For a governess Miss Overmore
differed surprisingly; far more for instance than would have
entered into the bowed head of Mrs. Wix. She observed to Maisie
many times that she was quite conscious of not doing her justice,
and that Mr. Farange equally measured and equally lamented this
deficiency. The reason of it was that she had mysterious
responsibilities that interfered—responsibilities, Miss Overmore
intimated, to Mr. Farange himself and to the friendly noisy little
house and those who came there. Mr. Farange's remedy for every
inconvenience was that the child should be put at school—there were
such lots of splendid schools, as everybody knew, at Brighton and
all over the place. That, however, Maisie learned, was just what
would bring her mother down: from the moment he should delegate to
others the housing of his little charge he hadn't a leg to stand on
before the law. Didn't he keep her away from her mother precisely
because Mrs. Farange was one of these others?
There was also the solution of a second governess, a young
person to come in by the day and really do the work; but to this
Miss Overmore wouldn't for a moment listen, arguing against it with
great public relish and wanting to know from all comers—she put it
even to Maisie herself—they didn't see how frightfully it would
give her away. "What am I supposed to be at all, don't you see, if
I'm not here to look after her?" She was in a false position and so
freely and loudly called attention to it that it seemed to become
almost a source of glory. The way out of it of course was just to
do her plain duty; but that was unfortunately what, with his
excessive, his exorbitant demands on her, which every one indeed
appeared quite to understand, he practically, he selfishly
prevented. Beale Farange, for Miss Overmore, was now never anything
but "he," and the house was as full as ever of lively gentlemen
with whom, under that designation, she chaffingly talked about him.
Maisie meanwhile, as a subject of familiar gossip on what was to be
done with her, was left so much to herself that she had hours of
wistful thought of the large loose discipline of Mrs. Wix; yet she
none the less held it under her father's roof a point of
superiority that none of his visitors were ladies. It added to this
odd security that she had once heard a gentleman say to him as if
it were a great joke and in obvious reference to Miss Overmore:
"Hanged if she'll let another woman come near you—hanged if she
ever will. She'd let fly a stick at her as they do at a strange
cat!" Maisie greatly preferred gentlemen as inmates in spite of
their also having their way—louder but sooner over—of laughing out
at her. They pulled and pinched, they teased and tickled her; some
of them even, as they termed it, shied things at her, and all of
them thought it funny to call her by names having no resemblance to
her own. The ladies on the other hand addressed her as "You poor
pet" and scarcely touched her even to kiss her. But it was of the
ladies she was most afraid.
She was now old enough to understand how disproportionate a stay
she had already made with her father; and also old enough to enter
a little into the ambiguity attending this excess, which oppressed
her particularly whenever the question had been touched upon in
talk with her governess. "Oh you needn't worry: she doesn't care!"
Miss Overmore had often said to her in reference to any fear that
her mother might resent her prolonged detention. "She has other
people than poor little you to think about, and has gone
abroad with them; so you needn't be in the least afraid she'll
stickle this time for her rights." Maisie knew Mrs. Farange had
gone abroad, for she had had weeks and weeks before a letter from
her beginning "My precious pet" and taking leave of her for an
indeterminate time; but she had not seen in it a renunciation of
hatred or of the writer's policy of asserting herself, for the
sharpest of all her impressions had been that there was nothing her
mother would ever care so much about as to torment Mr. Farange.
What at last, however, was in this connexion bewildering and a
little frightening was the dawn of a suspicion that a better way
had been found to torment Mr. Farange than to deprive him of his
periodical burden. This was the question that worried our young
lady and that Miss Overmore's confidences and the frequent
observations of her employer only rendered more mystifying. It was
a contradiction that if Ida had now a fancy for waiving the rights
she had originally been so hot about her late husband shouldn't
jump at the monopoly for which he had also in the first instance so
fiercely fought; but when Maisie, with a subtlety beyond her years,
sounded this new ground her main success was in hearing her mother
more freshly abused. Miss Overmore had up to now rarely deviated
from a decent reserve, but the day came when she expressed herself
with a vividness not inferior to Beale's own on the subject of the
lady who had fled to the Continent to wriggle out of her job. It
would serve this lady right, Maisie gathered, if that contract, in
the shape of an overgrown and underdressed daughter, should be
shipped straight out to her and landed at her feet in the midst of
scandalous excesses.
The picture of these pursuits was what Miss Overmore took refuge
in when the child tried timidly to ascertain if her father were
disposed to feel he had too much of her. She evaded the point and
only kicked up all round it the dust of Ida's heartlessness and
folly, of which the supreme proof, it appeared, was the fact that
she was accompanied on her journey by a gentleman whom, to be
painfully plain on it, she had—well, "picked up." The terms on
which, unless they were married, ladies and gentlemen might, as
Miss Overmore expressed it, knock about together, were the terms on
which she and Mr.
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