Only deep inside herself was she the same—in the private, inner Hannah that she didn’t show to anyone—the Hannah who rolled her eyes at April’s excesses and secretly enjoyed films like Clueless and Legally Blonde. The Hannah who thought D. H. Lawrence was unreadable and pretentious. The Hannah who bit off her split ends and ate peanut butter out of the jar and did all of the myriad other strange and unadmirable things that people did in the privacy of their own company.
“I—I’m not sure what you want to know,” she said slowly, and then, as Dr. Myers only looked at her over his glasses, “I… I’m an only child. My parents are divorced. But amicably. I don’t see my dad much at the moment, he lives in Norfolk with his new wife. My mum teaches A-level physics. I come from a town on the south coast called Dodsworth—you won’t know it, it’s a—” She gave a deprecating laugh, trying to find the right adjective for Dodsworth. “It’s not a hellhole or anything, it’s just really boring. It’s got nothing going for it, really, no culture; even the library closed down last year.” She stopped, trying to think of what else to say. What could she possibly tell him that he would be interested in—about her bog-standard comprehensive school with its used textbooks and peeling paint and total lack of any kind of character or history or record of academic excellence? Nothing about Dodsworth or her education there was likely to impress a man who had sat opposite students from the best private schools in the country.
She felt again the crushing sense of imposter syndrome she had experienced when she first walked through the gate at Pelham for her interview—trying not to think of the thousands of other students who were applying for the same place as hers, eighteen-year-olds just like her, but ones who came from storied institutions and famous families, and who walked confidently into Pelham with the air of already belonging here—while she was still trying to convince herself of that fact even as she knocked on the door of the interview room.
But hard on the heels of that came a flicker of something—not anger, exactly, but something close. So what if she went to a state school. So what if Dodsworth had no culture and no history. Didn’t that make her leap to Oxford more impressive? She had been accepted here after all, when many of those confident, shiny-haired students who had strode past her on the first day had not.
She sat up straighter.
“I was the only person in my year at school to apply for Oxford. I’m the first person in my family to come here too. In fact, my dad doesn’t even have a degree—he’s a builder who left education when he was sixteen. I didn’t volunteer to feed underprivileged kids in my gap year or spend my summer digging wells—I spent my summer working in a supermarket. As you may have guessed, I don’t always feel like I fit in here. But I’m determined to prove I belong.”
Dr. Myers said nothing for a long moment. But then he sat back in his chair and began clapping, slowly but steadily.
“Bravo, Hannah Jones,” he said at last. “Bravo. I think we’re going to get along very well, you and I. Very well indeed.”
* * *
AT THE END OF THE hour-long tutorial Hannah felt a strange mixture of drained and elated. Dr. Myers had taken her painstakingly back through her A-level syllabus and then gotten her to itemize the further reading she’d done in her own time, drawing out her opinions on everyone from Jane Austen to Benjamin Zephaniah.
As the tutorial drew to a close, she had the sensation of having undergone a pummeling mental workout as tiring as anything in the school gym.
“Until next week, then,” Dr. Myers said with a smile. “And when you come back, I’d like you to give me a thousand words on the role of social anxiety in any of these novels. There’s a list of books and essays you may find helpful on the reverse.” He handed her a piece of paper, and Hannah glanced down at it, and then turned it over to read the other side. She had read all the novels cited, but none of the critical theory essays listed on the back of the page. She had no idea how she was supposed to find the time to do all of the further reading between now and next week, but she could worry about that later.
“Well, goodbye, Hannah Jones,” Dr. Myers said. “Fare thee well, and we shall meet in a sennite.”
Hannah nodded and turned for the door. When she let herself out into the corridor, the porter who had helped her find Dr. Myers’s room was still there, leaning against a wall. It was the man she had met on her first day—not the grandfatherly one, the other, the one who had given her the keys.