<p> <SPAN name="26"></SPAN></p>
<p> </p>
<h3>XXVI<br/> </h3>
<p>Nothing so dreadful of course could be final or even for many
minutes prolonged: they rushed together again too soon for either
to feel that either had kept it up, and though they went home in
silence it was with a vivid perception for Maisie that her
companion's hand had closed upon her. That hand had shown
altogether, these twenty-four hours, a new capacity for closing,
and one of the truths the child could least resist was that a
certain greatness had now come to Mrs. Wix. The case was indeed
that the quality of her motive surpassed the sharpness of her
angles; both the combination and the singularity of which things,
when in the afternoon they used the carriage, Maisie could borrow
from the contemplative hush of their grandeur the freedom to feel
to the utmost. She still bore the mark of the tone in which her
friend had thrown out that threat of never losing sight of her.
This friend had been converted in short from feebleness to force;
and it was the light of her new authority that showed from how far
she had come. The threat in question, sharply exultant, might have
produced defiance; but before anything so ugly could happen
another process had insidiously forestalled it. The moment at
which this process had begun to mature was that of Mrs. Wix's
breaking out with a dignity attuned to their own apartments and
with an advantage now measurably gained. They had ordered coffee
after luncheon, in the spirit of Sir Claude's provision, and it
was served to them while they awaited their equipage in the white
and gold saloon. It was flanked moreover with a couple of
liqueurs, and Maisie felt that Sir Claude could scarce have been
taken more at his word had it been followed by anecdotes and
cigarettes. The influence of these luxuries was at any rate in the
air. It seemed to her while she tiptoed at the chimney-glass,
pulling on her gloves and with a motion of her head shaking a
feather into place, to have had something to do with Mrs. Wix's
suddenly saying: "Haven't you really and truly <i>any</i> moral
sense?"</p>
<p>Maisie was aware that her answer, though it brought her down to
her heels, was vague even to imbecility, and that this was the
first time she had appeared to practise with Mrs. Wix an
intellectual inaptitude to meet her—the infirmity to which she
had owed so much success with papa and mamma. The appearance did
her injustice, for it was not less through her candour than
through her playfellow's pressure that after this the idea of a
moral sense mainly coloured their intercourse. She began, the poor
child, with scarcely knowing what it was; but it proved something
that, with scarce an outward sign save her surrender to the swing
of the carriage, she could, before they came back from their
drive, strike up a sort of acquaintance with. The beauty of the
day only deepened, and the splendour of the afternoon sea, and the
haze of the far headlands, and the taste of the sweet air. It was
the coachman indeed who, smiling and cracking his whip, turning in
his place, pointing to invisible objects and uttering
unintelligible sounds—all, our tourists recognised, strict
features of a social order principally devoted to language: it was
this polite person, I say, who made their excursion fall so much
short that their return left them still a stretch of the long
daylight and an hour that, at his obliging suggestion, they spent
on foot by the shining sands. Maisie had seen the <i>plage</i> the
day before with Sir Claude, but that was a reason the more for
showing on the spot to Mrs. Wix that it was, as she said, another
of the places on her list and of the things of which she knew the
French name. The bathers, so late, were absent and the tide was
low; the sea-pools twinkled in the sunset and there were dry
places as well, where they could sit again and admire and
expatiate: a circumstance that, while they listened to the lap of
the waves, gave Mrs. Wix a fresh support for her challenge. "Have
you absolutely none at all?"</p>
<p>She had no need now, as to the question itself at least, to be
specific; that on the other hand was the eventual result of their
quiet conjoined apprehension of the thing that—well, yes, since
they must face it—Maisie absolutely and appallingly had so little
of. This marked more particularly the moment of the child's
perceiving that her friend had risen to a level which might—till
superseded at all events—pass almost for sublime. Nothing more
remarkable had taken place in the first heat of her own departure,
no act of perception less to be overtraced by our rough method,
than her vision, the rest of that Boulogne day, of the manner in
which she figured. I so despair of courting her noiseless mental
footsteps here that I must crudely give you my word for its being
from this time forward a picture literally present to her. Mrs.
Wix saw her as a little person knowing so extraordinarily much
that, for the account to be taken of it, what she still didn't
know would be ridiculous if it hadn't been embarrassing. Mrs. Wix
was in truth more than ever qualified to meet embarrassment; I am
not sure that Maisie had not even a dim discernment of the queer
law of her own life that made her educate to that sort of
proficiency those elders with whom she was concerned. She
promoted, as it were, their development; nothing could have been
more marked for instance than her success in promoting Mrs.
Beale's. She judged that if her whole history, for Mrs. Wix, had
been the successive stages of her knowledge, so the very climax of
the concatenation would, in the same view, be the stage at which
the knowledge should overflow. As she was condemned to know more
and more, how could it logically stop before she should know Most?
It came to her in fact as they sat there on the sands that she was
distinctly on the road to know Everything. She had not had
governesses for nothing: what in the world had she ever done but
learn and learn and learn? She looked at the pink sky with a
placid foreboding that she soon should have learnt All. They
lingered in the flushed air till at last it turned to grey and she
seemed fairly to receive new information from every brush of the
breeze. By the time they moved homeward it was as if this
inevitability had become for Mrs. Wix a long, tense cord, twitched
by a nervous hand, on which the valued pearls of intelligence were
to be neatly strung.</p>
<p>In the evening upstairs they had another strange sensation, as to
which Maisie couldn't afterwards have told you whether it was bang
in the middle or quite at the beginning that her companion sounded
with fresh emphasis the note of the moral sense. What mattered was
merely that she did exclaim, and again, as at first appeared, most
disconnectedly: "God help me, it does seem to peep out!" Oh the
queer confusions that had wooed it at last to such peeping! None
so queer, however, as the words of woe, and it might verily be
said of rage, in which the poor lady bewailed the tragic end of
her own rich ignorance. There was a point at which she seized the
child and hugged her as close as in the old days of partings and
returns; at which she was visibly at a loss how to make up to such
a victim for such contaminations: appealing, as to what she had
done and was doing, in bewilderment, in explanation, in
supplication, for reassurance, for pardon and even outright for
pity.</p>
<p>"I don't know what I've said to you, my own: I don't know what I'm
saying or what the turn you've given my life has rendered me,
heaven forgive me, capable of saying. Have I lost all delicacy,
all decency, all measure of how far and how bad? It seems to me
mostly that I have, though I'm the last of whom you would ever
have thought it. I've just done it for <i>you</i>, precious—not to
lose you, which would have been worst of all: so that I've had to
pay with my own innocence, if you do laugh! for clinging to you and
keeping you. Don't let me pay for nothing; don't let me have been
thrust for nothing into such horrors and such shames. I never knew
anything about them and I never wanted to know! Now I know too
much, too much!" the poor woman lamented and groaned. "I know so
much that with hearing such talk I ask myself where I am; and with
uttering it too, which is worse, say to myself that I'm far, too
far, from where I started! I ask myself what I should have thought
with my lost one if I had heard myself cross the line. There are
lines I've crossed with <i>you</i> where I should have fancied I had
come to a pretty pass—" She gasped at the mere supposition. "I've
gone from one thing to another, and all for the real love of you;
and now what would any one say—I mean any one but <i>them</i>—if
they were to hear the way I go on? I've had to keep up with you,
haven't I?—and therefore what could I do less than look to you to
keep up with <i>me</i>? But it's not <i>them</i> that are the
worst—by which I mean to say it's not <i>him</i>: it's your
dreadfully base papa and the one person in the world whom he could
have found, I do believe—and she's not the Countess,
duck—wickeder than himself. While they were about it at any rate,
since they <i>were</i> ruining you, they might have done it so as
to spare an honest woman. Then I shouldn't have
had to do whatever it is that's the worst: throw up at you the
badness you haven't taken in, or find my advantage in the vileness
you <i>have</i>! What I did lose patience at this morning was at
how it was that without your seeming to condemn—for you didn't,
you remember!—you yet did seem to <i>know</i>. Thank God, in his
mercy, at last, <i>if</i> you do!"</p>
<p>The night, this time, was warm, and one of the windows stood open
to the small balcony over the rail of which, on coming back from
dinner, Maisie had hung a long time in the enjoyment of the
chatter, the lights, the life of the quay made brilliant by the
season and the hour. Mrs. Wix's requirements had drawn her in from
this pasture and Mrs. Wix's embrace had detained her even though
midway in the outpouring her confusion and sympathy had permitted,
or rather had positively helped, her to disengage herself. But the
casement was still wide, the spectacle, the pleasure were still
there, and from her place in the room, which, with its polished
floor and its panels of elegance, was lighted from without more
than from within, the child could still take account of them. She
appeared to watch and listen; after which she answered Mrs. Wix
with a question. "If I do know—?"</p>
<p>"If you do condemn." The correction was made with some austerity.</p>
<p>It had the effect of causing Maisie to heave a vague sigh of
oppression and then after an instant and as if under cover of this
ambiguity pass out again upon the balcony. She hung again over the
rail; she felt the summer night; she dropped down into the manners
of France. There was a café below the hotel, before which,
with little chairs and tables, people sat on a space enclosed by
plants in tubs; and the impression was enriched by the flash of the
white aprons of waiters and the music of a man and a woman who, from
beyond the precinct, sent up the strum of a guitar and the drawl
of a song about "amour." Maisie knew what "amour" meant too, and
wondered if Mrs. Wix did: Mrs. Wix remained within, as still as a
mouse and perhaps not reached by the performance. After a while,
but not till the musicians had ceased and begun to circulate with
a little plate, her pupil came back to her. "<i>Is</i> it a crime?"
Maisie then asked.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix was as prompt as if she had been crouching in a lair.
"Branded by the Bible."</p>
<p>"Well, he won't commit a crime."</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix looked at her gloomily. "He's committing one now."</p>
<p>"Now?"</p>
<p>"In being with her."</p>
<p>Maisie had it on her tongue's end to return once more: "But now
he's free." She remembered, however, in time that one of the
things she had known for the last entire hour was that this made
no difference. After that, and as if to turn the right way, she
was on the point of a blind dash, a weak reversion to the reminder
that it might make a difference, might diminish the crime for Mrs.
Beale; till such a reflexion was in its order also quashed by the
visibility in Mrs. Wix's face of the collapse produced by her
inference from her pupil's manner that after all her pains her
pupil didn't even yet adequately understand. Never so much as when
confronted had Maisie wanted to understand, and all her thought
for a minute centred in the effort to come out with something
which should be a disproof of her simplicity. "Just <i>trust</i>
me, dear; that's all!"—she came out finally with that; and it was
perhaps a good sign of her action that with a long, impartial moan
Mrs. Wix floated her to bed.</p>
<p>There was no letter the next morning from Sir Claude—which Mrs.
Wix let out that she deemed the worst of omens; yet it was just
for the quieter communion they so got with him that, when after
the coffee and rolls which made them more foreign than ever, it
came to going forth for fresh drafts upon his credit they wandered
again up the hill to the rampart instead of plunging into
distraction with the crowd on the sands or into the sea with the
semi-nude bathers. They gazed once more at their gilded Virgin;
they sank once more upon their battered bench; they felt once more
their distance from the Regent's Park. At last Mrs. Wix became
definite about their friend's silence. "He <i>is</i> afraid of her!
She has forbidden him to write." The fact of his fear Maisie
already knew; but her companion's mention of it had at this moment
two unexpected results. The first was her wondering in dumb
remonstrance how Mrs. Wix, with a devotion not after all inferior
to her own, could put into such an allusion such a grimness of
derision; the second was that she found herself suddenly drop into
a deeper view of it. She too had been afraid, as we have seen, of
the people of whom Sir Claude was afraid, and by that law she had
had her due measure of latest apprehension of Mrs. Beale. What
occurred at present, however, was that, whereas this sympathy
appeared vain as for him, the ground of it loomed dimly as a
reason for selfish alarm. That uneasiness had not carried her far
before Mrs. Wix spoke again and with an abruptness so great as
almost to seem irrelevant. "Has it never occurred to you to be
jealous of her?"</p>
<p>It never had in the least; yet the words were scarce in the air
before Maisie had jumped at them. She held them well, she looked
at them hard; at last she brought out with an assurance which
there was no one, alas, but herself to admire: "Well, yes—since
you ask me." She debated, then continued: "Lots of times!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix glared askance an instant; such approval as her look
expressed was not wholly unqualified. It expressed at any rate
something that presumably had to do with her saying once more:
"Yes. He's afraid of her."</p>
<p>Maisie heard, and it had afresh its effect on her even through the
blur of the attention now required by the possibility of that idea
of jealousy—a possibility created only by her feeling she had
thus found the way to show she was not simple. It struck out of
Mrs. Wix that this lady still believed her moral sense to be
interested and feigned; so what could be such a gage of her
sincerity as a peep of the most restless of the passions? Such a
revelation would baffle discouragement, and discouragement was in
fact so baffled that, helped in some degree by the mere intensity
of their need to hope, which also, according to its nature, sprang
from the dark portent of the absent letter, the real pitch of
their morning was reached by the note, not of mutual scrutiny, but
of unprecedented frankness. There were broodings indeed and
silences, and Maisie sank deeper into the vision that for her
friend she was, at the most, superficial, and that also,
positively, she was the more so the more she tried to appear
complete. Was the sum of all knowledge only to know how little in
this presence one would ever reach it? The answer to that question
luckily lost itself in the brightness suffusing the scene as soon
as Maisie had thrown out in regard to Mrs. Beale such a remark as
she had never dreamed she should live to make. "If I thought she
was unkind to him—I don't know <i>what</i> I should do!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix dropped one of her squints; she even confirmed it by a
wild grunt. "I know what <i>I</i> should!"</p>
<p>Maisie at this felt that she lagged. "Well, I can think of
<i>one</i> thing."</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix more directly challenged her. "What is it then?"</p>
<p>Maisie met her expression as if it were a game with forfeits for
winking. "I'd <i>kill</i> her!" That at least, she hoped as she
looked away, would guarantee her moral sense. She looked away, but
her companion said nothing for so long that she at last turned her
head again. Then she saw the straighteners all blurred with tears
which after a little seemed to have sprung from her own eyes.
There were tears in fact on both sides of the spectacles, and they
were even so thick that it was presently all Maisie could do to
make out through them that slowly, finally Mrs. Wix put forth a
hand. It was the material pressure that settled this and even at
the end of some minutes more things besides. It settled in its own
way one thing in particular, which, though often, between them,
heaven knew, hovered round and hung over, was yet to be
established without the shadow of an attenuating smile. Oh there
was no gleam of levity, as little of humour as of deprecation, in
the long time they now sat together or in the way in which at some
unmeasured point of it Mrs. Wix became distinct enough for her own
dignity and yet not loud enough for the snoozing old women.</p>
<p>"I adore him. I adore him."</p>
<p>Maisie took it well in; so well that in a moment more she would
have answered profoundly: "So do I." But before that moment passed
something took place that brought other words to her lips; nothing
more, very possibly, than the closer consciousness in her hand of
the significance of Mrs. Wix's. Their hands remained linked in
unutterable sign of their union, and what Maisie at last said was
simply and serenely: "Oh I know!"</p>
<p>Their hands were so linked and their union was so confirmed that
it took the far deep note of a bell, borne to them on the summer
air, to call them back to a sense of hours and proprieties. They
had touched bottom and melted together, but they gave a start at
last: the bell was the voice of the inn and the inn was the image
of luncheon. They should be late for it; they got up, and their
quickened step on the return had something of the swing of
confidence. When they reached the hotel the <i>table d'hôte</i>
had begun; this was clear from the threshold, clear from the absence
in the hall and on the stairs of the "personnel," as Mrs. Wix
said—she had picked <i>that</i> up—all collected in the
dining-room. They mounted to their apartments for a brush before
the glass, and it was Maisie who, in passing and from a vain
impulse, threw open the white and gold door. She was thus first
to utter the sound that brought Mrs. Wix almost on top of her, as
by the other accident it would have brought her on top of Mrs. Wix.
It had at any rate the effect of leaving them bunched together in
a strained stare at their new situation. This situation had put on
in a flash the bright form of Mrs. Beale: she stood there in her
hat and her jacket, amid bags and shawls, smiling and holding out
her arms. If she had just arrived it was a different figure from
either of the two that for <i>their</i> benefit, wan and tottering
and none too soon to save life, the Channel had recently disgorged.
She was as lovely as the day that had brought her over, as fresh
as the luck and the health that attended her: it came to Maisie on
the spot that she was more beautiful than she had ever been. All
this was too quick to count, but there was still time in it to
give the child the sense of what had kindled the light. That
leaped out of the open arms, the open eyes, the open mouth; it
leaped out with Mrs. Beale's loud cry at her: "I'm free, I'm
free!"</p>
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