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A score of different things contributed to her enjoyment of that affair of atmosphere--her "lark." First, the initiative was hers--for her empty-eyed statue accepted everything with as much candour as if he had been born into a virgin world on the eighth day of its creation. Next, the mere disregarding of Mrs. Lovenant-Smith was a pleasure she felt it inc.u.mbent upon herself not to forgo. Next, there was the instinctive courage with which she translated her sulks into carelessness and gaiety. Next--but allow what you will for the rest: pique, vanity, her derivation, her upbringing. When, the third time she met Roy by the stile, the half-French girl, Pigou, came upon them, and instantly flew to spread the news among such girls as still remained at Chesson's, Louie's Coventry was the coveted thing she had all along intended it should be.
For she was more than merely popular now; she was romantic, apart, a being to be looked up to with something like awe. Meet a young man!
She felt herself to be the channel by which every girl in the place might have access to her own dreams. They gave her longing glances, that mutely implored her to tell them all, all about it; she talked about everything else, but not about that, and hearts and mouths watered. They offered to do things for her--to carry her mattress, to do her Sunday watering, even to clean her bicycle; and Louie let them--but told them nothing. Nay, she even drew Richenda Earle to herself. Richenda actually carried her mattress to the foot of the hill one night and slept out. The two mattresses were placed not six feet apart, and, as the birds settled on the boughs and the stars came out, Richenda set herself wistfully to pump Louie.
Then it appeared why Richenda had seemed changed since her vacation.
Speaking in a low voice, she too admitted that there was now--Somebody. Weston, his name was, Louie learned, and he was some sort of a commercial schoolmaster at the same place in Holborn where Richenda herself had studied. So instead of Richenda pumping Louie, Louie pumped Richenda. What was her Mr. Weston like? Well (Richenda said), some might think him an oddity--the Secretary Bird, his nickname was--but he was, oh, a soul so sensitive, so gentle! Was there any prospect of their marrying soon? Richenda sighed; it would be a long time; if she got her post at Chesson's he might apply for a country schoolmastership somewhere near, and then she would get a bicycle; or if he got a "rise" in London she might relinquish her appointment--when she got it. But in any case it could hardly be for years. Louie asked flatly what Weston got, and was told one hundred pounds a year. She looked up in surprise. Her own dress allowance was treble that amount.
"And you'd get a hundred here too?" she asked.
"If I get the place--which means if I get my medal," said Richenda.
Then, Louie thought, that would be two hundred between them--two-thirds of her dress allowance.
"But--but----," she said, "I thought people got paid more than that!"
"I told you you didn't know," said Richenda softly.
"But--but--why, my aunt paid Miss Skrine one hundred and fifty pounds, just to go through her engagements, opening bazaars and charities and so on--just to write down on a slate what she had to do each day!"
"Your aunt's Lady Moone," came from Richenda's couch.
"I _know_ she got one hundred and fifty pounds, _and_ lived with them.
One hundred pounds seems absurd."
"That's what father said when he apologised to me."
"But surely, all--all the people one sees aren't paid at that rate!
Why, some cooks get a thousand--I've heard that for a fact----"
"Some don't," came from the other pillow.
"Well, some do, and if you strike an average, or whatever it's called----"
But Richenda interrupted, softly and wearily:
"Oh, you don't, don't, don't know."
Louie asked further questions. She frowned, puzzled, at the answers.
Of course Richenda herself wasn't a very effective sort of girl; if anybody had to be downtrodden it would very likely be she; but the things she was telling her now (Richenda had begun to talk again, resignedly rather than bitterly) were preposterous. There must be something wrong with Richenda, probably with her Weston too; she did not look quite right; she was very different from the rosy housemaids at Trant, for example. One hundred pounds a year!... She had forgotten all about Roy. When, presently, Richenda came as near to putting a question about him as she dared, she forgot about him again. One hundred pounds a year!... She lay on her back, her knees up, her hands behind her head, her sleeves fallen from her wonderful arms, the brows above the grey eyes knitted. She was sure that _she_ could do better than that! She even went so far as to say so. Richenda showed no resentment.
"You've got Lord Moone behind you," she said.
"I've got a prizefighter and a public-house behind me," Louie replied.
"Yes--I know you think you know----"
Louie lay awake, still pondering it all, long after Richenda had fallen into an uneasy sleep.
On the following afternoon she met Roy by the stile again. She was restless, unsettled, she knew not what. She spoke almost sharply to him.
"I'm not going to stand here with you," she said; "that's twice I've been seen. Come down the hill."
Roy no longer urged the Rules. They walked together a hundred yards down the hill, and sat down under a gorse-bush. He made her move quite behind it, and even then tucked her skirt a little farther out of the gaze of a possible pa.s.ser-by.
"Now we're all right," he said. "How's Lovey this morning?"
"I don't know. I haven't seen her."
"Well, don't bite a fellow's head off, Louie."
"Then don't bother me to-day.--No, I don't want my hand held."
"What's the matter with you?"
"If you don't leave me alone I shall go. I didn't sleep till nearly daylight."
"I didn't sleep for quite an hour, either," he said sympathetically.
"I say, isn't it funny, Louie, when you come to think of it, that till a week ago I hadn't thought of you for years?"
"Oh, I wasn't lying awake thinking of you," she said bluntly.
"I was of you." He put out his hand again.
His approach only made her impatient. "Oh, don't!" she snapped.
"Really I shall get up and go if you worry me."
He was, as he would have put it, "keen": keen enough to begin to sulk.
She let him sulk, and watched the sea, always of a milky bloom, and the sky, still of the hue of an infant's eyeball. After some minutes she turned to him again.
"What _do_ people get paid?" she asked abruptly.
"What people?" He spoke over his shoulder.
"Oh, people--you know what I mean!"
"We get dashed little, I know that." (He was going into the army.) "What sort of people? Servants and those?"
"And those--yes."
Roy expounded.
"Jolly good pay, _I_ call it; lot of lazy beggars! Why, the fellow down there wanted to charge me two pounds for patching up that centre-board, that I did in about a day. I shouldn't mind getting two pounds a day!... Why?"
"I want to know."
"Some of your gardeners been grizzling to you?"
"No."