"I can understand it,"
he confessed. "I am in the same state."
"Oh but she likes you so!" Maisie promptly pleaded.
Sir Claude literally coloured. "That has something to do with
it."
Maisie wondered again. "Being liked with being afraid?"
"Yes, when it amounts to adoration."
"Then why aren't you afraid of me?"
"Because with you it amounts to that?" He had kept his hand on
her arm. "Well, what prevents is simply that you're the gentlest
spirit on earth. Besides—" he pursued; but he came to a pause.
"Besides—?"
"I should be in fear if you were older—there! See—you
already make me talk nonsense," the young man added. "The
question's about your father. Is he likewise afraid of Mrs.
Beale?"
"I think not. And yet he loves her," Maisie mused.
"Oh no—he doesn't; not a bit!" After which, as his companion
stared, Sir Claude apparently felt that he must make this oddity
fit with her recollections. "There's nothing of that sort
now."
But Maisie only stared the more. "They've changed?"
"Like your mother and me."
She wondered how he knew. "Then you've seen Mrs. Beale
again?"
He demurred. "Oh no. She has written to me," he presently
subjoined. "She's not afraid of your father either. No one
at all is—really." Then he went on while Maisie's little mind, with
its filial spring too relaxed from of old for a pang at this want
of parental majesty, speculated on the vague relation between Mrs.
Beale's courage and the question, for Mrs. Wix and herself, of a
neat lodging with their friend. "She wouldn't care a bit if Mr.
Farange should make a row."
"Do you mean about you and me and Mrs. Wix? Why should she care?
It wouldn't hurt her."
Sir Claude, with his legs out and his hand diving into his
trousers-pocket, threw back his head with a laugh just perceptibly
tempered, as she thought, by a sigh. "My dear stepchild, you're
delightful! Look here, we must pay. You've had five buns?"
"How can you?" Maisie demanded, crimson under the eye of
the young woman who had stepped to their board. "I've had
three."
Shortly after this Mrs. Wix looked so ill that it was to be
feared her ladyship had treated her to some unexampled passage.
Maisie asked if anything worse than usual had occurred; whereupon
the poor woman brought out with infinite gloom: "He has been seeing
Mrs. Beale."
"Sir Claude?" The child remembered what he had said. "Oh no—not
seeing her!"
"I beg your pardon. I absolutely know it." Mrs. Wix was as
positive as she was dismal.
Maisie nevertheless ventured to challenge her. "And how, please,
do you know it?"
She faltered a moment. "From herself.
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