and circumstances were dull, cheap, pleasureless, and
empty. Work girls, shop assistants and so forth, the
class that have neither the happy-go-lucky freedom of the
poor nor the leisured freedom of the rich, came specially
within the range of her
sympathy. It was sad to think
that there were young people who, after a long day's
work, had to sit alone in chill,
dreary bedrooms because
they could not afford the price of a cup of coffee and a
sandwich in a
restaurant, still less a
shilling for a
theatre gallery.
Jocantha's mind was still
dwelling on this theme
when she started forth on an afternoon
campaign of
desultory shopping; it would be rather a comforting
thing, she told herself, if she could do something, on
the spur of the moment, to bring a gleam of pleasure and
interest into the life of even one or two wistful-
hearted, empty-pocketed workers; it would add a good deal
to her sense of
enjoyment at the theatre that night. She
would get two upper
circle tickets for a popular play,
make her way into some cheap tea-shop, and present the
tickets to the first couple of interesting work girls
with whom she could casually drop into conversation. She
could explain matters by
saying that she was
unable to
use the tickets herself and did not want them to be
wasted, and, on the other hand, did not want the trouble
of sending them back. On further
reflection she decided
that it might be better to get only one ticket and give
it to some lonely-looking girl sitting eating her frugal
meal by herself; the girl might
scrapeacquaintance with
her next-seat neighbour at the theatre and lay the
foundations of a
lasting friendship.
With the Fairy Godmother
impulse strong upon her,
Jocantha marched into a ticket
agency and selected with
immense care an upper
circle seat for the "Yellow
Peacock," a play that was attracting a considerable
amount of
discussion and
criticism. Then she went forth
in search of a tea-shop and philanthropic adventure, at
about the same time that Attab sauntered into the garden
with a mind attuned to
sparrow stalking. In a corner of
an A.B.C. shop she found an
unoccupied table,
whereat she
promptly installed herself, impelled by the fact that at
the next table was sitting a young girl, rather plain of
feature, with tired, listless eyes, and a general air of
uncomplaining forlornness. Her dress was of poor
material, but aimed at being in the fashion, her hair was
pretty, and her
complexion bad; she was finishing a
modest meal of tea and scone, and she was not very
different in her way from thousands of other girls who
were finishing, or
beginning, or continuing their teas in
London tea-shops at that exact moment. The odds were
enormously in favour of the supposition that she had
never seen the "Yellow Peacock";
obviously she supplied
excellent material for Jocantha's first experiment in
haphazard benefaction.
Jocantha ordered some tea and a
muffin, and then
turned a friendly scrutiny on her neighbour with a view
to catching her eye. At that
precise moment the girl's
face lit up with sudden pleasure, her eyes sparkled, a
flush came into her cheeks, and she looked almost pretty.
A young man, whom she greeted with an affectionate
"Hullo, Bertie," came up to her table and took his seat
in a chair facing her. Jocantha looked hard at the new-
comer; he was in appearance a few years younger than
herself, very much better looking than Gregory, rather
better looking, in fact, than any of the young men of her
set. She guessed him to be a well-mannered young clerk
in some
wholesalewarehouse, existing and
amusing himself
as best he might on a tiny salary, and commanding a
holiday of about two weeks in the year. He was aware, of
course, of his good looks, but with the shy self-
consciousness of the Anglo-Saxon, not the blatant
complacency of the Latin or Semite. He was
obviously on
terms of friendly
intimacy with the girl he was talking
to, probably they were drifting towards a formal
engagement. Jocantha pictured the boy's home, in a
rather narrow
circle, with a
tiresome mother who always
wanted to know how and where he spent his evenings. He
would exchange that humdrum thraldom in due course for a
home of his own, dominated by a
chronicscarcity of
pounds,
shillings, and pence, and a
dearth of most of the
things that made life
attractive or comfortable.
Jocantha felt
extremely sorry for him. She wondered if
he had seen the "Yellow Peacock"; the odds were
enormously in favour of the supposition that he had not.
The girl had finished her tea and would
shortly be going
back to her work; when the boy was alone it would be
quite easy for Jocantha to say: "My husband has made
other arrangements for me this evening; would you care to
make use of this ticket, which would
otherwise be
wasted?" Then she could come there again one afternoon
for tea, and, if she saw him, ask him how he liked the
play. If he was a nice boy and improved on
acquaintancehe could be given more theatre tickets, and perhaps asked
to come one Sunday to tea at Chelsea. Jocantha made up
her mind that he would improve on
acquaintance, and that
Gregory would like him, and that the Fairy Godmother
business would prove far more entertaining than she had
originally anticipated. The boy was distinctly
presentable; he knew how to brush his hair, which was
possibly an imitative
faculty; he knew what colour of tie
suited him, which might be intuition; he was exactly the
type that Jocantha admired, which of course was accident.
Altogether she was rather pleased when the girl looked at
the clock and bade a friendly but
hurriedfarewell to her
companion. Bertie nodded "good-bye," gulped down a
mouthful of tea, and then produced from his overcoat
pocket a paper-covered book,
bearing the title "Sepoy and
Sahib, a tale of the great Mutiny."
The laws of tea-shop
etiquetteforbid that you
should offer theatre tickets to a stranger without having
first caught the stranger's eye. It is even better if
you can ask to have a sugar basin passed to you, having
previously concealed the fact that you have a large and
well-filled sugar basin on your own table; this is not
difficult to manage, as the printed menu is generally
nearly as large as the table, and can be made to stand on
end. Jocantha set to work
hopefully; she had a long and
rather high-pitched
discussion with the waitress
concerning alleged defects in an
altogether blameless
muffin, she made loud and
plaintive inquiries about the
tube service to some impossibly
remotesuburb, she talked
with
brilliant insincerity to the tea-shop
kitten, and as
a last
resort she upset a milk-jug and swore at it
daintily. Altogether she attracted a good deal of
attention, but never for a moment did she attract the
attention of the boy with the beautifully-brushed hair,
who was some thousands of miles away in the
baking plains