“What is your name?”
“Susan Grant, Miss Loach.”
“Call me ma’am. I am Miss Loach
only to my equals. Your age?”
“Twenty-five, ma’am.”
“Do you know your work as parlor-maid thoroughly?”
“Yes, ma’am. I was
two years in one place and six months in another,
ma’am. Here are my characters from both
places, ma’am.”
As the girl spoke she laid two papers before the sharp old
lady who questioned her. But Miss Loach did not look at them immediately.
She examined the applicant with such close attention that a faint color tinted
the girl’s cheeks and she dropped her eyes. But, in her turn, by stealthy
glances, Susan Grant tactfully managed to acquaint herself with the looks of her
possible mistress. The thoughts of each woman ran as follows, -
Miss Loach to herself. “Humph!
Plain-looking, sallow skin, rather fine eyes and
a slack mouth. Not badly dressed for a servant,
and displays some taste. She might turn my old
dresses at a pinch. Sad expression, as though
she had something on her mind. Honest-looking,
but I think a trifle inquisitive, seeing how she examined
the room and is stealing glances at me. Talks
sufficiently, but in a low voice. Fairly intelligent,
but not too much so. Might be secretive.
Humph!”
The thoughts of Susan Grant.
“Handsome old lady, probably nearly sixty.
Funny dress for ten o’clock in the morning.
She must be rich, to wear purple silk and old lace
and lovely rings at this hour. A hard mouth,
thin nose, very white hair and very black eyebrows.
Got a temper I should say, and is likely to prove
an exacting mistress. But I want a quiet home,
and the salary is good. I’ll try it, if
she’ll take me.”
Had either mistress or maid known
of each other’s thoughts, a conclusion to do
business might not have been arrived at. As it
was, Miss Loach, after a few more questions, appeared
satisfied. All the time she kept a pair of very
black eyes piercingly fixed on the girl’s face,
as though she would read her very soul. But Susan
had nothing to conceal, so far as Miss Loach could
gather, so in the end she resolved to engage her.
“I think you’ll do,”
she said nodding, and poking up the fire, with a shiver,
although the month was June. “The situation
is a quiet one. I hope you have no followers.”
“No, ma’am,” said Susan and flushed
crimson.
“Ha!” thought Miss Loach,
“she has been in love - jilted probably.
All the better, as she won’t bring any young
men about my quiet house.”
“Will you not read my characters, ma’am?”
Miss Loach pushed the two papers towards
the applicant. “I judge for myself,”
said she calmly. “Most characters I read
are full of lies. Your looks are enough for me.
Where were you last?”
“With a Spanish lady, ma’am!”
“A Spanish lady!” Miss
Loach dropped the poker she was holding, with a clatter,
and frowned so deeply that her black eyebrows met over
her high nose. “And her name?”
“Senora Gredos, ma’am!”
The eyes of the old maid glittered,
and she made a clutch at her breast as though the
reply had taken away her breath. “Why did
you leave?” she asked, regaining her composure.
Susan looked uncomfortable.
“I thought the house was too gay, ma’am.”
“What do you mean by that?
Can any house be too gay for a girl of your years?”
“I have been well brought up,
ma’am,” said Susan quietly; “and
my religious principles are dear to me. Although
she is an invalid, ma’am, Senora Gredos was
very gay. Many people came to her house and
played cards, even on Sunday,” added Susan under
her breath. But low as she spoke, Miss Loach
heard.
“I have whist parties here frequently,”
she said drily; “nearly every evening four friends
of mine call to play. Have you any objection
to enter my service on that account?”
“Oh, no, ma’am.
I don’t mind a game of cards. I play ‘Patience’
myself when alone. I mean gambling - there
was a lot of money lost and won at Senora Gredos’
house!”
“Yet she is an invalid I think you said?”
“Yes, ma’am. She
was a dancer, I believe, and fell in some way, so as
to break her leg or hurt her back. She has been
lying on a couch for two years unable to move.
Yet she has herself wheeled into the drawing-room
and watches the gentlemen play cards. She plays
herself sometimes!”
Miss Loach again directed one of her
piercing looks at the pale face of the girl.
“You are too inquisitive and too talkative,”
she said suddenly, “therefore you won’t
suit me. Good-day.”
Susan was quite taken aback.
“Oh, ma’am, I hope I’ve said nothing
wrong. I only answered your questions.”
“You evidently take note of
everything you see, and talk about it.”
“No, ma’am,” said
the girl earnestly. “I really hold my tongue.”
“When it suits you,” retorted
Miss Loach. “Hold it now and let me think!”
While Miss Loach, staring frowningly
into the fire, debated inwardly as to the advisability
of engaging the girl, Susan looked timidly round the
room. Curiously enough, it was placed in the
basement of the cottage, and was therefore below the
level of the garden. Two fairly large windows
looked on to the area, which had been roofed with glass
and turned into a conservatory. Here appeared
scarlet geraniums and other bright-hued flowers, interspersed
with ferns and delicate grasses. Owing to the
position of the room and the presence of the glass
roof, only a subdued light filtered into the place,
but, as the day was brilliant with sunshine, the apartment
was fairly well illuminated. Still, on a cloudy
day, Susan could imagine how dull it would be.
In winter time the room must be perfectly dark.
It was luxuriously furnished, in red
and gold. The carpet and curtains were of bright
scarlet, threaded with gold. The furniture, strangely
enough, was of white polished wood upholstered in crimson
satin fringed with gold. There were many pictures
in large gilded frames and many mirrors similarly
encircled with gilded wood. The grate, fender
and fire-irons were of polished brass, and round the
walls were numerous electric lamps with yellow shades.
The whole room represented a bizarre appearance,
flamboyant and rather tropical in looks. Apparently
Miss Loach was fond of vivid colors. There was
no piano, nor were there books or papers, and the
only evidence as to how Miss Loach passed her time
revealed itself in a work-basket and a pack of cards.
Yet, at her age, Susan thought that needlework would
be rather trying, even though she wore no glasses
and her eyes seemed bright and keen. She was
an odd old lady and appeared to be rich. “I’ll
engage you,” said Miss Loach abruptly; “get
your box and be here before five o’clock this
afternoon. I am expecting some friends at eight
o’clock. You must be ready to admit them.
Now go!”
“But, ma’am, I - ”
“In this house,” interrupted
Miss Loach imperiously, “no one speaks to me,
unless spoken to by me. You understand!”
“Yes, ma’am,” replied
Susan timidly, and obeyed the finger which pointed
to the door. Miss Loach listened to the girl’s
footsteps on the stairs, and sat down when she heard
the front door close. But she was up again almost
in a moment and pacing the room. Apparently the
conversation with Susan Grant afforded her food for
reflection. And not very palatable food either,
judging from her expression.
The newly-engaged servant returned
that same afternoon to the suburban station, which
tapped the district of Rexton. A trunk, a bandbox
and a bag formed her humble belongings, and she arranged
with a porter that these should be wheeled in a barrow
to Rose Cottage, as Miss Loach’s abode was primly
called. Having come to terms, Susan left the
station and set out to walk to the place. Apart
from the fact that she saved a cab fare, she wished
to obtain some idea of her surroundings, and therefore
did not hurry herself.
It was a bright June day with a warm
green earth basking under a blue and cloudless sky.
But even the sunshine could not render Rexton beautiful.
It stretched out on all sides from the station new
and raw. The roads were finished, with asphalt
footpaths and stone curbing, the lamp-posts had apparently
only been lately erected, and lines of white fences
divided the roads from gardens yet in their infancy.
Fronting these were damp-looking red brick villas,
belonging to small clerks and petty tradesmen.
Down one street was a row of shops filled with the
necessaries of civilization; and round the corner,
an aggressively new church of yellow brick with a
tin roof and a wooden steeple stood in the middle
of an untilled space. At the end of one street
a glimpse could be caught of the waste country beyond,
not yet claimed by the ferry-builder. A railway
embankment bulked against the horizon, and closed
the view in an unsightly manner. Rexton was as
ugly as it was new.
Losing her way, Susan came to the
ragged fringe of country environing the new suburb,
and paused there, to take in her surroundings.
Across the fields to the left she saw an unfinished
mansion, large and stately, rising amidst a forest
of pines. This was girdled by a high brick wall
which looked older than the suburb itself. Remembering
that she had seen this house behind the cottage of
Miss Loach, the girl used it as a landmark, and turning
down a side street managed to find the top of a crooked
lane at the bottom of which Rose Cottage was situated.
This lane showed by its very crookedness that it belonged
to the ancient civilization of the district.
Here were no paths, no lamps, no aggressively new
fences and raw brick houses. Susan, stepping
down the slight incline, passed into quite an old
world, smacking of the Georgian times, leisurely and
quaint. On either side of the lane, old-fashioned
cottages, with whitewash walls and thatched roofs,
stood amidst gardens filled with unclipped greenery
and homely flowers. Quickset hedges, ragged and
untrimmed, divided these from the roadway, and to
add to the rural look one garden possessed straw bee-hives.
Here and there rose ancient elm-trees and grass grew
in the roadway. It was a blind lane and terminated
in a hedge, which bordered a field of corn.
To the left was a narrow path running between hedges
past the cottages and into the country.
Miss Loach’s house was a mixture
of old and new. Formerly it had been an unpretentious
cottage like the others, but she had added a new wing
of red brick built in the most approved style of the
jerry-builder, and looking like the villas in the
more modern parts of Rexton. The crabbed age
and the uncultured youth of the old and new portions,
planted together cheek by jowl, appeared like ill-coupled
clogs and quite out of harmony. The thatched
and tiled roofs did not seem meet neighbors, and the
whitewash walls of the old-world cottage looked dingy
beside the glaring redness of the new villa.
The front door in the new part was reached by a flight
of dazzling white steps. From this, a veranda
ran across the front of the cottage, its rustic posts
supporting rose-trees and ivy. On the cottage
side appeared an old garden, but the new wing was
surrounded by lawns and decorated with carpet bedding.
A gravel walk divided the old from the new, and intersected
the garden. At the back, Susan noted again the
high brick wall surrounding the half-completed mansion.
Above this rose tall trees, and the wall itself was
overgrown with ivy. It apparently was old and
concealed an unfinished palace of the sleeping beauty,
so ragged and wild appeared the growth which peeped
over the guardian wall.
With a quickness of perception unusual
in her class, Susan took all this in, then rang the
bell. There was no back door, so far as she
could see, and she thought it best to enter as she
had done in the morning. But the large fat woman
who opened the door gave her to understand that she
had taken a liberty.
“Of course this morning and
before engaging, you were a lady,” said the
cook, hustling the girl into the hall, “but now
being the housemaid, Miss Loach won’t be pleased
at your touching the front bell.”
“I did not see any other entrance,” protested
Susan.
“Ah,” said the cook, leading
the way down a few steps into the thatched cottage,
which, it appeared was the servants’ quarters,
“you looked down the area as is natural-like.
But there ain’t none, it being a conservitery!”
“Why does Miss Loach live in
the basement?” asked Susan, on being shown into
a comfortable room which answered the purpose of a
servants’ hall.
The cook resented this question.
“Ah!” said she with a snort, “and
why does a miller wear a white ’at, Miss Grant,
that being your name I take it. Don’t
you ask no questions but if you must know, Miss Loach
have weak eyes and don’t like glare. She
lives like a rabbit in a burrow, and though the rooms
on the ground floor are sich as the King might
in’abit, she don’t come up often save to
eat. She lives in the basement room where you
saw her, Miss Grant, and she sleeps in the room orf.
When she eats, the dining-room above is at her service.
An’ I don’t see why she shouldn’t,”
snorted the cook.
“I don’t mean any - ”
“No offence being given none
is taken,” interrupted cook, who seemed fond
of hearing her own wheezy voice. “Emily
Pill’s my name, and I ain’t ashamed of
it, me having been cook to Miss Loach for years an’
years and years. But if you had wished to behave
like a servant, as you are,” added she with
emphasis, “why didn’t you run round by
the veranda and so get to the back where the kitchen
is. But you’re one of the new class of
servants, Miss Grant, ’aughty and upsetting.”
“I know my place,” said Susan, taking
off her hat.
“And I know mine,” said
Emily Pill, “me being cook and consequently the
mistress of this servants’ ‘all.
An’ I’m an old-fashioned servant myself,
plain in my ’abits and dress.” This
with a disparaging look at the rather smart costume
of the newly-arrived housemaid. “I don’t
’old with cockes feathers and fal-de-dals on
’umble folk myself, not but what I could afford
’em if I liked, being of saving ’abits
and a receiver of good wages. But I’m
a friendly pusson and not ’ard on a good-lookin’
gal, not that you are what I call ’andsome.”
Susan seated beside the table, looked
weary and forlorn, and the good-natured heart of the
cook was touched, especially when Susan requested
her to refrain from the stiff name of Miss Grant.
“You an’ me will be good
friends, I’ve no doubt,” said Emily, “an’
you can call me Mrs. Pill, that being the name of
my late ’usband, who died of gin in excess.
The other servants is housemaid and page, though to
be sure he’s more of a man-of-all-work, being
forty if he’s a day, and likewise coachman,
when he drives out Miss Loach in her donkey carriage.
Thomas is his name, my love.” The cook
was rapidly becoming more and more friendly, “and
the housemaid is called Geraldine, for which ‘eaven
forgives her parents, she bein’ spotty and un’ealthy
and by no means a Bow-Bell’s ’eroine,
which ’er name makes you think of. But
there’s a dear, I’m talking brilliant,
when you’re dying for a cup of tea, and need
to get your box unpacked, by which I mean that I sees
the porter with the barrer.”
The newly-arrived parlor-maid was
pleased by this friendly if ungrammatical reception,
and thought she would like the cook in spite of her
somewhat tiresome tongue. For the next hour she
was unpacking her box and arranging a pleasant little
room at the back. She shared this with the spotty
Geraldine, who seemed to be a good-natured girl.
Apparently Miss Loach looked after her servants and
made them comfortable. Thomas proved to be amiable
if somewhat stupid, and welcomed Susan to tea affably
but with sheepish looks. As the servants seemed
pleasant, the house comfortable, and as the salary
was excellent, Susan concluded that she had - as
the saying is - fallen on her feet.
The quartette had tea in the servants’
hall, and there was plenty of well-cooked if plain
victuals. Miss Loach dined at half-past six and
Susan assumed her dress and cap. She laid the
table in a handsome dining-room, equally as garish
in color as the apartment below. The table appointments
were elegant, and Mrs. Pill served a nice little meal
to which Miss Loach did full justice. She wore
the same purple dress, but with the addition of more
jewellery. Her sharp eyes followed Susan about
the room as she waited, and at the end of the dinner
she made her first observation. “You know
your work I see,” she said. “I hope
you will be happy here!”
“I think I will, ma’am,” said Susan,
with a faint sigh.
“You have had trouble?” asked Miss Loach
quickly.
“Yes, ma’am!”
“You must tell me about it to-morrow,”
said the old lady rising. “I like to gain
the confidence of my servants. Now bring my coffee
to the room below. At eight, three people will
arrive - a lady and two gentlemen.
You will show them into the sitting-room and put out
the card-table. Then you can go to the kitchen
and wait till I ring. Be sure you don’t
come till I do ring,” and Miss Loach emphasized
this last order with a flash of her brilliant eyes.
Susan took the coffee to the sitting-room
in the basement and then cleared the table.
Shortly before eight o’clock there was a ring
at the front door. She opened it to a tall lady,
with gray hair, who leaned on an ebony cane.
With her were two men, one a rather rough foolish-looking
fellow, and the other tall, dark, and well-dressed
in an evening suit. A carriage was just driving
away from the gate. As the tall lady entered,
a breath of strong perfume saluted Susan’s nostrils.
The girl started and peered into the visitor’s
face. When she returned to the kitchen her own
was as white as chalk.