“Ah you should have thought of that sooner!”
said her companion with the first faint note of asperity
she had ever heard him sound.
XIV
Mrs Beale fairly swooped upon her and the effect of
the whole hour was to show the child how much, how
quite formidably indeed, after all, she was loved.
This was the more the case as her stepmother, so changed—in
the very manner of her mother—that she really
struck her as a new acquaintance, somehow recalled
more familiarity than Maisie could feel. A rich
strong expressive affection in short pounced upon her
in the shape of a handsomer, ampler, older Mrs. Beale.
It was like making a fine friend, and they hadn’t
been a minute together before she felt elated at the
way she had met the choice imposed on her in the cab.
There was a whole future in the combination of Mrs.
Beale’s beauty and Mrs. Beale’s hug.
She seemed to Maisie charming to behold, and also to
have no connexion at all with anybody who had once
mended underclothing and had meals in the nursery.
The child knew one of her father’s wives was
a woman of fashion, but she had always dimly made a
distinction, not applying that epithet without reserve
to the other. Mrs. Beale had since their separation
acquired a conspicuous right to it, and Maisie’s
first flush of response to her present delight coloured
all her splendour with meanings that this time were
sweet. She had told Sir Claude she was afraid
of the lady in the Regent’s Park; but she had
confidence enough to break on the spot, into the frankest
appreciation. “Why, aren’t you beautiful?
Isn’t she beautiful, Sir Claude, isn’t
she?”
“The handsomest woman in London, simply,”
Sir Claude gallantly replied. “Just as
sure as you’re the best little girl!”
Well, the handsomest woman in London gave herself
up, with tender lustrous looks and every demonstration
of fondness, to a happiness at last clutched again.
There was almost as vivid a bloom in her maturity
as in mamma’s, and it took her but a short time
to give her little friend an impression of positive
power—an impression that seemed to begin
like a long bright day. This was a perception
on Maisie’s part that neither mamma, nor Sir
Claude, nor Mrs. Wix, with their immense and so varied
respective attractions, had exactly kindled, and that
made an immediate difference when the talk, as it
promptly did, began to turn to her father. Oh
yes, Mr. Farange was a complication, but she saw now
that he wouldn’t be one for his daughter.
For Mrs. Beale certainly he was an immense one—she
speedily made known as much; but Mrs. Beale from this
moment presented herself to Maisie as a person to whom
a great gift had come. The great gift was just
for handling complications. Maisie felt how little
she made of them when, after she had dropped to Sir
Claude some recall of a previous meeting, he made
answer, with a sound of consternation and yet an air
of relief, that he had denied to their companion their
having, since the day he came for her, seen each other
till that moment.
Copyrights
What Maisie Knew from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.