<p> <SPAN name="27"></SPAN></p>
<p> </p>
<h3>XXVII<br/> </h3>
<p>The greatest wonder of all was the way Mrs. Beale addressed her
announcement, so far as could be judged, equally to Mrs. Wix, who,
as if from sudden failure of strength, sank into a chair while
Maisie surrendered to the visitor's embrace. As soon as the child
was liberated she met with profundity Mrs. Wix's stupefaction and
actually was able to see that while in a manner sustaining the
encounter her face yet seemed with intensity to say: "Now, for
God's sake, don't crow 'I told you so!'" Maisie was somehow on the
spot aware of an absence of disposition to crow; it had taken her
but an extra minute to arrive at such a quick survey of the
objects surrounding Mrs. Beale as showed that among them was no
appurtenance of Sir Claude's. She knew his dressing-bag now—oh
with the fondest knowledge!—and there was an instant during which
its not being there was a stroke of the worst news. She was yet to
learn what it could be to recognise in some lapse of a sequence
the proof of an extinction, and therefore remained unaware that
this momentary pang was a foretaste of the experience of death. It
of course yielded in a flash to Mrs. Beale's brightness, it gasped
itself away in her own instant appeal. "You've come alone?"</p>
<p>"Without Sir Claude?" Strangely, Mrs. Beale looked even brighter.
"Yes; in the eagerness to get at you. You abominable little
villain!"—and her stepmother, laughing clear, administered to her
cheek a pat that was partly a pinch. "What were you up to and what
did you take me for? But I'm glad to be abroad, and after all it's
you who have shown me the way. I mightn't, without you, have been
able to come—to come, that is, so soon. Well, here I am at any
rate and in a moment more I should have begun to worry about you.
This will do very well"—she was good-natured about the place and
even presently added that it was charming. Then with a rosier glow
she made again her great point: "I'm free, I'm free!" Maisie made
on her side her own: she carried back her gaze to Mrs. Wix, whom
amazement continued to hold; she drew afresh her old friend's
attention to the superior way she didn't take that up. What she
did take up the next minute was the question of Sir Claude. "Where
is he? Won't he come?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Beale's consideration of this oscillated with a smile between
the two expectancies with which she was flanked: it was
conspicuous, it was extraordinary, her unblinking acceptance of
Mrs. Wix, a miracle of which Maisie had even now begun to read a
reflexion in that lady's long visage. "He'll come, but we must
<i>make</i> him!" she gaily brought forth.</p>
<p>"Make him?" Maisie echoed.</p>
<p>"We must give him time. We must play our cards."</p>
<p>"But he promised us awfully," Maisie replied.</p>
<p>"My dear child, he has promised <i>me</i> awfully; I mean lots
of things, and not in every case kept his promise to the letter."
Mrs. Beale's good humour insisted on taking for granted Mrs. Wix's,
to whom her attention had suddenly grown prodigious. "I dare say
he has done the same with you, and not always come to time. But
he makes it up in his own way—and it isn't as if we didn't know
exactly what he is. There's one thing he is," she went on, "which
makes everything else only a question, for us, of tact." They
scarce had time to wonder what this was before, as they might have
said, it flew straight into their face. "He's as free as I am!"</p>
<p>"Yes, I know," said Maisie; as if, however, independently weighing
the value of that. She really weighed also the oddity of her
stepmother's treating it as news to <i>her</i>, who had been the
first person literally to whom Sir Claude had mentioned it. For a
few seconds, as if with the sound of it in her ears, she stood with
him again, in memory and in the twilight, in the hotel garden at
Folkestone.</p>
<p>Anything Mrs. Beale overlooked was, she indeed divined, but the
effect of an exaltation of high spirits, a tendency to soar that
showed even when she dropped—still quite impartially—almost to
the confidential. "Well, then—we've only to wait. He can't do
without us long. I'm sure, Mrs. Wix, he can't do without
<i>you</i>! He's devoted to you; he has told me so much about you.
The extent I count on you, you know, count on you to help me—"
was an extent that even all her radiance couldn't express. What it
couldn't express quite as much as what it could made at any rate
every instant her presence and even her famous freedom loom
larger; and it was this mighty mass that once more led her
companions, bewildered and disjoined, to exchange with each other
as through a thickening veil confused and ineffectual signs. They
clung together at least on the common ground of unpreparedness,
and Maisie watched without relief the havoc of wonder in Mrs. Wix.
It had reduced her to perfect impotence, and, but that gloom was
black upon her, she sat as if fascinated by Mrs. Beale's high
style. It had plunged her into a long deep hush; for what had
happened was the thing she had least allowed for and before which
the particular rigour she had worked up could only grow limp and
sick. Sir Claude was to have reappeared with his accomplice or
without her; never, never his accomplice without <i>him</i>. Mrs.
Beale had gained apparently by this time an advantage she could
pursue: she looked at the droll dumb figure with jesting
reproach. "You really won't shake hands with me? Never mind;
you'll come round!" She put the matter to no test, going on
immediately and, instead of offering her hand, raising it, with
a pretty gesture that her bent head met, to a long black pin that
played a part in her back hair. "Are hats worn at luncheon? If
you're as hungry as I am we must go right down."</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix stuck fast, but she met the question in a voice her
pupil scarce recognised. "I wear mine."</p>
<p>Mrs. Beale, swallowing at one glance her brand-new bravery,
which she appeared at once to refer to its origin and to follow
in its flights, accepted this as conclusive. "Oh but I've not
such a beauty!" Then she turned rejoicingly to Maisie. "I've
got a beauty for <i>you</i> my dear."</p>
<p>"A beauty?"</p>
<p>"A love of a hat—in my luggage. I remembered <i>that</i>"—she
nodded at the object on her stepdaughter's head—"and I've brought
you one with a peacock's breast. It's the most gorgeous blue!"</p>
<p>It was too strange, this talking with her there already not about
Sir Claude but about peacocks—too strange for the child to have
the presence of mind to thank her. But the felicity in which she
had arrived was so proof against everything that Maisie felt more
and more the depth of the purpose that must underlie it. She had a
vague sense of its being abysmal, the spirit with which Mrs. Beale
carried off the awkwardness, in the white and gold salon, of such
a want of breath and of welcome. Mrs. Wix was more breathless than
ever; the embarrassment of Mrs. Beale's isolation was as nothing
to the embarrassment of her grace. The perception of this dilemma
was the germ on the child's part of a new question altogether.
What if <i>with</i> this indulgence—? But the idea lost itself in
something too frightened for hope and too conjectured for fear;
and while everything went by leaps and bounds one of the waiters
stood at the door to remind them that the <i>table d'hôte</i>
was half over.</p>
<p>"Had you come up to wash hands?" Mrs. Beale hereupon asked them.
"Go and do it quickly and I'll be with you: they've put my boxes
in that nice room—it was Sir Claude's. Trust him," she laughed,
"to have a nice one!" The door of a neighbouring room stood open,
and now from the threshold, addressing herself again to Mrs. Wix,
she launched a note that gave the very key of what, as she would
have said, she was up to. "Dear lady, please attend to my
daughter."</p>
<p>She was up to a change of deportment so complete that it
represented—oh for offices still honourably subordinate if not
too explicitly menial—an absolute coercion, an interested clutch
of the old woman's respectability. There was response, to Maisie's
view, I may say at once, in the jump of that respectability to its
feet: it was itself capable of one of the leaps, one of the bounds
just mentioned, and it carried its charge, with this momentum and
while Mrs. Beale popped into Sir Claude's chamber, straight away
to where, at the end of the passage, pupil and governess were
quartered. The greatest stride of all, for that matter, was that
within a few seconds the pupil had, in another relation, been
converted into a daughter. Maisie's eyes were still following it
when, after the rush, with the door almost slammed and no thought
of soap and towels, the pair stood face to face. Mrs. Wix, in this
position, was the first to gasp a sound. "Can it ever be that
<i>she</i> has one?"</p>
<p>Maisie felt still more bewildered. "One what?"</p>
<p>"Why moral sense."</p>
<p>They spoke as if you might have two, but Mrs. Wix looked as if it
were not altogether a happy thought, and Maisie didn't see how
even an affirmative from her own lips would clear up what had
become most of a mystery. It was to this larger puzzle she sprang
pretty straight. "<i>Is</i> she my mother now?"</p>
<p>It was a point as to which an horrific glimpse of the
responsibility of an opinion appeared to affect Mrs. Wix like a
blow in the stomach. She had evidently never thought of it; but
she could think and rebound. "If she is, he's equally your
father."</p>
<p>Maisie, however, thought further. "Then my father and my
mother—!"</p>
<p>But she had already faltered and Mrs. Wix had already glared back:
"Ought to live together? Don't begin it <i>again</i>!" She turned
away with a groan, to reach the washing-stand, and Maisie could by
this time recognise with a certain ease that that way verily madness
did lie. Mrs. Wix gave a great untidy splash, but the next instant
had faced round. "She has taken a new line."</p>
<p>"She was nice to you," Maisie concurred.</p>
<p>"What <i>she</i> thinks so—'go and dress the young lady!'
But it's something!" she panted. Then she thought out the
rest. "If he won't have her, why she'll have <i>you</i>.
She'll be the one."</p>
<p>"The one to keep me abroad?"</p>
<p>"The one to give you a home." Mrs. Wix saw further; she mastered
all the portents. "Oh she's cruelly clever! It's not a moral
sense." She reached her climax: "It's a game!"</p>
<p>"A game?"</p>
<p>"Not to lose him. She has sacrificed him—to her duty."</p>
<p>"Then won't he come?" Maisie pleaded.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix made no answer; her vision absorbed her. "He has fought.
But she has won."</p>
<p>"Then won't he come?" the child repeated.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix made it out. "Yes, hang him!" She had never been so
profane.</p>
<p>For all Maisie minded! "Soon—to-morrow?"</p>
<p>"Too soon—whenever. Indecently soon."</p>
<p>"But then we <i>shall</i> be together!" the child went on.
It made Mrs. Wix look at her as if in exasperation; but nothing
had time to come before she precipitated: "Together with
<i>you</i>!" The air of criticism continued, but took voice only
in her companion's bidding her wash herself and come down. The
silence of quick ablutions fell upon them, presently broken,
however, by one of Maisie's sudden reversions. "Mercy, isn't
she handsome?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix had finished; she waited. "She'll attract attention."
They were rapid, and it would have been noticed that the shock the
beauty had given them acted, incongruously, as a positive spur to
their preparations for rejoining her. She had none the less, when
they returned to the sitting-room, already descended; the open
door of her room showed it empty and the chambermaid explained.
Here again they were delayed by another sharp thought of Mrs.
Wix's. "But what will she live on meanwhile?"</p>
<p>Maisie stopped short. "Till Sir Claude comes?"</p>
<p>It was nothing to the violence with which her friend had been
arrested. "Who'll pay the bills?"</p>
<p>Maisie thought. "Can't <i>she</i>?"</p>
<p>"She? She hasn't a penny."</p>
<p>The child wondered. "But didn't papa—?"</p>
<p>"Leave her a fortune?" Mrs. Wix would have appeared to speak of
papa as dead had she not immediately added: "Why he lives on other
women!"</p>
<p>Oh yes, Maisie remembered. "Then can't he send—" She faltered
again; even to herself it sounded queer.</p>
<p>"Some of their money to his wife?" Mrs. Wix pave a laugh still
stranger than the weird suggestion. "I dare say she'd take it!"</p>
<p>They hurried on again; yet again, on the stairs, Maisie pulled up.
"Well, if she had stopped in England—!" she threw out.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix considered. "And he had come over instead?"</p>
<p>"Yes, as we expected." Maisie launched her speculation. "What then
would she have lived on?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix hung fire but an instant. "On other men!" And she marched
downstairs.</p>
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