Precisely at nine o’clock on
the following morning Antonia presented herself at
the office of the new review; and was forthwith conducted
to the editor’s room.
Here Owen and Barry were waiting for
her; and at the sight of the trim little figure in
the doorway the faces of both men brightened.
In truth Toni was pleasant to look
upon. She had taken off her hat and coat in the
little ante-room, and as she stood there in her black
frock, with its demure little white turn-down collar,
she looked very young, very shy, and if the truth
must be told, very pretty. Whereupon Barry, who
loved all pretty girls in a harmless, kindly fashion,
rejoiced exceedingly; while even Owen, to whom things
feminine were at present anathema, owned to himself
that she was certainly more attractive to have about
the place than her sour-faced predecessor.
It was Barry who put her at her ease,
of course. Not being troubled with shyness he
greeted her in friendly fashion, bade her come in,
and pointed out to her the chair, behind the typewriter,
which she was expected to fill.
Yes, she said, in answer to questioning,
she was used to a Remington. No, she had never
been connected with journalism before. Yes, she
was well up in ordinary office work, and in
answer to Owen, this she knew pretty well
the rules of composition, grammar, etc.
“That’s good.”
Owen spoke formally, and Toni decided instantly that
she liked Mr. Raymond the better of the two.
“Well, I have here an article I want you to
type at once, and then can you read proof?”
Blushing, she owned her inability
to do so. Privately, she was not at all sure
what he meant, but dread of Miss Hardy’s wrath
should she be returned to the office marked “Incompetent”
forced her to add quickly:
“But I’m sure I could
learn if if you wouldn’t mind showing
me how to do it.”
“I’m sure you could.”
Barry spoke kindly and she turned to him with a feeling
of relief. “When you have typed that article
for Mr. Rose I’ll show you how, and then you’ll
manage all right.”
“Teach her now,” advised
Rose, looking up from the manuscript he was scanning.
“This stuff wants a bit of revising, and you
might as well do something for your living, Barry,
you lazy wretch.”
Barry smilingly disclaimed any right to the title.
“I’m ready to work as hard as anyone,”
he said gaily.
“But as I’m only considered
fit to do the theatrical criticisms and play office-boy
to you, Owen, naturally I find time to make holiday
now and then. Well, Miss ... er ...”
“Gibbs.” She supplied him with the
name as he hesitated.
“Gibbs? You won’t
mind being known as ‘Our Miss Gibbs,’ will
you?” His tone was free of all offence, and
Toni smiled in response. “Now, here’s
a chair for me, and if only our chief will hold his
peace for half an hour, I’ll soon put you wise,
as the Yankees say.”
He sat down beside her, and pulling
a couple of galley proof-sheets towards him, began
to initiate her into the mysteries of “reading.”
For all his laughing manner he was an excellent teacher;
and after twenty minutes of his clear and lucid exposition
the girl felt she was beginning to grasp her lesson
thoroughly. She proved, too, wonderfully quick
at detecting mistakes, and Barry, who had petitioned
the heads of the office they had selected not to send
him any Council School product, was pleased to find
that her spelling was admirable, her grammar passable,
and her memory retentive.
As to the meaning which the article
they were correcting conveyed to her, Barry was a
little doubtful.
It was a short summary, by a famous
Catholic writer, of some of the lesser-understood
aspects of mysticism; and Barry suspected that a good
deal of it was Greek to her, though she did her best
to answer him intelligently when he questioned her,
rather artfully, on the correct reading of a somewhat
involved sentence.
As a matter of fact, Toni was wondering
inwardly what on earth it was all about. Her
education, though sound so far as it went, had been
thoroughly old-fashioned; and at this period of her
development it is to be feared there were whole tracts
of mind and brain left vacant for Toni
belonged, by adoption at least, to a class who read
only for amusement and occupation, and are not in
the least anxious to try their mental teeth on any
abstract theories or philosophies of life. She
was at present all for the concrete. Things seen
and known were of importance, things unseen were alike
uninteresting and incredible. The abstract virtues
were all very well, but life was much too vivid and
important to allow itself to be ousted by dreams and
speculations.
Something of this Barry, who had an
almost femininely swift intuition, guessed as he sat
beside Toni on this first morning; but Toni was much
too intent on her work to wonder what he thought of
her; and by the time she had done a little typing,
taken down a few letters, and read a short proof all
by herself, it was one o’clock, and she was dismissed
in search of lunch.
When she returned, nearly an hour
later, she found Owen alone, studying a dummy copy
of the review; and seeing she was interested, Owen
handed it over for her to see.
“The Bridge.”
She quoted the title a little dubiously. “Is
that what you call it? But what does
it mean?”
Taking it back into his own hands,
Owen pointed with a pencil to the design on the cover.
“Here is the Bridge, you see,
and this stream of people passing over it symbolize
the present generation. This side of the bridge
represents the past, from which the present comes;
this, over the bridge, is the future, towards which
the pilgrims are hastening. The idea is to bridge
the gulf between past and future, between the old worlds
and the new; and with that in mind we try, while never
neglecting the storehouse of the past, to point to
the future, with all its wonderful, and as yet unwon,
rewards and discoveries.”
She murmured a word or two, and he
went on with a note of enthusiasm in his voice.
“Personally, I look to the future
with confidence. Some people say the golden age
of poetry, of music and letters generally, is past;
but I don’t agree. I think that there will
be a fresh Renaissance presently, that there will
be found fresh hands to pass on the sacred torch ...
there’s a flood of brilliant youth let loose
in the world just now; and every bit of help the Bridge
can give is at the service of that marvellous band.”
He broke off suddenly, the light of
the visionary gleaming in his eyes; but seeing, with
a slight pang of disappointment, that his outburst
was unintelligible to his hearer, he threw down the
paper and laughed.
“There, Miss Gibbs, I have finished!
Don’t start me on the subject unless you’re
ready to be bored. Talk to Barry about it he
is able to look upon the Bridge quite sanely,
as a means of providing bread and butter; but I’m
afraid I’m a bit of a fanatic.”
Toni, uncertain of her ground, but
desperately anxious to appear intelligent, murmured
something shyly, and Rose pulled out his watch with
a smile.
“After two already! Well,
Miss Gibbs, I’m off for lunch. You might
just sort these papers out a bit, will you? We
seem to have let things get into rather a muddle.”
“I’ll do it at once.
There would be plenty of room for everything if some
of these papers wore tidied up.”
“Yes, I suppose you’re
right.” Owen, who loved order, but was too
impatient to preserve it, spoke dubiously. “Of
course some of those papers are done with, but you
wouldn’t know which to keep, would you?”
“Perhaps Mr. Raymond would help me?”
Owen’s face cleared.
“Of course do the
idle young beggar good. All right, Miss Gibbs,
he shall give you a hand this afternoon when he gets
back. He’s an awfully good sort, you know,
though I pretend to rag him. He’s as clever
as you please, and with it all as obliging and unspoilt
as possible. Well, I’d better go.
You can get along all right, can you?”
Receiving her reply, he lit a cigarette
and went out, assuring himself that so far she promised
well.
“Pretty little thing, and anxious
to please us. Shallow, I expect, emotional probably,
and not brainy enough to appreciate the symbolism of
the Bridge. Well, we don’t want too
brilliant a typist, after all Miss Jenkins
and her ‘culture’ were a bit trying at
times!”
And then meeting by chance an old
friend who insisted on carrying him off to lunch,
Owen speedily forgot that such a person as Miss Antonia
Gibbs existed in the world.