<p> <SPAN name="3"></SPAN></p>
<p> </p>
<h3>III<br/> </h3>
<p>She was therefore all the more startled when her mother said to
her in connexion with something to be done before her next
migration: "You understand of course that she's not going with
you."</p>
<p>Maisie turned quite faint. "Oh I thought she was."</p>
<p>"It doesn't in the least matter, you know, what you think," Mrs.
Farange loudly replied; "and you had better indeed for the future,
miss, learn to keep your thoughts to yourself." This was exactly
what Maisie had already learned, and the accomplishment was just
the source of her mother's irritation. It was of a horrid little
critical system, a tendency, in her silence, to judge her elders,
that this lady suspected her, liking as she did, for her own part,
a child to be simple and confiding. She liked also to hear the
report of the whacks she administered to Mr. Farange's character,
to his pretensions to peace of mind: the satisfaction of dealing
them diminished when nothing came back. The day was at hand, and
she saw it, when she should feel more delight in hurling Maisie at
him than in snatching her away; so much so that her conscience
winced under the acuteness of a candid friend who had remarked
that the real end of all their tugging would be that each parent
would try to make the little girl a burden to the other—a sort of
game in which a fond mother clearly wouldn't show to advantage.
The prospect of not showing to advantage, a distinction in which
she held she had never failed, begot in Ida Farange an ill humour
of which several persons felt the effect. She determined that
Beale at any rate should feel it; she reflected afresh that in the
study of how to be odious to him she must never give way. Nothing
could incommode him more than not to get the good, for the child,
of a nice female appendage who had clearly taken a fancy to her.
One of the things Ida said to the appendage was that Beale's was a
house in which no decent woman could consent to be seen. It was
Miss Overmore herself who explained to Maisie that she had had a
hope of being allowed to accompany her to her father's, and that
this hope had been dashed by the way her mother took it. "She says
that if I ever do such a thing as enter his service I must never
expect to show my face in this house again. So I've promised not
to attempt to go with you. If I wait patiently till you come back
here we shall certainly be together once more."</p>
<p>Waiting patiently, and above all waiting till she should come back
there, seemed to Maisie a long way round—it reminded her of all
the things she had been told, first and last, that she should have
if she'd be good and that in spite of her goodness she had never
had at all. "Then who'll take care of me at papa's?"</p>
<p>"Heaven only knows, my own precious!" Miss Overmore replied,
tenderly embracing her. There was indeed no doubt that she was
dear to this beautiful friend. What could have proved it better
than the fact that before a week was out, in spite of their
distressing separation and her mother's prohibition and Miss
Overmore's scruples and Miss Overmore's promise, the beautiful
friend had turned up at her father's? The little lady already
engaged there to come by the hour, a fat dark little lady with a
foreign name and dirty fingers, who wore, throughout, a bonnet
that had at first given her a deceptive air, too soon dispelled,
of not staying long, besides asking her pupil questions that had
nothing to do with lessons, questions that Beale Farange himself,
when two or three were repeated to him, admitted to be awfully
low—this strange apparition faded before the bright creature who
had braved everything for Maisie's sake. The bright creature told
her little charge frankly what had happened—that she had really
been unable to hold out. She had broken her vow to Mrs. Farange;
she had struggled for three days and then had come straight to
Maisie's papa and told him the simple truth. She adored his
daughter; she couldn't give her up; she'd make for her any
sacrifice. On this basis it had been arranged that she should
stay; her courage had been rewarded; she left Maisie in no doubt
as to the amount of courage she had required. Some of the things
she said made a particular impression on the child—her
declaration for instance that when her pupil should get older
she'd understand better just how "dreadfully bold" a young lady,
to do exactly what she had done, had to be.</p>
<p>"Fortunately your papa appreciates it; he appreciates it
<i>immensely</i>"—that was one of the things Miss Overmore also
said, with a striking insistence on the adverb. Maisie herself was
no less impressed with what this martyr had gone through, especially
after hearing of the terrible letter that had come from Mrs.
Farange. Mamma had been so angry that, in Miss Overmore's own
words, she had loaded her with insult—proof enough indeed that
they must never look forward to being together again under mamma's
roof. Mamma's roof, however, had its turn, this time, for the
child, of appearing but remotely contingent, so that, to reassure
her, there was scarce a need of her companion's secret, solemnly
confided—the probability there would be no going back to mamma at
all. It was Miss Overmore's private conviction, and a part of the
same communication, that if Mr. Farange's daughter would only show
a really marked preference she would be backed up by "public
opinion" in holding on to him. Poor Maisie could scarcely grasp
that incentive, but she could surrender herself to the day. She
had conceived her first passion, and the object of it was her
governess. It hadn't been put to her, and she couldn't, or at any
rate she didn't, put it to herself, that she liked Miss Overmore
better than she liked papa; but it would have sustained her under
such an imputation to feel herself able to reply that papa too
liked Miss Overmore exactly as much. He had particularly told her
so. Besides she could easily see it.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />