"It's your happy thought that I shall take a house for
you?"
"For the wretched homeless child. Any roof—over our
heads—will do for us; but of course for you it will have to be
something really nice."
Sir Claude's eyes reverted to Maisie, rather hard, as she
thought; and there was a shade in his very smile that seemed to
show her—though she also felt it didn't show Mrs. Wix—that the
accommodation prescribed must loom to him pretty large. The next
moment, however, he laughed gaily enough. "My dear lady, you
exaggerate tremendously my poor little needs." Mrs. Wix had
once mentioned to her young friend that when Sir Claude called her
his dear lady he could do anything with her; and Maisie felt a
certain anxiety to see what he would do now. Well, he only
addressed her a remark of which the child herself was aware of
feeling the force. "Your plan appeals to me immensely; but of
course—don't you see—I shall have to consider the position I put
myself in by leaving my wife."
"You'll also have to remember," Mrs. Wix replied, "that if you
don't look out your wife won't give you time to consider. Her
ladyship will leave you."
"Ah my good friend, I do look out!" the young man returned while
Maisie helped herself afresh to bread and butter. "Of course if
that happens I shall have somehow to turn round; but I hope with
all my heart it won't. I beg your pardon," he continued to his
stepdaughter, "for appearing to discuss that sort of possibility
under your sharp little nose. But the fact is I forget half
the time that Ida's your sainted mother."
"So do I!" said Maisie, her mouth full of bread and butter and
to put him the more in the right.
Her protectress, at this, was upon her again. "The little
desolate precious pet!" For the rest of the conversation she was
enclosed in Mrs. Wix's arms, and as they sat there interlocked Sir
Claude, before them with his tea-cup, looked down at them in
deepening thought. Shrink together as they might they couldn't
help, Maisie felt, being a very large lumpish image of what Mrs.
Wix required of his slim fineness. She knew moreover that this lady
didn't make it better by adding in a moment: "Of course we
shouldn't dream of a whole house. Any sort of little lodging,
however humble, would be only too blest."
"But it would have to be something that would hold us all," said
Sir Claude.
"Oh yes," Mrs. Wix concurred; "the whole point's our being
together. While you're waiting, before you act, for her ladyship to
take some step, our position here will come to an impossible pass.
You don't know what I went through with her for you yesterday—and
for our poor darling; but it's not a thing I can promise you often
to face again. She cast me out in horrible language—she has
instructed the servants not to wait on me."
"Oh the poor servants are all right!" Sir Claude eagerly
cried.
"They're certainly better than their mistress. It's too dreadful
that I should sit here and say of your wife, Sir Claude, and of
Maisie's own mother, that she's lower than a domestic; but my being
betrayed into such remarks is just a reason the more for our
getting away. I shall stay till I'm taken by the shoulders, but
that may happen any day. What also may perfectly happen, you must
permit me to repeat, is that she'll go off to get rid of us."
"Oh if she'll only do that!" Sir Claude laughed. "That would be
the very making of us!"
"Don't say it—don't say it!" Mrs. Wix pleaded. "Don't speak of
anything so fatal. You know what I mean. We must all cling to the
right. You mustn't be bad."
Sir Claude set down his tea-cup; he had become more grave and he
pensively wiped his moustache.
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