Kathy has several “one-nighters” with boys at the Cottages. Although sex is more “grown-up” there, Kathy realizes, when
Ruth makes her scathing remark during the
Daniel Deronda conversation, that sex remains a taboo topic—or that Kathy is being shamed for her perceived promiscuity. Kathy writes, during the period of the novel’s narration, that, at the time, Ruth appeared to be doing her best to mature quickly, to lead the other
Hailsham students into maturity. Kathy also notes that Ruth told her, much later, that she never held onto her collected objects from Hailsham, but instead threw them away, since she saw no need for them once she reached the Cottages. Kathy finds this lack of nostalgia quite strange but typical of Ruth.