This time, nevertheless, she felt emboldened for
risks; above all as something portentous seemed to have leaped into
her sense of the relations of things. She looked at Miss Overmore
much as she had a way of looking at persons who treated her to
"grown up" jokes. "Do you mean papa's hold on me—do you mean
he's about to marry?"
"Papa's not about to marry—papa is married, my dear. Papa
was married the day before yesterday at Brighton." Miss Overmore
glittered more gaily; meanwhile it came over Maisie, and quite
dazzlingly, that her "smart" governess was a bride. "He's my
husband, if you please, and I'm his little wife. So now
we'll see who's your little mother!" She caught her pupil to her
bosom in a manner that was not to be outdone by the emissary of her
predecessor, and a few moments later, when things had lurched back
into their places, that poor lady, quite defeated of the last word,
had soundlessly taken flight.
VIII
After Mrs. Wix's retreat Miss Overmore appeared to recognise
that she was not exactly in a position to denounce Ida Farange's
second union; but she drew from a table-drawer the photograph of
Sir Claude and, standing there before Maisie, studied it at some
length.
"Isn't he beautiful?" the child ingenuously asked.
Her companion hesitated. "No—he's horrid," she, to Maisie's
surprise, sharply returned. But she debated another minute, after
which she handed back the picture. It appeared to Maisie herself to
exhibit a fresh attraction, and she was troubled, having never
before had occasion to differ from her lovely friend. So she only
could ask what, such being the case, she should do with it: should
she put it quite away—where it wouldn't be there to offend? On this
Miss Overmore again cast about; after which she said unexpectedly:
"Put it on the schoolroom mantelpiece."
Maisie felt a fear. "Won't papa dislike to see it there?"
"Very much indeed; but that won't matter now." Miss
Overmore spoke with peculiar significance and to her pupil's
mystification.
"On account of the marriage?" Maisie risked.
Miss Overmore laughed, and Maisie could see that in spite of the
irritation produced by Mrs. Wix she was in high spirits. "Which
marriage do you mean?"
With the question put to her it suddenly struck the child she
didn't know, so that she felt she looked foolish. So she took
refuge in saying: "Shall you be different—" This was a full
implication that the bride of Sir Claude would be.
"As your father's wedded wife? Utterly!" Miss Overmore replied.
And the difference began of course in her being addressed, even by
Maisie, from that day and by her particular request, as Mrs. Beale.
It was there indeed principally that it ended, for except that the
child could reflect that she should presently have four parents in
all, and also that at the end of three months the staircase, for a
little girl hanging over banisters, sent up the deepening rustle of
more elaborate advances, everything made the same impression as
before. Mrs. Beale had very pretty frocks, but Miss Overmore's had
been quite as good, and if papa was much fonder of his second wife
than he had been of his first Maisie had foreseen that fondness,
had followed its development almost as closely as the person more
directly involved. There was little indeed in the commerce of her
companions that her precocious experience couldn't explain, for if
they struck her as after all rather deficient in that air of the
honeymoon of which she had so often heard—in much detail, for
instance, from Mrs. Wix—it was natural to judge the circumstance in
the light of papa's proved disposition to contest the empire of the
matrimonial tie. His honeymoon, when he came back from Brighton—not
on the morrow of Mrs. Wix's visit, and not, oddly, till several
days later—his honeymoon was perhaps perceptibly tinged with the
dawn of a later stage of wedlock. There were things dislike of
which, as the child knew it, wouldn't matter to Mrs. Beale now, and
their number increased so that such a trifle as his hostility to
the photograph of Sir Claude quite dropped out of view. This
pleasing object found a conspicuous place in the schoolroom, which
in truth Mr. Farange seldom entered and in which silent admiration
formed, during the time I speak of, almost the sole scholastic
exercise of Mrs. Beale's pupil.
Maisie was not long in seeing just what her stepmother had meant
by the difference she should show in her new character. If she was
her father's wife she was not her own governess, and if her
presence had had formerly to be made regular by the theory of a
humble function she was now on a footing that dispensed with all
theories and was inconsistent with all servitude. That was what she
had meant by the drop of the objection to a school; her small
companion was no longer required at home as—it was Mrs. Beale's own
amusing word—a little duenna.
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