<h2><SPAN name="b6c3">CHAPTER III</SPAN><br/> AT THE WORKS</h2>
<h3>I</h3>
<p>That night, late, Hilda and Janet shut themselves up in the bedroom
together. The door clicked softly under Janet's gentle push, and they were
as safe from invasion as if the door had been of iron, and locked and
double-locked and barred with bars of iron. Alicia alone might have
disturbed them, but Alicia was asleep. Hilda had a sense of entire security
in this room such as she had never had since she drove away from Lessways
Street, Turnhill, early one morning, with Florrie Bagster in a cab. It was
not that there had been the least real fear of any room of hers being
attacked: it was that this room seemed to have been rendered mystically
inviolate by long years of Janet's occupation. "Janet's bedroom!"--the
phrase had a sanction which could not possibly have attached itself to, for
instance, "Hilda's bedroom!" Nor even to "mother's bedroom"--mother's
bedroom being indeed at the mercy of any profane and marauding member of
the family, a sort of market-place for the transaction of affairs.</p>
<p>And, further, Janet's bedroom was distinguished and made delicious for
Hilda by its fire. It happened to be one of the very few bedrooms in the
Five Towns at that date with a fire, as a regular feature of it. Mrs.
Orgreave had a fire in the parental bedroom, when she could not reasonably
do without it, but Osmond Orgreave suffered the fire rather than enjoyed
it. As for Tom, though of a shivery disposition, he would have dithered to
death before admitting that a bedroom fire might increase his comfort.
Johnnie and Jimmie genuinely liked to be cold in their bedroom. Alicia
pined for a fire, but Mrs. Orgreave, imitating the contrariety of fate,
forbade a fire to Alicia, and one consequence of this was that Alicia
sometimes undressed in Janet's bedroom, making afterwards a dash for the
Pole. The idea of a bedroom was always, during nearly half the year,
associated with the idea of discomfort in Hilda's mind. And now, in Janet's
bedroom, impressed as she was by the strangeness of the fact that the prime
reason for hurrying at top-speed into bed had been abolished, she yet
positively could not linger, the force of habit being too strong for her.
And she was in bed, despite efforts to dawdle, while Janet was still
brushing her hair.</p>
<p>As she lay and watched Janet's complex unrobing, she acquired knowledge.
And once more, she found herself desiring to be like Janet--not only in
appearance, but in soft manner and tone. She thought: "How shall I dress
to-morrow afternoon?" All the operations of her brain related themselves
somehow to to-morrow afternoon. The anticipation of the visit to the
printing-works burned in her heart like a steady lamp that shone through
the brief, cloudy interests of the moment. And Edwin Clayhanger was
precisely the topic which Janet seemed, as it were, expressly to avoid.
Janet inquired concerning life at Brighton and the health of Sarah Gailey;
Janet even mentioned George Cannon; Hilda steadied her voice in replying,
though she was not really apprehensive, for Janet's questions, like the
questions of the whole family, were invariably discreet and respectful of
the individual's privacy. But of Edwin Clayhanger, whose visit nevertheless
had been recounted to her in the drawing-room on her return, Janet said not
a word.</p>
<p>And then, when she had extinguished the gas, and the oriental sleeve of
her silk nightgown delicately brushed Hilda's face, as she got into bed,
she remarked:</p>
<p>"Strange that Edwin Clayhanger should call just to-night!"</p>
<p>Hilda's cheek warmed.</p>
<p>"He asked me to go and look over their printing-works to-morrow," said
she quickly.</p>
<p>Janet was taken aback.</p>
<p>"Really!" she exclaimed, unmistakably startled. She spoke a second too
soon. If she had delayed only one second, she might have concealed from
Hilda that which Hilda had most plainly perceived, to wit, anxiety and
jealousy. Yes, jealousy, in this adorably benevolent creature's tone.
Hilda's interest in to-morrow afternoon was intensified.</p>
<p>"Shall you be able to come?" she asked.</p>
<p>"What time?"</p>
<p>"He said about half-past six, or a quarter to seven."</p>
<p>"I can't," said Janet dreamily, "because of that Musical Society
meeting--you know--I told you, didn't I?"</p>
<p>In the faint light of the dying fire, Hilda made out little by little
the mysterious, pale heaps of clothes, and all the details of the room
strewn and disordered by reason of an additional occupant. The adventure
was now of infinite complexity, and its complexity seemed to be symbolized
by the suggestive feminine mysteriousness of what she saw and what she
divined in the darkness of the chamber. She thought: "I am here on false
pretences. I ought to tell my secret. That would be fair--I have no right
to intrude between her and him." But she instinctively and powerfully
resisted such ideas; with firmness she put them away, and yielded herself
with a more exquisite apprehension to the anticipation of to-morrow.</p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>The order of meals at Lane End was somewhat peculiar even then, and
would now be almost unique. It was partly the natural expression of an
instinctive and justified feeling of superiority, and partly due to a
discretion which forbade the family to scandalize the professional classes
of the district by dining at night. Dinner occurred in the middle of the
day, and about nine in the evening was an informal but copious supper.
Between those two meals, there came a tea which was neither high or low,
and whose hour, six o'clock in theory, depended to a certain extent, in
practice, on Mr. Orgreave's arrival from the office. Not seldom Mr.
Orgreave was late; occasionally he was very late. The kitchen waited to
infuse the tea until a command came from some woman, old or young, who
attentively watched a window for a particular swinging of the long gate at
the end of the garden, or listened, when it was dark, for the bang of the
gate and a particular crunching of gravel.</p>
<p>On this Tuesday evening, Osmond Orgreave was very late, and the movement
of the household was less smooth than usual, owing to Mrs. Orgreave's
illness and to the absence of Janet at Hillport in connection with the
projected Hillport Choral Society. (Had Janet been warned of Hilda's visit,
she would not have accepted an invitation to a tea at Hillport as a
preliminary to the meeting of the provisional committee.) Hilda was in a
state of acute distress. The appointment with Edwin Clayhanger seemed to be
absolutely sacred to her; to be late for it would amount to a crime: to
miss it altogether would be a calamity inconceivable. The fingers of all
the clocks in the house were revolving with the most extraordinary
rapidity--she was helpless.</p>
<p>She was helpless, because she had said nothing all day of her
appointment, and because Janet had not mentioned it either. Janet might
have said before leaving: "Tea had better not wait too long--Hilda has to
be down at Clayhanger's at half-past six." Janet's silence impressed Hilda:
it was not merely strange--it was formidable: it affected the whole day.
Hilda thought: "Is she determined not to speak of it unless I do?"
Immediately Janet was gone, Hilda had run up to the bedroom. She was minded
to change the black frock which she had been wearing, and which she hated,
and to put on another skirt and bodice that Janet had praised. She longed
to beautify herself, and yet she was still hesitating about it at half-past
five in the evening as she had hesitated at eight in the morning. In the
end she had decided not to change, an account of the rain. But the rain had
naught to do with her decision. She would not change, because she was too
proud to change. She would go just as she was! She could not accept the
assistance of an attractive bodice!... Unfeminine, perhaps, but
womanly.</p>
<p>At twenty-five minutes to seven, she went into Mrs. Orgreave's bedroom,
rather like a child, and also rather like an adult creature in a
distracting crisis. Tom Orgreave and Alicia were filling the entire house
with the stormy noise of a piano duet based upon Rossini's <i>William
Tell</i>.</p>
<p>"I think I'll miss tea, Mrs. Orgreave," she said. "Edwin Clayhanger
invited me to go over the printing-works at half-past six, and it's
twenty-five minutes to seven now."</p>
<p>"Oh, but, my dear," cried Mrs. Orgreave, "why ever didn't you tell them
downstairs, or let me know earlier?"</p>
<p>And she pulled at the bell-rope that overhung the head of the bed. Not a
trace of teasing archness in her manner! Hilda's appointment might have
been of the most serious business interest, for anything Mrs. Orgreave's
demeanor indicated to the contrary. Hilda stood mute and constrained.</p>
<p>"You run down and tell them to make tea at once, dear. I can't let you
go without anything at all. I wonder what can have kept Osmond."</p>
<p>Almost at the same moment, Osmond Orgreave entered the bedroom. His
arrival had been unnoticed amid the tremendous resounding of the duet.</p>
<p>"Oh, Osmond," said his wife. "Wherever have you been so late? Hilda
wants to go--Edwin Clayhanger has invited her to go over the works."</p>
<p>Hilda, trembling at the door, more than half expected Mr. Orgreave to
say: "You mean, she's invited herself." But Osmond received the information
with exactly the same polite, apologetic seriousness as his wife, and,
reassured, Hilda departed from the room.</p>
<p>Ten minutes later, veiled and cloaked, she stepped out alone into the
garden. And instantly her torment was assuaged, and she was happy. She
waited at the corner of the street for the steam-car. But, when the car
came thundering down, it was crammed to the step; with a melancholy
gesture, the driver declined her signal. She set off down Trafalgar Road in
the mist and the rain, glad that she had been compelled to walk. It seemed
to her that she was on a secret and mystic errand. This was not surprising.
The remarkable thing was that all the hurrying people she met seemed also
each of them to be on a secret and mystic errand. The shining wet pavement
was dotted with dark figures, suggestive and enigmatic, who glided over a
floor that was pierced by perpendicular reflections.</p>
<h3>III</h3>
<p>In the Clayhanger shop, agitated and scarcely aware of what she did, she
could, nevertheless, hear her voice greeting Edwin Clayhanger in firm, calm
tones; and she soon perceived very clearly that he was even more acutely
nervous than herself: which perception helped to restore her confidence,
while, at the same time, it filled her with bliss. The young, fair man,
with his awkward and constrained movements, took possession of her
umbrella, and then suggested that she should remove her mackintosh. She
obeyed, timid and glad. She stripped off her mackintosh, as though she were
stripping off her modesty, and stood before him revealed. To complete the
sacrifice, she raised her veil, and smiled up at him, as it were, asking:
"What next?" Then a fat, untidy old man appeared in the doorway of a
cubicle within the shop, and Edwin Clayhanger blushed.</p>
<p>"Father, this is Miss Lessways. Miss Lessways, my father....
She's--she's come to look over the place."</p>
<p>"How-d'ye-do, miss?"</p>
<p>She shook hands with the tyrannic father, who was, however, despite his
reputation, apparently just as nervous as the son. There followed a most
sinister moment of silence. And, at last, the shop door opened, and the
father turned to greet a customer. Hilda thought: "Suppose this fat old man
is one day my father-in-law? Is it possible to imagine him as a
father-in-law?" And she had a transient gleam of curiosity concerning the
characters of the two Clayhanger sisters, and recalled with satisfaction
that Janet liked the elder one.</p>
<p>Edwin Clayhanger, muttering, pointed to an aperture in the counter, and
immediately she was going through it with him, and through a door at the
back of the shop. They were alone, facing a rain-soaked yard. Edwin
Clayhanger sneezed violently.</p>
<p>"It keeps on raining," Edwin murmured. "Better to have kept umbrella!
However--"</p>
<p>He glanced at her inquiringly and invitingly. They ran side by side
across the yard to a roofed flight of steps that led to the
printing-office. For a couple of seconds, the rain wet them, and then they
were under cover again. It seemed to Hilda that they had escaped from the
shop like fox-terriers--like two friendly dogs from the surveillance of an
incalculable and dangerous old man. She felt a comfortable, friendly
confidence in Edwin Clayhanger--a tranquil sentiment such as she had never
experienced for George Cannon. After more than a year--and what a period of
unforeseen happenings!--she thought again: "I <i>like him</i>." Not love,
she thought, but liking! She liked being with him. She liked the sensation
of putting confidence in him. She liked his youth, and her own. She was
sorry because he had a cold and was not taking care of it.... Now they were
climbing a sombre creaking staircase towards a new and remote world that
was separated from the common world just quitted by the adventurous passage
of the rainy yard.... And now they were amid oily odours in a large
raftered workshop, full of machines.... The printing-works!... An enormous
but very deferential man saluted them with majestic solemnity. He was the
foreman, and labelled by his white apron as an artisan, but his gigantic
bulk--he would have outweighed the pair of them--and his age set him
somehow over them, so that they were a couple of striplings in his vasty
presence. When Edwin Clayhanger employed, as it were, daringly, the accents
of a master to this intimidating fellow, Hilda thrilled with pleasure at
the piquancy of the spectacle, and she was admiringly proud of Edwin. The
foreman's immense voice, explaining machines and tools, caused physical
vibrations in her. But she understood nothing of what he said--nothing
whatever. She was in a dream of oily odours and monstrous iron
constructions, dominated by the grand foreman: and Edwin was in the dream.
She began talking quite wildly of the four-hundredth anniversary of the
inventor of printing, of which she had read in Cranswick's History... at
Brighton! Brighton had sunk away over the verge of memory. Even Lane End
House was lost somewhere in the vague past. All her previous life had
faded. She reflected guiltily: "He's bound to think I've been reading about
printing because I was interested in <i>him</i> I don't care! I hope he
does think it!" She heard a suggestion that, as it was too late that night
to see the largest machine in motion, she might call the next afternoon.
She at once promised to come.... She impatiently desired now to leave the
room where they were, and to see something else. And then she feared lest
this might be all there was to see.... Edwin Clayhanger was edging towards
the door.... They were alone on the stairway again.... The foreman had
bowed at the top like a chamberlain.... She gathered, with delicious
anticipation, that other and still more recondite interiors awaited their
visit.</p>
<h3>IV</h3>
<p>They were in an attic which was used for the storage of reams upon reams
of paper. By the light of a candle in a tin candlestick, they had passed
alone together through corridors and up flights of stairs at the back of
the shop. She had seen everything that was connected with the enterprise of
steam-printing, and now they were at the top of the old house and at the
end of the excursion.</p>
<p>"I used to work here," said Edwin Clayhanger.</p>
<p>She inquired about the work.</p>
<p>"Well," he drawled, "reading and writing, you know--at that very
table."</p>
<p>In the aperture of the window, amid piles of paper, stood a rickety old
table, covered with dust.</p>
<p>"But there's no fireplace," she said, glancing round the room, and then
directly at him.</p>
<p>"I know."</p>
<p>"But how did you do in winter?" she eagerly appealed.</p>
<p>And he replied shortly, and with a slight charming affectation of pride:
"I did without."</p>
<p>Her throat tightened, and she could feel the tears suddenly swim in her
eyes. She was not touched by the vision of his hardships. It was the
thought of all his youth that exquisitely saddened her--or all the years
which were and would be for ever hidden from her. She knew that she alone
of all human beings was gifted with the power to understand and fully
sympathize with him. And so she grieved over the long wilderness of time
during which he had been uncomprehended. She wanted, by some immense effort
of tenderness, to recompense him for all that he had suffered. And she had
a divine curiosity concerning the whole of his past life. She had never had
this curiosity in relation to George Cannon--she had only wondered about
his affairs with other women. Nor had George Cannon ever evoked the
tenderness which sprang up in her from some secret and inexhaustible source
at the mere sight of Edwin Clayhanger's wistful smile. Still, in that
moment, standing close to Edwin in the high solitude of the shadowed attic,
the souvenir of George Cannon gripped her painfully. She thought: "He loves
me, and he is ruined, and he will never see me again! And I am here,
bursting with hope renewed, and dizzy with joy!" And she pictured Janet,
too, wearying herself at a committee meeting. And she thought, "And here am
I...!" Her bliss was tragic.</p>
<p>"I think I ought to be going," she said softly.</p>
<p>They re-threaded the corridors, and in each lower room, as they passed,
Edwin Clayhanger extinguished the gas which he had lit there on the way up,
and Hilda waited for him. And then they were back in the crude glare of the
shop. The fat, untidy old man was not visible. Edwin helped her with the
mackintosh, and she liked him for the awkwardness of his efforts in doing
so.</p>
<p>At the door, she urged him not to come out, and referred to his
cold.</p>
<p>"This isn't the end of winter, it's the beginning," she warned him.
Nobody else, she knew, would watch over him.</p>
<p>But he insisted on coming out.</p>
<p>They arranged a rendezvous for three o'clock on the morrow, and then
they shook hands.</p>
<p>"Now, do go in," she entreated, as she hurried away. The rain had
ceased. She fled triumphantly up Trafalgar Road, with her secret, guarding
it. "He's in love with me!" If a scientific truth is a statement of which
the contrary is inconceivable, then it was a scientific truth for her that
she and Edwin must come together. She simply would not and could not
conceive the future without him.... And this so soon, so precipitately
soon, after her misfortune! But it was her very misfortune which pushed her
violently forward. Her life had been convulsed and overthrown by the hazard
of destiny, and she could have no peace now until she had repaired and
re-established it. At no matter what risk, the thing must be accomplished
quickly... quickly.</p>
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