Criminally Uneducatable.
âI was predominantly educated at home,â Maisie answered, hoping she sounded starchy and governess-trained.
âWas this a general all-round education, or did you have a specialty?â
Maisie wasnât sure what the woman meant. All she could think of was Georgina instructing her never to wear two shades of red together.
âJust general. I, er, I liked history. Iâve always liked reading. Reading everything, really.â
âHmm. Well, I didnât exactly expect the equivalent of Cheltenham,â Miss Shields remarked, making a note.
Cheltenham! That was one of the poshest girlsâ schools in Britain. Was Savoy Hill filled with women who had gone there? Had Miss Shields?
âWe need people who are sharp and well organized, Miss Musgrave. For this job, your educational background is less critical than your ability. Now, the post also demands some assistance given to the new director of TalksââMaisie was quite sure Miss Shields swallowed a sneerââbut your main attention is to me, which is to say, Mr. Reith. I expect thatâs quite clear?â
âYes, Miss Shields.â Maisie nodded.
âBecause we canât have someone whoâs got one eye somewhere else.â
âNo, Miss Shields.â
âIt is useful, of course, especially in Talks, if you know a great deal about the important people of the day and things taking place. Do you read the daily papers?â
Maisie used to, but the long period of irregular employment made it impossible to focus on anything other than the âSituations Availableâ pages. She had, however, become adept at picking up abandoned papers from collection piles and cutting out shoe linings from them. They kept her feet warm. She wondered what stories she had walked on to get here.
âI certainly do look at them, Miss Shields.â
âI see.â
Miss Shields didnât seem likely to say more, and Maisie finished her tea, thinking
she
ought to ask a question.
âWould I, that is, would the person you engage be working in this room with you?â It seemed unlikely, given the roomâs size, but she wanted to steel herself if she were going to be subjected to that stern gaze half the day.
âIn my room? I should say not. We are pushing through a cupboard to create space.â
Maisie glanced at the door to her left.
âNo,â Miss Shields corrected her. âThat is Mr. Reithâs room.â
Maisieâs heart jumped. Was he in there? Had he been listening? What if he opened the door?
âThis is the space we are designating,â Miss Shields said, pointing to the door on the right. âThere will be space enough for a typewriter, and it will do. Much time will be spent in managing files and papers. Energy, Miss Musgrave, I need someone with energy.â
âI have energy,â Maisie assured her, wishing there were some way to prove it.
Shame I canât turn a cartwheel
.
Miss Shields set down her cup and saucer, then looked at Maisieâs references again.
âWhat I cannot understand, Miss Musgrave, is why, if youâve had such trouble securing regular employment, you havenât returned once more to your people in Toronto or New York.â
Beneath the impertinence, Maisie sensed the woman was exhorting her to leave and save jobs for those who deserved them, especially as so many men were unemployed. It was a fair point, although no man would be hired as this sort of secretary. And in fact, despite the enticement of the office, Maisie planned to quit the moment she was sure her hoped-for husband was a certainty, bringing her closer to the loving family she had wanted since she knew such things existed.
She forced her shoulders back and her breath steady.
âMiss Shields, I may have been born and raised in whatâs sometimes still called the New World, but my heart lies in the Old World. Thereâs nothing that