<p> <SPAN name="5"></SPAN></p>
<p> </p>
<h3>V<br/> </h3>
<p>The second parting from Miss Overmore had been bad enough, but
this first parting from Mrs. Wix was much worse. The child had
lately been to the dentist's and had a term of comparison for the
screwed-up intensity of the scene. It was dreadfully silent, as it
had been when her tooth was taken out; Mrs. Wix had on that
occasion grabbed her hand and they had clung to each other with
the frenzy of their determination not to scream. Maisie, at the
dentist's, had been heroically still, but just when she felt most
anguish had become aware of an audible shriek on the part of her
companion, a spasm of stifled sympathy. This was reproduced by the
only sound that broke their supreme embrace when, a month later,
the "arrangement," as her periodical uprootings were called,
played the part of the horrible forceps. Embedded in Mrs. Wix's
nature as her tooth had been socketed in her gum, the operation of
extracting her would really have been a case for chloroform. It
was a hug that fortunately left nothing to say, for the poor
woman's want of words at such an hour seemed to fall in with her
want of everything. Maisie's alternate parent, in the outermost
vestibule—he liked the impertinence of crossing as much as that
of his late wife's threshold—stood over them with his open watch
and his still more open grin, while from the only corner of an eye
on which something of Mrs. Wix's didn't impinge the child saw at
the door a brougham in which Miss Overmore also waited. She
remembered the difference when, six months before, she had been
torn from the breast of that more spirited protectress. Miss
Overmore, then also in the vestibule, but of course in the other
one, had been thoroughly audible and voluble; her protest had rung
out bravely and she had declared that something—her pupil didn't
know exactly what—was a regular wicked shame. That had at the
time dimly recalled to Maisie the far-away moment of Moddle's
great outbreak: there seemed always to be "shames" connected in
one way or another with her migrations. At present, while Mrs.
Wix's arms tightened and the smell of her hair was strong, she
further remembered how, in pacifying Miss Overmore, papa had made
use of the words "you dear old duck!"—an expression which, by its
oddity, had stuck fast in her young mind, having moreover a place
well prepared for it there by what she knew of the governess whom
she now always mentally characterised as the pretty one. She
wondered whether this affection would be as great as before: that
would at all events be the case with the prettiness Maisie could
see in the face which showed brightly at the window of the
brougham.</p>
<p>The brougham was a token of harmony, of the fine conditions papa
would this time offer: he had usually come for her in a hansom,
with a four-wheeler behind for the boxes. The four-wheeler with
the boxes on it was actually there, but mamma was the only lady
with whom she had ever been in a conveyance of the kind always of
old spoken of by Moddle as a private carriage. Papa's carriage
was, now that he had one, still more private, somehow, than
mamma's; and when at last she found herself quite on top, as she
felt, of its inmates and gloriously rolling away, she put to Miss
Overmore, after another immense and talkative squeeze, a question
of which the motive was a desire for information as to the
continuity of a certain sentiment. "Did papa like you just the
same while I was gone?" she enquired—full of the sense of how
markedly his favour had been established in her presence. She had
bethought herself that this favour might, like her presence and as
if depending on it, be only intermittent and for the season. Papa,
on whose knee she sat, burst into one of those loud laughs of his
that, however prepared she was, seemed always, like some trick in
a frightening game, to leap forth and make her jump. Before Miss
Overmore could speak he replied: "Why, you little donkey, when
you're away what have I left to do but just to love her?" Miss
Overmore hereupon immediately took her from him, and they had a
merry little scrimmage over her of which Maisie caught the
surprised perception in the white stare of an old lady who passed
in a victoria. Then her beautiful friend remarked to her very
gravely: "I shall make him understand that if he ever again says
anything as horrid as that to you I shall carry you straight off
and we'll go and live somewhere together and be good quiet little
girls." The child couldn't quite make out why her father's speech
had been horrid, since it only expressed that appreciation which
their companion herself had of old described as "immense." To
enter more into the truth of the matter she appealed to him again
directly, asked if in all those months Miss Overmore hadn't been
with him just as she had been before and just as she would be now.
"Of course she has, old girl—where else could the poor dear be?"
cried Beale Farange, to the still greater scandal of their
companion, who protested that unless he straightway "took back"
his nasty wicked fib it would be, this time, not only him she
would leave, but his child too and his house and his tiresome
trouble—all the impossible things he had succeeded in putting on
her. Beale, under this frolic menace, took nothing back at all; he
was indeed apparently on the point of repeating his extravagance,
but Miss Overmore instructed her little charge that she was not to
listen to his bad jokes: she was to understand that a lady
couldn't stay with a gentleman that way without some awfully
proper reason.</p>
<p>Maisie looked from one of her companions to the other; this was
the freshest gayest start she had yet enjoyed, but she had a shy
fear of not exactly believing them. "Well, what reason <i>is</i>
proper?" she thoughtfully demanded.</p>
<p>"Oh a long-legged stick of a tomboy: there's none so good as
that." Her father enjoyed both her drollery and his own and tried
again to get possession of her—an effort deprecated by their
comrade and leading again to something of a public scuffle. Miss
Overmore declared to the child that she had been all the while
with good friends; on which Beale Farange went on: "She means good
friends of mine, you know—tremendous friends of mine. There has
been no end of <i>them</i> about—that I <i>will</i> say for her!"
Maisie felt bewildered and was afterwards for some time conscious
of a vagueness, just slightly embarrassing, as to the subject of so
much amusement and as to where her governess had really been. She
didn't feel at all as if she had been seriously told, and no such
feeling was supplied by anything that occurred later. Her
embarrassment, of a precocious instinctive order, attached itself
to the idea that this was another of the matters it was not for
her, as her mother used to say, to go into. Therefore, under her
father's roof during the time that followed, she made no attempt
to clear up her ambiguity by an ingratiating way with housemaids;
and it was an odd truth that the ambiguity itself took nothing
from the fresh pleasure promised her by renewed contact with Miss
Overmore. The confidence looked for by that young lady was of the
fine sort that explanation can't improve, and she herself at any
rate was a person superior to any confusion. For Maisie moreover
concealment had never necessarily seemed deception; she had grown
up among things as to which her foremost knowledge was that she
was never to ask about them. It was far from new to her that the
questions of the small are the peculiar diversion of the great:
except the affairs of her doll Lisette there had scarcely ever
been anything at her mother's that was explicable with a grave
face. Nothing was so easy to her as to send the ladies who
gathered there off into shrieks, and she might have practised upon
them largely if she had been of a more calculating turn.
Everything had something behind it: life was like a long, long
corridor with rows of closed doors. She had learned that at these
doors it was wise not to knock—this seemed to produce from within
such sounds of derision. Little by little, however, she understood
more, for it befell that she was enlightened by Lisette's
questions, which reproduced the effect of her own upon those for
whom she sat in the very darkness of Lisette. Was she not herself
convulsed by such innocence? In the presence of it she often
imitated the shrieking ladies. There were at any rate things she
really couldn't tell even a French doll. She could only pass on
her lessons and study to produce on Lisette the impression of
having mysteries in her life, wondering the while whether she
succeeded in the air of shading off, like her mother, into the
unknowable. When the reign of Miss Overmore followed that of Mrs.
Wix she took a fresh cue, emulating her governess and bridging
over the interval with the simple expectation of trust. Yes, there
were matters one couldn't "go into" with a pupil. There were for
instance days when, after prolonged absence, Lisette, watching her
take off her things, tried hard to discover where she had been.
Well, she discovered a little, but never discovered all. There was
an occasion when, on her being particularly indiscreet, Maisie
replied to her—and precisely about the motive of a
disappearance—as she, Maisie, had once been replied to by Mrs.
Farange: "Find out for yourself!" She mimicked her mother's
sharpness, but she was rather ashamed afterwards, though as to
whether of the sharpness or of the mimicry was not quite clear.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />