Part 9 (2/2)

Her neighbour broke in upon her thoughts, and Katharine came to herself with a start.

”Whose cuby are you going to have?” she was asking.

”I--I don't know. The servant said it was not empty yet. I should rather like to unpack.”

”I don't suppose you will get a permanent one yet awhile,” said the shorthand clerk, in the cheerful way with which she imparted all her unpleasant revelations; ”they always move you about for a week or two first. I expect you are coming into our room for the present; Miss King is going up to Scotland by the night mail. Jenny will tell you when she comes in. Supper is at nine,” she added, pus.h.i.+ng back her chair and folding up her paper, ”and there are two reception rooms upstairs, if you want to sit somewhere till your cubicle is empty.”

Katharine thanked her, and felt more forlorn than ever when the shorthand clerk had gone. But the servant came to her rescue a few minutes later, and offered to take her to her room which was now empty.

”Is it Miss King's?” asked Katharine, and felt a little happier when she learned that it was. She would have one acquaintance in the same room at all events. But her heart sank again, when she found herself alone with her two boxes in a curtained corner of a dingy room, the corner that was the farthest from the window and the smallest of the four compartments. There was hardly room to move; and when she tried to unpack her boxes, she found that most of the drawers in the tiny chest were already occupied, and that there were no pegs for her dresses.

”Could anything be more dreary?” she said aloud. ”And the curtains are just horribly dirty, and I don't feel as though I _could_ get into that bed. And what a tiny jug and basin!”

”Hullo, is that you?” said the voice of the shorthand clerk, who had come into her part of the room un.o.bserved. ”I guessed you'd feel pretty bad when you saw what it was like. They all do. But you might as well turn up the gas, and make it as cheerful as possible. That's better. Well, it's not much like the prospectus, is it?”

Katharine remembered the plausible statements of the prospectus, and broke into a laugh. There was a grim humour in her situation that appealed to her, though it seemed to be lost on her companion.

”Well, I'm glad you can laugh, though I never found it funny myself,”

she called out. ”But don't stay moping here; come into the drawing-room until the bell rings for supper, won't you?”

Katharine followed her advice, and allowed herself to be taken into another bare looking room, over the dining-room. This was furnished with a horsehair sofa and three basket chairs, which were all occupied, several cane chairs, and two square tables, at which some girls sat writing. One of them looked up as the door opened, and asked the shorthand clerk to come and help her with her arithmetic.

”You know I'm no good, Polly. Where's Miss Browne?” asked the shorthand clerk, pus.h.i.+ng a chair towards Katharine, and taking one herself.

”She's out; I think you might try,” said the girl who had spoken to her, in a peevish tone. ”I have got to finish this paper to-night; and I'm f.a.gged now.”

”Can I help?” asked Katharine. The other two looked at her, and seemed surprised.

”This is some one new,” explained her first friend. ”Let me introduce you: Miss Polly Newland, Miss-- Why, I don't even know your name, do I?”

”Austen,” said Katharine. ”Won't you tell me yours?”

The girl said her name was Hyam,--Phyllis Hyam; and they returned to the subject of the arithmetic.

”Let's look at it, Polly,” said Phyllis Hyam, and Miss Newland pa.s.sed the paper across the table. The two girls bent over it, and Phyllis shook her head.

”I never understood stocks,--too badly taught!” she said, and tilted her chair and began to whistle.

”Shall I try?” said Katharine, taking out a pencil. She worked out the sum to the satisfaction of Polly Newland, who then unbent a little, and explained that she was going up for the Civil Service examination in March.

”I say, you're clever, aren't you? Do you teach?” asked Phyllis Hyam, bringing the front legs of her chair down again with a bang.

”That is what I want to do; but I never have,” replied Katharine. The other two looked at her pityingly.

”Any friends in London?” they asked.

”Only relations; and they won't help me.”

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