Farange's
confidence."
Miss Overmore gave a scornful laugh. "Then you must be mixed up
with some extraordinary proceedings!"
"None so extraordinary," cried Mrs. Wix, turning very pale, "as
to say horrible things about the mother to the face of the helpless
daughter!"
"Things not a bit more horrible, I think," Miss Overmore
returned, "than those you, madam, appear to have come here to say
about the father!"
Mrs. Wix looked for a moment hard at Maisie, and then, turning
again to this witness, spoke with a trembling voice. "I came to say
nothing about him, and you must excuse Mrs. Farange and me if we're
not so above all reproach as the companion of his travels."
The young woman thus described stared at the apparent breadth of
the description—she needed a moment to take it in. Maisie, however,
gazing solemnly from one of the disputants to the other, noted that
her answer, when it came, perched upon smiling lips. "It will do
quite as well, no doubt, if you come up to the requirements of the
companion of Mrs. Farange's!"
Mrs. Wix broke into a queer laugh; it sounded to Maisie an
unsuccessful imitation of a neigh. "That's just what I'm here to
make known—how perfectly the poor lady comes up to them herself."
She held up her head at the child. "You must take your mamma's
message, Maisie, and you must feel that her wishing me to come to
you with it this way is a great proof of interest and affection.
She sends you her particular love and announces to you that she's
engaged to be married to Sir Claude."
"Sir Claude?" Maisie wonderingly echoed. But while Mrs. Wix
explained that this gentleman was a dear friend of Mrs. Farange's,
who had been of great assistance to her in getting to Florence and
in making herself comfortable there for the winter, she was not too
violently shaken to perceive her old friend's enjoyment of the
effect of this news on Miss Overmore. That young lady opened her
eyes very wide; she immediately remarked that Mrs. Farange's
marriage would of course put an end to any further pretension to
take her daughter back. Mrs. Wix enquired with astonishment why it
should do anything of the sort, and Miss Overmore gave as an
instant reason that it was clearly but another dodge in a system of
dodges. She wanted to get out of the bargain: why else had she now
left Maisie on her father's hands weeks and weeks beyond the time
about which she had originally made such a fuss? It was vain for
Mrs. Wix to represent—as she speciously proceeded to do—that all
this time would be made up as soon as Mrs. Farange returned: she,
Miss Overmore, knew nothing, thank heaven, about her confederate,
but was very sure any person capable of forming that sort of
relation with the lady in Florence would easily agree to object to
the presence in his house of the fruit of a union that his dignity
must ignore. It was a game like another, and Mrs. Wix's visit was
clearly the first move in it. Maisie found in this exchange of
asperities a fresh incitement to the unformulated fatalism in which
her sense of her own career had long since taken refuge; and it was
the beginning for her of a deeper prevision that, in spite of Miss
Overmore's brilliancy and Mrs. Wix's passion, she should live to
see a change in the nature of the struggle she appeared to have
come into the world to produce. It would still be essentially a
struggle, but its object would now be not to receive
her.
Mrs. Wix, after Miss Overmore's last demonstration, addressed
herself wholly to the little girl, and, drawing from the pocket of
her dingy old pelisse a small flat parcel, removed its envelope and
wished to know if that looked like a gentleman who wouldn't
be nice to everybody—let alone to a person he would be so sure to
find so nice. Mrs. Farange, in the candour of new-found happiness,
had enclosed a "cabinet" photograph of Sir Claude, and Maisie lost
herself in admiration of the fair smooth face, the regular
features, the kind eyes, the amiable air, the general glossiness
and smartness of her prospective stepfather—only vaguely puzzled to
suppose herself now with two fathers at once.
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