I've been to see her."
Then on Maisie's visible surprise: "I went yesterday while you
were out with him. He has seen her repeatedly."
It was not wholly clear to Maisie why Mrs. Wix should be
prostrate at this discovery; but her general consciousness of the
way things could be both perpetrated and resented always eased off
for her the strain of the particular mystery. "There may be some
mistake. He says he hasn't."
Mrs. Wix turned paler, as if this were a still deeper ground for
alarm. "He says so?—he denies that he has seen her?"
"He told me so three days ago. Perhaps she's mistaken," Maisie
suggested.
"Do you mean perhaps she lies? She lies whenever it suits her,
I'm very sure. But I know when people lie—and that's what I've
loved in you, that you never do. Mrs. Beale didn't yesterday
at any rate. He has seen her."
Maisie was silent a little. "He says not," she then repeated.
"Perhaps—perhaps—" Once more she paused.
"Do you mean perhaps he lies?"
"Gracious goodness, no!" Maisie shouted.
Mrs. Wix's bitterness, however, again overflowed. "He does, he
does," she cried, "and it's that that's just the worst of it!
They'll take you, they'll take you, and what in the world will then
become of me?" She threw herself afresh upon her pupil and wept
over her with the inevitable effect of causing the child's own
tears to flow. But Maisie couldn't have told you if she had been
crying at the image of their separation or at that of Sir Claude's
untruth. As regards this deviation it was agreed between them that
they were not in a position to bring it home to him. Mrs. Wix was
in dread of doing anything to make him, as she said, "worse"; and
Maisie was sufficiently initiated to be able to reflect that in
speaking to her as he had done he had only wished to be tender of
Mrs. Beale. It fell in with all her inclinations to think of him as
tender, and she forbore to let him know that the two ladies had, as
she would never do, betrayed him.
She had not long to keep her secret, for the next day, when she
went out with him, he suddenly said in reference to some errand he
had first proposed: "No, we won't do that—we'll do something else."
On this, a few steps from the door, he stopped a hansom and helped
her in; then following her he gave the driver over the top an
address that she lost. When he was seated beside her she asked him
where they were going; to which he replied "My dear child, you'll
see." She saw while she watched and wondered that they took the
direction of the Regent's Park; but she didn't know why he should
make a mystery of that, and it was not till they passed under a
pretty arch and drew up at a white house in a terrace from which
the view, she thought, must be lovely that, mystified, she clutched
him and broke out: "I shall see papa?"
He looked down at her with a kind smile. "No, probably not. I
haven't brought you for that."
"Then whose house is it?"
"It's your father's. They've moved here."
She looked about: she had known Mr. Farange in four or five
houses, and there was nothing astonishing in this except that it
was the nicest place yet. "But I shall see Mrs. Beale?"
"It's to see her that I brought you."
She stared, very white, and, with her hand on his arm, though
they had stopped, kept him sitting in the cab. "To leave me, do you
mean?"
He could scarce bring it out. "It's not for me to say if you
can stay.
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