insults! What in the world's our connexion but the love of the child who's our duty and our life and who holds us together as closely as she originally brought us?'
'I know, I know!' Maisie said with a burst of eagerness. 'I did bring you.'
The strangest of laughs escaped from Sir Claude. 'You did bring us—you did!' His hands went up and down gently on her shoulders.
Mrs. Wix so dominated the situation that she had something sharp for every one. 'There you have it, you see!' she pregnantly remarked to her pupil.
'
'To
'I love Sir Claude—I love
'She hates you—she hates you,' he observed with the oddest quietness to Mrs. Beale.
His quietness made her blaze. 'And you back her up in it and give me up to outrage?'
'No; I only insist that she's free—she's free.'
Mrs. Beale stared—Mrs. Beale glared. 'Free to starve with this pauper lunatic?'
'I'll do more for her than
Maisie, with Sir Claude's hands still on her shoulders, felt, just as she felt the fine surrender in them, that over her head he looked in a certain way at Mrs. Wix. 'You needn't do that,' she heard him say. 'She has means.'
'Means?—Maisie?' Mrs. Beale shrieked. 'Means that her vile father has stolen!'
'I'll get them back—I'll get them back. I'll look into it.' He smiled and nodded at Mrs. Wix.
This had a fearful effect on his other friend. 'Haven't I looked into it, I should like to know, and haven't I found an abyss? It's too inconceivable—your cruelty to me!' she wildly broke out. She had hot tears in her eyes.
He spoke to her very kindly, almost coaxingly. 'We'll look into it again; we'll look into it together. It
'Not good enough, and that beast
At this for a moment there was a hush in the room, and in the midst of it Sir Claude replied to the question by moving with Maisie to Mrs. Wix. The next thing the child knew she was at that lady's side with an arm firmly grasped. Mrs. Beale still guarded the door. 'Let them pass,' said Sir Claude at last.
She remained there, however; Maisie saw the pair look at each other. Then she saw Mrs. Beale turn to her. 'I'm your mother now, Maisie. And he's your father.'
'That's just where it is!' sighed Mrs. Wix with an effect of irony positively detached and philosophic.
Mrs. Beale continued to address her young friend, and her effort to be reasonable and tender was in its way remarkable. 'We're representative, you know, of Mr. Farange and his former wife. This person represents mere illiterate presumption. We take our stand on the law.'
'Oh the law, the law!' Mrs. Wix superbly jeered. 'You had better indeed let the law have a look at you!'
'Let them pass—let them pass!' Sir Claude pressed his friend hard—he pleaded.
But she fastened herself still to Maisie. '
Maisie looked at her with new eyes, but answered as she had answered before. 'Will you give him up?'
Mrs. Beale's rejoinder hung fire, but when it came it was noble. 'You shouldn't talk to me of such things!' She was shocked, she was scandalised to tears.
For Mrs. Wix, however, it was her discrimination that was indelicate. 'You ought to be ashamed of yourself!' she roundly cried.
Sir Claude made a supreme appeal. 'Will you be so good as to allow these horrors to terminate?'
Mrs. Beale fixed her eyes on him, and again Maisie watched them. 'You should do him justice,' Mrs. Wix went on to Mrs. Beale. 'We've always been devoted to him, Maisie and I—and he has shown how much he likes us. He would like to please her; he would like even, I think, to please me. But he hasn't given you up.'
They stood confronted, the step-parents, still under Maisie's observation. That observation had never sunk so deep as at this particular moment. 'Yes, my dear, I haven't given you up,' Sir Claude said to Mrs. Beale at last, 'and if you'd like me to treat our friends here as solemn witnesses I don't mind giving you my word for it that I never never will. There!' he dauntlessly exclaimed.
'He can't!' Mrs. Wix tragically commented.
Mrs. Beale, erect and alive in her defeat, jerked her handsome face about. 'He can't!' she literally mocked.
'He can't, he can't, he can't!'—Sir Claude's gay emphasis wonderfully carried it off.
Mrs. Beale took it all in, yet she held her ground; on which Maisie addressed Mrs. Wix. 'Shan't we lose the boat?'
'Yes, we shall lose the boat,' Mrs. Wix remarked to Sir Claude.