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    Chapter 19 - Page 2

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    his legs, a toss of his
    cigarette-ash and a fidgety look--he was for ever taking one--all the
    length of his waistcoat and trousers, that she needn't be quite so
    disgusted. It helped her in a few seconds to appear more as he would
    like her that she saw, in the lovely light of the Countess's splendour,
    exactly, however she appeared, the right answer to make. "Dear papa,
    I'll go with you anywhere."

    He turned his back to her and stood with his nose at the glass of the
    chimneypiece while he brushed specks of ash out of his beard. Then he
    abruptly said: "Do you know anything about your brute of a mother?"

    It was just of her brute of a mother that the manner of the question in
    a remarkable degree reminded her: it had the free flight of one of Ida's
    fine bridgings of space. With the sense of this was kindled for Maisie
    at the same time an inspiration. "Oh yes, I know everything!" and she
    became so radiant that her father, seeing it in the mirror, turned back
    to her and presently, on the sofa, had her at his knee again and was
    again particularly affecting. Maisie's inspiration instructed her,
    pressingly, that the more she should be able to say about mamma the
    less she would be called upon to speak of her step-parents. She kept
    hoping the Countess would come in before her power to protect them was
    exhausted; and it was now, in closer quarters with her companion, that
    the idea at the back of her head shifted its place to her lips. She told
    him she had met her mother in the Park with a gentleman who, while Sir
    Claude had strolled with her ladyship, had been kind and had sat and
    talked to her; narrating the scene with a remembrance of her pledge of
    secrecy to the Captain quite brushed away by the joy of seeing Beale
    listen without profane interruption. It was almost an amazement, but it
    was indeed all a joy, thus to be able to guess that papa was at last
    quite tired of his anger--of his anger at any rate about mamma. He was
    only bored with her now. That made it, however, the more imperative that
    his spent displeasure shouldn't be blown out again. It charmed the child
    to see how much she could interest him; and the charm remained even

    when, after asking her a dozen questions, he observed musingly and a
    little obscurely: "Yes, damned if she won't!" For in this too there was
    a detachment, a wise weariness that made her feel safe. She had had
    to mention Sir Claude, though she mentioned him as little as possible
    and Beale only appeared to look quite over his head. It pieced itself
    together for her that this was the mildness of general indifference, a
    source of profit so great for herself personally that if the Countess
    was the author of it she was prepared literally to hug the
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