But if she's so fond of you, why doesn't
she write to you?"
"Oh on account of mamma." This was rudimentary, and she was
almost surprised at the simplicity of Sir Claude's question.
"I see—that's quite right," he answered. "She might get at
you—there are all sorts of ways. But of course there's Mrs.
Wix."
"There's Mrs. Wix," Maisie lucidly concurred. "Mrs. Wix can't
abide her."
Sir Claude seemed interested. "Oh she can't abide her? Then what
does she say about her?"
"Nothing at all—because she knows I shouldn't like it. Isn't it
sweet of her?" the child asked.
"Certainly; rather nice. Mrs. Beale wouldn't hold her tongue for
any such thing as that, would she?"
Maisie remembered how little she had done so; but she desired to
protect Mrs. Beale too. The only protection she could think of,
however, was the plea: "Oh at papa's, you know, they don't
mind!"
At this Sir Claude only smiled. "No, I dare say not. But here we
mind, don't we?—we take care what we say. I don't suppose it's a
matter on which I ought to prejudice you," he went on; "but I think
we must on the whole be rather nicer here than at your father's.
However, I don't press that; for it's the sort of question on which
it's awfully awkward for you to speak. Don't worry, at any rate: I
assure you I'll back you up." Then after a moment and while he
smoked he reverted to Mrs. Beale and the child's first enquiry.
"I'm afraid we can't do much for her just now. I haven't seen her
since that day—upon my word I haven't seen her." The next instant,
with a laugh the least bit foolish, the young man slightly
coloured: he must have felt this profession of innocence to be
excessive as addressed to Maisie. It was inevitable to say to her,
however, that of course her mother loathed the lady of the other
house. He couldn't go there again with his wife's consent, and he
wasn't the man—he begged her to believe, falling once more, in
spite of himself, into the scruple of showing the child he didn't
trip—to go there without it. He was liable in talking with her to
take the tone of her being also a man of the world. He had gone to
Mrs. Beale's to fetch away Maisie, but that was altogether
different. Now that she was in her mother's house what pretext had
he to give her mother for paying calls on her father's wife? And of
course Mrs. Beale couldn't come to Ida's—Ida would tear her limb
from limb. Maisie, with this talk of pretexts, remembered how much
Mrs. Beale had made of her being a good one, and how, for such a
function, it was her fate to be either much depended on or much
missed. Sir Claude moreover recognised on this occasion that
perhaps things would take a turn later on; and he wound up by
saying: "I'm sure she does sincerely care for you—how can she
possibly help it? She's very young and very pretty and very clever:
I think she's charming. But we must walk very straight. If you'll
help me, you know, I'll help you," he concluded in the
pleasant fraternising, equalising, not a bit patronising way which
made the child ready to go through anything for him and the beauty
of which, as she dimly felt, was that it was so much less a
deceitful descent to her years than a real indifference to
them.
It gave her moments of secret rapture—moments of believing she
might help him indeed.
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