173177.fb2 Fingersmith - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 20

Fingersmith - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 20

Then Gentleman came.

C h a p t e r F o u r

He came, I suppose, about two weeks afiter I got there. It was only two weeks and yet, the hours at Briar were such slow ones, and the days— being all quite the same— were so even and quiet and long, it might have been twice that time.

It was long enough, anyway, for me to find out all the peculiar habits of the house; long enough for me to get used to the other servants, and for them to get used to me.

For a while, I didn't know why it was they did not care for me. I would go down to the kitchen, saying, 'How do you do?' to whoever I met there: 'How do you do, Margaret?

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All right, Charles?' (That was the knife-boy.) 'How are you, Mrs Cakebread?' (That was the cook: that really was her name, it wasn't a joke and no-one laughed at it.) And Charles might look at me as if he was too afraid to speak; and Mrs Cakebread would answer, in a nasty kind of way, 'Oh, I'm sure I'm very well, thank you.'

I supposed they were peeved to have me about, reminding them

of all the flash London things they would never, in that quiet and out-of-the-way place, get a look at. Then one day Mrs Stiles took me aside. She said, 'I hope you don't mind, Miss Smith, if I have a little word? I can't say how the house was run in your last place— ' She started everything she said to me with a line like that.— 'I can't say how you did things in London, but here at Briar we like to keep very mindful of the footings of the house ..."

It turned out that Mrs Cakebread had fancied herself insulted, by my saying good-morning to the kitchen- maid and the knife-boy before I said it to her; and Charles thought I meant to tease him, by wishing him good-morning at all. It was all the most trifling sort of nonsense, and enough to make a cat laugh; but it was life and death to them— I suppose, it would be life and death to you, if all you had to look forward to for the next forty years was carrying trays and baking pastry. Anyway, I saw that, if I was to get anywhere with them, I must watch my steps. I gave Charles a bit of chocolate, that I had carried down with me from the Borough and never eaten; I gave Margaret a piece of scented soap; and to Mrs Cakebread I gave a pair of those black stockings that Gentleman had had Phil get for me from the crooked warehouse.

I said I hoped there were no hard feelings. If I met Charles on the stairs in the morning, then, I looked the other way. They were all much nicer to me after that.

That's like a servant. A servant says, All for my master,' and means, All for myself. It's the two-facedness of it that I can't bear. At Briar, they were all on the dodge in one way or another, but all over sneaking little matters that would have put a real thief to the blush— such as, holding off the fat from Mr Lilly's gravy to sell on the quiet to the butcher's boy; which is what Mrs Cakebread did. Or, pulling the pearl buttons from Maud's chemises, and keeping them, and saying they were lost; which is what Margaret did. I had them all worked out, after three days' watching. I might have been Mrs Sucksby's own daughter after all. Mr Way, now: he had a mark on the side of his nose— in the Borough we should have called it a gin-bud. And how do you think he got that, in a place like his? He had the key to Mr Lilly's cellar, on a chain. You never saw such a

shine as that key had on it! And then, when we had finished our meals in Mrs Stiles's pantry, he would make a great show of loading up the tray— and I'd see him, when he thought no-one was looking, tipping the beer from the bottom of all the glasses into one great cup, and lushing it away.

I saw it— but, of course, I kept it all to myself. I wasn't there to make trouble. It was nothing to me, if he drank himself to death. And I passed most of my time, anyway, with Maud. I got used to her, too. She had her finicking ways, all right; but they were slight enough, it didn't hurt me to indulge them. And I was good at working hard, on little things: I began to take a kind of pleasure in the keeping of her gowns, the tidying of her pins and combs and boxes. I was used to dressing infants. I grew used to 58

dressing her.

'Lift your arms, miss,' I'd say. 'Lift your foot. Step here. Now, here.'

'Thank you, Sue,' she would always murmur. Sometimes she would close her eyes.

'How well you know me,' she might say. 'I think you know the turning of all my limbs.'

I did, in time. I knew all that she liked and hated. I knew what food she would eat, and what she'd leave— and when Cook, for instance, kept sending up eggs, I went and told her to send soup instead.

'Clear soup,' I said. 'Clear as you can make it. All right?' She made a face. 'Mrs Stiles,'

she said, 'won't like it.' 'Mrs Stiles don't have to eat it,' I answered. 'And Mrs Stiles ain't Miss Maud's maid. I am.'

So then she did send soup. Maud ate it all up. 'Why are you smiling?' she said, in her anxious way, when she had finished. I said I wasn't. She put down her spoon. Then she frowned, like before, over her gloves. They had got splashed.

'It's only water,' I said, seeing her face. 'It won't hurt you.' She bit her lip. She sat another minute with her hands in her lap, stealing glances at her fingers, growing more and more restless. Finally she said:

'I think the water has a little fat in it..."

Then, it was easier to go into her room and get her a fresh pair of aloves myself, than to sit and watch her fret. 'Let me do it,' I said, undoing the button at her wrist; and though at first she wouldn't let me touch her bare hands, in time— since I said I would be gentle— she began to let me. When her fingernails grew long I cut them, with a pair of silver scissors she had, that were shaped like a flying bird. Her nails were soft and perfectly clean, and grew quickly, like a child's nails. When I cut, she flinched. The skin of her hands was smooth— but, like the rest of her, too smooth to be right, I never saw it without thinking of the things— rough things, sharp things— that would mark or hurt it. I was glad when she put her gloves back on. The slivers of nail that I had cut away I would gather up out of my lap and throw on the fire. She would stand and watch them turn black. She did the same with the hairs I drew from her brushes and combs— frowning while they wriggled on the coals, like worms, then flared and turned to ash. Sometimes I'd stand and look with her.

For there weren't the things to notice, at Briar, that there were at home. You watched, instead, things like that: the rising of smoke, the passing of clouds in the sky. Each day we walked to the river, to see how it had lifted or dropped. 'In the autumn, it floods,' Maud said, 'and all the rushes are drowned. I don't care for that. And some nights a white mist comes creeping from the water, almost to the walls of my uncle's house . . .' She shivered. She always said, my uncle's, she never said my. The ground was crisp, and when it gave beneath our boots she said: 'How brittle the grass is! I think the river will freeze. I think it is freezing already. Do you see how it struggles?

It wants to flow, but the cold will still it. Do you see, Sue? Here, among the rushes?'

She gazed, and frowned. I watched the movement of her face. And I said— as I had said about the soup: 'It's only water, miss.'

'Only water?'

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'Brown water.'

She blinked.

'You are cold,' I said then. 'Come back, to the house. We've been out too long.' I put her arm about mine. I did it, not thinking; and her arm stayed stiff. But then, the next day— or perhaps, the day

after that— she took my arm again, and was not so stiff; and after that, I suppose we joined arms naturally ... I don't know. It was only later that I wondered about it and tried to look back. But by then I could only see that there was once a time when we had walked apart; and then a time when we walked together.

She was just a girl, after all; for all that they called her a lady. She was just a girl that had never known fun. One day I was tidying one of her drawers and found a deck of cards in it. She said she thought they must have been her mother's. She knew the suits, but that was all— she called the jacks, cavaliers!— so I taught her one or two soft Borough games— All- fours, and Put. We played for matches and spills, at first; then we found, in another drawer, a box of little counters, made of mother-of-pearl and shaped like fish and diamonds and crescent moons; and after that, we played for them.

The mother-of-pearl was very sweet and cool on the hand.— My hand, I mean; for Maud of course still wore her gloves. And when she put down a card she put it down neatly, making the edges and corners match with the ones below. After a while I began to do that, too.

While we played, we talked. She liked to hear me talk of London. 'Is it truly so large?'

she'd say. And there are theatres? And what they call, fashion- houses?'

And eating- houses. And every kind of shop. And parks, miss.'

'Parks, like my uncle's?'

A little like,' I'd say. 'But filled with people, of course.— Are you low, miss, or high?'

'I am high.' She set down a card.'— Quite filled, would you say?'

'I am higher. There. Three fish, to your two.'

'How well you play!— Quite filled, you say, with people?'

'Of course. But dark. Will you cut?'

'Dark? Are you sure? I thought London was said to be bright. With great lamps fired— I believe— with gas?'

'Great lamps, like diamonds!' I said. 'In the theatres and halls. You may dance there, miss, right through the night— '

'Dance, Sue?'

'Dance, miss.' Her face had changed. I put the cards down. 'You like to dance, of course?'

'I— ' She coloured, and lowered her gaze. 'I was never taught it. Do you think,' she said, looking up, 'I might be a lady, in London— that is,' she added quickly, 'if I were ever to go there.— Do you think I might be a lady in London, and yet not dance?'