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<h2> CHAPTER XI </h2>
<h3> PEAR BLOSSOM </h3>
<p>Weighed down by her three parcels, the little model pursued her way to
Hound Street. At the door of No. 1 the son of the lame woman, a tall weedy
youth with a white face, was resting his legs alternately, and smoking a
cigarette. Closing one eye, he addressed her thus:</p>
<p>“'Allo, miss! Kerry your parcels for you?”</p>
<p>The little model gave him a look. 'Mind your own business!' it said; but
there was that in the flicker of her eyelashes which more than nullified
this snub.</p>
<p>Entering her room, she deposited the parcels on her bed, and untied the
strings with quick, pink fingers. When she had freed the garments from
wrappings and spread them out, she knelt down, and began to touch them,
putting her nose down once or twice to sniff the linen and feel its
texture. There were little frills attached here and there, and to these
she paid particular attention, ruffling their edges with the palms of her
hands, while the holy look came back to her face. Rising at length, she
locked the door, drew down the blind, undressed from head to foot, and put
on the new garments. Letting her hair down, she turned herself luxuriously
round and round before the too-small looking-glass. There was utter
satisfaction in each gesture of that whole operation, as if her spirit,
long starved, were having a good meal. In this rapt contemplation of
herself, all childish vanity and expectancy, and all that wonderful
quality found in simple unspiritual natures of delighting in the present
moment, were perfectly displayed. So, motionless, with her hair loose on
her neck, she was like one of those half-hours of Spring that have lost
their restlessness and are content just to be.</p>
<p>Presently, however, as though suddenly remembering that her happiness was
not utterly complete, she went to a drawer, took out a packet of
pear-drops, and put one in her mouth.</p>
<p>The sun, near to setting, had found its way through a hole in the blind,
and touched her neck. She turned as though she had received a kiss, and,
raising a corner of the blind, peered out. The pear-tree, which, to the
annoyance of its proprietor, was placed so close to the back court of this
low-class house as almost to seem to belong to it, was bathed in slanting
sunlight. No tree in all the world could have looked more fair than it did
just then in its garb of gilded bloom. With her hand up to her bare neck,
and her cheeks indrawn from sucking the sweet, the little model fixed her
eyes on the tree. Her expression did not change; she showed no signs of
admiration. Her gaze passed on to the back windows of the house that
really owned the pear-tree, spying out whether anyone could see her—hoping,
perhaps, someone would see her while she was feeling so nice and new.
Then, dropping the blind, she went back to the glass and began to pin her
hair up. When this was done she stood for a long minute looking at her old
brown skirt and blouse, hesitating to defile her new-found purity. At last
she put them on and drew up the blind. The sunlight had passed off the
pear-tree; its bloom was now white, and almost as still as snow. The
little model put another sweet into her mouth, and producing from her
pocket an ancient leather purse, counted out her money. Evidently
discovering that it was no more than she expected, she sighed, and
rummaged out of a top drawer an old illustrated magazine.</p>
<p>She sat down on the bed, and, turning the leaves rapidly till she reached
a certain page, rested the paper in her lap. Her eyes were fixed on a
photograph in the left-hand corner-one of those effigies of writers that
appear occasionally in the public press. Under it were printed the words:
“Mr. Hilary Dallison.” And suddenly she heaved a sigh.</p>
<p>The room grew darker; the wind, getting up as the sun went down, blew a
few dropped petals of the pear-tree against the window-pane.</p>
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