<h3><SPAN name="III" id="III"></SPAN>III</h3>
<p>Ten o'clock in the morning, and little Miss Anthony flew up Questerham
High Street on her bicycle, conscious that her hurried choice of a
winter hat had not only been highly unsatisfactory, owing to the extreme
haste with which she had conducted it, but was also about to make her
late in arriving at the office. She threw an anxious glance at the
Post-Office clock, and redoubled her speed at the sight of it, though no
amount of haste would get her to the Midland Supply Depôt Headquarters
under another seven minutes.</p>
<p>But she sped gallantly across the tram-lines and in and out of the
slow-moving stream of market-carts, and arrived breathless at the
offices in Pollard Street just as Miss Vivian's small open car drew up
at the door.</p>
<p>"Damn!" automatically muttered Tony under her breath, and seeing nothing
for it but to put her bicycle into a corner and efface herself
respectfully to let Miss Vivian pass.</p>
<p>But Miss Vivian, generally so unaware of any member of her staff as not
even to exchange a "Good-morning," elected suddenly to reverse this
policy.</p>
<p>"Good-morning," she said graciously. "We're both late today, I'm
afraid."</p>
<p>The clerk in the hall, who drew an ominous line in her book under the
last signature as the clock struck ten, laughed in a rather awestruck
way and said, "Oh, Miss Vivian!"</p>
<p>"I think you must let Miss Anthony off today," said Char Vivian,
smiling. "As I am late myself, you know."</p>
<p>She went slowly upstairs, just hearing an ecstatic gasp from the two
girls in the hall.</p>
<p>She was vaguely aware that those few gracious words and tone of easy
kindness had secured for her little Miss Anthony's unswerving loyalty
and admiration.</p>
<p>Girls of that age and class <i>were</i> like that, she told herself with a
slight smile.</p>
<p>The smile died away into an expression of weary concentration as she
entered her private office.</p>
<p>"Good-morning, Miss Delmege. Is there much in today?"</p>
<p>"Good-morning, Miss Vivian," said Miss Delmege, elegantly rising from
her knees, in which lowly position she had been trying to coax the
small, indifferent fire to burn. "I am afraid there are a lot of
letters."</p>
<p>Miss Vivian sighed and moved to the looking-glass to take off her hat.
She also was in uniform, and wore several curly stripes of gold braid on
her coat collar and cuffs to denote her exalted position.</p>
<p>Even when she had taken off her ugly and unbecoming felt hat and run her
fingers through the thick, straight masses of reddish hair that hung
over her forehead, Char Vivian contrived to look at least ten years
older than her actual twenty-nine years.</p>
<p>She was very good-looking, with delicate aquiline features, a pale, fair
skin powdered all over with tiny freckles, and beautiful deep-set brown
eyes surrounded by unexpectedly dark lashes.</p>
<p>It was something quite indefinable in the lines round her pretty,
decided mouth, and under her eyes that gave the odd impression of
maturity. Her manner had always, from the age of five, been one of
extreme self-security.</p>
<p>"Now, then, for the letters," she said, as she sat down before the great
roll-top desk. Char Vivian's voice was deep and rather drawling in
character, and she used it with great effect.</p>
<p>"Miss Delmege, did you put these heavenly lilies-of-the-valley here? You
really mustn't—but they're too lovely. Thank you so much. They <i>do</i>
make such a difference!"</p>
<p>She sniffed delicately, and Miss Delmege smiled with gratification. The
lilies-of-the-valley had really cost more than she could afford, but
those few words of appreciation sent her to her small table in the
corner with a sense of great satisfaction.</p>
<p>Char tore open one envelope after another with murmured comments. She
frequently affected an absence of mind denoted by fragmentary monologue.</p>
<p>"Transport wanted for fifty men going from the King Street Hospital
today—and they want more sphagnum moss. There ought to be five hundred
bags ready to go out this morning.... I wonder if they've seen to it.
Inquiries—inquiries—inquiries! When are people ever going to stop
asking me questions? Hospital accounts—that can go to the Finance
Department.... The Stores bill—to the Commissariat. What's all
this—transport for that man in Hospital? I shall have to see to that
myself. Look me up the War Office letters as to Petrol regulations, Miss
Delmege, will you? Belgians again; they're very difficult to satisfy,
poor people. Madame Van Damm—I don't remember them—I must send for the
files. Here are some more of those tiresome muddles of Mrs. Potter's. I
told her all about those people on Monday. Why on earth hasn't it been
arranged? Nothing is <i>ever</i> done unless one sees to it oneself. The
Medical Officer of Health wants to see me. What are my appointments for
today, Miss Delmege?"</p>
<p>"The man from the building contractors is coming at twelve, and the
Matron from the Overseas Hospital at three, and then there's that Miss
Jones who's coming to work here. And it's the day you generally go to
the Convalescent Homes."</p>
<p>"I see. Ring up the Medical Officer and say I can give him a quarter of
an hour at two o'clock. I can't really spare that," sighed Miss Vivian,
"but I suppose I shall have to see him."</p>
<p>Miss Delmege knew that, whatever else her chief might depute to her, she
never relinquished to any one a business interview, so she merely looked
concerned and said: "I'm afraid it will be a great rush for you."</p>
<p>Miss Vivian gave her subtle, infrequent smile, and began the customary
series of morning interviews which were supposed to settle the
perplexities of each department for the day. That this supposition was
not invariably correct was made manifest on this occasion by the
demeanour of the unhappy Miss Plumtree, when her chief had made short
work of a series of difficulties haltingly and stammeringly put before
her in sentences made involved and awkward through sheer nervousness.</p>
<p>"Let me have those Requisition Averages by twelve o'clock, please—and I
think that completes you, Miss Plumtree?" concluded Miss Vivian rapidly.</p>
<p>"Thank you, Miss Vivian. Is—are—do these averages include the first
day of the month as well as the last?"</p>
<p>"Yes, of course. And remember to give the gross weight of the supplies
as well as the net weight."</p>
<p>"And I—I divide by the number of days in each month. Yes, I see,"
faltered Miss Plumtree, seeing nothing at all except the brisk tapping
of Miss Vivian's long, slight fingers on the blotting-paper in front of
her, denoting with sufficient clearness that in her opinion the
interview had reached its conclusion some moments since.</p>
<p>"It's for August, September, and October, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>Miss Vivian's tone implied that the question was unnecessary in the
extreme, as indeed it was, since Miss Plumtree had been engaged in
conducting the quarterly Requisition Averages to an unsuccessful issue
for the past eighteen months.</p>
<p>"Thank you."</p>
<p>Miss Plumtree faltered from the room, with the consciousness of past
failures heavy upon her.</p>
<p>Char did not like an attitude of sycophantic dejection, and Miss
Plumtree may therefore have been responsible for the very modified
enthusiasm with which the next applicant's request for an afternoon off
duty was received.</p>
<p>"It rather depends, Miss Cox," said Char, her drawl slightly emphasized.
"I thought the work in that department was behindhand?"</p>
<p>"Not now, Miss Vivian," said the grey-haired spinster anxiously. "Mrs.
Tweedale and I cleared it all up last night; I'm quite up to date."</p>
<p>"Well, I'm afraid there's a good deal for you here," said Char rather
cruelly, handing her a bundle of papers. "However, please take your
afternoon off if you want to, and if you feel that the work can be
left."</p>
<p>"Thank you, Miss Vivian."</p>
<p>Miss Cox, who was meek and deferential, left the room, the pleasurable
anticipation of a holiday quite gone from her tired face.</p>
<p>Char looked at the neatly coiled twist of Miss Delmege's sand-coloured
hair.</p>
<p>"Was I a wet-blanket?" she inquired whimsically. "Really, the way these
people are always asking for leave! I wonder what would happen if <i>I</i>
took an afternoon off. How long is it since I had a holiday, Miss
Delmege?"</p>
<p>"You've not had one since I've been here," declared her secretary, "and
that's nearly a year."</p>
<p>"Exactly. But then I can't understand putting anything before the work,
personally."</p>
<p>Char returned to her pile of letters and Miss Delmege went on with her
writing in a glow of admiration, and resolved that, after all, she would
come and work on Sunday morning, although nominally no one came to the
office on Sundays except the clerks who took turns for telephone duty,
and Miss Vivian herself in the afternoon.</p>
<p>The morning was a busy one. Telephone calls seemed incessant, and the
operator downstairs was unintelligent and twice cut Miss Vivian off in
the midst of an important trunk call.</p>
<p>"Hallo! hallo! are you there? Miss Henderson, what the <i>dickens</i> are you
doing? You've cut me off again."</p>
<p>Char banged the receiver down impatiently with one hand, while the other
continued to make rapid calculations on a large sheet of foolscap. She
possessed and exercised to the full the faculty of following two or more
trains of thought at the same moment.</p>
<p>Presently she rang her bell sharply, the customary signal that she was
ready to dictate her letters.</p>
<p>Each department was supposed to possess its own typewriter and to make
use of it, and the services of the shorthand-typist, who was amongst the
few paid workers in the office, were exclusively reserved for Miss
Vivian.</p>
<p>The work entailed was no sinecure, the more especially since Miss
Collins was obdurate as to her time-limit of ten to five-thirty. But it
was never difficult for Miss Vivian to commandeer volunteer typists from
the departments when her enormous correspondence appeared to her to
require it.</p>
<p>"Good-morning, Miss Vivian."</p>
<p>"Good-morning," said Char curtly, unsmiling. Miss Collins always gave
her a sense of irritation. She was so jauntily competent, so consciously
independent of the office.</p>
<p>Shorthand-typists could always find work in the big Questerham
manufacturing works, and Miss Collins had only been secured for the
Supply Depôt with difficulty. She received two pounds ten shillings a
week, never worked overtime, and had every Saturday afternoon off. Miss
Vivian had once, in the early days of Miss Collins, suggested that she
might like to wear uniform, and had received a smiling and unqualified
negative, coupled with a candid statement of Miss Collins's views as to
the undesirability of combining clerical work with the exhausting
activities required in meeting and feeding the troop-trains.</p>
<p>"I should be sorry to think that any of <i>my</i> staff would shirk the
little additional work which brings them into contact with the men who
have risked their lives for England," had been the freezing <i>finale</i>
with which the dialogue had been brought to a close by the disgusted
Miss Vivian.</p>
<p>Since then her stenographer had continued to frequent her presence in
transparent and <i>décolletées</i> blouses, with short skirts swinging above
silk-stockinged ankles and suede shoes. Even her red, fluffy curls were
unnecessarily decked with half a dozen sparkling prongs. But she was
very quick and intelligent, and Miss Vivian had perforce to accept her
impudent prettiness and complete independence.</p>
<p>Char never, after the first week, made the mistake of supposing that
Miss Collins would ever fall under that spell of personal magnetism to
which the rest of the office was in more or less complete subjection,
and she consequently wasted no smile upon her morning greeting.</p>
<p>"This is to the Director-General of Voluntary Organizations, and please
do not use abbreviations. Kindly head the letter in full."</p>
<p>Miss Collins's small manicured hand ran easily over her notebook,
leaving a trail of cabalistic signs behind it.</p>
<p>Char leant back, half-closing her eyes in a way which served to
emphasize the tired shadows beneath them, and proceeded with her fluent,
unhampered dictation.</p>
<p>She was seldom at a loss for a word, and had a positive gift for the
production of rhetorical periods which never failed to impress Miss
Delmege, still writing at her corner table. In spite of frequent
interruptions, Char proceeded unconcernedly enough, until at the
eleventh entry of a messenger she broke into an impatient exclamation:</p>
<p>"Miss Delmege, please deal for me!"</p>
<p>Miss Delmege swept forward, annihilating the unhappy bearer of the card
with a look of deep reproach, as she took it from her.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid it's some one to see you," she faltered deprecatingly.</p>
<p>Char frowned and took the card impatiently, and Miss Delmege stood by
looking nervous, as she invariably did when her chief appeared annoyed.
Char Vivian, however, although frequently impatient, was not a
passionate woman, and however much she might give rein to her tongue,
seldom lost control of her temper, for the simple reason that she never
lost sight of herself or of her own effect upon her surroundings.</p>
<p>Her face cleared as she read the card.</p>
<p>"Please ask Captain Trevellyan to come up here."</p>
<p>The messenger disappeared thankfully and Miss Delmege retreated
relievedly to her corner.</p>
<p>Char leant back again in her capacious chair, a sheaf of papers, at
which she only cast an occasional glance, before her.</p>
<p>She was not at all averse to being found in this attitude, which she
judged to be most typical of herself and her work, and for an instant
after Captain Trevellyan's booted tread had paused upon the threshold
she affected unawareness of his presence and did not raise her eyes.</p>
<p>"... I am in receipt of your letter of even date, and would inform you
in reply...."</p>
<p>"Oh, John! So you've come for an official inspection?"</p>
<p>"Since you're never to be seen any other way," he returned, laughing,
and grasping her hand.</p>
<p>"I ought to send you away; we're in the midst of a heavy day's work."</p>
<p>"Don't you think you might call a—a sort of truce of God, for the
moment, and tell me something about this office of yours? I'm much
impressed by all I hear."</p>
<p>Miss Delmege, judging from her chief's smile that this suggestion was
approved of, brought forward a chair, and acknowledged Captain
Trevellyan's protesting thanks with a genteel bend at the waist and a
small, tight smile.</p>
<p>The amenities of social intercourse were always strictly held in check
by the limits of officialdom by Miss Vivian's staff, with the exception
of the unregenerate Miss Collins, who tucked her pencil into her belt,
uncrossed her knees, and rose from her chair.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid I'm interrupting you," said Trevellyan politely, addressing
his remark to Char, but casting a quite unnecessary look at the now
smiling Miss Collins.</p>
<p>"I've nearly finished," said Char.</p>
<p>"Shall I come back later?" suggested Miss Collins gaily, swinging a
turquoise heart from the end of an outrageously long gold chain.</p>
<p>"I will ring if I want you," said Miss Vivian in tones eminently
calculated to allay any assumption of indispensability on the part of
her employée.</p>
<p>With a freezing eye she watched Miss Collins swing jauntily from the
room, her red head cocked at an angle that enabled her to throw a
farewell dimple in the direction of Captain Trevellyan.</p>
<p>"Is that one of your helpers?" was the rather infelicitously worded
inquiry which John was inspired to put as Miss Collins disappeared.</p>
<p>"The office stenographer," said Char curtly.</p>
<p>"Why don't you have poor old Miss Bruce up here? She's longing to help
you—couldn't talk about anything but this place last night."</p>
<p>"Dear old Brucey!" said Char, with more languor than enthusiasm in her
voice. "But there are one or two reasons why it wouldn't quite do to
have her in the office; we have to be desperately official here, you
know. Besides, it's such a comfort to get back in the evenings to some
one who doesn't look upon me as the Director of the Midland Supply
Depôt! I sometimes feel I'm turning into an organization instead of a
human being."</p>
<p>Miss Vivian, needless to say, had never felt anything of the sort, but
there was something rather gallantly pathetic in the half-laughing turn
of the phrase, and it sufficed for a weighty addition to Miss Delmege's
treasured collections of "Glimpses into Miss Vivian's Real Self."</p>
<p>She received yet another such a few minutes later, when Captain
Trevellyan began to urge Miss Vivian to come out with him in the new car
waiting at the office door.</p>
<p>"Do! I'll take you anywhere you want to go, and I really do want you to
see how beautifully she runs. Come and lunch somewhere?"</p>
<p>"I'd love it," declared Char wistfully, "but I really mustn't, Johnnie.
There's so much to do."</p>
<p>Either the cousinly diminutive, or something unusually unofficial in
Miss Vivian's regretful voice, caused the discreet Miss Delmege to rise
and glide quietly from the room.</p>
<p>"Miss Vivian really is most awfully human," she declared to a
fellow-worker whom she met upon the stairs. "What do you think I've left
her doing?"</p>
<p>The fellow-worker leant comfortably against the wall, balancing a wire
basket full of official-looking documents on her hip, and said
interestedly:</p>
<p>"Do tell me."</p>
<p>"Refusing to go for a motor ride with a cousin of hers, an officer, who
wants her to see his new car. And she awfully wants to go—I could see
that—it's only the work that's keeping her."</p>
<p>"I must say she <i>is</i> splendid!"</p>
<p>"Yes, isn't she?"</p>
<p>"I think I saw the cousin, waiting downstairs about a quarter of an hour
ago. Is he a Staff Officer, very tall and large, and awfully fair?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Rather nice-looking, isn't he?"</p>
<p>"Quite, and I do like them to be tall. He's got a nice voice, too. You
know—I mean his voice is nice."</p>
<p>"Yes; he has got a nice voice, hasn't he? I noticed it myself. Of
course, that awful Miss Collins made eyes at him like anything. She was
taking letters when he came in."</p>
<p>"Rotten little minx! I wonder if he's engaged to Miss Vivian?"</p>
<p>"I couldn't say," primly returned Miss Delmege, with a sudden access of
discretion, implying a reticence which in point of fact she was not in a
position to exercise.</p>
<p>She did not go upstairs again until Captain Trevellyan and his motor-car
had safely negotiated the corner of Pollard Street, unaccompanied by
Miss Vivian.</p>
<p>This Miss Delmege ascertained from a ground-floor window, and then
returned to her corner table, wearing an expression of compassionate
admiration that Char was perfectly able to interpret.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid that was an interruption to our morning's work," she said
kindly. "What time is it?"</p>
<p>"Nearly one o'clock, Miss Vivian."</p>
<p>"Oh, good heavens! Just bring me the Belgian files, will you? and then
you'd better go to lunch."</p>
<p>"I can quite well go later," said Miss Delmege eagerly. "I—I thought
perhaps you'd be lunching out today."</p>
<p>"No," drawled Char decisively; "in spite of the inducement of the new
car, I shan't leave the office till I have to go to the Convalescent
Homes. I'll send for some lunch when I want it."</p>
<p>Miss Delmege went to her own lunch with a vexed soul.</p>
<p>"I do wish one could get Miss Vivian to eat something," she murmured
distractedly to her neighbour. "I know exactly what it'll be, you know.
She'll sit there writing, writing, writing, and forget all about food,
and then it'll be two o'clock, and she has to see the M.O. of Health and
somebody else coming at three—and she'll have had no lunch at all."</p>
<p>"Doesn't she ever go out to lunch?"</p>
<p>"Only on slack days, and you know how often we get <i>them</i>, especially
now that the work is simply increasing by leaps and bounds every day."</p>
<p>"Couldn't you take her some sandwiches?" asked Mrs. Bullivant from the
head of the table. "I could cut some in a minute."</p>
<p>"Oh, no, thank you. She wouldn't like it. She hates a fuss," Miss
Delmege declared decidedly.</p>
<p>The refusal, with its attendant tag of explanatory ingratitude, was
received in matter-of-fact silence by every one.</p>
<p>Miss Vivian's hatred of a fuss, as interpreted by her secretary, merely
redounded to her credit in the eyes of the Hostel.</p>
<p>They ate indifferent pressed beef and tepid milk-pudding, and those who
could afford it—for the most part accompanied by those who could not
afford it—supplemented the meal with coffee and cakes devoured in haste
at the High Street confectioner's, and then hurried back to the office.</p>
<p>It was nearly three o'clock before Miss Delmege ventured to address her
chief.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid you haven't had lunch. Do let me send for something."</p>
<p>Miss Vivian looked up, flushed and tired.</p>
<p>"Dear me, yes. It's much later than I thought. Send out one of the
Scouts for a couple of buns and a piece of chocolate."</p>
<p>"Oh!" protested Miss Delmege, as she invariably did on receipt of this
menu.</p>
<p>Char Vivian did not raise her eyes from the letter she was rapidly
inditing, and her secretary retreated to give the order.</p>
<p>Miss Plumtree, counting on her fingers and looking acutely distressed,
sat at a small table in the hall from whence the Scout was dispatched.</p>
<p>"Is that <i>all</i> she's having for lunch?" she paused in her pursuit of
ever-elusive averages to inquire in awestruck tones.</p>
<p>"Yes, and she's been simply worked to death this morning. And it's
nearly three now, and she won't get back to dinner till long after ten
o'clock, probably; but she never will have more for lunch, when she's
very busy, than just buns and a penny piece of chocolate. That," said
Miss Delmege, with a sort of desperate admiration—"that is just Miss
Vivian all over!"</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />