<SPAN name="chap11"></SPAN>
<h3> XI. </h3>
<p>It was an odd thing, all the same, how easy it was to be friends with
Lilith Gordon: though she did not belong to Laura's set though Laura
did not even like her, and though she had had ample proof that Lilith
was double-faced, not to be trusted. Yet, in the months that followed
the affair of the purple dress, Laura grew more intimate with the
plump, sandy-haired girl than with either Bertha, or Inez, or Tilly.
Or, to put it more exactly, she was continually having lapses into
intimacy, and repenting them when it was too late. In one way Lilith
was responsible for this: she could make herself very pleasant when she
chose, seem to be your friend through thick and thin, thus luring you
on to unbosom yourself; and afterwards she would go away and laugh over
what you had told her, with other girls. And Laura was peculiarly
helpless under such circumstances: if it was done with tact, and with a
certain assumed warmth of manner, anyone could make a cat's-paw of her.</p>
<p>That Lilith and she undressed for bed together had also something to do
with their intimacy: this half-hour when one's hair was unbound and
replaited, and fat and thin arms wielded the brush, was the time of all
others for confidences. The governess who occupied the fourth bed did
not come upstairs till ten o'clock; the publican's daughter, a lazy
girl, was usually half asleep before the other two had their clothes
off.</p>
<p>It was in the course of one of these confidential chats that Laura did
a very foolish thing. In a moment of weakness, she gratuitously gave
away the secret that Mother supported her family by the work of her
hands.</p>
<p>The two girls were sitting on the side of Lilith's bed. Laura had a day
of mishaps behind her—that partly, no doubt, accounted for her
self-indulgence. But, in addition, her companion had just told her,
unasked, that she thought her "very pretty". It was not in Laura's
nature to let this pass: she was never at ease under an obligation; she
had to pay the coin back in kind.</p>
<p>"Embroidery? What sort? However does she do it?"—Lilith's interest was
on tiptoe at once—a false and slimy interest, the victim afterwards
told herself.</p>
<p>"Oh, my mother's awfully clever. It's just lovely, too, what she
does—all in silk—and ever so many different colours. She made a
piano-cover once, and got fifty pounds for it."</p>
<p>"How perfectly splendid!"</p>
<p>"But that was only a lucky chance ... that she got that to do. She
mostly does children's dresses and cloaks and things like that."</p>
<p>"But she's not a dressmaker, is she?"</p>
<p>"A dressmaker? I should think not indeed! They're sent up, all ready to
work, from the biggest shops in town."</p>
<p>"I say!—she must be clever."</p>
<p>"She is; she can do anything. She makes the patterns up all out of her
own head. "—And filled with pride in Mother's accomplishments and
Lilith's appreciation of them, Laura fell asleep that night without a
qualm.</p>
<p>It was the next evening. Several of the boarders who had finished
preparing their lessons were loitering in the dining-hall, Laura and
Lilith among them. In the group was a girl called Lucy, young but very
saucy; for she lived at Toorak, and came of one of the best families in
Melbourne. She was not as old as Laura by two years, but was already
feared and respected for the fine scorn of her opinions.</p>
<p>Lilith Gordon had bragged: "My uncle's promised me a gold watch and
chain when I pass matric."</p>
<p>Lucy of Toorak laughed: her nose came down, and her mouth went up at
the corners. "Do you think you ever will?"</p>
<p>"G. o. k. and He won't tell. But I'll probably get the watch all the
same."</p>
<p>"Where does your uncle hang out?"</p>
<p>"Brisbane."</p>
<p>"Sure he can afford to buy it?"</p>
<p>"Of course he can."</p>
<p>"What is he?"</p>
<p>Lilith was unlucky enough to hesitate, ever so slightly. "Oh, he's got
plenty of money," she asserted.</p>
<p>"She doesn't like to say what he is!"</p>
<p>"I don't care whether I say it or not."</p>
<p>"A butcher, p'raps, or an undertaker?"</p>
<p>"A butcher! He's got the biggest newspaper in Brisbane!"</p>
<p>"A newspaper! Great Scott! Her uncle keeps a newspaper!"</p>
<p>There was a burst of laughter from those standing round.</p>
<p>Lilith was scarlet now. "It's nothing to be ashamed of," she said
angrily.</p>
<p>But Lucy of Toorak could not recover from her amusement. "An uncle who
keeps a newspaper! A newspaper! Well, I'm glad none of MY uncles are so
rummy.—I say, does he leave it at front doors himself in the morning?"</p>
<p>Laura had at first looked passively on, well pleased to see another
than herself the butt of young Lucy's wit. But at this stage of her
existence she was too intent on currying favour, to side with any but
the stronger party. And so she joined in the boisterous mirth Lilith's
admission and Lucy's reception of it excited, and flung her gibes with
the rest.</p>
<p>She was pulled up short by a hissing in her ear. "If you say one word
more, I'll tell about the embroidery!"</p>
<p>Laura went pale with fright: she had been in good spirits that day, and
had quite forgotten her silly confidence of the night before. Now, the
jeer that was on the tip of her tongue hung fire. She could not all at
once obliterate her smile—that would have been noticeable; but it grew
weaker, stiffer and more unnatural, then gradually faded away, leaving
her with a very solemn little face.</p>
<p>From this night on, Lilith Gordon represented a powder-mine, which
might explode at any minute.—And she herself had laid the train!</p>
<p>From the outset, Laura had been accepted, socially, by even the most
exclusive, as one of themselves; and this, in spite of her niggardly
allowance, her ridiculous clothes. For the child had race in her: in a
well-set head, in good hands and feet and ears. Her nose, too, had a
very pronounced droop, which could stand only for blue blood, or a
Hebraic ancestor—and Jews were not received as boarders in the school.
Now, loud as money made itself in this young community, effectual as it
was in cloaking shortcomings, it did not go all the way: inherited
instincts and traditions were not so easily subdued. Just some of the
wealthiest, too, were aware that their antecedents would not stand a
close scrutiny; and thus a mighty respect was engendered in them for
those who had nothing to fear. Moreover, directly you got away from the
vastly rich, class distinctions were observed with an exactitude such
as can only obtain in an exceedingly mixed society. The three
professions alone were sacrosanct. The calling of architect, for
example, or of civil engineer, was, if a fortune had not been
accumulated, utterly without prestige; trade, any connection with
trade—the merest bowing acquaintance with buying and selling—was a
taint that nothing could remove; and those girls who were related to
shopkeepers, or, more awful still, to publicans, would rather have
bitten their tongues off than have owned to the disgrace.</p>
<p>Yet Laura knew very well that good birth and an aristocratic appearance
would not avail her, did the damaging fact leak out that Mother worked
for her living. Work in itself was bad enough—how greatly to be envied
were those whose fathers did nothing more active than live on their
money! But the additional circumstance of Mother being a woman made
things ten times worse: ladies did not work; some one always left them
enough to live on, and if he didn't, well, then he, too, shared the
ignominy. So Laura went in fear and trembling lest the truth should
come to light—in that case, she would be a pariah indeed—went in
hourly dread of Lilith betraying her. Nothing, however, happened—at
least as far as she could discover—and she sought to propitiate Lilith
in every possible way. For the time being, though, anxiety turned her
into a porcupine, ready to erect her quills at a touch. She was ever on
the look-out for an allusion to her mother's position, and for the
slight that was bound to accompany it.</p>
<p>Even the governesses noticed the change in her.</p>
<p>Three of them sat one evening round the fire in Mrs. Gurley's
sitting-room, with their feet on the fender. The girls had gone to bed;
it was Mrs. Gurley's night off, and as Miss Day was also on leave, the
three who were left could draw in more closely than usual. Miss
Snodgrass had made the bread into toast—in spite of Miss Chapman's
quakings lest Mrs. Gurley should notice the smell when she came
in—and, as they munched, Miss Snodgrass related how she had just
confiscated a book Laura Rambotham was trying to smuggle upstairs, and
how it had turned out that it belonged, not to Laura herself, but to
Lilith Gordon.</p>
<p>"She was like a little spitfire about it all the same. A most
objectionable child, I call her. It was only yesterday I wanted to look
at some embroidery on her apron—a rather pretty new stitch—and do you
think she'd let me see it? She jerked it away and glared at me as if
she would have liked to eat me. I could have boxed her ears."</p>
<p>"I never have any trouble with Laura. I don't think you know how to
manage her," said Miss Chapman, and executed a little manoeuvre. She
had poor teeth; and, having awaited a moment when Miss Snodgrass's
sharp eyes were elsewhere engaged, she surreptitiously dropped the
crusts of the toast into her handkerchief.</p>
<p>"I'd be sorry to treat her as you do," said Miss Snodgrass, and yawned.
"Girls need to be made to sit up nowadays."</p>
<p>She yawned again, and gazing round the room for fresh food for talk,
caught Miss Zielinski with her eye. "Hullo, Ziely, what are you deep
in?" She put her arm round the other's neck, and unceremoniously laid
hold of her book. "You naughty girl, you're at Ouida again! Always got
your nose stuck in some trashy novel."</p>
<p>"DO let me alone," said Miss Zielinski pettishly, holding fast to the
book; but she did not raise her eyes, for they were wet.</p>
<p>"You know you'll count the washing all wrong again to-morrow, your
head'll be so full of that stuff."</p>
<p>"Yes, it's time to go, girls; to-morrow's Saturday." And Miss Chapman
sighed; for, on a Saturday morning between six and eight o'clock,
fifty-five lots of washing had to be sorted out and arranged in piles.</p>
<p>"Holy Moses, what a life!" ejaculated Miss Snodgrass, and yawned again,
in a kind of furious desperation. "I swear I'll marry the first man
that asks me, to get away from it.—As long as he has money enough to
keep me decently."</p>
<p>"You would soon wish yourself back, if you had no more feeling for him
that that," reproved Miss Chapman.</p>
<p>"Catch me! Not even if he had a hump, or kept a mistress, or was over
eighty. Oh dear, oh dear!"—she stretched herself so violently that her
bones cracked; to resume, in a tone of ordinary conversation: "I do
wish I knew whether to put a brown wing or a green one in that blessed
hat of mine."</p>
<p>Miss Chapman's face straightened out from its shocked expression. "Your
hat? Why do you want to change it? It's very nice as it is."</p>
<p>"My dear Miss Chapman, it's at least six months out of date.—Ziely,
you're crying!"</p>
<p>"I'm not," said Miss Zielinski weakly, caught in the act of blowing her
nose.</p>
<p>"How on earth can you cry over a book? As if it were true!"</p>
<p>"I thank God I haven't such a cold heart as you."</p>
<p>"And I thank God I'm not a romantic idiot. But your name's not Thekla
for nothing I suppose."</p>
<p>"My name's as good as yours. And I won't be looked down on because my
father was once a German."</p>
<p>"'Mr. Kayser, do you vant to buy a dawg?'" hummed Miss Snodgrass.</p>
<p>"Girls, girls!" admonished Miss Chapman. "How you two do bicker.—
There, that's Mrs. Gurley now! And it's long past ten."</p>
<p>At the creaking of the front door both juniors rose, gathered their
belongings together, and hurried from the room. But it was a false
alarm; and having picked up some crumbs and set the chairs in order,
Miss Chapman resumed her seat. As she waited, she looked about her and
wondered, with a sigh, whether it would ever be her good fortune to
call this cheery little room her own. It was only at moments like the
present that she could indulge such a dream. Did Mrs. Gurley stand
before her, majestic in bonnet and mantle, as in a minute or two she
would, or draped in her great shawl, thoughts of this kind sank to
their proper level, and Miss Chapman knew them for what they were
worth. But sitting alone by night, her chin in her hand, her eyes on
the dying fire, around her the eerie stillness of the great house, her
ambition did not seem wholly out of reach; and, giving rein to her
fancy, she could picture herself sweeping through halls and rooms,
issuing orders that it was the business of others to fulfil, could even
think out a few changes that should be made, were she head of the staff.</p>
<p>But the insertion of Mrs. Gurley's key in the lock, the sound of her
foot on the oilcloth, was enough to waken a sense of guilt in Miss
Chapman, and make her start to her feet—the drab, elderly, apologetic
governess once more.</p>
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