"You seem so tremendously eager," she said to the
child, "that I hope you're at least clear about Sir Claude's
relation to you. It doesn't appear to occur to him to give you the
necessary reassurance."
Maisie, a trifle mystified, turned quickly to her new friend.
"Why it's of course that you're married to her, isn't
it?"
Her anxious emphasis started them off, as she had learned to
call it; this was the echo she infallibly and now quite resignedly
produced; moreover Sir Claude's laughter was an indistinguishable
part of the sweetness of his being there. "We've been married, my
dear child, three months, and my interest in you is a consequence,
don't you know? of my great affection for your mother. In coming
here it's of course for your mother I'm acting."
"Oh I know," Maisie said with all the candour of her competence.
"She can't come herself—except just to the door." Then as she
thought afresh: "Can't she come even to the door now?"
"There you are!" Mrs. Beale exclaimed to Sir Claude. She spoke
as if his dilemma were ludicrous.
His kind face, in a hesitation, seemed to recognise it; but he
answered the child with a frank smile. "No—not very well."
"Because she has married you?"
He promptly accepted this reason. "Well, that has a good deal to
do with it."
He was so delightful to talk to that Maisie pursued the subject.
"But papa—he has married Miss Overmore."
"Ah you'll see that he won't come for you at your mother's,"
that lady interposed.
"Yes, but that won't be for a long time," Maisie hastened to
respond.
"We won't talk about it now—you've months and months to put in
first." And Sir Claude drew her closer.
"Oh that's what makes it so hard to give her up!" Mrs. Beale
made this point with her arms out to her stepdaughter. Maisie,
quitting Sir Claude, went over to them and, clasped in a still
tenderer embrace, felt entrancingly the extension of the field of
happiness. "I'll come for you," said her stepmother, "if Sir
Claude keeps you too long: we must make him quite understand that!
Don't talk to me about her ladyship!" she went on to their visitor
so familiarly that it was almost as if they must have met before.
"I know her ladyship as if I had made her. They're a pretty pair of
parents!" cried Mrs. Beale.
Maisie had so often heard them called so that the remark
diverted her but an instant from the agreeable wonder of this grand
new form of allusion to her mother; and that, in its turn,
presently left her free to catch at the pleasant possibility, in
connexion with herself, of a relation much happier as between Mrs.
Beale and Sir Claude than as between mamma and papa. Still the next
thing that happened was that her interest in such a relation
brought to her lips a fresh question.
"Have you seen papa?" she asked of Sir Claude.
It was the signal for their going off again, as her small
stoicism had perfectly taken for granted that it would be. All that
Mrs. Beale had nevertheless to add was the vague apparent sarcasm:
"Oh papa!"
"I'm assured he's not at home," Sir Claude replied to the child;
"but if he had been I should have hoped for the pleasure of seeing
him."
"Won't he mind your coming?" Maisie asked as with need of the
knowledge.
"Oh you bad little girl!" Mrs. Beale humorously protested.
The child could see that at this Sir Claude, though still moved
to mirth, coloured a little; but he spoke to her very kindly.
"That's just what I came to see, you know—whether your father
would mind. But Mrs. Beale appears strongly of the opinion
that he won't."
This lady promptly justified that view to her stepdaughter. "It
will be very interesting, my dear, you know, to find out what it is
to-day that your father does mind. I'm sure I don't
know!"—and she seemed to repeat, though with perceptible
resignation, her plaint of a moment before. "Your father, darling,
is a very odd person indeed." She turned with this, smiling, to Sir
Claude. "But perhaps it's hardly civil for me to say that of his
not objecting to have you in the house. If you knew some of
the people he does have!"
Maisie knew them all, and none indeed were to be compared to Sir
Claude. He laughed back at Mrs. Beale; he looked at such moments
quite as Mrs. Wix, in the long stories she told her pupil, always
described the lovers of her distressed beauties—"the perfect
gentleman and strikingly handsome." He got up, to the child's
regret, as if he were going. "Oh I dare say we should be all
right!"
Mrs. Beale once more gathered in her little charge, holding her
close and looking thoughtfully over her head at their visitor.
"It's so charming—for a man of your type—to have wanted her so
much!"
"What do you know about my type?" Sir Claude laughed. "Whatever
it may be I dare say it deceives you.
1 comment