, then?â
âBusiness, sir.â
Benno nods, and his demeanor changes in a single, terrifying instant. As soon as a truly merchant-like expression appears on his face, the gentle air about him disappears entirely. With a thud, he sits down roughly in a chair across from Ma?ne, a fierce glint in his eyes as he stares at her.
âThis much,â he says, holding up several fingers.
Ma?ne scoffs. âI certainly canât sell it for that little. Iâd rather take this to Freida instead.â
Even though she is seated directly in front of Benno, who is giving off a terrifyingly menacing air, Ma?neâs expression doesnât flicker in the slightest bit as she turns down his offer like itâs the most obvious thing to do. Instead, she looks like she might even be a little gleeful when faced with this competition.
âWeâve already decided that the things Ma?neâs Workshop makes would be sold through Lutz, havenât we?â
âThe things Ma?neâs Workshop makes, correct? That doesnât include recipes or rights, you know?â
âYou cheeky littleâ¦!â
Bennoâs exasperated shout causes Mom and I, who are still seated at the same table as these two, to flinch back in shock. Ma?ne, however, just smiles sweetly, tilting her head curiously to the side.
âOh, speaking of which, Mister Benno! How much did you decide youâre selling rinsham for? I had a chat with Freida, and it seems that when it comes to the rights for a completely new product that has no other competition, prices should start at no lower than a large gold coin, shouldnât they? I think I might have been selling my ideas to you for very reasonable rates! Hee hee hee~â¦â
Iâd heard her talk about it before, but this is the first time Iâve seen Ma?ne working as a merchant. I know that hearing about it and seeing it are two entirely different things, but seeing her dealing evenly with such a terrifying adult is leaving me completely dumbfounded.
What do I do? My little sisterâs scaryâ¦
At home, sheâs always worn out, she gets sick whenever she tries to do any work, and sheâs just as useless at helping around the house as sheâs always been, so this is the first time Iâve seen her take such an active, prominent role in something. Iâm honestly shocked. I know sheâd been aiming to become an apprentice merchant at Mister Bennoâs shop and gave it up because her health wouldnât allow it, but I wonder if sheâd really wanted to stick with it? This really seems to suit her.
âThis will take a while,â says Miss Corinna, standing up suddenly. âPlease, come this way.â
âHuh? â¦Huh?â
Corinna beckons us over to the table on the edge of the room. Mom and I exchange a look, then quietly stand up and follow her. Iâm worried about Ma?ne, but even if we stayed with her, it really didnât feel like there was anything we could do to help her.
âMy brother looks like heâs enjoying himself very much, so itâll probably take a while,â she says quietly, looking at the other table. ââ¦That said, Iâm really impressed by Ma?ne, how sheâs able to negotiate with my brother like that.â
This is the first time Iâve ever realized how amazing Ma?ne can be. Iâm her older sister, but I didnât know anything about this until just now.
âHow about we leave the merchantsâ talk to those two, and have our own discussion about sewing? Remind me, weâd been talking about how I shaped this skirt to drape like it does, right?â
âOh, yes! Please.â
While the other table works their way through their haggling, a lively conversation about sewing grows at our table as we sip our tea. Miss Corinna kindly explains to us a lot about the kinds of styles and decorations that are currently in fashion with the nobility. It seems like there are a lot of different methods for sewing things, because sheâs mentioning names of things that, even when I hear them clearly, donât bring to mind anything that would help change the shape of a skirt. These are words that I would never hear at the workshop, no matter how much I talked with coworkers, and Miss Corinna is mentioning them one right after the others.
âWhatâs that there?â
Whenever I have a question, Miss Corinna kindly answers it for me. Iâm happy, but Iâm also feeling a little ashamed. Iâve been working as an apprentice for a whole year now. I didnât think that I had so much left to learn. Iâm fully realizing that just asking questions isnât going to be enough. If I donât put a lot of effort into practice and study, Iâm never going to get to make any clothes for the customers.
âThis is a kind of dress that is only just starting to come into fashion,â she says, gesturing at a dress thatâs shown promptly in the center of a display.
It looks like the kind of dress that a noblewoman would wear to a fancy tea party. The cloth is glossy, the thread is fine, and the embroidery added here and there is simply splendid, and I canât help but sigh in admiration.
âItâs lovely,â I say. âBut, I canât believe that youâd need a whole dress just for one use. It seems like itâs a huge waste of money to meâ¦â
âAh, you might be right. But think about it this way: when we sleep, when we go out, when we do dirty work⦠we have different kinds of clothes for different kinds of situations, donât we? When you have more money, then the situations you need different clothes for get more and more specific.â
âHuhâ¦â
Suddenly, thereâs a loud clatter from the other table, as if someone had stood up very forcefully. When I look over in shock, I see that both Ma?ne and Mister Benno have stood up and are staring right at each other, with only the table providing any separation between them.
âYouâre not the slightest bit cute anymore, girl.â
âItâs all thanks to your training, sir.â
âHmph, maybe I gave you too much adviceâ¦â
âAh, but making sure you gather information from several sources so that you can be as accurate as possible is one of the fundamental principles of being a merchant, isnât it?â
The two of them shake hands, exchanging rueful smiles. It somehow feels like there is something dark lurking behind each of them that theyâre keeping restrained.
Yep, I donât think I could ever be a merchant, is the only thought that crosses my mind when I look at the two of them.
Ma?ne glances restlessly around the room, looking for us. When she spots us, she rushes over.
âWe made a deal,â she says as she gets closer, âso Mom, please teach Miss Corinna how to make the hairpins.ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
She grabs a cup of tea, which has grown cold by now, thanking Miss Corinna for bringing it out.
âAhh⦠my throat got really dry.â
âGood work,â says Corinna. âMay I ask, how much did you settle on? Iâll be deciding how much I sell them for based on that.â
Ma?ne glances nervously at me and Mom, then quickly holds up a few fingers for Miss Corinna to see. Miss Corinna gasps slightly as she looks at Ma?neâs outstretched fingers. This must be some sort of merchant-specific sign, I think. I canât help but get a little annoyed, since I have no idea what it actually means.
âWeâve decided that youâll make hairpins at your workshop for one year, and during that time youâll have a total monopoly on selling them.â
âEven still, Iâm impressed that you managed to get that much out of my brother.â
Corinna really does seem impressed when she looks at Ma?ne. It seems like that finger sign translates to a particular amount of money.
âHey, Ma?ne,â I say. âHow much is that?â
Iâm legitimately curious as to how much the rights to make these hairpins might actually cost. When I ask, though, Ma?ne suddenly looks extremely troubled. She glances at Mom, then at Miss Corinna, then lets out a quiet moan.
âYou canât say how much?â
âI mean, itâs a perfectly reasonable priceâ¦â she says. âItâs not like I canât say it, but I really donât want toâ¦â
I keep pestering her, despite how pained sheâs sounding. Eventually, she gives in, not even bothering to hide how reluctant sheâs feeling.
ââ¦One large and seven small gold coins,â she mutters.
âWhat?! Did you say gold coins?!â
Iâd thought that it was going to be expensive, but Iâd been thinking that it was going to be a couple big silver coins. I was off by two entire digits, and the shock of it crashes into my brain like a bullet. My jaw drops, and Momâs eyes nearly bulge out of her skull.
âIt sounds like a lot of money,â she says, frantically waving her hands, âbut it really is a fair price for selling the rights to something. I mean, this was Mister Benno. I really didnât rip him off! Also, these funds are for Ma?neâs Workshop, so itâs not like this is my own money!â
No matter how desperately sheâs chucking out excuse after excuse, I canât believe at all that Ma?ne could have so calmly been dealing with a pile of money that huge.
I mean, these are large gold coins, right? It doesnât matter that sheâs insisting itâs not her own money, but just how much does she have?! Is she secretly really amazing?! Wouldnât it be way better for her to be in business instead of going to the temple?
***
As I sit there, overwhelmed by the realization that not only do I have a long, long way to go with my sewing, but also that my little sister is actually amazing, our visit to Miss Corinnaâs house comes to a close.