household by doing so.  Next day, however, the question became more
   urgent, because Mrs Semprill was now publishing the story of the
   elopement far and wide.  Of course, the Rector denied it violently,
   but in his heart he had a sneaking suspicion that it might be true.
   It was the kind of thing, he now decided, that Dorothy WOULD do.  A
   girl who would suddenly walk out of the house without even taking
   thought for her father's breakfast was capable of anything.
   Two days later the newspapers got hold of the story, and a nosy
   young reporter came down to Knype Hill and began asking questions.
   The Rector made matters worse by angrily refusing to interview the
   reporter, so that Mrs Semprill's version was the only one that got
   into print.  For about a week, until the papers got tired of
   Dorothy's case and dropped her in favour of a plesiosaurus that had
   been seen at the mouth of the Thames, the Rector enjoyed a horrible
   notoriety.  He could hardly open a newspaper without seeing some
   flaming headline about 'Rector's Daughter.  Further Revelations',
   or 'Rector's Daughter.  Is she in Vienna?  Reported seen in Low-
   class Cabaret'.  Finally there came an article in the Sunday
   Spyhole, which began, 'Down in a Suffolk Rectory a broken old man
   sits staring at the wall', and which was so absolutely unbearable
   that the Rector consulted his solicitor about an action for libel.
   However, the solicitor was against it; it might lead to a verdict,
   he said, but it would certainly lead to further publicity.  So the
   Rector did nothing, and his anger against Dorothy, who had brought
   this disgrace upon him, hardened beyond possibility of forgiveness.
   After this there came three letters from Dorothy, explaining what
   had happened.  Of course the Rector never really believed that
   Dorothy had lost her memory.  It was too thin a story altogether.
   He believed that she either HAD eloped with Mr Warburton, or had
   gone off on some similar escapade and had landed herself penniless
   in Kent; at any rate--this he had settled once and for all, and no
   argument would ever move him from it--whatever had happened to her
   was entirely her own fault.  The first letter he wrote was not to
   Dorothy herself but to his cousin Tom, the baronet.  For a man of
   the Rector's upbringing it was second nature, in any serious
   trouble, to turn to a rich relative for help.  He had not exchanged
   a word with his cousin for the last fifteen years, since they had
   quarrelled over a little matter of a borrowed fifty pounds; still,
   he wrote fairly confidently, asking Sir Thomas to get in touch with
   Dorothy if it could be done, and to find her some kind of job in
   London.  For of course, after what had happened, there could be no
   question of letting her come back to Knype Hill.
   Shortly after this there came two despairing letters from Dorothy,
   telling him that she was in danger of starvation and imploring him
   to send her some money.  The Rector was disturbed.  It occurred to
   him--it was the first time in his life that he had seriously
   considered such a thing--that it IS possible to starve if you have
   no money.  So, after thinking it over for the best part of a week,
   he sold out ten pounds' worth of shares and sent a cheque for ten
   pounds to his cousin, to be kept for Dorothy till she appeared.  At
   the same time he sent a cold letter to Dorothy herself, telling her
   that she had better apply to Sir Thomas Hare.  But several more
   days passed before this letter was posted, because the Rector had
   qualms about addressing a letter to 'Ellen Millborough'--he dimly
   imagined that it was against the law to use false names--and, of
   course, he had delayed far too long.  Dorothy was already in the
   streets when the letter reached 'Mary's'.
   Sir Thomas Hare was a widower, a good-hearted, chuckle-headed man
   of about sixty-five, with an obtuse rosy face and curling
   moustaches.  He dressed by preference in checked overcoats and
   curly brimmed bowler hats that were at once dashingly smart and
   four decades out of date.  At a first glance he gave the impression
   of having carefully disguised himself as a cavalry major of the
   'nineties, so that you could hardly look at him without thinking of
   devilled bones with a b and s, and the tinkle of hansom bells, and
   the Pink 'Un in its great 'Pitcher' days, and Lottie Collins and
   'Tarara-BOOM-deay'.  But his chief characteristic was an abysmal
   mental vagueness.  He was one of those people who say 'Don't you
   know?' and 'What!  What!' and lose themselves in the middle of their
   sentences.  When he was puzzled or in difficulties, his moustaches
   seemed to bristle forward, giving him the appearance of a well-
   meaning but exceptionally brainless prawn.
   So far as his own inclinations went Sir Thomas was not in the least
   anxious to help his cousins, for Dorothy herself he had never seen,
   and the Rector he looked on as a cadging poor relation of the worst
   possible type.  But the fact was that he had had just about as much
   of this 'Rector's Daughter' business as he could stand.  The
   accursed chance that Dorothy's surname was the same as his own had
   made his life a misery for the past fortnight, and he foresaw
   further and worse scandals if she were left at large any longer.
   So, just before leaving London for the pheasant shooting, he sent
   for his butler, who was also his confidant and intellectual guide,
   and held a council of war.
   'Look here, Blyth, dammit,' said Sir Thomas prawnishly (Blyth was
   the butler's name), 'I suppose you've seen all this damn' stuff in
   the newspapers, hey?  This "Rector's Daughter" stuff?  About this
   damned niece of mine.'
   Blyth was a small sharp-featured man with a voice that never rose
   above a whisper.  It was as nearly silent as a voice can be while
   still remaining a voice.  Only by watching his lips as well as
   listening closely could you catch the whole of what he said.  In
   this case his lips signalled something to the effect that Dorothy
   was Sir Thomas's cousin, not his niece.
   'What, my cousin, is she?' said Sir Thomas.  'So she is, by Jove!
   Well, look here, Blyth, what I mean to say--it's about time we got
   hold of the damn' girl and locked her up somewhere.  See what I
   mean?  Get hold of her before there's any MORE trouble.  She's
   knocking about somewhere in London, I believe.  What's the best way
   of getting on her track?  Police?  Private detectives and all that?
   D'you think we could manage it?'
   Blyth's lips registered disapproval.  It would, he seemed to be
   saying, be possible to trace Dorothy without calling in the police
   and having a lot of disagreeable publicity.
   'Good man!' said Sir Thomas.  'Get to it, then.  Never mind what it
   costs.  I'd give fifty quid not to have that "Rector's Daughter"
   business over again.  And for God's sake, Blyth,' he added
   confidentially, 'once you've got hold of the damn' girl, don't let
   her out of your sight.  Bring her back to the house and damn' well
   keep her here.  See what I mean?  Keep her under lock and key till
					     					 			br />
   I get back.  Or else God knows what she'll be up to next.'
   Sir Thomas, of course, had never seen Dorothy, and it was therefore
   excusable that he should have formed his conception of her from the
   newspaper reports.
   It took Blyth about a week to track Dorothy down.  On the morning
   after she came out of the police-court cells (they had fined her
   six shillings, and, in default of payment, detained her for twelve
   hours: Mrs McElligot, as an old offender, got seven days), Blyth
   came up to her, lifted his bowler hat a quarter of an inch from his
   head, and inquired noiselessly whether she were not Miss Dorothy
   Hare.  At the second attempt Dorothy understood what he was saying,
   and admitted that she WAS Miss Dorothy Hare; whereupon Blyth
   explained that he was sent by her cousin, who was anxious to help
   her, and that she was to come home with him immediately.
   Dorothy followed him without more words said.  It seemed queer that
   her cousin should take this sudden interest in her, but it was no
   queerer than the other things that had been happening lately.  They
   took the bus to Hyde Park Corner, Blyth paying the fares, and then
   walked to a large, expensive-looking house with shuttered windows,
   on the borderland between Knightsbridge and Mayfair.  They went
   down some steps, and Blyth produced a key and they went in.  So,
   after an absence of something over six weeks, Dorothy returned to
   respectable society, by the area door.
   She spent three days in the empty house before her cousin came
   home.  It was a queer, lonely time.  There were several servants in
   the house, but she saw nobody except Blyth, who brought her her
   meals and talked to her, noiselessly, with a mixture of deference
   and disapproval.  He could not quite make up his mind whether she
   was a young lady of family or a rescued Magdalen, and so treated
   her as something between the two.  The house had that hushed,
   corpselike air peculiar to houses whose master is away, so that you
   instinctively went about on tiptoe and kept the blinds over the
   windows.  Dorothy did not even dare to enter any of the main rooms.
   She spent all the daytime lurking in a dusty, forlorn room at the
   top of the house which was a sort of museum of bric-a-brac dating
   from 1880 onwards.  Lady Hare, dead these five years, had been an
   industrious collector of rubbish, and most of it had been stowed
   away in this room when she died.  It was a doubtful point whether
   the queerest object in the room was a yellowed photograph of
   Dorothy's father, aged eighteen but with respectable side-whiskers,
   standing self-consciously beside an 'ordinary' bicycle--this was in
   1888; or whether it was a little sandalwood box labelled 'Piece of
   Bread touched by Cecil Rhodes at the City and South Africa Banquet,
   June 1897'.  The sole books in the room were some grisly school
   prizes that had been won by Sir Thomas's children--he had three,
   the youngest being the same age as Dorothy.
   It was obvious that the servants had orders not to let her go out
   of doors.  However, her father's cheque for ten pounds had arrived,
   and with some difficulty she induced Blyth to get it cashed, and,
   on the third day, went out and bought herself some clothes.  She
   bought herself a ready-made tweed coat and skirt and a jersey to go
   with them, a hat, and a very cheap frock of artificial printed
   silk; also a pair of passable brown shoes, three pairs of lisle
   stockings, a nasty, cheap little handbag, and a pair of grey cotton
   gloves that would pass for suede at a little distance.  That came
   to eight pounds ten, and she dared not spend more.  As for
   underclothes, nightdresses, and handkerchiefs, they would have to
   wait.  After all, it is the clothes that show that matter.
   Sir Thomas arrived on the following day, and never really got over
   the surprise that Dorothy's appearance gave him.  He had been
   expecting to see some rouged and powdered siren who would plague
   him with temptations to which alas! he was no longer capable of
   succumbing; and this countrified, spinsterish girl upset all his
   calculations.  Certain vague ideas that had been floating about his
   mind, of finding her a job as a manicurist or perhaps as a private
   secretary to a bookie, floated out of it again.  From time to time
   Dorothy caught him studying her with a puzzled, prawnish eye,
   obviously wondering how on earth such a girl could ever have
   figured in an elopement.  It was very little use, of course,
   telling him that she had NOT eloped.  She had given him her version
   of the story, and he had accepted it with a chivalrous 'Of course,
   m'dear, of course!' and thereafter, in every other sentence,
   betrayed the fact that he disbelieved her.
   So for a couple of days nothing definite was done.  Dorothy
   continued her solitary life in the room upstairs, and Sir Thomas
   went to his club for most of his meals, and in the evening there
   were discussions of the most unutterable vagueness.  Sir Thomas was
   genuinely anxious to find Dorothy a job, but he had great
   difficulty in remembering what he was talking about for more than a
   few minutes at a time.  'Well, m'dear,' he would start off, 'you'll
   understand, of course, that I'm very keen to do what I can for you.
   Naturally, being your uncle and all that--what?  What's that?  Not
   your uncle?  No, I suppose I'm not, by Jove!  Cousin--that's it;
   cousin.  Well, now, m'dear, being your cousin--now, what was I
   saying?'  Then, when Dorothy had guided him back to the subject, he
   would throw out some such suggestion as, 'Well, now, for instance,
   m'dear, how would you like to be companion to an old lady?  Some
   dear old girl, don't you know--black mittens and rheumatoid
   arthritis.  Die and leave you ten thousand quid and care of the
   parrot.  What, what?' which did not get them very much further.
   Dorothy repeated a number of times that she would rather be a
   housemaid or a parlourmaid, but Sir Thomas would not hear of it.
   The very idea awakened in him a class-instinct which he was usually
   too vague-minded to remember.  'What!' he would say.  'A dashed
   skivvy?  Girl of your upbringing?  No, m'dear--no, no!  Can't do
   THAT kind of thing, dash it!'
   But in the end everything was arranged, and with surprising ease;
   not by Sir Thomas, who was incapable of arranging anything, but by
   his solicitor, whom he had suddenly thought of consulting.  And the
   solicitor, without even seeing Dorothy, was able to suggest a job
   for her.  She could, he said, almost certainly find a job as a
   schoolmistress.  Of all jobs, that was the easiest to get.
   Sir Thomas came home very pleased with this suggestion, which
   struck him as highly suitable.  (Privately, he thought that Dorothy
   had just the kind of face that a schoolmistress ought to have.)
   But Dorothy was momentarily aghast when she heard of it.
   'A schoolmistress!' she said.  'But I couldn't possibly!  I'm sure
   no school would give me a job.  There isn't a single subject I can
   teach.'
   'What?  What's that?  Can 
					     					 			't teach?  Oh, dash it!  Of course you
   can!  Where's the difficulty?'
   'But I don't know enough!  I've never taught anybody anything,
   except cooking to the Girl Guides.  You have to be properly
   qualified to be a teacher.'
   'Oh, nonsense!  Teaching's the easiest job in the world.  Good
   thick ruler--rap 'em over the knuckles.  They'll be glad enough
   to get hold of a decently brought up young woman to teach the
   youngsters their ABC.  That's the line for you, m'dear--
   schoolmistress.  You're just cut out for it.'
   And sure enough, a schoolmistress Dorothy became.  The invisible
   solicitor had made all the arrangements in less than three days.
   It appeared that a certain Mrs Creevy, who kept a girls' day school
   in the suburb of Southbridge, was in need of an assistant, and was
   quite willing to give Dorothy the job.  How it had all been settled
   so quickly, and what kind of school it could be that would take on
   a total stranger, and unqualified at that, in the middle of the
   term, Dorothy could hardly imagine.  She did not know, of course,
   that a bribe of five pounds, miscalled a premium, had changed
   hands.
   So, just ten days after her arrest for begging, Dorothy set out for
   Ringwood House Academy, Brough Road, Southbridge, with a small
   trunk decently full of clothes and four pounds ten in her purse--
   for Sir Thomas had made her a present of ten pounds.  When she
   thought of the ease with which this job had been found for her, and
   then of the miserable struggles of three weeks ago, the contrast
   amazed her.  It brought home to her, as never before, the
   mysterious power of money.  In fact, it reminded her of a favourite
   saying of Mr Warburton's, that if you took 1 Corinthians, chapter
   thirteen, and in every verse wrote 'money' instead of 'charity',
   the chapter had ten times as much meaning as before.
   2
   Southbridge was a repellent suburb ten or a dozen miles from
   London.  Brough Road lay somewhere at the heart of it, amid
   labyrinths of meanly decent streets, all so indistinguishably
   alike, with their ranks of semi-detached houses, their privet and
   laurel hedges and plots of ailing shrubs at the crossroads, that
   you could lose yourself there almost as easily as in a Brazilian
   forest.  Not only the houses themselves, but even their names were
   the same over and over again.  Reading the names on the gates as
   you came up Brough Road, you were conscious of being haunted by
   some half-remembered passage of poetry; and when you paused to
   identify it, you realized that it was the first two lines of
   Lycidas.
   Ringwood House was a dark-looking, semi-detached house of yellow
   brick, three storeys high, and its lower windows were hidden from
   the road by ragged and dusty laurels.  Above the laurels, on the
   front of the house, was a board inscribed in faded gold letters:
   RINGWOOD HOUSE ACADEMY FOR GIRLS
   Ages 5 to 18
   Music and Dancing Taught
   Apply within for Prospectus
   Edge to edge with this board, on the other half of the house, was
   another board which read:
   RUSHINGTON GRANGE HIGH SCHOOL FOR BOYS
   Ages 6 to 16
   Book-keeping and Commercial Arithmetic a Speciality
   Apply within for Prospectus
   The district pullulated with small private schools; there were four
   of them in Brough Road alone.  Mrs Creevy, the Principal of
   Ringwood House, and Mr Boulger, the Principal of Rushington Grange,
   were in a state of warfare, though their interests in no way
   clashed with one another.  Nobody knew what the feud was about, not
   even Mrs Creevy or Mr Boulger themselves; it was a feud that they
   had inherited from earlier proprietors of the two schools.  In the
   mornings after breakfast they would stalk up and down their
   respective back gardens, beside the very low wall that separated
   them, pretending not to see one another and grinning with hatred.