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    Chapter 19

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    When he had lighted a cigarette and begun to smoke in her face it was as
    if he had struck with the match the note of some queer clumsy ferment
    of old professions, old scandals, old duties, a dim perception of what
    he possessed in her and what, if everything had only--damn it!--been
    totally different, she might still be able to give him. What she was
    able to give him, however, as his blinking eyes seemed to make out
    through the smoke, would be simply what he should be able to get from
    her. To give something, to give here on the spot, was all her own
    desire. Among the old things that came back was her little instinct of
    keeping the peace; it made her wonder more sharply what particular thing
    she could do or not do, what particular word she could speak or not
    speak, what particular line she could take or not take, that might for
    every one, even for the Countess, give a better turn to the crisis. She
    was ready, in this interest, for an immense surrender, a surrender of
    everything but Sir Claude, of everything but Mrs. Beale. The immensity
    didn't include THEM; but if he had an idea at the back of his head
    she had also one in a recess as deep, and for a time, while they sat
    together, there was an extraordinary mute passage between her vision
    of this vision of his, his vision of her vision, and her vision of his
    vision of her vision. What there was no effective record of indeed
    was the small strange pathos on the child's part of an innocence so
    saturated with knowledge and so directed to diplomacy. What, further,
    Beale finally laid hold of while he masked again with his fine presence
    half the flounces of the fireplace was: "Do you know, my dear, I shall
    soon be off to America?" It struck his daughter both as a short cut and
    as the way he wouldn't have said it to his wife. But his wife figured
    with a bright superficial assurance in her response.

    "Do you mean with Mrs. Beale?"

    Her father looked at her hard. "Don't be a little ass!"

    Her silence appeared to represent a concentrated effort not to be. "Then
    with the Countess?"

    "With her or without her, my dear; that concerns only your poor daddy.
    She has big interests over there, and she wants me to take a look at
    them."

    Maisie threw herself into them. "Will that take very long?"

    "Yes; they're in such a muddle--it may take months. Now what I want to
    hear, you know, is whether you'd like to come along?"

    Planted once more before him in the middle of the room she felt herself
    turning white. "I?" she gasped, yet feeling as soon as she had spoken
    that such a note of dismay was not altogether pretty. She felt it still
    more while her father replied, with a shake of
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