<h2><SPAN name="b1c13">CHAPTER XIII</SPAN><br/> HILDA'S WORLD</h2>
<h3>I</h3>
<p>The conversation in the inner room promised to be interminable. Hilda
could not decide what to do. She felt no real alarm on her mother's
account. Mrs. Lessways, often slightly indisposed, was never seriously ill;
she possessed one of those constitutions which do not go to extremes of
disease; if a malady overtook her, she invariably 'had' it in a mild form.
Doubtless Sarah Gailey, preoccupied and worried by new responsibilities,
desired to avoid the added care of nursing the sick. Hence the telegram.
Moreover, if the case had been grave, she would not have put the telegram
in the interrogative; she would have written, 'Please come at once.' No,
Hilda was not unduly disturbed. Nevertheless, she had an odd idea that she
ought to rush to the station and catch the next train, which left Knype at
five minutes to four; this idea did not spring from her own conscience, but
rather from the old-fashioned collective family conscience. But at a
quarter to four, when it was already too late to catch the local train at
Turnhill, the men had not emerged from the inner room; nor had Hilda come
to any decision. As the departure of her mother and Miss Gailey had
involved much solemn poring over time-tables, it happened that she knew the
times of all the trains to London; to catch the next and last she would
have to leave Turnhill at <i>5.55</i>. She said that she would wait and
see. Her work for the first number of the paper was practically done, but
there was this mysterious conclave which fretted her curiosity and
threatened exciting development; also the Majuba disaster would mean
trouble for somebody. And in any event she hated the very thought of
quitting Turnhill before the <i>Chronicle</i> was definitely out. She had
lived for the moment of its publication, and she could not bear to miss it.
She was almost angry with her mother; she was certainly angry with Miss
Gailey. All the egotism of the devotee in her was aroused and irate.</p>
<p>Then the men came forth from the inner room, with a rather unexpected
suddenness. Mr. Cannon appeared first; and after him Mr. Enville; lastly
Arthur Dayson, papers in hand. Intimidated by the presence of the stranger,
Hilda affected to be busy at her table. Mr. Enville shook hands very
amicably with George Cannon, and instantly departed. As he passed down the
stairs she caught sight of him; he was a grizzled man of fifty, lean and
shabby, despite his reputation for riches. She knew that he was a candidate
for the supreme position of Chief Bailiff at the end of the year, and he
did not accord with her spectacular ideal of a Chief Bailiff; the actual
Chief Bailiff was a beautiful and picturesque old man, with perfectly
tended white whiskers, and always a flower in his coat. Further, she could
not reconcile this nearly effusive friendliness between Mr. Enville and Mr.
Cannon with the animadversions of the leading article which Arthur Dayson
had composed, and Mr. Cannon had approved, only twenty-four hours
earlier.</p>
<p>As Mr. Cannon shut the door at the head of the stairs, she saw him give
a discreet, disdainful wink to Dayson. Then he turned sharply to Hilda, and
said, thoughtful and stern:</p>
<p>"Your notebook, please."</p>
<p>Bracing herself, and still full of pride in her ability to write this
mysterious shorthand, she opened her notebook, and waited with poised
pencil. The mien of the two men had communicated to her an excitement far
surpassing their own, in degree and in felicity. The whole of her vital
force was concentrated at the point of her pencil, and she seemed to be
saying to herself: "I'm very sorry, mother, but see how important this is!
I shall consider what I can do for you the very moment I am free."</p>
<p>Arthur Dayson coughed and plumped heavily on a chair.</p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>It was in such moments as this that Dayson really lived, with all the
force of his mediocrity. George Cannon was not a journalist; he could
compose a letter, but he had not the trick of composing an article. He
felt, indeed, a negligent disdain for the people who possessed this trick,
as for performers in a circus; he certainly did not envy them, for he knew
that he could buy them, as a carpenter buys tools. His attitude was that of
the genuine bourgeois towards the artist: possessive, incurious, and
contemptuous. Dayson, however, ignored George Cannon's attitude, perhaps
did not even perceive what it was. He gloried in his performance.
Accustomed to dictate extempore speeches on any subject whatever to his
shorthand pupils, he was quite at his ease, quite master of his faculties,
and self-satisfaction seemed to stand out on his brow like genial sweat
while the banal phrases poured glibly from the cavern behind his jagged
teeth; and each phrase was a perfect model of provincial journalese. George
Cannon had to sit and listen,--to approve, or at worst to make tentative
suggestions.</p>
<p>The first phrase which penetrated through the outer brain of the
shorthand writer to the secret fastness where Hilda sat in judgment on the
world was this:</p>
<p>"The campaign of vulgar vilification inaugurated yesterday by our
contemporary <i>The Staffordshire Signal</i> against our esteemed
fellow-townsman Mr. Richard Enville..."</p>
<p>This phrase came soon after such phrases as "Our first bow to the
public"... "Our solemn and bounden duty to the district which it is our
highest ambition to serve..." etc. Phrases which had already occurred in
the leading article dictated on the previous day.</p>
<p>Hilda soon comprehended that in twenty-four hours Mr. Enville, from
being an unscrupulous speculator who had used his official position to make
illicit profits out of the sale of land to the town for town improvements,
had become the very mirror of honesty and high fidelity to the noblest
traditions of local government. Without understanding the situation, and
before even she had formulated to herself any criticism of the persons
concerned, she felt suddenly sick. She dared not look at George Cannon, but
once when she raised her head to await the flow of a period that had been
arrested at a laudatory superlative, she caught Dayson winking coarsely at
him. She hated Dayson for that; George Cannon might wink at Dayson (though
she regretted the condescending familiarity), but Dayson had no right to
presume to wink at George Cannon. She hoped that Mr. Cannon had silently
snubbed him.</p>
<p>As the article proceeded there arose a crying from the Square below. A
<i>Signal</i> boy, one of the earliest to break the silent habit of the
Square, was bawling a fresh edition of Arthur Dayson's contemporary, and
across the web of the dictator's verbiage she could hear the words: "South
Africa--Details--" Mr. Cannon glanced at his watch impatiently. Hilda could
see, under her bent and frowning brow, his white hand moving on the dark
expanse of his waistcoat.</p>
<p>Immediately afterwards Mr. Cannon, interrupting, said:</p>
<p>"That'll be all right. Finish it. I must be off."</p>
<p>"Right you are!" said Dayson grandly. "I'll run down with it to the
printer's myself--soon as it's copied."</p>
<p>Mr. Cannon nodded. "And tell him we've got to be on the railway
bookstalls first thing to-morrow morning."</p>
<p>"He'll never do it."</p>
<p>"He must do it. I don't care if he works all night."</p>
<p>"But--"</p>
<p>"There hasn't got to be any 'buts,' Dayson. There's been a damned sight
too much delay as it is."</p>
<p>"All right! All right!" Dayson placated him hastily.</p>
<p>Mr. Cannon departed.</p>
<p>It seemed to Hilda that she shivered, but whether with pain or pleasure
she knew not. Never before had Mr. Cannon sworn in her presence. All day
his manner had been peculiar, as though the strain of mysterious anxieties
was changing his spirit. And now he was gone, and she had said naught to
him about the telegram from Miss Gailey!</p>
<p>Arthur Dayson rolled oratorically on in defence of the man whom
yesterday he had attacked.</p>
<p>And then Sowter, the old clerk, entered.</p>
<p>"What is it? Don't interrupt me!" snapped Dayson.</p>
<p>"There's the <i>Signal</i>.... Latest details.... This here Majuba
business!"</p>
<p>"What do I care about your Majuba?" Dayson retorted. "I've got something
more important than your Majuba."</p>
<p>"It was the governor as told me to give it you," said Sowter,
restive.</p>
<p>"Well, give it me, then; and don't waste my time!" Dayson held out an
imperial hand for the sheet. He looked at Hilda as if for moral support and
added, to her, in a martyred tone: "I suppose I shall have to dash off a
few lines about Sowter's Majuba while you're copying out my article."</p>
<p>"And the governor said to remind you that Mr. Enville wants a proof of
his advertisement," Sowter called out sulkily as he was disappearing down
the stairs.</p>
<p>Hilda blushed, as she had blushed in writing George Cannon's first lie
about the printing of the first issue. She had accustomed herself to lies,
and really without any difficulty or hesitation. Yes! She had even reached
the level of being religiously proud of them! But now her bullied and
crushed conscience leaped up again, and in the swift alarm of the shock her
heart was once more violently beating. Yet amid the wild confusion of her
feelings, a mechanical intelligence guided her hand to follow Arthur
Dayson's final sentences. And there shone out from her soul a contempt for
the miserable hack, so dazzling that it would have blinded him--had he not
been already blind.</p>
<h3>III</h3>
<p>That evening she sat alone in the office. The first number of <i>The
Five Towns Chronicle</i>, after the most astounding adventures, had
miraculously gone to press. Dayson and Sowter had departed. There was no
reason why Hilda should remain,--burning gas to no purpose. She had
telegraphed, by favour of a Karkeek office-boy, to Miss Gailey, saying that
she would come by the first train on the morrow--Saturday, and she had
therefore much to do at home. Nevertheless, she sat idle in the office,
unable to leave. Her whole life was in that office, and it was just when
she was most weary of the environment that she would vacillate longest
before quitting it. She was unhappy and apprehensive, much less about her
mother than about the attitude of her conscience towards the morals of this
new world of hers. The dramatic Enville incident had spoiled the pleasure
which she had felt in sacrificing her formal duty as a daughter to her duty
as a clerk. She had been disillusioned. She foresaw the future with
alarm.</p>
<p>And yet, strangely, the disillusion and the fear were a source of
pleasure. She savoured them with her loyalty, that loyalty which had
survived even the frightful blow of George Cannon's casual disdain at her
mother's tea-table! Whatever this new world might be, it was hers, it was
precious. She would no more think of abandoning it than a young mother
would think of abandoning a baby obviously imperfect.... Nay, she would
cling to it the tighter!</p>
<p>George Cannon came up the stairs with his decisive and rapid step. She
rose from her chair at the table as he entered. He was wearing a new
overcoat, that she had never seen before, with a fine velvet collar.</p>
<p>"You're going?" he asked, a little breathless.</p>
<p>"I <i>was</i> going," she replied in her clear, timid voice, implying
that she was ready to stay.</p>
<p>"Everything all right?"</p>
<p>"Mr. Dayson said so."</p>
<p>"He's gone?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Mr. Sowter's gone too."</p>
<p>"Good!" he murmured. And he straightened his shoulders, and, putting his
hands in the pockets of his trousers, began to walk about the room.</p>
<p>Hilda moved to get her bonnet and jacket. She moved very quietly and
delicately, and, because he was there, she put on her bonnet and jacket
with gestures of an almost apologetic modesty. He seemed to ignore her, so
that she was able to glance surreptitiously at his face. He was now
apparently less worried. Still, it was an enigmatic face. She had no notion
of what he had been doing since his hurried exit in the afternoon. He might
have been attending to his legal practice, or he might have been abroad on
mysterious errands.</p>
<p>"Funny business, this newspaper business is, isn't it?" he remarked,
after a moment. "Just imagine Enville, now! Upon my soul I didn't think he
had it in him!... Of course,"--he threw his head up with a careless
laugh,--"of course, it would have been madness for us to miss such a
chance! He's one of the men of the future, in this town."</p>
<p>"Yes," she agreed, in an eager whisper.</p>
<p>In an instant George Cannon had completely changed the attitude of her
conscience,--by less than a phrase, by a mere intonation. In an instant he
had reassured her into perfect security. It was plain, from every accent of
his voice, that he had done nothing of which he thought he ought to be
ashamed. Business was business, and newspapers were newspapers; and the
simple truth was that her absurd conscience had been in the wrong. Her duty
was to accept the standards of her new world. Who was she? Nobody! She did
accept the standards of her new world, with fervour. She was proud of them,
actually proud of their apparent wickedness. She had accomplished an act of
faith. Her joy became intense, and shot glinting from her eyes as she put
on her gloves. Her life became grand to her. She knew she was known in the
town as 'the girl who could write shorthand.' Her situation was not
ordinary; it was unique. Again, the irregularity of the hours, and the fact
that the work never commenced till the afternoon, seemed to her romantic
and beautiful. Here she was, at nine o'clock, alone with George Cannon on
the second floor of the house! And who, gazing from the Square at the
lighted window, would guess that she and he were there alone?</p>
<p>All the activities of newspaper production were poetized by her fervour.
The <i>Chronicle</i> was not a poor little weekly sheet, struggling into
existence anyhow, at haphazard, dependent on other newspapers for all
except purely local items of news. It was an organ! It was the courageous
rival of the ineffable <i>Signal</i>, its natural enemy! One day it would
trample on the <i>Signal</i>! And though her rôle was humble, though
she understood scarcely anything of the enterprise beyond her own duties,
yet she was very proud of her rôle too. And she was glad that the men
were seemingly so careless, so disorderly, so forgetful of details, so--in
a word--childish! For it was part of her rôle to remind them, to set
them right, to watch over their carelessness, to restore order where they
had left disorder. In so far as her rôle affected them, she
condescended to them.</p>
<p>She informed George Cannon of her mother's indisposition, and that she
meant to go to London the next morning, and to return most probably in a
few days. He stopped in his walk, near her. Like herself, he was not
seriously concerned about Mrs. Lessways, but he showed a courteous
sympathy.</p>
<p>"It's a good thing you didn't go to London when your mother went," he
said, after a little conversation.</p>
<p>He did not add: "You've been indispensable." He had no air of
apologizing for his insult at the tea-table. But he looked firmly at her,
with a peculiar expression.</p>
<p>Suddenly she felt all her slimness and fragility; she felt all the girl
in herself and all the dominant man in him, and all the empty space around
them. She went hot. Her sight became dim. She was ecstatically blissful;
she was deeply ashamed. She desired the experience to last for ever, and
him and herself to be eternally moveless; and at the same time she desired
to fly. Or rather, she had no desire to fly, but her voice and limbs acted
of themselves, against her volition.</p>
<p>"Good-night, then."</p>
<p>"But I say! Your wages. Shall I pay you now?"</p>
<p>"No, no! It doesn't matter in the least, thanks."</p>
<p>He shook hands with a careless, good-natured smile, which seemed to be
saying: "Foolish creature! You can't defend yourself, and these airs are
amusing. But I am benevolent." And she was ashamed of her shame, and
furious against the childishness that made her frown, and lower her eyes,
and escape out of the room like a mouse.</p>
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