"Winding Circle can cover it. That's not to say they won't appreciate you contributing what you can, but you don't have to."
"Can I bring all my stuff? Will they let me sleep outside?"
"You can bring as much stuff as we can carry on the way. You'll have to ask Dedicate Honey about sleeping outside. There might not be anywhere outside for you to sleep; most of Winding Circle is in use somehow or other, even the outdoor parts."
"I have a hammock. Can't I put the hammock somewhere?" asks Stormy. "I've been sleeping outside since I was seven!"
"If there's somewhere to put your hammock, Dedicate Honey will find it," Mathilde assures her.
"I don't want to have to sleep all shut up inside," says Stormy. "It's stuffy."
Charlie's eventual return letter accepts Ranae's judgment on their child's education, and the trip to Winding Circle is undertaken.
"Stormy, Ranae, this is Dedicate Honey," laughs Mathilde. "Honey, this is Ranae Swan and her daughter Bella, who likes to be known as Stormy. I wrote ahead about them; did you get my letter?"
"Oh, yes," says Honey, nodding. "I'm so pleased to meet you both. Come inside; I've found just the place to put you."
"Do I get to sleep outside?" asks Stormy, following the dedicate.
"Good. But also I need to have a place for my stuff that isn't outside because books aren't waterproof."
"Don't worry, you will," says the dedicate. "It's this way."
And she leads them to a little cottage, isolated from most of the other buildings and surrounded by gardens. There is a fence, but the corresponding gate is open; Dedicate Honey walks right past it and up the path toward the cottage door.
"Rook! Sedge!" she calls out. "Your new guest has arrived!"
Stormy bounces on her toes. It would probably be rude to taste the sky she will be living under right now, when there are people to meet.
"Glad to hear it," he says. "What's your name, little one? You may call me Sedge."
"I'm named Isabella but I'd rather be called Stormy and if you have to call me something that's not Stormy Bella is better than Isabella."
"Pleased to meet you, Stormy. Why don't you bring your things inside?"
"Okay." She goes and get the first of a few boxes - she has a lot of books, and notebooks.
Sedge shows her the room just to the left of the door where a few of the people living in the house keep this and that. There's plenty of space for her boxes.
Stormy takes a few trips, and then she goes to look at the rest of the house.