receive ten pounds a year, for Mrs. Halliday insisted that payment there must be.
"I can't cook," Rosamund had avowed. "I never boiled a potato in my life. If you teach me, I shall be grateful to you."
"The cooking I can do myself, and you can learn if you like."
"I should think I might wash and scrub by the light of nature?"
"Perhaps. Good will and ordinary muscles will go a long way."
"I can't sew, but I will learn."
Mrs. Halliday reflected.
"You know that you are exchanging freedom for a hard and a very dull life?"
"My life has been hard and dull enough, if you only knew. The work will seem hard at first, no doubt. But I don't think I shall be dull with you."
Mrs. Halliday held out her work-worn hand, and received a clasp of the fingers attenuated by idleness.
It was a poor little house; built—of course—with sham display of spaciousness in front, and huddling discomfort at the rear. Mrs. Halliday's servants never failed to urge the smallness of the rooms as an excuse for leaving them dirty; they had invariably been accustomed to lordly abodes, where their virtues could expand. The furniture was homely and no more than sufficient, but here and there on the walls shone a glimpse of summer landscape, done in better days by the master of the house, who knew something of various arts, but could not succeed in that of money-making. Rosamund bestowed her worldly goods in a tiny chamber which Mrs. Halliday did her best to make inviting and comfortable; she had less room here than at Mrs. Banting's, but the cleanliness of surroundings would depend upon herself, and she was not likelyto