<p> <SPAN name="30"></SPAN></p>
<p> </p>
<h3>XXX<br/> </h3>
<p>After they were seated there it was different: the place was not
below the hotel, but further along the quay; with wide, clear
windows and a floor sprinkled with bran in a manner that gave it
for Maisie something of the added charm of a circus. They had
pretty much to themselves the painted spaces and the red plush
benches; these were shared by a few scattered gentlemen who picked
teeth, with facial contortions, behind little bare tables, and by
an old personage in particular, a very old personage with a red
ribbon in his buttonhole, whose manner of soaking buttered rolls
in coffee and then disposing of them in the little that was left
of the interval between his nose and chin might at a less anxious
hour have cast upon Maisie an almost envious spell. They too had
their <i>café au lait</i> and their buttered rolls,
determined by Sir Claude's asking her if she could with that
light aid wait till the hour of déjeuner. His allusion
to this meal gave her, in the shaded sprinkled coolness, the
scene, as she vaguely felt, of a sort of ordered mirrored
licence, the haunt of those—the
irregular, like herself—who went to bed or who rose too late,
something to think over while she watched the white-aproned waiter
perform as nimbly with plates and saucers as a certain conjurer
her friend had in London taken her to a music-hall to see. Sir
Claude had presently begun to talk again, to tell her how London
had looked and how long he had felt himself, on either side, to
have been absent; all about Susan Ash too and the amusement as
well as the difficulty he had had with her; then all about his
return journey and the Channel in the night and the crowd of
people coming over and the way there were always too many one
knew. He spoke of other matters beside, especially of what she
must tell him of the occupations, while he was away, of Mrs. Wix
and her pupil. Hadn't they had the good time he had promised?—had
he exaggerated a bit the arrangements made for their pleasure?
Maisie had something—not all there was—to say of his success and
of their gratitude: she had a complication of thought that grew
every minute, grew with the consciousness that she had never seen
him in this particular state in which he had been given back.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix had once said—it was once or fifty times; once was
enough for Maisie, but more was not too much—that he was
wonderfully various. Well, he was certainly so, to the child's
mind, on the present occasion: he was much more various than he
was anything else. Besides, the fact that they were together in a
shop, at a nice little intimate table as they had so often been in
London, only made greater the difference of what they were
together about. This difference was in his face, in his voice, in
every look he gave her and every movement he made. They were not
the looks and the movements he really wanted to show, and she
could feel as well that they were not those she herself wanted.
She had seen him nervous, she had seen every one she had come in
contact with nervous, but she had never seen him so nervous as
this. Little by little it gave her a settled terror, a terror that
partook of the coldness she had felt just before, at the hotel, to
find herself, on his answer about Mrs. Beale, disbelieve him. She
seemed to see at present, to touch across the table, as if by
laying her hand on it, what he had meant when he confessed on
those several occasions to fear. Why was such a man so often
afraid? It must have begun to come to her now that there was one
thing just such a man above all could be afraid of. He could be
afraid of himself. His fear at all events was there; his fear was
sweet to her, beautiful and tender to her, was having coffee and
buttered rolls and talk and laughter that were no talk and
laughter at all with her; his fear was in his jesting postponing
perverting voice; it was just in this make-believe way he had
brought her out to imitate the old London playtimes, to imitate
indeed a relation that had wholly changed, a relation that she had
with her very eyes seen in the act of change when, the day before
in the salon, Mrs. Beale rose suddenly before her. She rose before
her, for that matter, now, and even while their refreshment
delayed Maisie arrived at the straight question for which, on
their entrance, his first word had given opportunity. "Are we
going to have déjeuner with Mrs. Beale?"</p>
<p>His reply was anything but straight. "You and I?"</p>
<p>Maisie sat back in her chair. "Mrs. Wix and me."</p>
<p>Sir Claude also shifted. "That's an enquiry, my dear child, that
Mrs. Beale herself must answer." Yes, he had shifted; but
abruptly, after a moment during which something seemed to hang
there between them and, as it heavily swayed, just fan them with
the air of its motion, she felt that the whole thing was upon
them. "Do you mind," he broke out, "my asking you what Mrs. Wix
has said to you?"</p>
<p>"Said to me?"</p>
<p>"This day or two—while I was away."</p>
<p>"Do you mean about you and Mrs. Beale?"</p>
<p>Sir Claude, resting on his elbows, fixed his eyes a moment on the
white marble beneath them. "No; I think we had a good deal of
that—didn't we?—before I left you. It seems to me we had it
pretty well all out. I mean about yourself, about your—don't you
know?—associating with us, as I might say, and staying on with
us. While you were alone with our friend what did she say?"</p>
<p>Maisie felt the weight of the question; it kept her silent for a
space during which she looked at Sir Claude, whose eyes remained
bent. "Nothing," she returned at last.</p>
<p>He showed incredulity. "Nothing?"</p>
<p>"Nothing," Maisie repeated; on which an interruption descended in
the form of a tray bearing the preparations for their breakfast.
These preparations were as amusing as everything else; the waiter
poured their coffee from a vessel like a watering-pot and then
made it froth with the curved stream of hot milk that dropped from
the height of his raised arm; but the two looked across at each
other through the whole play of French pleasantness with a gravity
that had now ceased to dissemble. Sir Claude sent the waiter off
again for something and then took up her answer. "Hasn't she tried
to affect you?"</p>
<p>Face to face with him thus it seemed to Maisie that she had tried
so little as to be scarce worth mentioning; again therefore an
instant she shut herself up. Presently she found her middle
course. "Mrs. Beale likes her now; and there's one thing I've
found out—a great thing. Mrs. Wix enjoys her being so kind. She
was tremendously kind all day yesterday."</p>
<p>"I see. And what did she do?" Sir Claude asked.</p>
<p>Maisie was now busy with her breakfast, and her companion attacked
his own; so that it was all, in form at least, even more than
their old sociability. "Everything she could think of. She was as
nice to her as you are," the child said. "She talked to her all
day."</p>
<p>"And what did she say to her?"</p>
<p>"Oh I don't know." Maisie was a little bewildered with his
pressing her so for knowledge; it didn't fit into the degree of
intimacy with Mrs. Beale that Mrs. Wix had so denounced and that,
according to that lady, had now brought him back in bondage.
Wasn't he more aware than his stepdaughter of what would be done
by the person to whom he was bound? In a moment, however, she
added: "She made love to her."</p>
<p>Sir Claude looked at her harder, and it was clearly something in
her tone that made him quickly say: "You don't mind my asking you,
do you?"</p>
<p>"Not at all; only I should think you'd know better than I."</p>
<p>"What Mrs. Beale did yesterday?"</p>
<p>She thought he coloured a trifle; but almost simultaneously
with that impression she found herself answering: "Yes—if you
have seen her."</p>
<p>He broke into the loudest of laughs. "Why, my dear boy, I told you
just now I've absolutely not. I say, don't you believe me?"</p>
<p>There was something she was already so afraid of that it covered
up other fears. "Didn't you come back to see her?" she enquired in
a moment. "Didn't you come back because you always want to so
much?"</p>
<p>He received her enquiry as he had received her doubt—with an
extraordinary absence of resentment. "I can imagine of course why
you think that. But it doesn't explain my doing what I have. It
was, as I said to you just now at the inn, really and truly you I
wanted to see."</p>
<p>She felt an instant as she used to feel when, in the back garden
at her mother's, she took from him the highest push of a
swing—high, high, high—that he had had put there for her
pleasure and that had finally broken down under the weight and the
extravagant patronage of the cook. "Well, that's beautiful. But to
see me, you mean, and go away again?"</p>
<p>"My going away again is just the point. I can't tell yet—it all
depends."</p>
<p>"On Mrs. Beale?" Maisie asked. "<i>She</i> won't go away." He
finished emptying his coffee-cup and then, when he had put it down,
leaned back in his chair, where she could see that he smiled on
her. This only added to her idea that he was in trouble, that he
was turning somehow in his pain and trying different things. He
continued to smile and she went on: "Don't you know that?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I may as well confess to you that as much as that I do know.
<i>She</i> won't go away. She'll stay."</p>
<p>"She'll stay. She'll stay," Maisie repeated.</p>
<p>"Just so. Won't you have some more coffee?"</p>
<p>"Yes, please."</p>
<p>"And another buttered roll?"</p>
<p>"Yes, please."</p>
<p>He signed to the hovering waiter, who arrived with the shining
spout of plenty in either hand and with the friendliest interest
in mademoiselle. <i>"Les tartines sont là."</i> Their cups
were replenished and, while he watched almost musingly the bubbles
in the fragrant mixture, "Just so—just so," Sir Claude said again
and again. "It's awfully awkward!" he exclaimed when the waiter
had gone.</p>
<p>"That she won't go?"</p>
<p>"Well—everything! Well, well, well!" But he pulled himself
together; he began again to eat. "I came back to ask you
something. That's what I came back for."</p>
<p>"I know what you want to ask me," Maisie said.</p>
<p>"Are you very sure?"</p>
<p>"I'm <i>almost</i> very."</p>
<p>"Well then risk it. You mustn't make <i>me</i> risk
everything."</p>
<p>She was struck with the force of this. "You want to know if I
should be happy with <i>them</i>."</p>
<p>"With those two ladies only? No, no, old man: <i>vous n'y
êtes pas</i>. So now—there!" Sir Claude laughed.</p>
<p>"Well then what is it?"</p>
<p>The next minute, instead of telling her what it was, he laid his
hand across the table on her own and held her as if under the
prompting of a thought. "Mrs. Wix would stay with <i>her</i>?"</p>
<p>"Without you? Oh yes—now."</p>
<p>"On account, as you just intimated, of Mrs. Beale's changed
manner?"</p>
<p>Maisie, with her sense of responsibility, weighed both Mrs.
Beale's changed manner and Mrs. Wix's human weakness. "I think she
talked her round."</p>
<p>Sir Claude thought a moment. "Ah poor dear!"</p>
<p>"Do you mean Mrs. Beale?"</p>
<p>"Oh no—Mrs. Wix."</p>
<p>"She likes being talked round—treated like any one else. Oh she
likes great politeness," Maisie expatiated. "It affects her very
much."</p>
<p>Sir Claude, to her surprise, demurred a little to this. "Very
much—up to a certain point."</p>
<p>"Oh up to any point!" Maisie returned with emphasis.</p>
<p>"Well, haven't I been polite to her?"</p>
<p>"Lovely—and she perfectly worships you."</p>
<p>"Then, my dear child, why can't she let me alone?"—this time Sir
Claude unmistakeably blushed. Before Maisie, however, could answer
his question, which would indeed have taken her long, he went on
in another tone: "Mrs. Beale thinks she has probably quite broken
her down. But she hasn't."</p>
<p>Though he spoke as if he were sure, Maisie was strong in the
impression she had just uttered and that she now again produced.
"She has talked her round."</p>
<p>"Ah yes; round to herself, but not round to me."</p>
<p>Oh she couldn't bear to hear him say that! "To you? Don't you
really believe how she loves you?"</p>
<p>Sir Claude examined his belief. "Of course I know she's
wonderful."</p>
<p>"She's just every bit as fond of you as <i>I</i> am," said
Maisie. "She told me so yesterday."</p>
<p>"Ah then," he promptly exclaimed, "she <i>has</i> tried to
affect you! I don't love <i>her</i>, don't you see? I do her
perfect justice," he pursued, "but I mean I don't love her as I
do you, and I'm sure you wouldn't seriously expect it. She's not
my daughter—come, old chap! She's not even my mother,
though I dare say it would have
been better for me if she had been. I'll do for her what I'd do
for my mother, but I won't do more." His real excitement broke out
in a need to explain and justify himself, though he kept trying to
correct and conceal it with laughs and mouthfuls and other vain
familiarities. Suddenly he broke off, wiping his moustache with
sharp pulls and coming back to Mrs. Beale. "Did she try to talk
<i>you</i> over?"</p>
<p>"No—to me she said very little. Very little indeed," Maisie
continued.</p>
<p>Sir Claude seemed struck with this. "She was only sweet to Mrs.
Wix?"</p>
<p>"As sweet as sugar!" cried Maisie.</p>
<p>He looked amused at her comparison, but he didn't contest it; he
uttered on the contrary, in an assenting way, a little
inarticulate sound. "I know what she <i>can</i> be. But much good
may it have done her! Mrs. Wix won't <i>come</i> 'round.' That's
what makes it so fearfully awkward."</p>
<p>Maisie knew it was fearfully awkward; she had known this now, she
felt, for some time, and there was something else it more
pressingly concerned her to learn. "What is it you meant you came
over to ask me?"</p>
<p>"Well," said Sir Claude, "I was just going to say. Let me tell you
it will surprise you." She had finished breakfast now and she sat
back in her chair again: she waited in silence to hear. He had
pushed the things before him a little way and had his elbows on
the table. This time, she was convinced, she knew what was coming,
and once more, for the crash, as with Mrs. Wix lately in her room,
she held her breath and drew together her eyelids. He was going to
say she must give him up. He looked hard at her again; then he
made his effort. "Should you see your way to let her go?"</p>
<p>She was bewildered. "To let who—?"</p>
<p>"Mrs. Wix simply. I put it at the worst. Should you see your way
to sacrifice her? Of course I know what I'm asking."</p>
<p>Maisie's eyes opened wide again; this was so different from what
she had expected. "And stay with you alone?"</p>
<p>He gave another push to his coffee-cup. "With me and Mrs. Beale.
Of course it would be rather rum; but everything in our whole
story is rather rum, you know. What's more unusual than for any
one to be given up, like you, by her parents?"</p>
<p>"Oh nothing is more unusual than <i>that</i>!" Maisie concurred,
relieved at the contact of a proposition as to which concurrence
could have lucidity.</p>
<p>"Of course it would be quite unconventional," Sir Claude went
on—"I mean the little household we three should make together;
but things have got beyond that, don't you see? They got beyond
that long ago. We shall stay abroad at any rate—it's ever so much
easier and it's our affair and nobody else's: it's no one's
business but ours on all the blessed earth. I don't say that for
Mrs. Wix, poor dear—I do her absolute justice. I respect her; I
see what she means; she has done me a lot of good. But there are
the facts. There they are, simply. And here am I, and here are
you. And she won't come round. She's right from her point of view.
I'm talking to you in the most extraordinary way—I'm always
talking to you in the most extraordinary way, ain't I? One would
think you were about sixty and that I—I don't know what any one
would think <i>I</i> am. Unless a beastly cad!" he suggested. "I've
been awfully worried, and this's what it has come to. You've done
us the most tremendous good, and you'll do it still and always,
don't you see? We can't let you go—you're everything. There are
the facts as I say. She <i>is</i> your mother now, Mrs. Beale, by
what has happened, and I, in the same way, I'm your father. No
one can contradict that, and we can't get out of it. My idea
would be a nice little place—somewhere in the South—where
she and you would be together and as good as any one else.
And I should be as good too, don't you see? for I shouldn't
live with you, but I should be close to you—just round
the corner, and it would be just the same. My idea would
be that it should all be perfectly open and frank.
<i>Honi soit qui mal y pense</i>, don't you know? You're the best
thing—you and what we can do for you—that either of us has ever
known," he came back to that. "When I say to her 'Give her up,
come,' she lets me have it bang in the face: 'Give her up
yourself!' It's the same old vicious circle—and when I say
vicious I don't mean a pun, a what-d'-ye-call-'em. Mrs. Wix is the
obstacle; I mean, you know, if she has affected you. She has
affected <i>me</i>, and yet here I am. I never was in such a tight
place: please believe it's only that that makes me put it to you
as I do. My dear child, isn't that—to put it so—just the way out
of it? That came to me yesterday, in London, after Mrs. Beale had
gone: I had the most infernal atrocious day. 'Go straight over and
put it to her: let her choose, freely, her own self.' So I do, old
girl—I put it to you. <i>Can</i> you choose freely?"</p>
<p>This long address, slowly and brokenly uttered, with fidgets and
falterings, with lapses and recoveries, with a mottled face and
embarrassed but supplicating eyes, reached the child from a
quarter so close that after the shock of the first sharpness she
could see intensely its direction and follow it from point to
point; all the more that it came back to the point at which it had
started. There was a word that had hummed all through it. "Do you
call it a 'sacrifice'?"</p>
<p>"Of Mrs. Wix? I'll call it whatever <i>you</i> call it. I won't
funk it—I haven't, have I? I'll face it in all its baseness. Does
it strike you it <i>is</i> base for me to get you well away from
her, to smuggle you off here into a corner and bribe you with
sophistries and buttered rolls to betray her?"</p>
<p>"To betray her?"</p>
<p>"Well—to part with her."</p>
<p>Maisie let the question wait; the concrete image it presented was
the most vivid side of it. "If I part with her where will she go?"</p>
<p>"Back to London."</p>
<p>"But I mean what will she do?"</p>
<p>"Oh as for that I won't pretend I know. I don't. We all have our
difficulties."</p>
<p>That, to Maisie, was at this moment more striking than it had ever
been. "Then who'll teach me?"</p>
<p>Sir Claude laughed out. "What Mrs. Wix teaches?"</p>
<p>She smiled dimly; she saw what he meant. "It isn't so very very
much."</p>
<p>"It's so very very little," he returned, "that that's a thing
we've positively to consider. We probably shouldn't give you
another governess. To begin with we shouldn't be able to get
one—not of the only kind that would do. It wouldn't do—the kind
that <i>would</i> do," he queerly enough explained. "I mean they
wouldn't stay—heigh-ho! We'd do you ourselves. Particularly
me. You see I <i>can</i> now; I haven't got to mind—what I
used to. I won't fight shy as I did—she can show out <i>with</i>
me. Our relation, all round, is more regular."</p>
<p>It seemed wonderfully regular, the way he put it; yet none the
less, while she looked at it as judiciously as she could, the
picture it made persisted somehow in being a combination quite
distinct—an old woman and a little girl seated in deep silence on
a battered old bench by the rampart of the <i>haute ville</i>. It
was just at that hour yesterday; they were hand in hand; they had
melted together. "I don't think you yet understand how she clings
to you," Maisie said at last.</p>
<p>"I do—I do. But for all that—" And he gave, turning in his
conscious exposure, an oppressed impatient sigh; the sigh, even
his companion could recognise, of the man naturally accustomed to
that argument, the man who wanted thoroughly to be reasonable, but
who, if really he had to mind so many things, would be always
impossibly hampered. What it came to indeed was that he understood
quite perfectly. If Mrs. Wix clung it was all the more reason for
shaking Mrs. Wix off.</p>
<p>This vision of what she had brought him to occupied our young lady
while, to ask what he owed, he called the waiter and put down a
gold piece that the man carried off for change. Sir Claude looked
after him, then went on: "How could a woman have less to reproach
a fellow with? I mean as regards herself."</p>
<p>Maisie entertained the question. "Yes. How <i>could</i> she
have less? So why are you so sure she'll go?"</p>
<p>"Surely you heard why—you heard her come out three nights ago?
How can she do anything but go—after what she then said? I've
done what she warned me of—she was absolutely right. So here we
are. Her liking Mrs. Beale, as you call it now, is a motive
sufficient, with other things, to make her, for your sake, stay on
without me; it's not a motive sufficient to make her, even for
yours, stay on <i>with</i> me—swallow, don't you see? what she
can't swallow. And when you say she's as fond of me as you are I
think I can, if that's the case, challenge you a little on it.
Would <i>you</i>, only with those two, stay on without me?"</p>
<p>The waiter came back with the change, and that gave her, under
this appeal, a moment's respite. But when he had retreated again
with the "tip" gathered in with graceful thanks on a subtle hint
from Sir Claude's forefinger, the latter, while pocketing the
money, followed the appeal up. "Would you let her make you live
with Mrs. Beale?"</p>
<p>"Without you? Never," Maisie then answered. "Never," she said
again.</p>
<p>It made him quite triumph, and she was indeed herself shaken by
the mere sound of it. "So you see you're not, like her," he
exclaimed, "so ready to give me away!" Then he came back to his
original question. "<i>Can</i> you choose? I mean can you settle
it by a word yourself? Will you stay on with us without her?"
Now in truth she felt the coldness of her terror, and it seemed
to her that suddenly she knew, as she knew it about Sir Claude,
what she was afraid of. She was afraid of herself. She looked
at him in such a way that it brought, she could see, wonder
into his face, a wonder held in check, however, by his frank
pretension to play fair with her, not to use advantages, not
to hurry nor hustle her—only to put her chance clearly and
kindly before her. "May I think?" she finally asked.</p>
<p>"Certainly, certainly. But how long?"</p>
<p>"Oh only a little while," she said meekly.</p>
<p>He had for a moment the air of wishing to look at it
as if it were the most cheerful prospect in the world.
"But what shall we do while you're thinking?" He spoke
as if thought were compatible with almost any distraction.</p>
<p>There was but one thing Maisie wished to do, and after an instant
she expressed it. "Have we got to go back to the hotel?"</p>
<p>"Do you want to?"</p>
<p>"Oh no."</p>
<p>"There's not the least necessity for it." He bent his eyes on his
watch; his face was now very grave. "We can do anything else in
the world." He looked at her again almost as if he were on the
point of saying that they might for instance start off for Paris.
But even while she wondered if that were not coming he had a
sudden drop. "We can take a walk."</p>
<p>She was all ready, but he sat there as if he had still something
more to say. This too, however, didn't come; so she herself spoke.
"I think I should like to see Mrs. Wix first."</p>
<p>"Before you decide? All right—all right." He had put on his hat,
but he had still to light a cigarette. He smoked a minute, with
his head thrown back, looking at the ceiling; then he said:
"There's one thing to remember—I've a right to impress it on you:
we stand absolutely in the place of your parents. It's their
defection, their extraordinary baseness, that has made our
responsibility. Never was a young person more directly committed
and confided." He appeared to say this over, at the ceiling,
through his smoke, a little for his own illumination. It carried
him after a pause somewhat further. "Though I admit it was to each
of us separately."</p>
<p>He gave her so at that moment and in that attitude the sense of
wanting, as it were, to be on her side—on the side of what would
be in every way most right and wise and charming for her—that she
felt a sudden desire to prove herself not less delicate and
magnanimous, not less solicitous for his own interests. What were
these but that of the "regularity" he had just before spoken of?
"It <i>was</i> to each of you separately," she accordingly with
much earnestness remarked. "But don't you remember? I brought you
together."</p>
<p>He jumped up with a delighted laugh. "Remember? Rather! You
brought us together, you brought us together. Come!"</p>
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