Annie in the foster system
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"Yeah. I don't think it's worth telling her while I can't even do anything very usefully magic. Don't tell her please."

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Miss Enderbridge winks and makes a zipper motion across her lips. 

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“You could let her read the story,” Miss Enderbridge suggests. “Sort of ease her into it slowly.”

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"I guess that might be a good idea. I don't know how long I'll even be with her, though, it might not be worth easing her into it if next year I'll be somewhere else starting over."

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"I suppose not. Has she said anything about what they plan to do with you?" She sniffs. "The Social Services can be just awful about it, dragging on and on forever and never communicating about it to the person who you'd think has the most right to know."
 

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"I have not been kept in the loop on this. I don't suppose you want to adopt me? Is there an age maximum for adopting?"

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"Awwww, that's a very sweet thing to say." Miss Enderbridge reaches down to ruffle her hair. "I don't think they'd let me. I couldn't drive you to school, I imagine the social would say I'm barely looking after myself. But I hope we can be friends for a nice long time before I pop off." 

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"I think I should homeschool myself. I don't trust a roomful of kindergaterners to not sing. Possibly especially if I scream."

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"Oh, dear, that could be awkward. I hope the social workers decide to be all right with that, they're so fussy about school, school, school. But you're reading like a high schooler already, I hardly think anyone should worry about your education suffering." 

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"And math and stuff aren't as fun but I can still do those some if anyone wants me to prove it. I have no idea how all right the social workers will be. I think Evelyn takes the music thing seriously but I also thinks she expects I will grow out of it, which is not, in fact, a thing with magical curses."

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"Math! Oh dear. I'm sure they will want you to learn it, unfortunately, and I'm afraid it's never been an interest of mine. ...I do own a very strange book that's partly about math, but I'm afraid it mostly left me all confused, this old head is too old for new ideas like that. It's called Gödel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid.

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"Well, I'll have a look at it sometime. Anyway I can teach myself math it's just not exciting per se."

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Nod. "Maybe Evelyn can help you out. Or that big grown-up boy of hers." Smile. "One more iced tea before you go? There's a little more in the jug and certainly won't drink it." 

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"Yes thank you."

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She even has time to finish most of it before Evelyn knocks on the door and is let in with two bulging plastic grocery bags. (She stopped off at home to fridge her own groceries appropriately, since she doesn't want to end up feeling like she has to rush Annie out the door to get home for that.) 

"Did you have a nice afternoon?" she asks Annie, offering Miss Enderbridge the lighter of the two bags. 

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"Miss Enderbridge recited a really good poem."

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Miss Enderbridge will hurry off to the kitchen with her bag. (Evelyn might ask about the poem, and if Miss Enderbridge is right there then she might ask her to recite it again, and Miss Enderbridge does not actually think that Annie is ready to cry in front of Evelyn - though of course she might not cry the second time around, but still.) 

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Evelyn smiles at Annie. "Oh? What did you like about it?" 

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"It was just really poignant."

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Nod. "Well, I'm glad you liked it! I - wouldn't've thought of it, but poetry is sort of like music. I'm glad it's something you can enjoy." 

That is the most Evelyn can say because she is...not really a poetry fan. She takes her bag off to the kitchen as well. 

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Annie will retie her shoe and wait to be brought back to Evelyn's house.

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Evelyn had been prepared to have to take her time with goodbyes and hugs and easing Annie away from Miss Enderbridge and back home, if it turned out that she was right about how well they got along, but she maybe sort of half forgot that Annie is...Annie...and not a normal three-year-old. They can undramatically leave and walk home. 

"It sounds like you got along?" she says cheerfully as they walk. 

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"I suggested that she adopt me but I'm not sure if her claim that they wouldn't let her was a gentle no or a real obstacle I should put work into getting around."

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Blink blink. 

"- You know, that's a very - forward - thing to ask most people. Though I'm sure Miss Enderbridge didn't mind. I'm - not sure? It's definitely not how Social Services would usually go, for a child your age who needs someone to live with until you're eighteen at least, that's another fifteen years and I don't know if we can bet on Miss Enderbridge living to a hundred– sorry, I know that's a little morbid." 

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