The greatest wonder of all was the way Mrs. Beale addressed her announcement, so far as could be judged, equally to Mrs. Wix, who, as if from sudden failure of strength, sank into a chair while Maisie surrendered to the visitor's embrace. As soon as the child was liberated she met with profundity Mrs. Wix's stupefaction and actually was able to see that while in a manner sustaining the encounter her face yet seemed with intensity to say: 'Now, for God's sake, don't crow 'I told you so!'' Maisie was somehow on the spot aware of an absence of disposition to crow; it had taken her but an extra minute to arrive at such a quick survey of the objects surrounding Mrs. Beale as showed that among them was no appurtenance of Sir Claude's. She knew his dressing-bag now—oh with the fondest knowledge!—and there was an instant during which its not being there was a stroke of the worst news. She was yet to learn what it could be to recognise in some lapse of a sequence the proof of an extinction, and therefore remained unaware that this momentary pang was a foretaste of the experience of death. It of course yielded in a flash to Mrs. Beale's brightness, it gasped itself away in her own instant appeal. 'You've come alone?'
'Without Sir Claude?' Strangely, Mrs. Beale looked even brighter. 'Yes; in the eagerness to get at you. You abominable little villain!'—and her stepmother, laughing clear, administered to her cheek a pat that was partly a pinch. 'What were you up to and what did you take me for? But I'm glad to be abroad, and after all it's you who have shown me the way. I mightn't, without you, have been able to come—to come, that is, so soon. Well, here I am at any rate and in a moment more I should have begun to worry about you. This will do very well'—she was good-natured about the place and even presently added that it was charming. Then with a rosier glow she made again her great point: 'I'm free, I'm free!' Maisie made on her side her own: she carried back her gaze to Mrs. Wix, whom amazement continued to hold; she drew afresh her old friend's attention to the superior way she didn't take that up. What she did take up the next minute was the question of Sir Claude. 'Where is he? Won't he come?'
Mrs. Beale's consideration of this oscillated with a smile between the two expectancies with which she was flanked: it was conspicuous, it was extraordinary, her unblinking acceptance of Mrs. Wix, a miracle of which Maisie had even now begun to read a reflexion in that lady's long visage. 'He'll come, but we must
'Make him?' Maisie echoed.
'We must give him time. We must play our cards.'
'But he promised us awfully,' Maisie replied.
'My dear child, he has promised
'Yes, I know,' said Maisie; as if, however, independently weighing the value of that. She really weighed also the oddity of her stepmother's treating it as news to
Anything Mrs. Beale overlooked was, she indeed divined, but the effect of an exaltation of high spirits, a tendency to soar that showed even when she dropped—still quite impartially—almost to the confidential. 'Well, then—we've only to wait. He can't do without us long. I'm sure, Mrs. Wix, he can't do without
Mrs. Wix stuck fast, but she met the question in a voice her pupil scarce recognised. 'I wear mine.'
Mrs. Beale, swallowing at one glance her brand-new bravery, which she appeared at once to refer to its origin and to follow in its flights, accepted this as conclusive. 'Oh but I've not such a beauty!' Then she turned rejoicingly to Maisie. 'I've got a beauty for
'A beauty?'
'A love of a hat—in my luggage. I remembered
It was too strange, this talking with her there already not about Sir Claude but about peacocks—too strange for the child to have the presence of mind to thank her. But the felicity in which she had arrived was so proof against everything that Maisie felt more and more the depth of the purpose that must underlie it. She had a vague sense of its being abysmal, the spirit with which Mrs. Beale carried off the awkwardness, in the white and gold salon, of such a want of breath and of welcome. Mrs. Wix was more breathless than ever; the embarrassment of Mrs. Beale's isolation was as nothing to the embarrassment of her grace. The perception of this dilemma was the germ on the child's part of a new question altogether. What if
'Had you come up to wash hands?' Mrs. Beale hereupon asked them. 'Go and do it quickly and I'll be with you: they've put my boxes in that nice room—it was Sir Claude's. Trust him,' she laughed, 'to have a nice one!' The door of a neighbouring room stood open, and now from the threshold, addressing herself again to Mrs. Wix, she launched a note that gave the very key of what, as she would have said, she was up to. 'Dear lady, please attend to my daughter.'
She was up to a change of deportment so complete that it represented—oh for offices still honourably subordinate if not too explicitly menial—an absolute coercion, an interested clutch of the old woman's respectability. There was response, to Maisie's view, I may say at once, in the jump of that respectability to its feet: it was itself capable of one of the leaps, one of the bounds just mentioned, and it carried its charge, with this momentum and while Mrs. Beale popped into Sir Claude's chamber, straight away to where, at the end of the passage, pupil and governess were quartered. The greatest stride of all, for that matter, was that within a few seconds the pupil had, in another relation, been converted into a daughter. Maisie's eyes were still following it when, after the rush, with
