The Marianne Trilogy by Sheri S. Tepper gives
an example of someone who, just like Lucy Snowe in Villette, gets into the
exact nightmare situation that she dreads the most.
In the article about the Marianne books I mentioned
a laundry world. This alien dream world appears in Marianne, the Madame, and
the Momentary Gods, the second book in the trilogy. The city that Marianne has
been banished to by the evil witch Madame Delubovoska has a very strange
attribute: it changes its name and rearranges itself every day around midnight,
so the inhabitants need a new map for each day.
The rules are very strict; maps must be
bought on the previous day, and it is a both a crime and extremely dangerous not
to have one. Being without a map is something to be avoided at all costs.
Marianne runs a public laundry in the city.
Her worst fear comes upon her one day when she forgets to buy her map for the
next day. Despite increasingly desperate efforts in
dangerous surroundings, she fails to get a new map. This puts her into even more danger, and there
is a good chance of permanent homelessness and destitution.
It all ends with a safe return to the
laundry, but not before she has gone through a terrible ordeal which she has had
to cope with entirely on her own.