No one could have guessed, when Rhoda came down, with her hair freshly done, and a new pink ribbon round the neck of her brown dress, what bitter tears she had been shedding upstairs. And when Mr. Price came in, he was pleasantly surprised at the sensible view she took of things, and his invitation to her to spend the August holidays at Coombe was far heartier than Mrs. M’Alister had dared to hope for.
“And you will be able to run down to Leyton for a Sunday every now and then,” he said, regarding her approvingly out of his hard grey eyes. “Mary, here, seems to think you’re a baby still, but I know better. Girls aren’t what they used to be, Mary—silly creatures who couldn’t look after themselves. They don’t want to stay at home by the chimney corner all the time.”
“I want to work,” said Rhoda, speaking rather proudly. She could have added that she might have got work at Plymouth and come home every night, as Ned was going to do, but she knew that it would be no use to say it. He had plainly made up his mind that she must shift for herself. And the only excuse she could make for him was that he did not know how hard it was for her to be suddenly deprived of a home. Shabby and uncomfortable as their lodgings were, not even beautiful Woodcote could have been a dearer home. And a deadly chill seized her heart as she thought of living alone or with strangers. Rhoda was a thorough woman in her need of a home to fill her life. She had never felt Rose’s desire to be free from home ties; she could not have understood it.
“Rhoda means to ask Miss Desborough’s advice, James,” said Mrs. M’Alister, putting down her sewing. “She knows a great many girls who get their living in London and board out somewhere. I shan’t feel happy till I see Rhoda comfortably settled.”
“Oh, we’ll manage that for her,” returned the farmer briskly. “And now this Miss Merivale has taken her up she’ll get plenty of work, never fear.”
“How would it do for you to live with Miss Smythe?” suggested Mrs. M’Alister, looking anxiously at Rhoda. “Now Miss Desborough is going away, she will want somebody, won’t she?”
A smile broke over Rhoda’s face. She had never spoken of Pauline’s contemptuous rudeness to her aunt. She had felt too indifferent to her to be hurt by her behaviour; and since her visit to Leyton, the week before, she had a special reason for being amused at it. But this she had not mentioned.
“Miss Smythe would think me very bold if I suggested living with her, Aunt Mary,” she said, in a voice that had a ripple of laughter in it. “But don’t be anxious about me. I can stay here with Mrs. Ellis if I can’t hear of anything I like better. But I will speak to Miss Desborough to-morrow.”
As it happened, however, Rhoda did not see Clare next day. When she arrived at the flat, she found that Lady Desborough had reached town the day before, and had taken her daughter for a day’s shopping with her, preparatory to their journey into Lincolnshire.
It was Rose who told Rhoda this. Mrs. Richards had gone out to buy some chops for dinner, and Rose opened the door. Rhoda thought her the prettiest creature she had ever seen in her life. She had a blue dress on and a white cooking apron, and her yellow hair was brushed loosely back from her face and fastened in a loose knot.