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    Chapter 9 - Page 2

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    and at
    moments most startling; he impressed on his young companion, with a
    frankness that agitated her much more than he seemed to guess, that he
    depended on her not letting her mother, when she should see her, get
    anything out of her about anything Mrs. Beale might have said to him. He
    came in and out; he professed, in joke, to take tremendous precautions;
    he showed a positive disposition to romp. He chaffed Mrs. Wix till she
    was purple with the pleasure of it, and reminded Maisie of the reticence
    he expected of her till she set her teeth like an Indian captive. Her
    lessons these first days and indeed for long after seemed to be all
    about Sir Claude, and yet she never really mentioned to Mrs. Wix that
    she was prepared, under his inspiring injunction, to be vainly tortured.
    This lady, however, had formulated the position of things with an
    acuteness that showed how little she needed to be coached. Her
    explanation of everything that seemed not quite pleasant--and if her own
    footing was perilous it met that danger as well--that her ladyship was
    passionately in love. Maisie accepted this hint with infinite awe and
    pressed upon it much when she was at last summoned into the presence of
    her mother.

    There she encountered matters amid which it seemed really to help to
    give her a clue--an almost terrifying strangeness, full, none the less,
    after a little, of reverberations of Ida's old fierce and demonstrative
    recoveries of possession. They had been some time in the house together,
    and this demonstration came late. Preoccupied, however, as Maisie was
    with the idea of the sentiment Sir Claude had inspired, and familiar,
    in addition, by Mrs. Wix's anecdotes, with the ravages that in general
    such a sentiment could produce, she was able to make allowances for her
    ladyship's remarkable appearance, her violent splendour, the wonderful
    colour of her lips and even the hard stare, the stare of some gorgeous
    idol described in a story-book, that had come into her eyes in
    consequence of a curious thickening of their already rich circumference.
    Her professions and explanations were mixed with eager challenges and
    sudden drops, in the midst of which Maisie recognised as a memory

    of other years the rattle of her trinkets and the scratch of her
    endearments, the odour of her clothes and the jumps of her conversation.
    She had all her old clever way--Mrs. Wix said it was "aristocratic"--of
    changing the subject as she might have slammed the door in your face.
    The principal thing that was different was the tint of her golden hair,
    which had changed to a coppery red and, with the head it profusely
    covered, struck the child as now lifted still further aloft. This
    picturesque parent showed literally a grander stature and a nobler
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