
moment, as she glanced around, she panicked with disorientation, her heart racing with fear as
she groped for her glasses. This was not her room! Nothing was where it should be—why was that
rectangle of fight at the foot of her bed, and not off to the side—and why was there only one, not
two? Why were the walls white, and what was that huge, looming object at her left?
And why weren't her glasses on the stand beside the bed, where they should be?
Then, as the bed beneath her creaked in a way that her bed never had, the steadying knowledge
of where she was and why she was here came flooding back.
Nothing was where it should be, because she was not at home, and never would see her room
again. She was in a narrow, iron-framed bed in Mrs. Abernathy's boarding house for respectable
young ladies.
Rose had met a few of them last night, and had immediately been reassured as to the solidity of
this establishment. Several of the ladies were nurses; one worked at the Hull House with the
indigent. Another was a typist for Professor Cathcart at the University. Her own shabby-genteel
clothing fit in perfectly here, giving her no cause for embarrassment.
Mrs. Abernathy was a stolid woman who had not been at all disturbed when they appeared on her
doorstep after dark. She had taken in Professor Cathcart's whispered explanation and the money he
ressed into her hand with a nod, and had sent Rose to this room on the second floor, just off the
common parlor. Her trunk was still downstairs in a storage closet, but she hardly needed what was in
it. She'd brought up her carpetbag and valise herself, and had attempted to be sociable with some of
the other boarders, but fatigue and strain had taken their toll, and she had soon sought the room and
the bed.
She stopped groping for her glasses, preferring the vague shapes of furniture and windows to the
stark reality of this sad little room. She closed her eyes again, and lay quietly, listening to the sounds
that had awakened her. Down below, someone, presumably Mrs. Abernathy, was cooking breakfast;
from the scents that reached her, it was oatmeal porridge and strong coffee, cheap and filling. Other
girls in tiny rooms on either side of her were moving about. By the very faint light, it could not be
much past dawn—but these young women were working girls, and their day began at dawn and
ended long after sunset, every day except Sunday.
That was when the full impact of her situation hit home. Within the week, she would join them.
She had not realized just how privileged her life had been, even with all the economies she and her
father had practiced these last several years. She had always been something of a night-owl,
referring to study in the late hours when she would be undisturbed; her classes had always been
scheduled in the afternoons, allowing her to enjoy leisurely mornings. Now she would obey someone
else's schedule, whether or not it happened to suit her.
Everything was changed; her life, as she had known it, was over. It lay buried with her father.
The rest of her life stretched before her, devoid of all the things that she cared for—the joys of
scholarship, the thrill of academic pursuit, the intellectual companionship of fellow scholars. She
would be a servant in someone else's house, or a hireling in someone's employ, subject to their will,
their whims. Very likely she would never again have access to a resource like the University Library.
Her life, which had been defined by books, would now be defined by her position below the salt.
Professor Cathcart had insisted that at she think Cameron's offer over carefully before deciding,
but her options were narrower than he thought; the choices were two, really. Take Jason Cameron's
ob (or search for another like it) and become a servant in the household of a wealthy, and probably
autocratic man—or take a position teaching in a public school.
The latter actually offered fewer opportunities. It was unlikely that she would find such a public
school position in Chicago; there were many aspiring teachers, and few jobs for them. She would
have to seek employment out in the country, perhaps even in the scarcely-settled West or the
backward South, where she would be an alien and an outsider.
In either case, as a private tutor or as a teacher, she would be a servant, for as a schoolteacher she
must present a perfectly respectable front at all times, attending the proper church, saying the proper
things, so as to be completely beyond reproach. Neither a schoolteacher nor a child's private tutor
could even hint that she had read the uncensored Ovid. Neither would dare to have an original
thought, or dare to contradict the men around her. The days of her freedom of thought, action and
speech were over.
She had not we
t since the funeral; she had remained dr
-e
ed before the Ivorssons, before Mr.
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