Beale gave her an
affectionate shake. "You little monster—take care what you do! But
that's what she does do," she continued to Sir Claude. "She did it
to me and Beale."
"Well then," he said to Maisie, "you must try the trick at
our place." He held out his hand to her again. "Will you
come now?"
"Now—just as I am?" She turned with an immense appeal to her
stepmother, taking a leap over the mountain of "mending," the abyss
of packing that had loomed and yawned before her. "Oh may
I?"
Mrs. Beale addressed her assent to Sir Claude. "As well so as
any other way. I'll send on her things to-morrow." Then she gave a
tug to the child's coat, glancing at her up and down with some
ruefulness.
"She's not turned out as I should like—her mother will pull her
to pieces. But what's one to do—with nothing to do it on? And she's
better than when she came—you can tell her mother that. I'm sorry
to have to say it to you—but the poor child was a sight."
"Oh I'll turn her out myself!" the visitor cordially said.
"I shall like to see how!"—Mrs. Beale appeared much amused. "You
must bring her to show me—we can manage that. Good-bye, little
fright!" And her last word to Sir Claude was that she would keep
him up to the mark.
IX
The idea of what she was to make up and the prodigious total it
came to were kept well before Maisie at her mother's. These things
were the constant occupation of Mrs. Wix, who arrived there by the
back stairs, but in tears of joy, the day after her own arrival.
The process of making up, as to which the good lady had an immense
deal to say, took, through its successive phases, so long that it
heralded a term at least equal to the child's last stretch with her
father. This, however, was a fuller and richer time: it bounded
along to the tune of Mrs. Wix's constant insistence on the energy
they must both put forth. There was a fine intensity in the way the
child agreed with her that under Mrs. Beale and Susan Ash she had
learned nothing whatever; the wildness of the rescued castaway was
one of the forces that would henceforth make for a career of
conquest. The year therefore rounded itself as a receptacle of
retarded knowledge—a cup brimming over with the sense that now at
least she was learning. Mrs. Wix fed this sense from the stores of
her conversation and with the immense bustle of her reminder that
they must cull the fleeting hour. They were surrounded with
subjects they must take at a rush and perpetually getting into the
attitude of triumphant attack. They had certainly no idle hours,
and the child went to bed each night as tired as from a long day's
play. This had begun from the moment of their reunion, begun with
all Mrs. Wix had to tell her young friend of the reasons of her
ladyship's extraordinary behaviour at the very first.
It took the form of her ladyship's refusal for three days to see
her little girl—three days during which Sir Claude made hasty merry
dashes into the schoolroom to smooth down the odd situation, to say
"She'll come round, you know; I assure you she'll come round," and
a little even to compensate Maisie for the indignity he had caused
her to suffer. There had never in the child's life been, in all
ways, such a delightful amount of reparation. It came out by his
sociable admission that her ladyship had not known of his visit to
her late husband's house and of his having made that person's
daughter a pretext for striking up an acquaintance with the
dreadful creature installed there. Heaven knew she wanted her child
back and had made every plan of her own for removing her; what she
couldn't for the present at least forgive any one concerned was
such an officious underhand way of bringing about the transfer.
Maisie carried more of the weight of this resentment than even Mrs.
Wix's confidential ingenuity could lighten for her, especially as
Sir Claude himself was not at all ingenious, though indeed on the
other hand he was not at all crushed. He was amused and
intermittent and at moments most startling; he impressed on his
young companion, with a frankness that agitated her much more than
he seemed to guess, that he depended on her not letting her mother,
when she should see her, get anything out of her about anything
Mrs.
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