<p> <SPAN name="17"></SPAN></p>
<p> </p>
<h3>XVII<br/> </h3>
<p>If for reasons of her own she could bear the sense of Sir Claude's
displeasure her young endurance might have been put to a serious
test. The days went by without his knocking at her father's door,
and the time would have turned sadly to waste if something hadn't
conspicuously happened to give it a new difference. What took
place was a marked change in the attitude of Mrs. Beale—a change
that somehow, even in his absence, seemed to bring Sir Claude
again into the house. It began practically with a conversation
that occurred between them the day Maisie, came home alone in the
cab. Mrs. Beale had by that time returned, and she was more
successful than their friend in extracting from our young lady an
account of the extraordinary passage with the Captain. She came
back to it repeatedly, and on the very next day it grew distinct
to the child that she was already in full possession of what at
the same moment had been enacted between her ladyship and Sir
Claude. This was the real origin of her final perception that
though he didn't come to the house her stepmother had some rare
secret for not being quite without him. This led to some rare
passages with Mrs. Beale, the promptest of which had been—not on
Maisie's part—a wonderful outbreak of tears. Mrs. Beale was not,
as she herself said, a crying creature: she hadn't cried, to
Maisie's knowledge, since the lowly governess days, the grey dawn
of their connexion. But she wept now with passion, professing
loudly that it did her good and saying remarkable things to her
charge, for whom the occasion was an equal benefit, an addition to
all the fine precautionary wisdom stored away. It somehow hadn't
violated that wisdom, Maisie felt, for her to have told Mrs. Beale
what she had not told Sir Claude, inasmuch as the greatest strain,
to her sense, was between Sir Claude and Sir Claude's wife, and
his wife was just what Mrs. Beale was unfortunately not. He sent
his stepdaughter three days after the incident in Kensington
Gardens a message as frank as it was tender, and that was how Mrs.
Beale had had to bring out in a manner that seemed half an appeal,
half a defiance: "Well yes, hang it—I <i>do</i> see him!"</p>
<p>How and when and where, however, were just what Maisie was not to
know—an exclusion moreover that she never questioned in the light of
a participation large enough to make him, while she shared the ample
void of Mrs. Beale's rather blank independence, shine in her yearning
eye like the single, the sovereign window-square of a great dim
disproportioned room. As far as her father was concerned such hours
had no interruption; and then it was clear between them that each was
thinking of the absent and thinking the other thought, so that he was
an object of conscious reference in everything they said or did. The
wretched truth, Mrs. Beale had to confess, was that she had hoped
against hope and that in the Regent's Park it was impossible Sir
Claude should really be in and out. Hadn't they at last to look the
fact in the face?—it was too disgustingly evident that no one after
all had been squared. Well, if no one had been squared it was because
every one had been vile. No one and every one were of course Beale
and Ida, the extent of whose power to be nasty was a thing that, to a
little girl, Mrs. Beale simply couldn't give chapter and verse for.
Therefore it was that to keep going at all, as she said, that lady
had to make, as she also said, another arrangement—the arrangement
in which Maisie was included only to the point of knowing it existed
and wondering wistfully what it was. Conspicuously at any rate it
had a side that was responsible for Mrs. Beale's sudden emotion and
sudden confidence—a demonstration this, however, of which the
tearfulness was far from deterrent to our heroine's thought of how
happy she should be if she could only make an arrangement for
herself. Mrs. Beale's own operated, it appeared, with regularity
and frequency; for it was almost every day or two that she was
able to bring Maisie a message and to take one back. It had been
over the vision of what, as she called it, he did for her that she
broke down; and this vision was kept in a manner before Maisie by
a subsequent increase not only of the gaiety, but literally—it
seemed not presumptuous to perceive—of the actual virtue of her
friend. The friend was herself the first to proclaim it: he had
pulled her up immensely—he had quite pulled her round. She had
charming tormenting words about him: he was her good fairy, her
hidden spring—above all he was just her "higher" conscience. That
was what had particularly come out with her startling tears: he
had made her, dear man, think ever so much better of herself. It
had been thus rather surprisingly revealed that she had been in a
way to think ill, and Maisie was glad to hear of the corrective at
the same time that she heard of the ailment.</p>
<p>She presently found herself supposing, and in spite of her envy
even hoping, that whenever Mrs. Beale was out of the house Sir
Claude had in some manner the satisfaction of it. This was now of
more frequent occurrence than ever before—so much so that she
would have thought of her stepmother as almost extravagantly
absent had it not been that, in the first place, her father was a
superior specimen of that habit: it was the frequent remark of his
present wife, as it had been, before the tribunals of their
country, a prominent plea of her predecessor, that he scarce came
home even to sleep. In the second place Mrs. Beale, when she
<i>was</i> on the spot, had now a beautiful air of longing to make up
for everything. The only shadow in such bright intervals was that,
as Maisie put it to herself, she could get nothing by questions. It
was in the nature of things to be none of a small child's
business, even when a small child had from the first been deluded
into a fear that she might be only too much initiated. Things then
were in Maisie's experience so true to their nature that questions
were almost always improper; but she learned on the other hand
soon to recognise how at last, sometimes, patient little silences
and intelligent little looks could be rewarded by delightful
little glimpses. There had been years at Beale Farange's when the
monosyllable "he" meant always, meant almost violently, the
master; but all that was changed at a period at which Sir Claude's
merits were of themselves so much in the air that it scarce took
even two letters to name him. "He keeps me up splendidly—he does,
my own precious," Mrs. Beale would observe to her comrade; or else
she would say that the situation at the other establishment had
reached a point that could scarcely be believed—the point,
monstrous as it sounded, of his not having laid eyes upon her for
twelve days. "She" of course at Beale Farange's had never meant
any one but Ida, and there was the difference in this case that it
now meant Ida with renewed intensity. Mrs. Beale—it was
striking—was in a position to animadvert more and more upon her
dreadfulness, the moral of all which appeared to be how abominably
yet blessedly little she had to do with her husband. This flow of
information came home to our two friends because, truly, Mrs.
Beale had not much more to do with her own; but that was one of
the reflexions that Maisie could make without allowing it to break
the spell of her present sympathy. How could such a spell be
anything but deep when Sir Claude's influence, operating from
afar, at last really determined the resumption of his
stepdaughter's studies? Mrs. Beale again took fire about them and
was quite vivid for Maisie as to their being the great matter to
which the dear absent one kept her up.</p>
<p>This was the second source—I have just alluded to the first—of
the child's consciousness of something that, very hopefully, she
described to herself as a new phase; and it also presented in the
brightest light the fresh enthusiasm with which Mrs. Beale always
reappeared and which really gave Maisie a happier sense than she
had yet had of being very dear at least to two persons. That she
had small remembrance at present of a third illustrates, I am
afraid, a temporary oblivion of Mrs. Wix, an accident to be
explained only by a state of unnatural excitement. For what was
the form taken by Mrs. Beale's enthusiasm and acquiring relief in
the domestic conditions still left to her but the delightful form
of "reading" with her little charge on lines directly prescribed
and in works profusely supplied by Sir Claude? He had got hold of
an awfully good list—"mostly essays, don't you know?" Mrs. Beale
had said; a word always august to Maisie, but henceforth to be
softened by hazy, in fact by quite languorous edges. There was at
any rate a week in which no less than nine volumes arrived, and
the impression was to be gathered from Mrs. Beale that the obscure
intercourse she enjoyed with Sir Claude not only involved an
account and a criticism of studies, but was organised almost for
the very purpose of report and consultation. It was for Maisie's
education in short that, as she often repeated, she closed her
door—closed it to the gentlemen who used to flock there in such
numbers and whom her husband's practical desertion of her would
have made it a course of the highest indelicacy to receive. Maisie
was familiar from of old with the principle at least of the care
that a woman, as Mrs. Beale phrased it, attractive and exposed
must take of her "character," and was duly impressed with the
rigour of her stepmother's scruples. There was literally no one of
the other sex whom she seemed to feel at liberty to see at home,
and when the child risked an enquiry about the ladies who, one by
one, during her own previous period, had been made quite loudly
welcome, Mrs. Beale hastened to inform her that, one by one, they
had, the fiends, been found out, after all, to be awful. If she
wished to know more about them she was recommended to approach her
father.</p>
<p>Maisie had, however, at the very moment of this injunction much
livelier curiosities, for the dream of lectures at an institution
had at last become a reality, thanks to Sir Claude's now unbounded
energy in discovering what could be done. It stood out in this
connexion that when you came to look into things in a spirit of
earnestness an immense deal could be done for very little more
than your fare in the Underground. The institution—there was a
splendid one in a part of the town but little known to the
child—became, in the glow of such a spirit, a thrilling place,
and the walk to it from the station through Glower Street (a
pronunciation for which Mrs. Beale once laughed at her little
friend) a pathway literally strewn with "subjects." Maisie
imagined herself to pluck them as she went, though they thickened
in the great grey rooms where the fountain of knowledge, in the
form usually of a high voice that she took at first to be angry,
plashed in the stillness of rows of faces thrust out like empty
jugs. "It <i>must</i> do us good—it's all so hideous," Mrs. Beale
had immediately declared; manifesting a purity of resolution that
made these occasions quite the most harmonious of all the many on
which the pair had pulled together. Maisie certainly had never, in
such an association, felt so uplifted, and never above all been so
carried off her feet, as at the moments of Mrs. Beale's
breathlessly re-entering the house and fairly shrieking upstairs
to know if they should still be in time for a lecture. Her
stepdaughter, all ready from the earliest hours, almost leaped
over the banister to respond, and they dashed out together in
quest of learning as hard as they often dashed back to release
Mrs. Beale for other preoccupations. There had been in short no
bustle like these particular spasms, once they had broken out,
since that last brief flurry when Mrs. Wix, blowing as if she were
grooming her, "made up" for everything previously lost at her
father's.</p>
<p>These weeks as well were too few, but they were flooded with a new
emotion, part of which indeed came from the possibility that,
through the long telescope of Glower Street, or perhaps between
the pillars of the institution—which impressive objects were what
Maisie thought most made it one—they should some day spy Sir
Claude. That was what Mrs. Beale, under pressure, had
said—doubtless a little impatiently: "Oh yes, oh yes, some day!"
His joining them was clearly far less of a matter of course than
was to have been gathered from his original profession of desire
to improve in their company his own mind; and this sharpened our
young lady's guess that since that occasion either something
destructive had happened or something desirable hadn't. Mrs. Beale
had thrown but a partial light in telling her how it had turned
out that nobody had been squared. Maisie wished at any rate that
somebody <i>would</i> be squared. However, though in every approach
to the temple of knowledge she watched in vain for Sir Claude, there
was no doubt about the action of his loved image as an incentive
and a recompense. When the institution was most on pillars—or, as
Mrs. Beale put it, on stilts—when the subject was deepest and the
lecture longest and the listeners ugliest, then it was they both
felt their patron in the background would be most pleased with
them. One day, abruptly, with a glance at this background, Mrs.
Beale said to her companion: "We'll go to-night to the thingumbob
at Earl's Court"; an announcement putting forth its full lustre
when she had made known that she referred to the great Exhibition
just opened in that quarter, a collection of extraordinary foreign
things in tremendous gardens, with illuminations, bands,
elephants, switchbacks and side-shows, as well as crowds of people
among whom they might possibly see some one they knew. Maisie flew
in the same bound at the neck of her friend and at the name of Sir
Claude, on which Mrs. Beale confessed that—well, yes, there was
just a chance that he would be able to meet them. He never of
course, in his terrible position, knew what might happen from hour
to hour; but he hoped to be free and he had given Mrs. Beale the
tip. "Bring her there on the quiet and I'll try to turn up"—this
was clear enough on what so many weeks of privation had made of
his desire to see the child: it even appeared to represent on his
part a yearning as constant as her own. That in turn was just
puzzling enough to make Maisie express a bewilderment. She
couldn't see, if they were so intensely of the same mind, why the
theory on which she had come back to Mrs. Beale, the general
reunion, the delightful trio, should have broken down so in fact.
Mrs. Beale furthermore only gave her more to think about in saying
that their disappointment was the result of his having got into
his head a kind of idea.</p>
<p>"What kind of idea?"</p>
<p>"Oh goodness knows!" She spoke with an approach to asperity. "He's
so awfully delicate."</p>
<p>"Delicate?"—that was ambiguous.</p>
<p>"About what he does, don't you know?" said Mrs. Beale. She
fumbled. "Well, about what <i>we</i> do."</p>
<p>Maisie wondered. "You and me?"</p>
<p>"Me and <i>him</i>, silly!" cried Mrs. Beale with, this time, a
real giggle.</p>
<p>"But you don't do any harm—<i>you</i> don't," said Maisie,
wondering afresh and intending her emphasis as a decorous allusion
to her parents.</p>
<p>"Of course we don't, you angel—that's just the ground <i>I</i>
take!" her companion exultantly responded. "He says he doesn't want
you mixed up."</p>
<p>"Mixed up with what?"</p>
<p>"That's exactly what <i>I</i> want to know: mixed up with what,
and how you are any more mixed—?" Mrs. Beale paused without ending
her question. She ended after an instant in a different way. "All
you can say is that it's his fancy."</p>
<p>The tone of this, in spite of its expressing a resignation, the
fruit of weariness, that dismissed the subject, conveyed so
vividly how much such a fancy was not Mrs. Beale's own that our
young lady was led by the mere fact of contact to arrive at a dim
apprehension of the unuttered and the unknown. The relation
between her step-parents had then a mysterious residuum; this was
the first time she really had reflected that except as regards
herself it was not a relationship. To each other it was only what
they might have happened to make it, and she gathered that this,
in the event, had been something that led Sir Claude to keep away
from her. Didn't he fear she would be compromised? The perception
of such a scruple endeared him the more, and it flashed over her
that she might simplify everything by showing him how little she
made of such a danger. Hadn't she lived with her eyes on it from
her third year? It was the condition most frequently discussed at
the Faranges', where the word was always in the air and where at
the age of five, amid rounds of applause, she could gabble it off.
She knew as well in short that a person could be compromised as
that a person could be slapped with a hair-brush or left alone in
the dark, and it was equally familiar to her that each of these
ordeals was in general held to have too little effect. But the
first thing was to make absolutely sure of Mrs. Beale. This was
done by saying to her thoughtfully: "Well, if you don't mind—and
you really don't, do you?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Beale, with a dawn of amusement, considered. "Mixing you up?
Not a bit. For what does it mean?"</p>
<p>"Whatever it means I don't in the least mind <i>being</i> mixed.
Therefore if you don't and I don't," Maisie concluded, "don't you
think that when I see him this evening I had better just tell him
we don't and ask him why in the world <i>he</i> should?"</p>
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