the concussion that couldn’t bring them down—the
arrest produced by the so remarkably distinct figure
that, at Fawns, for the previous weeks, was constantly
crossing, in its regular revolution, the further end
of any watched perspective. Whoever knew, or whoever
didn’t, whether or to what extent Charlotte,
with natural business in Eaton Square, had shuffled
other opportunities under that cloak, it was all matter
for the kind of quiet ponderation the little man who
so kept his wandering way had made his own. It
was part of the very inveteracy of his straw hat and
his white waistcoat, of the trick of his hands in
his pockets, of the detachment of the attention he
fixed on his slow steps from behind his secure pince-nez.
The thing that never failed now as an item in the
picture was that gleam of the silken noose, his wife’s
immaterial tether, so marked to Maggie’s sense
during her last month in the country. Mrs. Verver’s
straight neck had certainly not slipped it; nor had
the other end of the long cord—oh, quite
conveniently long!—disengaged its smaller
loop from the hooked thumb that, with his fingers
closed upon it, her husband kept out of sight.
To have recognised, for all its tenuity, the play of
this gathered lasso might inevitably be to wonder with
what magic it was twisted, to what tension subjected,
but could never be to doubt either of its adequacy
to its office or of its perfect durability. These
reminded states for the Princess were in fact states
of renewed gaping. So many things her father knew
that she even yet didn’t!
All this, at present, with Mrs. Assingham, passed
through her in quick vibrations. She had expressed,
while the revolution of her thought was incomplete,
the idea of what Amerigo “ought,” on his
side, in the premises, to be capable of, and then had
felt her companion’s answering stare. But
she insisted on what she had meant. “He
ought to wish to see her—and I mean in some
protected and independent way, as he used to—in
case of her being herself able to manage it.
That,” said Maggie with the courage of her conviction,
“he ought to be ready, he ought to be happy,
he ought to feel himself sworn—little as
it is for the end of such a history!—to
take from her. It’s as if he wished to get
off without taking anything.”
Mrs. Assingham deferentially mused. “But
for what purpose is it your idea that they should
again so intimately meet?”
“For any purpose they like. That’s
their affair.”
Fanny Assingham sharply laughed, then irrepressibly
fell back to her constant position. “You’re
splendid—perfectly splendid.”
To which, as the Princess, shaking an impatient head,
wouldn’t have it again at all, she subjoined:
“Or if you’re not it’s because you’re
so sure. I mean sure of him.”
“Ah, I’m exactly not sure of him.
If I were sure of him I shouldn’t doubt—!”
But Maggie cast about her.
“Doubt what?” Fanny pressed as she waited.