<h2><SPAN name="II" id="II">II</SPAN><br/> FANNY CLOSE</h2>
<p>Since the second year of the war Fanny Close had
been portress at Hortons. It had demanded very
much resolution on the part of Mr. Nix to search for
a portress. Since time immemorial the halls of Hortons
had known only porters. George, the present fine specimen,
had been magnificently in service there for the last
ten years. However, Mr. Nix was a patriot; he sent
his son aged nineteen to the war (his son was only too
delighted to go), himself joined the London Air
Defences, and then packed off every man and boy in
the place.</p>
<p>The magnificent James was the last to go. He had,
he said, an ancient mother dependent upon him. Mr.
Nix was disappointed in him. He did not live up to his
chest measurement. "You're very nearly a shirker,"
he said to him indignantly. Nevertheless he promised
to keep his place open for him....</p>
<p>He had to go out into the highways and by-ways and
find women. The right ones were not easily found, and
often enough they were disappointing. Mr. Nix was
a tremendous disciplinarian, that was why Hortons
were the best service flats in the whole of the West End.
But he discovered, as many a man had discovered before
him, that the discipline that does for a man will not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</SPAN></span>
do nine times out of ten for a woman. Woman has a
way of wriggling out of the net of discipline with subtleties
unknown to man.</p>
<p>So Mr. Nix discovered.... Only with Fanny Close
Mr. Nix had no trouble at all. She became at the end
of the first week a "jewel," and a jewel to the end of
her time she remained.</p>
<p>I don't wish, in these days of stern and unrelenting
realism, to draw Dickensian pictures of youth and
purity, but the plain truth is that Fanny Close was as
good a girl as ever was made. She was good for two
reasons, one because she was plain, the other because
she had a tiresome sister. The first of these reasons
made her humble, the other made her enjoy everything
from which her sister was absent twice as much as anyone
else would have enjoyed it.</p>
<p>She was twenty-five years of age; the mother had
died of pleurisy when the children were babies, and
the father, who was something very unimportant in a
post office, had struggled for twenty years to keep them
all alive, and then caught a cold and died. The only
brother had married, and Aggie and Fanny had
remained to keep house together. Aggie had always
been the beauty of the family, but it had been a beauty
without "charm," so that many young men had
advanced with beating hearts, gazed with eager eyes,
and then walked away, relieved that for some reason or
another they had been saved from "putting the question."
She had had proposals, of course, but they had
never been good enough. At twenty-six she was a
disappointed virgin.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Fanny had always been so ready to consider herself
the plainer and stupider of the two that it had not been
altogether Aggie's fault that she, Aggie, should take,
so naturally, the first place. Many a relation had told
Fanny that she was too "submissive" and didn't stand
up for herself enough, but Fanny shook her head and
said that she couldn't be other than she was. The true
fact was that deep down in her heart she not only
admired her sister, she also hated her. How astonished
Aggie would have been had she known this—and how
astonished, to be truly platitudinous for a moment, we
should all be if we really knew what our nearest and
dearest relatives thought of us!</p>
<p>Fanny hated Aggie, but had quite made up her mind
that she would never be free of her. How could she
be? She herself was far too plain for anyone to want
to marry her, and Aggie was apparently settling down
inevitably into a bitter old-maidenhood. Then came
the war. Fanny was most unexpectedly liberated.
Aggie did, of course, try to prevent her escape, but on
this occasion Fanny was resolved. She would do what
she could to help—the country needed every single
woman. At first she washed plates in a canteen, then
she ran a lift outside some Insurance office, finally she
fell into Mr. Nix's arms, and there she stayed for three
years.</p>
<p>She knew from the very first that she would like it.
She liked Mr. Nix, she liked the blue uniform provided
for her, most of all she liked the "atmosphere" of
Hortons, the coloured repose of St. James's, the hall of
white and green, the broad staircase, the palms in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</SPAN></span>
staircase windows, the grandfather's clock near Mr.
Nix's office; she even liked her own little rabbit-hutch
where were the little boxes for the letters, the cupboard
for her own private possessions, the telephone, and a
chair for her to sit upon. In a marvellously short
time she was the mistress of the whole situation. Mr.
Nix could not have believed that he would have missed
the marvellous James so little. "Really," he said to
Mrs. Nix, "a great discovery, a remarkable find."</p>
<p>"Well, I hope she won't disappoint you," said Mrs.
Nix, who was an amiable pessimist. Fanny did not
disappoint; she got better and better. Everyone liked
her, and she liked everyone.</p>
<p>Because she had as her standard Aggie's grudging
and reluctant personality, she naturally found everyone
delightful. She was very happy indeed because they
all wanted her assistance in one way or another. "Men
<i>are</i> helpless," was her happy comment after a year's
experience at Hortons. She stamped letters for one,
delivered telephone messages for another, found addresses
for a third, carried bags for a fourth, acted as
confidential adviser for a fifth. She was not pretty,
of course, but she was much less plain in her uniform
than she had been in her private dress. The blue,
peaked cap suited her, and managed somehow, in combination
with her pince-nez, to give her quite a roguish
complexion.</p>
<p>Nevertheless she was looked upon as a serious person—"quite
like a man," she reflected with satisfaction.
She did not wish to waste her time with flirtations, she
wanted to do her job efficiently. It needed great self<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</SPAN></span>-control
not to take too active an interest in the affairs
of the ladies and gentlemen in her charge. She was,
for instance, deeply sorry for poor old Mr. Jay, who
was obviously poor and helpless and had no friends.
He used to ask her whether "So-and-so" had called,
to tell her that he was expecting Lady This, and Lord
That to ring up. Of course, they never did. No one
ever came to see him. Fanny's heart simply ached for
him.</p>
<p>Then there was young Mr. Torby—the Hon. Clive
Torby. Fanny thought him the most wonderful figure
in London. He was in France and was wounded, went
back and was wounded again, this time losing an arm.
He had the D.S.O. and M.C., and was simply the most
handsome young man in London—but Fanny feared
that he was leading a very idle life. He was always
happy, always good-tempered, always laughing, but
Fanny shivered at the thought of the money that he
spent. Lord Dronda, his father, used to come and see
him and "remonstrate with him," so the Hon. Clive
told Fanny after the interview. But what was the
good? All the young ladies came just the same, and
the flowers and the fruit and the wine——</p>
<p>"We can only love once, Fanny," the young man
declared one day. "And I've been so near kicking the
bucket so many times lately that I'm going to make the
most of the sunshine."</p>
<p>How could you blame him? At any rate, Fanny
couldn't.</p>
<p>There were many others into whose histories and
personalities this is neither the time nor place to enter.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</SPAN></span>
Fanny felt as though she were living at the very heart
of the great, bustling, eventful world. When she saw
Edmund Robsart, the famous novelist, whose flat was
No. 20, go up in the lift, when he said "Good-evening"
to her and smiled, he whose picture was quite often in
the daily papers, whose books were on the railway book-stalls,
whose name was even mentioned once in Fanny's
hearing by T. E. Dunville at the Victoria Palace—well,
there was something to be proud of. True, he was over
fifty, and fat and a little pompous—what did that matter?
Fanny had taken messages to him in his rooms
and seen him once in a purple silk dressing-gown.</p>
<p>She did not consider herself overworked. She had
to be on duty at eight-thirty every morning, and she
remained until six-thirty in the evening. She had
every Saturday afternoon and every other Sunday.
She did every kind of thing in between those hours.
The whole warm pulsing life of the twenty chambers
seemed to radiate from her. She fancied herself sitting
there in her little office, taking the messages from
the flats and distributing them to the different valets
and servants in the kitchen, watching everyone who
came in and out, detecting suspicious people who
wanted to see "So-and-so on very urgent business,"
attending to Mr. Nix when he had anything to say or
wanted anything ... and sometimes in the hot summer
weather she would sit and look out upon the white
and shining street, feeling the heat play in little gleaming
waves upon the green staircase behind her, hearing
the newsboys shout their war-news, watching stout Mr.
Newbury, of the picture-shop, as he stood in his door<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</SPAN></span>way
and speculated on the weather. How cool here, and
how hot out there!—and in the winter how warm the
flats and how cold the dusky blue-green street!</p>
<p>She sometimes wondered whether it were not wicked
of her to care for her life at Hortons so much when it
all came to her from the horrible war, which did indeed
seem to her the most dreadful thing that had ever
happened.</p>
<p>She had not known many young men, but there had
been Mr. Simmons and Mr. Frank Blake and his
brother Tom Blake—nice young men, and most amusing
in the evening after supper or on an evening out at
the Music Hall—all gone.... Tom Blake dead,
Frank Blake without a leg, Mr. Simmons gassed....
Oh, she <i>hated</i> this war, she <i>hated</i> it—but she loved
Hortons.</p>
<p>The fly in the ointment was the old familiar fly of
family comment. The war had not had a good effect
upon Aggie. She sat at home and grew more and more
pessimistic. There never <i>was</i> such pessimism. Germany
was to Aggie a triumphing, dominating force that
nothing could stop. "What's the use of our fighting?"
she would say when Fanny would arrive home to supper,
exhausted but cheerful. "What's the <i>use</i>? That's
what I want to know. Here we are at their mercy—can
step over any time they like and just take us."</p>
<p>Nothing made Fanny so angry as this. It was all
she could do to control herself; nevertheless, control
herself she did.</p>
<p>"What about our Army?" she would say. "And the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</SPAN></span>
submarines? What about Kitchener?" and later,
"What about Haig?"</p>
<p>"Haig!" sniffed Aggie. "Haig!" The air-raids
finished Aggie. A bomb was dropped quite close to
their upper-part in Bloomsbury. Aggie was ill for
weeks—she recovered, but rose from her bed a soured,
injured, vindictive woman. It was exactly as though
the whole of the war, and especially the bomb-dropping
part of it, had been arranged simply for the annoyance
of Aggie Close. She always said that she hated the
Germans, but to hear her talk you'd think that she
hated the English a great deal more. Our incompetence,
our cowardice, our selfishness, our wickedness in
high places—such were her eternal topics. Fanny, sitting
in her hutch at Hortons, saw the evening waiting
for her—the horrible evening with their little stuffy,
food-smelling, overcrowded room, with the glazed and
grinning sideboard, the pink-and-white wool mats, the
heavy lace curtains over the window, the hideous oleographs,
the large, staring photographs. Unlike most of
her kind she knew that all this was ugly, and in the
midst of the ugliness was Aggie, Aggie with her square,
short, thick-set figure, her huge flat feet, her heavy,
freckled hands. She would have escaped to a place of
entertainment had there been anybody to take her—just
now there was nobody. She could not walk about
the streets alone.</p>
<p>At first she had tried to interest Aggie in the exciting
events of her day, in poor Mr. Jay, and magnificent
Mr. Robsart, and funny, fussing Mrs. Demaris, and the
Hon. Clive. But Aggie had a marvellous way of turn<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</SPAN></span>ing
everything, however cheerful and bright it might
seem, into sin and sorrow and decay. If Fanny was
happy, it was: "How can you laugh when the world's
in the state it's in?" If Fanny sighed, it was: "I
should have thought it was one's duty to be as cheerful
as possible just now. But some people think only of
themselves."</p>
<p>If Fanny argued against some too outrageous piece
of pessimism, it was: "Really, Fanny, it's such as
you is losing us the war."</p>
<p>"Oh! I hate Aggie!—I hate Aggie!" Fanny would
sometimes cry to herself in the heart of her hutch, but
she could not summon to herself sufficient resolution to
go off and live by herself; she had a terror of solitary
evenings, all the terror of one who did not care for
books, who was soaked in superstition and loved lights
and noise.</p>
<p>During the first two years of the war she did not
consider the end of the war. She never doubted for a
single moment but that the Allies would win, and for
the rest she had too much work to do to waste time in
idle speculations. But in the third year that little
phrase "after the war" began to drive itself in upon
her. Everyone said it. She perceived that people were
bearing their trials and misfortunes and losses because
"after the war" everything would be all right again—there
would be plenty of food and money and rest
"after the war."</p>
<p>Her heart began to ache for all the troubles that she
saw around her. Mr. Nix lost his boy in France and
was a changed man. For a month or two it seemed as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</SPAN></span>
though he would lose all interest in Hortons. He was
listless and indifferent and suffered slackness to go
unpunished. Then he pulled himself together. Hortons
was its old self again—and how Fanny admired him
for that!</p>
<p>Then came the Armistice, and the world changed for
Fanny. It changed because, in a sudden devastating
horrible flash of revelation, she realised that the women
would all have to go! The men would come back....
And she?</p>
<p>That night when she perceived this gave her one of
her worst hours. She had allowed herself—and she saw
now how foolish she had been to do so—to look upon
the work at Hortons as the permanent occupation of
her life. How could she have done otherwise? It
suited her so exactly; she loved it, and everybody
encouraged her to believe that she did it well. Had
not Mr. Nix himself told her that he could not have
believed that he could miss the magnificent James so
little, and that no man could have filled the blank as
she had done? Moreover, in the third year of the war
James had been killed, and it would take a new man
a long time to learn all the ins-and-outs of the business
as she had learnt them. So she had encouraged herself
to dream, and the dream and the business had become
one—she could not tear them apart. Well, now she
must tear them apart. Mr. Nix was dismissing all the
women.</p>
<p>With teeth set she faced her future. No use to think
of getting another job—everywhere the men were
returning. For such work as she could do there would<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</SPAN></span>
be a hundred men waiting for every vacancy. No, she
would have to live always with Aggie. They would
have enough to live on—just enough. Their brother
allowed them something, and an aunt had left them a
little legacy. Just enough with a perpetual sparing
and scraping—no more of the little luxuries that
Fanny's pay from Hortons had allowed them. Certainly
not enough for either of them to live alone. Tied for
ever together, that's what they would be—chained! and
Aggie growing ever more and more bitter.</p>
<p>Nevertheless she faced it. She went back to Hortons
with a smile and a laugh. Her gentlemen and ladies
did not know that she was looking upon them with eyes
of farewell. Miss Lois Drake, for instance, that daring
and adventurous type of the modern girl about whose
future Fanny was always speculating with trembling
excitement, she did not notice anything at all. But
then she thought of very little save herself. "However
she <i>can</i> do the things she does!" was Fanny's awed
comment—and now, alas, she would never see the climax
to her daring—never, never, never!</p>
<p>She said nothing to Aggie of her troubles, and Aggie
said nothing to her. The days passed. Then just
before Christmas came the marvellous news.</p>
<p>By this time all the girl valets had been dismissed
and men had taken their places. They would congregate
in the hall of a morning, coming on approval, and
Fanny would speculate about them. Mr. Nix even
asked her advice. "I like that one," she would say;
"I wouldn't trust that man a yard," she would decide.
Then one day Albert Edward came. There was no<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</SPAN></span>
doubt about him at all. He was almost as good as the
late lamented James. Handsome, although short—but
Fanny liked the "stocky" kind, and with <i>such</i> a laugh!
Fanny delighted in his jet-black hair cut tight about
his head, his smiling black eyes, his round, rosy cheeks.
She admired him quite in the abstract. He was far too
grand for any personal feeling.... At once, when he
had been in the place two days, she allotted him to Mrs.
Mellish's maid, Annette, <i>such</i> a handsome girl, so bold
and clever! They were made for one another.</p>
<p>Albert Edward was valet on the second floor; he
shared that floor with Bacon. Fanny did not like
Bacon, the one mistake she thought that Mr. Nix had
made.</p>
<p>Well, just before Christmas the wonderful hour
arrived.</p>
<p>"Fanny," said Mr. Nix one evening. "Do you
realise that you're the only woman left in a man's job?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Fanny, her heart beating horribly.</p>
<p>"Well," said Mr. Nix, "you're going to continue to
be the only woman unless you've any objection."</p>
<p>"Oh, Mr. Nix," said Fanny, "I'm sure I've always
tried——"</p>
<p>"Yes, I know," said Mr. Nix, "that's why I want
you to stay—for ever if you like—or at any rate so long
as I'm here."</p>
<p>"Oh, Mr. Nix," said Fanny again. Tears were in
her eyes; the familiar green staircase, the palm and the
grandfather's clock swam before her eyes.</p>
<p>It was Aggie, of course, who killed her happiness
almost as soon as it was born.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"And what about the demobilised men?" Aggie had
asked with her cold, acid smile. "I should have thought
that if there were any jobs going a patriotic girl like
you would have been the first to stand aside."</p>
<p>Fanny's heart seemed to leap into the air and then
fall—stone dead at her feet. Men! Demobilised men!
She had not thought of that. But for the moment the
only thing she could see was Aggie's spite—her old,
eternal spite.... She felt the tears rising. In a
moment they would break out.</p>
<p>"You would like to spoil it if you could!" she cried.
"Yes, you would. It's what you've always done—spoilt
everything. Yes, you have—since we were children.
Any little bit of happiness...."</p>
<p>"Happiness!" interrupted Aggie; "that's what you
call it? Selfishness! cruel selfishness, that's what some
would name it."</p>
<p>"You don't care," cried Fanny, her words now
choked with sobs. "You don't care as long as I'm hurt
and wounded—that's all you mind!... always ...
tried to hurt me ... always!" The tears had conquered
her. She rushed from the room.</p>
<p>She escaped—but she was haunted. It was not because
Aggie had said it that she minded—no, she did
not care for Aggie—it was because there was truth in
what Aggie had said. Fanny was precisely the girl to
feel such a charge, as Aggie well knew. All her life
her conscience had been her trouble, acute, vivid, lifting
its voice when there was no need, never satisfied with
the prizes and splendours thrown it. In ordinary<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</SPAN></span>
times Fanny surrendered at once to its hideous demands—this
time she fought.</p>
<p>Aggie herself helped in the fight. Having succeeded
in making Fanny miserable, it was by no means her
intention that the silly child should really surrender
the job. That did not at all suit her own idle selfishness.
So she mocked at her for staying where she was,
but made it plain that having given her word, she must
stick to it. "You've made your bed and must lie on it,"
was her phrase.</p>
<p>Fanny said nothing. The light had gone from her
eyes, the colour from her cheeks. She was fighting the
sternest battle of her life. Everywhere she saw, or
fancied she saw, demobilised men. Every man in the
street with a little shining disc fastened to his coat was
in her eyes a demobilised man starving and hungry
because she was so wicked. And yet why should she
give it up? She had proved her worth—shown that
she was <i>better</i> than a man in that particular business.
Would Mr. Nix have kept her had she not been better?
Kind though he was, he was not a philanthropist....
And to give it up, to be tied for life to Aggie, to be idle,
to be unwanted, to see no more of Hortons, to see no
more—of Albert Edward. Yes, the secret was out.
She loved Albert Edward. Not with any thought of
herself—dear me, no.... She knew that she was far
too plain, too dull. She need only compare herself for
an instant with Mrs. Mellish's Annette, and she could
see where she stood. No, romance was not for her.
But she liked his company. He was so kind to her.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</SPAN></span>
He would stand, again and again, in her little hutch
and chatter, laughing and making silly jokes.</p>
<p>She amused him, and he admired her capacity for
business. "You <i>are</i> a one!" was his way of putting it.
"You'd be something like running a restaurant—business
side, you know."</p>
<p>How proud she was when he said these things! After
all, everybody had something. Annette, for all her bows
and ribbons, was probably poor at business.</p>
<p>However, she included Albert Edward in the general
life of Hortons, and refused to look any closer. So
day and night the struggle continued. She could not
sleep, she could not eat, everyone told her that she
was looking ill and needed a holiday. She was most
truly a haunted woman, and her ghosts were on every
side of her, pressing in upon her, reproaching her with
starving, dark-rimmed eyes. She struggled, she fought,
she clung with bleeding hands to the stones and rafters
and walls of Hortons.</p>
<p>Conscience had her way—Fanny was beaten. The
decision was taken one night after a horrible dream—a
dream in which she had been pursued by a menacing,
sinister procession of men, some without arms and legs,
who floated about her, beating her in the face with their
soft boneless hands....</p>
<p>She awoke screaming. Next morning she went to
Mr. Nix.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid I must give you my notice, Mr. Nix,"
she said.</p>
<p>Of course he laughed at her when she offered her
reason. But she was firm.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"You've been terribly good to me, Mr. Nix," she
said, "but I must go."</p>
<p>She was firm. It was all that she could do not to
cry. He submitted, saying that he would leave her a
day or so to reconsider it.</p>
<p>She went into her hut and stared in front of her, in
stony wretchedness. That was the worst day of her
life. She felt like a dead woman. Worst of all was
the temptation to run back to Mr. Nix and tell him
that it was not true, that she <i>had</i> reconsidered it....</p>
<p>All day she saw Aggie in her green stuff dress, her
eyes close to the paper, the room so close, so close....</p>
<p>In the afternoon, about five, she felt that she could
bear it no longer.</p>
<p>She would get the hall-boy to take her place and
would go home.</p>
<p>Albert Edward came in for a chat. She told him
what she had done.</p>
<p>"Well," he said, "that's fine."</p>
<p>She stared at him.</p>
<p>"I want you to marry me," he said; "I've been wanting
it a long time. I like you. You're just the companion
for me, sense of humour and all that. And a
business head. I'm past the sentimental stuff. What
I want is a pal. What do you say to the little restaurant?"</p>
<p>The grandfather's clock rose up and struck Fanny
in the face. She could have endured that had not the
green and white staircase done the same. So strange
was the world that she was compelled to put her hand
on Albert Edward's arm.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Behind the swimming, dazzling splendour of her
happiness was the knowledge that she had secured a
job from which no man in the world would have the
right to oust her.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />