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"You may be wise. Well, come down to my part of the world if you want economy--and to feel as though you were out of London. Good-bye, dear."
Alex was surprised, and rather consoled, to hear Barbara alluding so lightly to the possibility of her seeking fresh quarters for herself.
Perhaps, after all, they all thought it would be the best thing for her to do. Perhaps there was no need to feel guilty and as though her intentions must be concealed.
But Alex, dreading blame or disapproval, or even a.s.surances that the scheme was unpractical and foolish, continued to conceal it.
She wrote and told Violet that she had decided that it would be too expensive to go abroad with Barbara. Might she stay on in Clevedon Square for a little while?
But she had secretly made up her mind to go and look for rooms or a boarding-house in Hampstead, as Barbara had suggested. As usual, it was only by chance that Alex realized the practical difficulties blocking her way.
She had now only five pounds.
On the following Sat.u.r.day afternoon she found her way out by omnibus to Hampstead. She alighted before the terminus was reached, from a nervous dread of being taken on too far, although the streets in which she found herself were not prepossessing.
For the first time Alex reflected that she had no definite idea as to where she wanted to go in her search for lodgings. She walked timidly along the road, which appeared to be interminably long and full of second-hand furniture shops. Bamboo tables, and armchairs with defective castors, were put out on the pavement in many instances, and there was often a small crowd in front of the window gazing at the cheaply-framed coloured supplements hung up within. The pavements and the road, even the tram-lines, swarmed with untidy, clamouring children.
Alex supposed that she must be in the region vaguely known to her as the slums.
Surely she could not live here?
Then the recollection of her solitary five pounds came to her with a pang of alarm.
Of course, she must live wherever she could do so most cheaply. She had no idea of what it would cost.
It was very hot, and the pavement began to burn her feet. She did not dare to leave the main road, fearing that she should never find her way to the 'bus route again, if once she left it, but she peeped down one or two side-streets. They seemed quieter than Malden Road, but the unpretentious little grey houses did not look as though lodgers were expected in any of them. Alex wondered desperately how she was to find out.
Presently she saw a policeman on the further side of the street.
She went up to him and asked:
"Can you tell me of anywhere near here where they let rooms--somewhere cheap?"
The man looked down at her white, exhausted face, and at the well-cut coat and skirt chosen by Barbara, which yet hung loosely and badly on her stooping, shrunken figure.
"Somebody's poor relation," was his unspoken comment.
"Is it for yourself, Miss? You'd hardly care to be in this neighbourhood, would you?"
"I want to be somewhere near Hampstead--and somewhere very, very cheap,"
Alex faltered, thinking of her five pounds, which lay at that moment in the purse she was clasping.
"Well, you'll find as cheap here as anywhere, if you don't mind the noise."
"Oh, no," said Alex--who had never slept within the sound of traffic--surprised.
"Then if I was you, Miss, I'd try No. 252 Malden Road--just beyond the _Gipsy Queen_, that is, or else two doors further up. I saw cards up in both windows with 'apartments' inside the last week."
"Thank you," said Alex.
She wished that Malden Road had looked more like Downs.h.i.+re Hill, which had trees and little tiny gardens in front of the houses, which almost all resembled country cottages. But no doubt houses in Downs.h.i.+re Hill did not let rooms, or if so they must be too expensive. Besides, Alex felt almost sure that Barbara would not want her as a very near neighbour.
She was very tired when she reached No. 252, and almost felt that she would take the rooms, whatever they were like, to save herself further search. After all, she could change later on, if she did not like them.
Like all weak people, Alex felt the urgent necessity of acting as quickly as possible on her own impulses.
She looked distastefully at the dingy house, with its paint cracking into hard flakes, and raised the knocker slowly. A jagged end of protruding wire at the side of the door proclaimed that the bell was broken.
Her timid knock was answered by a slatternly-looking young woman wearing an ap.r.o.n, whom Alex took to be the servant.
"Can I see the--the landlady?"
"Is it about a room? I'm Mrs. 'Oxton." She spoke in the harshest possible c.o.c.kney, but quite pleasantly.
"Oh," said Alex, still uncertain. "Yes, I want rooms, please."
The woman looked her swiftly up and down. "Only one bed-sittin'-room vacant, Miss, and that's at the top of the 'ouse. Would you care to see that?"
"Yes, please."
Mrs. Hoxton slammed the door and preceded Alex up a narrow staircase, carpeted with oil-cloth. On the third floor she threw open the door of a room considerably smaller than the bath-room at Clevedon Square, containing a low iron bed, and an iron tripod bearing an enamel basin, a chipped pitcher and a very small towel-rail. A looking-gla.s.s framed in mottled yellow plush was hung crookedly on the wall, and beneath it stood a wooden kitchen chair. There was a little table with two drawers in it behind the door.
Alex looked round her with bewilderment. A convent cell was no smaller than this, and presented a greater aspect of s.p.a.ce from its bareness.
"Is there a sitting-room?" she inquired.
"Not separate to this--no, Miss. Bed-sitting-room, this is called.
Small, but then I suppose you'd be out all day."
For a moment Alex wondered why.
"But meals?" she asked feebly.
"Would it be more than just the breakfast and supper, and three meals on Sunday?"
Alex did not know what to answer, and Mrs. Hoxton surveyed her.
"Where are you working, Miss? Anywhere near?"
"I'm not working anywhere--yet."
Mrs. Hoxton's manner changed a little.
"If you want two rooms, Miss, and full board, I could accommodate you downstairs. The price is according, of course--a week in advance, and pay by the week."
Alex followed the woman downstairs again. She was sure that this was not the kind of place where she wanted to live.
Mrs. Hoxton showed her into a larger bedroom on the first floor, just opening the door and giving Alex a glimpse of extreme untidiness and an unmade bed.