<p> <SPAN name="25"></SPAN></p>
<p> </p>
<h3>XXV<br/> </h3>
<p>Every single thing he had prophesied came so true that it was
after all no more than fair to expect quite as much for what he
had as good as promised. His pledges they could verify to the
letter, down to his very guarantee that a way would be found with
Miss Ash. Roused in the summer dawn and vehemently squeezed by
that interesting exile, Maisie fell back upon her couch with a
renewed appreciation of his policy, a memento of which, when she
rose later on to dress, glittered at her from the carpet in the
shape of a sixpence that had overflowed from Susan's pride of
possession. Sixpences really, for the forty-eight hours that
followed, seemed to abound in her life; she fancifully computed
the number of them represented by such a period of "larks." The
number was not kept down, she presently noticed, by any scheme of
revenge for Sir Claude's flight which should take on Mrs. Wix's
part the form of a refusal to avail herself of the facilities he
had so bravely ordered. It was in fact impossible to escape them;
it was in the good lady's own phrase ridiculous to go on foot when
you had a carriage prancing at the door. Everything about them
pranced: the very waiters even as they presented the dishes to
which, from a similar sense of the absurdity of perversity, Mrs.
Wix helped herself with a freedom that spoke to Maisie quite as
much of her depletion as of her logic. Her appetite was a sign to
her companion of a great many things and testified no less on the
whole to her general than to her particular condition. She had
arrears of dinner to make up, and it was touching that in a
dinnerless state her moral passion should have burned so clear.
She partook largely as a refuge from depression, and yet the
opportunity to partake was just a mark of the sinister symptoms
that depressed her. The affair was in short a combat, in which the
baser element triumphed, between her refusal to be bought off and
her consent to be clothed and fed. It was not at any rate to be
gainsaid that there was comfort for her in the developments of
France; comfort so great as to leave Maisie free to take with her
all the security for granted and brush all the danger aside. That
was the way to carry out in detail Sir Claude's injunction to be
"nice"; that was the way, as well, to look, with her, in a survey
of the pleasures of life abroad, straight over the head of any
doubt.</p>
<p>They shrank at last, all doubts, as the weather cleared up: it had
an immense effect on them and became quite as lovely as Sir Claude
had engaged. This seemed to have put him so into the secret of
things, and the joy of the world so waylaid the steps of his
friends, that little by little the spirit of hope filled the air
and finally took possession of the scene. To drive on the long
cliff was splendid, but it was perhaps better still to creep in
the shade—for the sun was strong—along the many-coloured and
many-odoured port and through the streets in which, to English
eyes, everything that was the same was a mystery and everything
that was different a joke. Best of all was to continue the creep
up the long Grand' Rue to the gate of the <i>haute ville</i> and,
passing beneath it, mount to the quaint and crooked rampart, with its
rows of trees, its quiet corners and friendly benches where brown old
women in such white-frilled caps and such long gold earrings sat and
knitted or snoozed, its little yellow-faced houses that looked like
the homes of misers or of priests and its dark château where
small soldiers lounged on the bridge that stretched across an empty
moat and military washing hung from the windows of towers. This was a
part of the place that could lead Maisie to enquire if it didn't just
meet one's idea of the middle ages; and since it was rather a
satisfaction than a shock to perceive, and not for the first time,
the limits in Mrs. Wix's mind of the historic imagination, that only
added one more to the variety of kinds of insight that she felt it
her own present mission to show. They sat together on the old grey
bastion; they looked down on the little new town which seemed to them
quite as old, and across at the great dome and the high gilt Virgin
of the church that, as they gathered, was famous and that pleased
them by its unlikeness to any place in which they had worshipped.
They wandered in this temple afterwards and Mrs. Wix confessed that
for herself she had probably made a fatal mistake early in life in
not being a Catholic. Her confession in its turn caused Maisie to
wonder rather interestedly what degree of lateness it was that shut
the door against an escape from such an error. They went back to the
rampart on the second morning—the spot on which they appeared to
have come furthest in the journey that was to separate them from
everything objectionable in the past: it gave them afresh the
impression that had most to do with their having worked round to a
confidence that on Maisie's part was determined and that she could
see to be on her companion's desperate. She had had for many hours
the sense of showing Mrs. Wix so much that she was comparatively
slow to become conscious of being at the same time the subject of
a like aim. The business went the faster, however, from the moment
she got her glimpse of it; it then fell into its place in her
general, her habitual view of the particular phenomenon that, had
she felt the need of words for it, she might have called her
personal relation to her knowledge. This relation had never been
so lively as during the time she waited with her old governess for
Sir Claude's reappearance, and what made it so was exactly that
Mrs. Wix struck her as having a new suspicion of it. Mrs. Wix had
never yet had a suspicion—this was certain—so calculated to
throw her pupil, in spite of the closer union of such adventurous
hours, upon the deep defensive. Her pupil made out indeed as many
marvels as she had made out on the rush to Folkestone; and if in
Sir Claude's company on that occasion Mrs. Wix was the constant
implication, so in Mrs. Wix's, during these hours, Sir Claude
was—and most of all through long pauses—the perpetual, the
insurmountable theme. It all took them back to the first flush of
his marriage and to the place he held in the schoolroom at that
crisis of love and pain; only he had himself blown to a much
bigger balloon the large consciousness he then filled out.</p>
<p>They went through it all again, and indeed while the interval
dragged by the very weight of its charm they went, in spite of
defences and suspicions, through everything. Their intensified
clutch of the future throbbed like a clock ticking seconds; but
this was a timepiece that inevitably, as well, at the best, rang
occasionally a portentous hour. Oh there were several of these,
and two or three of the worst on the old city-wall where
everything else so made for peace. There was nothing in the world
Maisie more wanted than to be as nice to Mrs. Wix as Sir Claude
had desired; but it was exactly because this fell in with her
inveterate instinct of keeping the peace that the instinct itself
was quickened. From the moment it was quickened, however, it found
other work, and that was how, to begin with, she produced the very
complication she most sought to avert. What she had essentially
done, these days, had been to read the unspoken into the spoken;
so that thus, with accumulations, it had become more definite to
her that the unspoken was, unspeakably, the completeness of the
sacrifice of Mrs. Beale. There were times when every minute that
Sir Claude stayed away was like a nail in Mrs. Beale's coffin.
That brought back to Maisie—it was a roundabout way—the beauty
and antiquity of her connexion with the flower of the Overmores as
well as that lady's own grace and charm, her peculiar prettiness
and cleverness and even her peculiar tribulations. A hundred
things hummed at the back of her head, but two of these were
simple enough. Mrs. Beale was by the way, after all, just her
stepmother and her relative. She was just—and partly for that
very reason—Sir Claude's greatest intimate ("lady-intimate" was
Maisie's term) so that what together they were on Mrs. Wix's
prescription to give up and break short off with was for one of
them his particular favourite and for the other her father's wife.
Strangely, indescribably her perception of reasons kept pace with
her sense of trouble; but there was something in her that, without
a supreme effort not to be shabby, couldn't take the reasons for
granted. What it comes to perhaps for ourselves is that,
disinherited and denuded as we have seen her, there still lingered
in her life an echo of parental influence—she was still
reminiscent of one of the sacred lessons of home. It was the only
one she retained, but luckily she retained it with force. She
enjoyed in a word an ineffaceable view of the fact that there were
things papa called mamma and mamma called papa a low sneak for
doing or for not doing. Now this rich memory gave her a name that
she dreaded to invite to the lips of Mrs. Beale: she should
personally wince so just to hear it. The very sweetness of the
foreign life she was steeped in added with each hour of Sir
Claude's absence to the possibility of such pangs. She watched
beside Mrs. Wix the great golden Madonna, and one of the
ear-ringed old women who had been sitting at the end of their
bench got up and pottered away. "Adieu mesdames!" said the old
woman in a little cracked civil voice—a demonstration by which
our friends were so affected that they bobbed up and almost
curtseyed to her. They subsided again, and it was shortly after,
in a summer hum of French insects and a phase of almost somnolent
reverie, that Maisie most had the vision of what it was to shut
out from such a perspective so appealing a participant. It had not
yet appeared so vast as at that moment, this prospect of statues
shining in the blue and of courtesy in romantic forms.</p>
<p>"Why after all should we have to choose between you? Why shouldn't
we be four?" she finally demanded.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix gave the jerk of a sleeper awakened or the start even of
one who hears a bullet whiz at the flag of truce. Her stupefaction
at such a breach of the peace delayed for a moment her answer.
"Four improprieties, do you mean? Because two of us happen to be
decent people! Do I gather you to wish that I should stay on with
you even if that woman <i>is</i> capable—?"</p>
<p>Maisie took her up before she could further phrase Mrs. Beale's
capability. "Stay on as <i>my</i> companion—yes. Stay on as just
what you were at mamma's. Mrs. Beale <i>would</i> let you!" the
child said.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix had by this time fairly sprung to her arms. "And who, I'd
like to know, would let Mrs. Beale? Do you mean, little
unfortunate, that <i>you</i> would?"</p>
<p>"Why not, if now she's free?"</p>
<p>"Free? Are you imitating <i>him</i>? Well, if Sir Claude's old
enough to know better, upon my word I think it's right to treat you
as if you also were. You'll have to, at any rate—to know better—if
that's the line you're proposing to take." Mrs. Wix had never been
so harsh; but on the other hand Maisie could guess that she
herself had never appeared so wanton. What was underlying,
however, rather overawed than angered her; she felt she could
still insist—not for contradiction, but for ultimate calm. Her
wantonness meanwhile continued to work upon her friend, who caught
again, on the rebound, the sound of deepest provocation. "Free,
free, free? If she's as free as <i>you</i> are, my dear, she's free
enough, to be sure!"</p>
<p>"As I am?"—Maisie, after reflexion and despite whatever of
portentous this seemed to convey, risked a critical echo.</p>
<p>"Well," said Mrs. Wix, "nobody, you know, is free to commit a
crime."</p>
<p>"A crime!" The word had come out in a way that made the child
sound it again.</p>
<p>"You'd commit as great a one as their own—and so should I—if we
were to condone their immorality by our presence."</p>
<p>Maisie waited a little; this seemed so fiercely conclusive. "Why
is it immorality?" she nevertheless presently enquired.</p>
<p>Her companion now turned upon her with a reproach softer because
it was somehow deeper. "You're too unspeakable! Do you know what
we're talking about?"</p>
<p>In the interest of ultimate calm Maisie felt that she must be
above all clear. "Certainly; about their taking advantage of their
freedom."</p>
<p>"Well, to do what?"</p>
<p>"Why, to live with us."</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix's laugh, at this, was literally wild. "'Us?' Thank
you!"</p>
<p>"Then to live with <i>me</i>."</p>
<p>The words made her friend jump. "You give me up? You break with me
for ever? You turn me into the street?"</p>
<p>Maisie, though gasping a little, bore up under the rain of
challenges. "Those, it seems to me, are the things you do to
<i>me</i>."</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix made little of her valour. "I can promise you that,
whatever I do, I shall never let you out of my sight! You ask me
why it's immorality when you've seen with your own eyes that Sir
Claude has felt it to be so to that dire extent that, rather than
make you face the shame of it, he has for months kept away from
you altogether? Is it any more difficult to see that the first
time he tries to do his duty he washes his hands of
<i>her</i>—takes you straight away from her?"</p>
<p>Maisie turned this over, but more for apparent consideration than
from any impulse to yield too easily. "Yes, I see what you mean.
But at that time they weren't free." She felt Mrs. Wix rear up
again at the offensive word, but she succeeded in touching her
with a remonstrant hand. "I don't think you know how free they've
become."</p>
<p>"I know, I believe, at least as much as you do!"</p>
<p>Maisie felt a delicacy but overcame it. "About the Countess?"</p>
<p>"Your father's—temptress?" Mrs. Wix gave her a sidelong squint.
"Perfectly. She pays him!"</p>
<p>"Oh <i>does</i> she?" At this the child's countenance fell: it
seemed to give a reason for papa's behaviour and place it in a more
favourable light. She wished to be just. "I don't say she's not
generous. She was so to me."</p>
<p>"How, to you?"</p>
<p>"She gave me a lot of money."</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix stared. "And pray what did you do with a lot of money?"</p>
<p>"I gave it to Mrs. Beale."</p>
<p>"And what did Mrs. Beale do with it?"</p>
<p>"She sent it back."</p>
<p>"To the Countess? Gammon!" said Mrs. Wix. She disposed of that
plea as effectually as Susan Ash.</p>
<p>"Well, I don't care!" Maisie replied. "What I mean is that you
don't know about the rest."</p>
<p>"The rest? What rest?"</p>
<p>Maisie wondered how she could best put it. "Papa kept me there an
hour."</p>
<p>"I do know—Sir Claude told me. Mrs. Beale had told him."</p>
<p>Maisie looked incredulity. "How could she—when I didn't speak of
it?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix was mystified. "Speak of what?"</p>
<p>"Why, of her being so frightful."</p>
<p>"The Countess? Of course she's frightful!" Mrs. Wix returned.
After a moment she added: "That's why she pays him."</p>
<p>Maisie pondered. "It's the best thing about her then—if she gives
him as much as she gave <i>me</i>!"</p>
<p>"Well, it's not the best thing about <i>him</i>! Or rather
perhaps it <i>is</i> too!" Mrs. Wix subjoined.</p>
<p>"But she's awful—really and truly," Maisie went on.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wix arrested her. "You needn't go into details!" It was
visibly at variance with this injunction that she yet enquired:
"How does that make it any better?"</p>
<p>"Their living with me? Why for the Countess—and for her
whiskers!—he has put me off on them. I understood him," Maisie
profoundly said.</p>
<p>"I hope then he understood you. It's more than I do!" Mrs. Wix
admitted.</p>
<p>This was a real challenge to be plainer, and our young lady
immediately became so. "I mean it isn't a crime."</p>
<p>"Why then did Sir Claude steal you away?"</p>
<p>"He didn't steal—he only borrowed me. I knew it wasn't for long,"
Maisie audaciously professed.</p>
<p>"You must allow me to reply to that," cried Mrs. Wix, "that you
knew nothing of the sort, and that you rather basely failed to
back me up last night when you pretended so plump that you did!
You hoped in fact, exactly as much as I did and as in my senseless
passion I even hope now, that this may be the beginning of better
things."</p>
<p>Oh yes, Mrs. Wix was indeed, for the first time, sharp; so that
there at last stirred in our heroine the sense not so much of
being proved disingenuous as of being precisely accused of the
meanness that had brought everything down on her through her very
desire to shake herself clear of it. She suddenly felt herself
swell with a passion of protest. "I never, <i>never</i> hoped I
wasn't going again to see Mrs. Beale! I didn't, I didn't, I didn't!"
she repeated. Mrs. Wix bounced about with a force of rejoinder of
which she also felt that she must anticipate the concussion and
which, though the good lady was evidently charged to the brim,
hung fire long enough to give time for an aggravation. "She's
beautiful and I love her! I love her and she's beautiful!"</p>
<p>"And I'm hideous and you hate <i>me</i>?" Mrs. Wix fixed her a
moment, then caught herself up. "I won't embitter you by absolutely
accusing you of that; though, as for my being hideous, it's hardly
the first time I've been told so! I know it so well that even if I
haven't whiskers—have I?—I dare say there are other ways in
which the Countess is a Venus to me! My pretensions must therefore
seem to you monstrous—which comes to the same thing as your not
liking me. But do you mean to go so far as to tell me that you
<i>want</i> to live with them in their sin?"</p>
<p>"You know what I want, you know what I want!"—Maisie spoke with
the shudder of rising tears.</p>
<p>"Yes, I do; you want me to be as bad as yourself! Well, I won't.
There! Mrs. Beale's as bad as your father!" Mrs. Wix went on.</p>
<p>"She's not!—she's not!" her pupil almost shrieked in retort.</p>
<p>"You mean because Sir Claude at least has beauty and wit and
grace? But he pays just as the Countess pays!" Mrs. Wix, who now
rose as she spoke, fairly revealed a latent cynicism.</p>
<p>It raised Maisie also to her feet; her companion had walked off a
few steps and paused. The two looked at each other as they had
never looked, and Mrs. Wix seemed to flaunt there in her finery.
"Then doesn't he pay <i>you</i> too?" her unhappy charge
demanded.</p>
<p>At this she bounded in her place. "Oh you incredible little waif!"
She brought it out with a wail of violence; after which, with
another convulsion, she marched straight away.</p>
<p>Maisie dropped back on the bench and burst into sobs.</p>
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