The sun was still full on the garden when the back door of the Burnells’
shut with a bang, and a very gay figure walked down the path to the gate. It
was Alice, the servant-girl, dressed for her afternoon out. She wore a white
cotton dress with such large red spots on it and so many that they made you
shudder, white shoes and a leghorn turned up under the brim with poppies. Of
course she wore gloves, white ones, stained at the fastenings with iron-mould,
and in one hand she carried a very dashed-looking sunshade which she referred
to as her “perishall.”
Beryl, sitting in the window, fanning her freshly-washed hair, thought she had
never seen such a guy. If Alice had only blacked her face with a piece of cork
before she started out, the picture would have been complete. And where did a
girl like that go to in a place like this? The heart-shaped Fijian fan beat
scornfully at that lovely bright mane. She supposed Alice had picked up some
horrible common larrikin and they’d go off into the bush together. Pity
to have made herself so conspicuous; they’d have hard work to hide with
Alice in that rig-out.
But no, Beryl was unfair. Alice was going to tea with Mrs Stubbs, who’d
sent her an “invite” by the little boy who called for orders. She
had taken ever such a liking to Mrs. Stubbs ever since the first time she went
to the shop to get something for her mosquitoes.
“Dear heart!” Mrs. Stubbs had clapped her hand to her side.
“I never seen anyone so eaten. You might have been attacked by
canningbals.”
Alice did wish there’d been a bit of life on the road though. Made her
feel so queer, having nobody behind her. Made her feel all weak in the spine.
She couldn’t believe that some one wasn’t watching her. And yet it
was silly to turn round; it gave you away. She pulled up her gloves, hummed to
herself and said to the distant gum-tree, “Shan’t be long
now.” But that was hardly company.
Mrs. Stubbs’s shop was perched on a little hillock just off the road. It
had two big windows for eyes, a broad veranda for a hat, and the sign on the
roof, scrawled MRS. STUBBS’S, was like a little card stuck rakishly in
the hat crown.
On the veranda there hung a long string of bathing-dresses, clinging together
as though they’d just been rescued from the sea rather than waiting to go
in, and beside them there hung a cluster of sandshoes so extraordinarily mixed
that to get at one pair you had to tear apart and forcibly separate at least
fifty. Even then it was the rarest thing to find the left that belonged to the
right. So many people had lost patience and gone off with one shoe that fitted
and one that was a little too big.... Mrs. Stubbs prided herself on keeping
something of everything. The two windows, arranged in the form of precarious
pyramids, were crammed so tight, piled so high, that it seemed only a conjurer
could prevent them from toppling over. In the left-hand corner of one window,
glued to the pane by four gelatine lozenges, there was—and there had been
from time immemorial—a notice.
LOST! HANSOME GOLE BROOCH
SOLID GOLD
ON OR NEAR BEACH
REWARD OFFERED
SOLID GOLD
ON OR NEAR BEACH
REWARD OFFERED
Alice pressed open the door. The bell jangled, the red serge curtains parted,
and Mrs. Stubbs appeared. With her broad smile and the long bacon knife in her
hand, she looked like a friendly brigand. Alice was welcomed so warmly that she
found it quite difficult to keep up her “manners.” They consisted
of persistent little coughs and hems, pulls at her gloves, tweaks at her skirt,
and a curious difficulty in seeing what was set before her or understanding
what was said.
Tea was laid on the parlour table—ham, sardines, a whole pound of butter,
and such a large johnny cake that it looked like an advertisement for
somebody’s baking-powder. But the Primus stove roared so loudly that it
was useless to try to talk above it. Alice sat down on the edge of a
basket-chair while Mrs. Stubbs pumped the stove still higher. Suddenly Mrs.
Stubbs whipped the cushion off a chair and disclosed a large brown-paper
parcel.
“I’ve just had some new photers taken, my dear,” she shouted
cheerfully to Alice. “Tell me what you think of them.”
In a very dainty, refined way Alice wet her finger and put the tissue back from
the first one. Life! How many there were! There were three dozzing at least.
And she held it up to the light.
Mrs. Stubbs sat in an arm-chair, leaning very much to one side. There was a
look of mild astonishment on her large face, and well there might be. For
though the arm-chair stood on a carpet, to the left of it, miraculously
skirting the carpet-border, there was a dashing water-fall. On her right stood
a Grecian pillar with a giant fern-tree on either side of it, and in the
background towered a gaunt mountain, pale with snow.
“It is a nice style, isn’t it?” shouted Mrs. Stubbs; and
Alice had just screamed “Sweetly” when the roaring of the Primus
stove died down, fizzled out, ceased, and she said “Pretty” in a
silence that was frightening.
“Draw up your chair, my dear,” said Mrs. Stubbs, beginning to pour
out. “Yes,” she said thoughtfully, as she handed the tea,
“but I don’t care about the size. I’m having an enlargemint.
All very well for Christmas cards, but I never was the one for small photers
myself. You get no comfort out of them. To say the truth, I find them
dis’eartening.”
Alice quite saw what she meant.
“Size,” said Mrs. Stubbs. “Give me size. That was what my
poor dear husband was always saying. He couldn’t stand anything small.
Gave him the creeps. And, strange as it may seem, my dear”—here
Mrs. Stubbs creaked and seemed to expand herself at the memory—“it
was dropsy that carried him off at the larst. Many’s the time they drawn
one and a half pints from ’im at the ’ospital... It seemed like a
judgmint.”
Alice burned to know exactly what it was that was drawn from him. She ventured,
“I suppose it was water.”
But Mrs. Stubbs fixed Alice with her eyes and replied meaningly, “It was
liquid, my dear.”
Liquid! Alice jumped away from the word like a cat and came back to it, nosing
and wary.
“That’s ’im!” said Mrs. Stubbs, and she pointed
dramatically to the life-size head and shoulders of a burly man with a dead
white rose in the buttonhole of his coat that made you think of a curl of cold
mutting fat. Just below, in silver letters on a red cardboard ground, were the
words, “Be not afraid, it is I.”
“It’s ever such a fine face,” said Alice faintly.
The pale-blue bow on the top of Mrs. Stubbs’s fair frizzy hair quivered.
She arched her plump neck. What a neck she had! It was bright pink where it
began and then it changed to warm apricot, and that faded to the colour of a
brown egg and then to a deep creamy.
“All the same, my dear,” she said surprisingly,
“freedom’s best!” Her soft, fat chuckle sounded like a purr.
“Freedom’s best,” said Mrs. Stubbs again.
Freedom! Alice gave a loud, silly little titter. She felt awkward. Her mind
flew back to her own kitching. Ever so queer! She wanted to be back in it
again.
