<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER THE FIFTH </h2>
<h3> THE FLIGHT TO LONDON </h3>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART_____________________"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Part 1 </h2>
<p>Ann Veronica had an impression that she did not sleep at all that night,
and at any rate she got through an immense amount of feverish feeling and
thinking.</p>
<p>What was she going to do?</p>
<p>One main idea possessed her: she must get away from home, she must assert
herself at once or perish. "Very well," she would say, "then I must go."
To remain, she felt, was to concede everything. And she would have to go
to-morrow. It was clear it must be to-morrow. If she delayed a day she
would delay two days, if she delayed two days she would delay a week, and
after a week things would be adjusted to submission forever. "I'll go,"
she vowed to the night, "or I'll die!" She made plans and estimated means
and resources. These and her general preparations had perhaps a certain
disproportion. She had a gold watch, a very good gold watch that had been
her mother's, a pearl necklace that was also pretty good, some
unpretending rings, some silver bangles and a few other such inferior
trinkets, three pounds thirteen shillings unspent of her dress and book
allowance and a few good salable books. So equipped, she proposed to set
up a separate establishment in the world.</p>
<p>And then she would find work.</p>
<p>For most of a long and fluctuating night she was fairly confident that she
would find work; she knew herself to be strong, intelligent, and capable
by the standards of most of the girls she knew. She was not quite clear
how she should find it, but she felt she would. Then she would write and
tell her father what she had done, and put their relationship on a new
footing.</p>
<p>That was how she projected it, and in general terms it seemed plausible
and possible. But in between these wider phases of comparative confidence
were gaps of disconcerting doubt, when the universe was presented as
making sinister and threatening faces at her, defying her to defy,
preparing a humiliating and shameful overthrow. "I don't care," said Ann
Veronica to the darkness; "I'll fight it."</p>
<p>She tried to plan her proceedings in detail. The only difficulties that
presented themselves clearly to her were the difficulties of getting away
from Morningside Park, and not the difficulties at the other end of the
journey. These were so outside her experience that she found it possible
to thrust them almost out of sight by saying they would be "all right" in
confident tones to herself. But still she knew they were not right, and at
times they became a horrible obsession as of something waiting for her
round the corner. She tried to imagine herself "getting something," to
project herself as sitting down at a desk and writing, or as returning
after her work to some pleasantly equipped and free and independent flat.
For a time she furnished the flat. But even with that furniture it
remained extremely vague, the possible good and the possible evil as well!</p>
<p>The possible evil! "I'll go," said Ann Veronica for the hundredth time.
"I'll go. I don't care WHAT happens."</p>
<p>She awoke out of a doze, as though she had never been sleeping. It was
time to get up.</p>
<p>She sat on the edge of her bed and looked about her, at her room, at the
row of black-covered books and the pig's skull. "I must take them," she
said, to help herself over her own incredulity. "How shall I get my
luggage out of the house?..."</p>
<p>The figure of her aunt, a little distant, a little propitiatory, behind
the coffee things, filled her with a sense of almost catastrophic
adventure. Perhaps she might never come back to that breakfast-room again.
Never! Perhaps some day, quite soon, she might regret that breakfast-room.
She helped herself to the remainder of the slightly congealed bacon, and
reverted to the problem of getting her luggage out of the house. She
decided to call in the help of Teddy Widgett, or, failing him, of one of
his sisters.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART______________________"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Part 2 </h2>
<p>She found the younger generation of the Widgetts engaged in languid
reminiscences, and all, as they expressed it, a "bit decayed." Every one
became tremendously animated when they heard that Ann Veronica had failed
them because she had been, as she expressed it, "locked in."</p>
<p>"My God!" said Teddy, more impressively than ever.</p>
<p>"But what are you going to do?" asked Hetty.</p>
<p>"What can one do?" asked Ann Veronica. "Would you stand it? I'm going to
clear out."</p>
<p>"Clear out?" cried Hetty.</p>
<p>"Go to London," said Ann Veronica.</p>
<p>She had expected sympathetic admiration, but instead the whole Widgett
family, except Teddy, expressed a common dismay. "But how can you?" asked
Constance. "Who will you stop with?"</p>
<p>"I shall go on my own. Take a room!"</p>
<p>"I say!" said Constance. "But who's going to pay for the room?"</p>
<p>"I've got money," said Ann Veronica. "Anything is better than this—this
stifled life down here." And seeing that Hetty and Constance were
obviously developing objections, she plunged at once into a demand for
help. "I've got nothing in the world to pack with except a toy size
portmanteau. Can you lend me some stuff?"</p>
<p>"You ARE a chap!" said Constance, and warmed only slowly from the idea of
dissuasion to the idea of help. But they did what they could for her. They
agreed to lend her their hold-all and a large, formless bag which they
called the communal trunk. And Teddy declared himself ready to go to the
ends of the earth for her, and carry her luggage all the way.</p>
<p>Hetty, looking out of the window—she always smoked her
after-breakfast cigarette at the window for the benefit of the less
advanced section of Morningside Park society—and trying not to raise
objections, saw Miss Stanley going down toward the shops.</p>
<p>"If you must go on with it," said Hetty, "now's your time." And Ann
Veronica at once went back with the hold-all, trying not to hurry
indecently but to keep up her dignified air of being a wronged person
doing the right thing at a smart trot, to pack. Teddy went round by the
garden backs and dropped the bag over the fence. All this was exciting and
entertaining. Her aunt returned before the packing was done, and Ann
Veronica lunched with an uneasy sense of bag and hold-all packed up-stairs
and inadequately hidden from chance intruders by the valance of the bed.
She went down, flushed and light-hearted, to the Widgetts' after lunch to
make some final arrangements and then, as soon as her aunt had retired to
lie down for her usual digestive hour, took the risk of the servants
having the enterprise to report her proceedings and carried her bag and
hold-all to the garden gate, whence Teddy, in a state of ecstatic service,
bore them to the railway station. Then she went up-stairs again, dressed
herself carefully for town, put on her most businesslike-looking hat, and
with a wave of emotion she found it hard to control, walked down to catch
the 3.17 up-train.</p>
<p>Teddy handed her into the second-class compartment her season-ticket
warranted, and declared she was "simply splendid." "If you want anything,"
he said, "or get into any trouble, wire me. I'd come back from the ends of
the earth. I'd do anything, Vee. It's horrible to think of you!"</p>
<p>"You're an awful brick, Teddy!" she said.</p>
<p>"Who wouldn't be for you?"</p>
<p>The train began to move. "You're splendid!" said Teddy, with his hair wild
in the wind. "Good luck! Good luck!"</p>
<p>She waved from the window until the bend hid him.</p>
<p>She found herself alone in the train asking herself what she must do next,
and trying not to think of herself as cut off from home or any refuge
whatever from the world she had resolved to face. She felt smaller and
more adventurous even than she had expected to feel. "Let me see," she
said to herself, trying to control a slight sinking of the heart, "I am
going to take a room in a lodging-house because that is cheaper.... But
perhaps I had better get a room in an hotel to-night and look round....</p>
<p>"It's bound to be all right," she said.</p>
<p>But her heart kept on sinking. What hotel should she go to? If she told a
cabman to drive to an hotel, any hotel, what would he do—or say? He
might drive to something dreadfully expensive, and not at all the quiet
sort of thing she required. Finally she decided that even for an hotel she
must look round, and that meanwhile she would "book" her luggage at
Waterloo. She told the porter to take it to the booking-office, and it was
only after a disconcerting moment or so that she found she ought to have
directed him to go to the cloak-room. But that was soon put right, and she
walked out into London with a peculiar exaltation of mind, an exaltation
that partook of panic and defiance, but was chiefly a sense of vast
unexampled release.</p>
<p>She inhaled a deep breath of air—London air.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART_______________________"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Part 3 </h2>
<p>She dismissed the first hotels she passed, she scarcely knew why, mainly
perhaps from the mere dread of entering them, and crossed Waterloo Bridge
at a leisurely pace. It was high afternoon, there was no great throng of
foot-passengers, and many an eye from omnibus and pavement rested
gratefully on her fresh, trim presence as she passed young and erect, with
the light of determination shining through the quiet self-possession of
her face. She was dressed as English girls do dress for town, without
either coquetry or harshness: her collarless blouse confessed a pretty
neck, her eyes were bright and steady, and her dark hair waved loosely and
graciously over her ears....</p>
<p>It seemed at first the most beautiful afternoon of all time to her, and
perhaps the thrill of her excitement did add a distinctive and culminating
keenness to the day. The river, the big buildings on the north bank,
Westminster, and St. Paul's, were rich and wonderful with the soft
sunshine of London, the softest, the finest grained, the most penetrating
and least emphatic sunshine in the world. The very carts and vans and cabs
that Wellington Street poured out incessantly upon the bridge seemed ripe
and good in her eyes. A traffic of copious barges slumbered over the face
of the river-barges either altogether stagnant or dreaming along in the
wake of fussy tugs; and above circled, urbanely voracious, the London
seagulls. She had never been there before at that hour, in that light, and
it seemed to her as if she came to it all for the first time. And this
great mellow place, this London, now was hers, to struggle with, to go
where she pleased in, to overcome and live in. "I am glad," she told
herself, "I came."</p>
<p>She marked an hotel that seemed neither opulent nor odd in a little side
street opening on the Embankment, made up her mind with an effort, and,
returning by Hungerford Bridge to Waterloo, took a cab to this chosen
refuge with her two pieces of luggage. There was just a minute's
hesitation before they gave her a room.</p>
<p>The young lady in the bureau said she would inquire, and Ann Veronica,
while she affected to read the appeal on a hospital collecting-box upon
the bureau counter, had a disagreeable sense of being surveyed from behind
by a small, whiskered gentleman in a frock-coat, who came out of the inner
office and into the hall among a number of equally observant green porters
to look at her and her bags. But the survey was satisfactory, and she
found herself presently in Room No. 47, straightening her hat and waiting
for her luggage to appear.</p>
<p>"All right so far," she said to herself....</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART________________________"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Part 4 </h2>
<p>But presently, as she sat on the one antimacassared red silk chair and
surveyed her hold-all and bag in that tidy, rather vacant, and dehumanized
apartment, with its empty wardrobe and desert toilet-table and pictureless
walls and stereotyped furnishings, a sudden blankness came upon her as
though she didn't matter, and had been thrust away into this impersonal
corner, she and her gear....</p>
<p>She decided to go out into the London afternoon again and get something to
eat in an Aerated Bread shop or some such place, and perhaps find a cheap
room for herself. Of course that was what she had to do; she had to find a
cheap room for herself and work!</p>
<p>This Room No. 47 was no more than a sort of railway compartment on the way
to that.</p>
<p>How does one get work?</p>
<p>She walked along the Strand and across Trafalgar Square, and by the
Haymarket to Piccadilly, and so through dignified squares and palatial
alleys to Oxford Street; and her mind was divided between a speculative
treatment of employment on the one hand, and breezes—zephyr breezes—of
the keenest appreciation for London, on the other. The jolly part of it
was that for the first time in her life so far as London was concerned,
she was not going anywhere in particular; for the first time in her life
it seemed to her she was taking London in.</p>
<p>She tried to think how people get work. Ought she to walk into some of
these places and tell them what she could do? She hesitated at the window
of a shipping-office in Cockspur Street and at the Army and Navy Stores,
but decided that perhaps there would be some special and customary hour,
and that it would be better for her to find this out before she made her
attempt. And, besides, she didn't just immediately want to make her
attempt.</p>
<p>She fell into a pleasant dream of positions and work. Behind every one of
these myriad fronts she passed there must be a career or careers. Her
ideas of women's employment and a modern woman's pose in life were based
largely on the figure of Vivie Warren in Mrs. Warren's Profession. She had
seen Mrs. Warren's Profession furtively with Hetty Widgett from the
gallery of a Stage Society performance one Monday afternoon. Most of it
had been incomprehensible to her, or comprehensible in a way that checked
further curiosity, but the figure of Vivien, hard, capable, successful,
and bullying, and ordering about a veritable Teddy in the person of Frank
Gardner, appealed to her. She saw herself in very much Vivie's position—managing
something.</p>
<p>Her thoughts were deflected from Vivie Warren by the peculiar behavior of
a middle-aged gentleman in Piccadilly. He appeared suddenly from the
infinite in the neighborhood of the Burlington Arcade, crossing the
pavement toward her and with his eyes upon her. He seemed to her
indistinguishably about her father's age. He wore a silk hat a little
tilted, and a morning coat buttoned round a tight, contained figure; and a
white slip gave a finish to his costume and endorsed the quiet distinction
of his tie. His face was a little flushed perhaps, and his small, brown
eyes were bright. He stopped on the curb-stone, not facing her but as if
he was on his way to cross the road, and spoke to her suddenly over his
shoulder.</p>
<p>"Whither away?" he said, very distinctly in a curiously wheedling voice.
Ann Veronica stared at his foolish, propitiatory smile, his hungry gaze,
through one moment of amazement, then stepped aside and went on her way
with a quickened step. But her mind was ruffled, and its mirror-like
surface of satisfaction was not easily restored.</p>
<p>Queer old gentleman!</p>
<p>The art of ignoring is one of the accomplishments of every well-bred girl,
so carefully instilled that at last she can even ignore her own thoughts
and her own knowledge. Ann Veronica could at the same time ask herself
what this queer old gentleman could have meant by speaking to her, and
know—know in general terms, at least—what that accosting
signified. About her, as she had gone day by day to and from the Tredgold
College, she had seen and not seen many an incidental aspect of those
sides of life about which girls are expected to know nothing, aspects that
were extraordinarily relevant to her own position and outlook on the
world, and yet by convention ineffably remote. For all that she was of
exceptional intellectual enterprise, she had never yet considered these
things with unaverted eyes. She had viewed them askance, and without
exchanging ideas with any one else in the world about them.</p>
<p>She went on her way now no longer dreaming and appreciative, but disturbed
and unwillingly observant behind her mask of serene contentment.</p>
<p>That delightful sense of free, unembarrassed movement was gone.</p>
<p>As she neared the bottom of the dip in Piccadilly she saw a woman
approaching her from the opposite direction—a tall woman who at the
first glance seemed altogether beautiful and fine. She came along with the
fluttering assurance of some tall ship. Then as she drew nearer paint
showed upon her face, and a harsh purpose behind the quiet expression of
her open countenance, and a sort of unreality in her splendor betrayed
itself for which Ann Veronica could not recall the right word—a
word, half understood, that lurked and hid in her mind, the word
"meretricious." Behind this woman and a little to the side of her, walked
a man smartly dressed, with desire and appraisal in his eyes. Something
insisted that those two were mysteriously linked—that the woman knew
the man was there.</p>
<p>It was a second reminder that against her claim to go free and
untrammelled there was a case to be made, that after all it was true that
a girl does not go alone in the world unchallenged, nor ever has gone
freely alone in the world, that evil walks abroad and dangers, and petty
insults more irritating than dangers, lurk.</p>
<p>It was in the quiet streets and squares toward Oxford Street that it first
came into her head disagreeably that she herself was being followed. She
observed a man walking on the opposite side of the way and looking toward
her.</p>
<p>"Bother it all!" she swore. "Bother!" and decided that this was not so,
and would not look to right or left again.</p>
<p>Beyond the Circus Ann Veronica went into a British Tea-Table Company shop
to get some tea. And as she was yet waiting for her tea to come she saw
this man again. Either it was an unfortunate recovery of a trail, or he
had followed her from Mayfair. There was no mistaking his intentions this
time. He came down the shop looking for her quite obviously, and took up a
position on the other side against a mirror in which he was able to regard
her steadfastly.</p>
<p>Beneath the serene unconcern of Ann Veronica's face was a boiling tumult.
She was furiously angry. She gazed with a quiet detachment toward the
window and the Oxford Street traffic, and in her heart she was busy
kicking this man to death. He HAD followed her! What had he followed her
for? He must have followed her all the way from beyond Grosvenor Square.</p>
<p>He was a tall man and fair, with bluish eyes that were rather protuberant,
and long white hands of which he made a display. He had removed his silk
hat, and now sat looking at Ann Veronica over an untouched cup of tea; he
sat gloating upon her, trying to catch her eye. Once, when he thought he
had done so, he smiled an ingratiating smile. He moved, after quiet
intervals, with a quick little movement, and ever and again stroked his
small mustache and coughed a self-conscious cough.</p>
<p>"That he should be in the same world with me!" said Ann Veronica, reduced
to reading the list of good things the British Tea-Table Company had
priced for its patrons.</p>
<p>Heaven knows what dim and tawdry conceptions of passion and desire were in
that blond cranium, what romance-begotten dreams of intrigue and
adventure! but they sufficed, when presently Ann Veronica went out into
the darkling street again, to inspire a flitting, dogged pursuit, idiotic,
exasperating, indecent.</p>
<p>She had no idea what she should do. If she spoke to a policeman she did
not know what would ensue. Perhaps she would have to charge this man and
appear in a police-court next day.</p>
<p>She became angry with herself. She would not be driven in by this
persistent, sneaking aggression. She would ignore him. Surely she could
ignore him. She stopped abruptly, and looked in a flower-shop window. He
passed, and came loitering back and stood beside her, silently looking
into her face.</p>
<p>The afternoon had passed now into twilight. The shops were lighting up
into gigantic lanterns of color, the street lamps were glowing into
existence, and she had lost her way. She had lost her sense of direction,
and was among unfamiliar streets. She went on from street to street, and
all the glory of London had departed. Against the sinister, the
threatening, monstrous inhumanity of the limitless city, there was nothing
now but this supreme, ugly fact of a pursuit—the pursuit of the
undesired, persistent male.</p>
<p>For a second time Ann Veronica wanted to swear at the universe.</p>
<p>There were moments when she thought of turning upon this man and talking
to him. But there was something in his face at once stupid and invincible
that told her he would go on forcing himself upon her, that he would
esteem speech with her a great point gained. In the twilight he had ceased
to be a person one could tackle and shame; he had become something more
general, a something that crawled and sneaked toward her and would not let
her alone....</p>
<p>Then, when the tension was getting unendurable, and she was on the verge
of speaking to some casual passer-by and demanding help, her follower
vanished. For a time she could scarcely believe he was gone. He had. The
night had swallowed him up, but his work on her was done. She had lost her
nerve, and there was no more freedom in London for her that night. She was
glad to join in the stream of hurrying homeward workers that was now
welling out of a thousand places of employment, and to imitate their
driven, preoccupied haste. She had followed a bobbing white hat and gray
jacket until she reached the Euston Road corner of Tottenham Court Road,
and there, by the name on a bus and the cries of a conductor, she made a
guess of her way. And she did not merely affect to be driven—she
felt driven. She was afraid people would follow her, she was afraid of the
dark, open doorways she passed, and afraid of the blazes of light; she was
afraid to be alone, and she knew not what it was she feared.</p>
<p>It was past seven when she got back to her hotel. She thought then that
she had shaken off the man of the bulging blue eyes forever, but that
night she found he followed her into her dreams. He stalked her, he stared
at her, he craved her, he sidled slinking and propitiatory and yet
relentlessly toward her, until at last she awoke from the suffocating
nightmare nearness of his approach, and lay awake in fear and horror
listening to the unaccustomed sounds of the hotel.</p>
<p>She came very near that night to resolving that she would return to her
home next morning. But the morning brought courage again, and those first
intimations of horror vanished completely from her mind.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART_________________________"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Part 5 </h2>
<p>She had sent her father a telegram from the East Strand post-office worded
thus:</p>
<p>| All | is | well | with | me |<br/>
|————-|—————-|—————|—————|————-|<br/>
| and | quite | safe | Veronica | |<br/>
——————————————————————————-<br/></p>
<p>and afterward she had dined a la carte upon a cutlet, and had then set
herself to write an answer to Mr. Manning's proposal of marriage. But she
had found it very difficult.</p>
<p>"DEAR MR. MANNING," she had begun. So far it had been plain sailing, and
it had seemed fairly evident to go on: "I find it very difficult to answer
your letter."</p>
<p>But after that neither ideas nor phrases had come and she had fallen
thinking of the events of the day. She had decided that she would spend
the next morning answering advertisements in the papers that abounded in
the writing-room; and so, after half an hour's perusal of back numbers of
the Sketch in the drawing-room, she had gone to bed.</p>
<p>She found next morning, when she came to this advertisement answering,
that it was more difficult than she had supposed. In the first place there
were not so many suitable advertisements as she had expected. She sat down
by the paper-rack with a general feeling of resemblance to Vivie Warren,
and looked through the Morning Post and Standard and Telegraph, and
afterward the half-penny sheets. The Morning Post was hungry for
governesses and nursery governesses, but held out no other hopes; the
Daily Telegraph that morning seemed eager only for skirt hands. She went
to a writing-desk and made some memoranda on a sheet of note-paper, and
then remembered that she had no address as yet to which letters could be
sent.</p>
<p>She decided to leave this matter until the morrow and devote the morning
to settling up with Mr. Manning. At the cost of quite a number of torn
drafts she succeeded in evolving this:</p>
<p>"DEAR MR. MANNING,—I find it very difficult to answer your letter. I
hope you won't mind if I say first that I think it does me an
extraordinary honor that you should think of any one like myself so highly
and seriously, and, secondly, that I wish it had not been written."</p>
<p>She surveyed this sentence for some time before going on. "I wonder," she
said, "why one writes him sentences like that? It'll have to go," she
decided, "I've written too many already." She went on, with a desperate
attempt to be easy and colloquial:</p>
<p>"You see, we were rather good friends, I thought, and now perhaps it will
be difficult for us to get back to the old friendly footing. But if that
can possibly be done I want it to be done. You see, the plain fact of the
case is that I think I am too young and ignorant for marriage. I have been
thinking these things over lately, and it seems to me that marriage for a
girl is just the supremest thing in life. It isn't just one among a number
of important things; for her it is the important thing, and until she
knows far more than I know of the facts of life, how is she to undertake
it? So please; if you will, forget that you wrote that letter, and forgive
this answer. I want you to think of me just as if I was a man, and quite
outside marriage altogether.</p>
<p>"I do hope you will be able to do this, because I value men friends. I
shall be very sorry if I cannot have you for a friend. I think that there
is no better friend for a girl than a man rather older than herself.</p>
<p>"Perhaps by this time you will have heard of the step I have taken in
leaving my home. Very likely you will disapprove highly of what I have
done—I wonder? You may, perhaps, think I have done it just in a fit
of childish petulance because my father locked me in when I wanted to go
to a ball of which he did not approve. But really it is much more than
that. At Morningside Park I feel as though all my growing up was presently
to stop, as though I was being shut in from the light of life, and, as
they say in botany, etiolated. I was just like a sort of dummy that does
things as it is told—that is to say, as the strings are pulled. I
want to be a person by myself, and to pull my own strings. I had rather
have trouble and hardship like that than be taken care of by others. I
want to be myself. I wonder if a man can quite understand that passionate
feeling? It is quite a passionate feeling. So I am already no longer the
girl you knew at Morningside Park. I am a young person seeking employment
and freedom and self-development, just as in quite our first talk of all I
said I wanted to be.</p>
<p>"I do hope you will see how things are, and not be offended with me or
frightfully shocked and distressed by what I have done.</p>
<p>"Very sincerely yours,</p>
<p>"ANN VERONICA STANLEY." <SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART__________________________"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Part 6 </h2>
<p>In the afternoon she resumed her search for apartments. The intoxicating
sense of novelty had given place to a more business-like mood. She drifted
northward from the Strand, and came on some queer and dingy quarters.</p>
<p>She had never imagined life was half so sinister as it looked to her in
the beginning of these investigations. She found herself again in the
presence of some element in life about which she had been trained not to
think, about which she was perhaps instinctively indisposed to think;
something which jarred, in spite of all her mental resistance, with all
her preconceptions of a clean and courageous girl walking out from
Morningside Park as one walks out of a cell into a free and spacious
world. One or two landladies refused her with an air of conscious virtue
that she found hard to explain. "We don't let to ladies," they said.</p>
<p>She drifted, via Theobald's Road, obliquely toward the region about
Titchfield Street. Such apartments as she saw were either scandalously
dirty or unaccountably dear, or both. And some were adorned with
engravings that struck her as being more vulgar and undesirable than
anything she had ever seen in her life. Ann Veronica loved beautiful
things, and the beauty of undraped loveliness not least among them; but
these were pictures that did but insist coarsely upon the roundness of
women's bodies. The windows of these rooms were obscured with draperies,
their floors a carpet patchwork; the china ornaments on their mantels were
of a class apart. After the first onset several of the women who had
apartments to let said she would not do for them, and in effect dismissed
her. This also struck her as odd.</p>
<p>About many of these houses hung a mysterious taint as of something weakly
and commonly and dustily evil; the women who negotiated the rooms looked
out through a friendly manner as though it was a mask, with hard, defiant
eyes. Then one old crone, short-sighted and shaky-handed, called Ann
Veronica "dearie," and made some remark, obscure and slangy, of which the
spirit rather than the words penetrated to her understanding.</p>
<p>For a time she looked at no more apartments, and walked through gaunt and
ill-cleaned streets, through the sordid under side of life, perplexed and
troubled, ashamed of her previous obtuseness.</p>
<p>She had something of the feeling a Hindoo must experience who has been
into surroundings or touched something that offends his caste. She passed
people in the streets and regarded them with a quickening apprehension,
once or twice came girls dressed in slatternly finery, going toward Regent
Street from out these places. It did not occur to her that they at least
had found a way of earning a living, and had that much economic
superiority to herself. It did not occur to her that save for some
accidents of education and character they had souls like her own.</p>
<p>For a time Ann Veronica went on her way gauging the quality of sordid
streets. At last, a little way to the northward of Euston Road, the moral
cloud seemed to lift, the moral atmosphere to change; clean blinds
appeared in the windows, clean doorsteps before the doors, a different
appeal in the neatly placed cards bearing the word</p>
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| APARTMENTS |<br/>
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<p>in the clear bright windows. At last in a street near the Hampstead Road
she hit upon a room that had an exceptional quality of space and order,
and a tall woman with a kindly face to show it. "You're a student,
perhaps?" said the tall woman. "At the Tredgold Women's College," said Ann
Veronica. She felt it would save explanations if she did not state she had
left her home and was looking for employment. The room was papered with
green, large-patterned paper that was at worst a trifle dingy, and the
arm-chair and the seats of the other chairs were covered with the unusual
brightness of a large-patterned chintz, which also supplied the
window-curtain. There was a round table covered, not with the usual
"tapestry" cover, but with a plain green cloth that went passably with the
wall-paper. In the recess beside the fireplace were some open bookshelves.
The carpet was a quiet drugget and not excessively worn, and the bed in
the corner was covered by a white quilt. There were neither texts nor
rubbish on the walls, but only a stirring version of Belshazzar's feast, a
steel engraving in the early Victorian manner that had some satisfactory
blacks. And the woman who showed this room was tall, with an understanding
eye and the quiet manner of the well-trained servant.</p>
<p>Ann Veronica brought her luggage in a cab from the hotel; she tipped the
hotel porter sixpence and overpaid the cabman eighteenpence, unpacked some
of her books and possessions, and so made the room a little homelike, and
then sat down in a by no means uncomfortable arm-chair before the fire.
She had arranged for a supper of tea, a boiled egg, and some tinned
peaches. She had discussed the general question of supplies with the
helpful landlady. "And now," said Ann Veronica surveying her apartment
with an unprecedented sense of proprietorship, "what is the next step?"</p>
<p>She spent the evening in writing—it was a little difficult—to
her father and—which was easier—to the Widgetts. She was
greatly heartened by doing this. The necessity of defending herself and
assuming a confident and secure tone did much to dispell the sense of
being exposed and indefensible in a huge dingy world that abounded in
sinister possibilities. She addressed her letters, meditated on them for a
time, and then took them out and posted them. Afterward she wanted to get
her letter to her father back in order to read it over again, and, if it
tallied with her general impression of it, re-write it.</p>
<p>He would know her address to-morrow. She reflected upon that with a thrill
of terror that was also, somehow, in some faint remote way, gleeful.</p>
<p>"Dear old Daddy," she said, "he'll make a fearful fuss. Well, it had to
happen somewhen.... Somehow. I wonder what he'll say?"</p>
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