It might in fact have
expressed positive relief. Everything was as it should be.
Yet it was not with them, they were very sure, that her ladyship
was furious, nor because she had forbidden it that there befell at
last a period—six months brought it round—when for days together he
scarcely came near them. He was "off," and Ida was "off," and they
were sometimes off together and sometimes apart; there were seasons
when the simple students had the house to themselves, when the very
servants seemed also to be "off" and dinner became a reckless
forage in pantries and sideboards. Mrs. Wix reminded her disciple
on such occasions—hungry moments often, when all the support of the
reminder was required—that the "real life" of their companions, the
brilliant society in which it was inevitable they should move and
the complicated pleasures in which it was almost presumptuous of
the mind to follow them, must offer features literally not to be
imagined without being seen. At one of these times Maisie found her
opening it out that, though the difficulties were many, it was Mrs.
Beale who had now become the chief. Then somehow it was brought
fully to the child's knowledge that her stepmother had been making
attempts to see her, that her mother had deeply resented it, that
her stepfather had backed her stepmother up, that the latter had
pretended to be acting as the representative of her father, and
that her mother took the whole thing, in plain terms, very hard.
The situation was, as Mrs. Wix declared, an extraordinary muddle to
be sure. Her account of it brought back to Maisie the happy vision
of the way Sir Claude and Mrs. Beale had made acquaintance—an
incident to which, with her stepfather, though she had had little
to say about it to Mrs. Wix, she had during the first weeks of her
stay at her mother's found more than one opportunity to revert. As
to what had taken place the day Sir Claude came for her, she had
been vaguely grateful to Mrs. Wix for not attempting, as her mother
had attempted, to put her through. That was what Sir Claude had
called the process when he warned her of it, and again afterwards
when he told her she was an awfully good "chap" for having foiled
it. Then it was that, well aware Mrs. Beale hadn't in the least
really given her up, she had asked him if he remained in
communication with her and if for the time everything must really
be held to be at an end between her stepmother and herself. This
conversation had occurred in consequence of his one day popping
into the schoolroom and finding Maisie alone.
X
He was smoking a cigarette and he stood before the fire and
looked at the meagre appointments of the room in a way that made
her rather ashamed of them. Then before (on the subject of Mrs.
Beale) he let her "draw" him—that was another of his words; it was
astonishing how many she gathered in—he remarked that really mamma
kept them rather low on the question of decorations. Mrs. Wix had
put up a Japanese fan and two rather grim texts; she had wished
they were gayer, but they were all she happened to have. Without
Sir Claude's photograph, however, the place would have been, as he
said, as dull as a cold dinner. He had said as well that there were
all sorts of things they ought to have; yet governess and pupil, it
had to be admitted, were still divided between discussing the
places where any sort of thing would look best if any sort of thing
should ever come and acknowledging that mutability in the child's
career which was naturally unfavourable to accumulation. She stayed
long enough only to miss things, not half long enough to deserve
them. The way Sir Claude looked about the schoolroom had made her
feel with humility as if it were not very different from the shabby
attic in which she had visited Susan Ash. Then he had said in
abrupt reference to Mrs. Beale: "Do you think she really cares for
you?"
"Oh awfully!" Maisie had replied.
"But, I mean, does she love you for yourself, as they call it,
don't you know? Is she as fond of you, now, as Mrs. Wix?"
The child turned it over. "Oh I'm not every bit Mrs. Beale
has!"
Sir Claude seemed much amused at this. "No; you're not every bit
she has!"
He laughed for some moments, but that was an old story to
Maisie, who was not too much disconcerted to go on: "But she'll
never give me up."
"Well, I won't either, old boy: so that's not so wonderful, and
she's not the only one.
1 comment