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    Chapter 6 - Page 2

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    called
    attention to it that it seemed to become almost a source of glory. The
    way out of it of course was just to do her plain duty; but that was
    unfortunately what, with his excessive, his exorbitant demands on her,
    which every one indeed appeared quite to understand, he practically, he
    selfishly prevented. Beale Farange, for Miss Overmore, was now never
    anything but "he," and the house was as full as ever of lively gentlemen
    with whom, under that designation, she chaffingly talked about him.
    Maisie meanwhile, as a subject of familiar gossip on what was to be done
    with her, was left so much to herself that she had hours of wistful
    thought of the large loose discipline of Mrs. Wix; yet she none the less
    held it under her father's roof a point of superiority that none of his
    visitors were ladies. It added to this odd security that she had once
    heard a gentleman say to him as if it were a great joke and in obvious
    reference to Miss Overmore: "Hanged if she'll let another woman come
    near you--hanged if she ever will. She'd let fly a stick at her as they
    do at a strange cat!" Maisie greatly preferred gentlemen as inmates
    in spite of their also having their way--louder but sooner over--of
    laughing out at her. They pulled and pinched, they teased and tickled
    her; some of them even, as they termed it, shied things at her, and all
    of them thought it funny to call her by names having no resemblance to
    her own. The ladies on the other hand addressed her as "You poor pet"
    and scarcely touched her even to kiss her. But it was of the ladies she
    was most afraid.

    She was now old enough to understand how disproportionate a stay she had
    already made with her father; and also old enough to enter a little into
    the ambiguity attending this excess, which oppressed her particularly
    whenever the question had been touched upon in talk with her governess.
    "Oh you needn't worry: she doesn't care!" Miss Overmore had often
    said to her in reference to any fear that her mother might resent her
    prolonged detention. "She has other people than poor little YOU to
    think about, and has gone abroad with them; so you needn't be in the

    least afraid she'll stickle this time for her rights." Maisie knew Mrs.
    Farange had gone abroad, for she had had weeks and weeks before a letter
    from her beginning "My precious pet" and taking leave of her for an
    indeterminate time; but she had not seen in it a renunciation of hatred
    or of the writer's policy of asserting herself, for the sharpest of all
    her impressions had been that there was nothing her mother would ever
    care so much about as to torment Mr. Farange. What at last, however, was
    in this connexion bewildering and a little frightening was the
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