One day,
Kathy is reading and
Ruth approaches her, telling her the plot of Kathy’s novel (George Eliot’s
Daniel Deronda). Kathy becomes angry at Ruth’s affectation, and, in a fit of spite, asks Ruth why Ruth has begun taking on the mannerisms of the older couples, and why Ruth occasionally ditches
Tommy to hang out with veterans like
Chrissie and
Rodney. Ruth fires back, however, that Kathy need not try to maintain the old social order of
Hailsham, and that Kathy ought to “grow up” and enjoy the life of the Cottages more. Ruth also implies, as a parting shot, that Kathy has been promiscuous with some of the older veteran boys at the Cottages, while Ruth, for her part, has remained true to Tommy.