<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<p>But whether the Baron, in naming such a distant spot for the
rendezvous, was in hope she might fail him, and so relieve him
after all of his undertaking, cannot be said; though it might
have been strongly suspected from his manner that he had no great
zest for the responsibility of escorting her.</p>
<p>But he little knew the firmness of the young woman he had to
deal with. She was one of those soft natures whose power of
adhesiveness to an acquired idea seems to be one of the special
attributes of that softness. To go to a ball with this
mysterious personage of romance was her ardent desire and aim;
and none the less in that she trembled with fear and excitement
at her position in so aiming. She felt the deepest awe,
tenderness, and humility towards the Baron of the strange name;
and yet she was prepared to stick to her point.</p>
<p>Thus it was that the afternoon of the eventful day found
Margery trudging her way up the slopes from the vale to the place
of appointment. She walked to the music of innumerable
birds, which increased as she drew away from the open meads
towards the groves.</p>
<p>She had overcome all difficulties. After thinking out
the question of telling or not telling her father, she had
decided that to tell him was to be forbidden to go. Her
contrivance therefore was this: to leave home this evening on a
visit to her invalid grandmother, who lived not far from the
Baron’s house; but not to arrive at her grandmother’s
till breakfast-time next morning. Who would suspect an
intercalated experience of twelve hours with the Baron at a
ball? That this piece of deception was indefensible she
afterwards owned readily enough; but she did not stop to think of
it then.</p>
<p>It was sunset within Chillington Wood by the time she reached
Three-Walks-End—the converging point of radiating
trackways, now floored with a carpet of matted grass, which had
never known other scythes than the teeth of rabbits and
hares. The twitter overhead had ceased, except from a few
braver and larger birds, including the cuckoo, who did not fear
night at this pleasant time of year. Nobody seemed to be on
the spot when she first drew near, but no sooner did Margery
stand at the intersection of the roads than a slight crashing
became audible, and her patron appeared. He was so
transfigured in dress that she scarcely knew him. Under a
light great-coat, which was flung open, instead of his ordinary
clothes he wore a suit of thin black cloth, an open waistcoat
with a frill all down his shirt-front, a white tie, shining
boots, no thicker than a glove, a coat that made him look like a
bird, and a hat that seemed as if it would open and shut like an
accordion.</p>
<p>‘I am dressed for the ball—nothing worse,’
he said, drily smiling. ‘So will you be
soon.’</p>
<p>‘Why did you choose this place for our meeting,
sir?’ she asked, looking around and acquiring
confidence.</p>
<p>‘Why did I choose it? Well, because in riding past
one day I observed a large hollow tree close by here, and it
occurred to me when I was last with you that this would be useful
for our purpose. Have you told your father?’</p>
<p>‘I have not yet told him, sir.’</p>
<p>‘That’s very bad of you, Margery. How have
you arranged it, then?’</p>
<p>She briefly related her plan, on which he made no comment,
but, taking her by the hand as if she were a little child, he led
her through the undergrowth to a spot where the trees were older,
and standing at wider distances. Among them was the tree he
had spoken of—an elm; huge, hollow, distorted, and
headless, with a rift in its side.</p>
<p>‘Now go inside,’ he said, ‘before it gets
any darker. You will find there everything you want.
At any rate, if you do not you must do without it.
I’ll keep watch; and don’t be longer than you can
help to be.’</p>
<p>‘What am I to do, sir?’ asked the puzzled
maiden.</p>
<p>‘Go inside, and you will see. When you are ready
wave your handkerchief at that hole.’</p>
<p>She stooped into the opening. The cavity within the tree
formed a lofty circular apartment, four or five feet in diameter,
to which daylight entered at the top, and also through a round
hole about six feet from the ground, marking the spot at which a
limb had been amputated in the tree’s prime. The
decayed wood of cinnamon-brown, forming the inner surface of the
tree, and the warm evening glow, reflected in at the top,
suffused the cavity with a faint mellow radiance.</p>
<p>But Margery had hardly given herself time to heed these
things. Her eye had been caught by objects of quite another
quality. A large white oblong paper box lay against the
inside of the tree; over it, on a splinter, hung a small oval
looking-glass.</p>
<p>Margery seized the idea in a moment. She pressed through
the rift into the tree, lifted the cover of the box, and, behold,
there was disclosed within a lovely white apparition in a
somewhat flattened state. It was the ball-dress.</p>
<p>This marvel of art was, briefly, a sort of heavenly
cobweb. It was a gossamer texture of precious manufacture,
artistically festooned in a dozen flounces or more.</p>
<p>Margery lifted it, and could hardly refrain from kissing
it. Had any one told her before this moment that such a
dress could exist, she would have said, ‘No; it’s
impossible!’ She drew back, went forward, flushed,
laughed, raised her hands. To say that the maker of that
dress had been an individual of talent was simply understatement:
he was a genius, and she sunned herself in the rays of his
creation.</p>
<p>She then remembered that her friend without had told her to
make haste, and she spasmodically proceeded to array
herself. In removing the dress she found satin slippers,
gloves, a handkerchief nearly all lace, a fan, and even flowers
for the hair. ‘O, how could he think of it!’
she said, clasping her hands and almost crying with
agitation. ‘And the glass—how good of
him!’</p>
<p>Everything was so well prepared, that to clothe herself in
these garments was a matter of ease. In a quarter of an
hour she was ready, even to shoes and gloves. But what led
her more than anything else into admiration of the Baron’s
foresight was the discovery that there were half-a-dozen pairs
each of shoes and gloves, of varying sizes, out of which she
selected a fit.</p>
<p>Margery glanced at herself in the mirror, or at as much as she
could see of herself: the image presented was superb. Then
she hastily rolled up her old dress, put it in the box, and
thrust the latter on a ledge as high as she could reach.
Standing on tiptoe, she waved the handkerchief through the upper
aperture, and bent to the rift to go out.</p>
<p>But what a trouble stared her in the face. The dress was
so airy, so fantastical, and so extensive, that to get out in her
new clothes by the rift which had admitted her in her old ones
was an impossibility. She heard the Baron’s steps
crackling over the dead sticks and leaves.</p>
<p>‘O, sir!’ she began in despair.</p>
<p>‘What—can’t you dress yourself?’ he
inquired from the back of the trunk.</p>
<p>‘Yes; but I can’t get out of this dreadful
tree!’</p>
<p>He came round to the opening, stooped, and looked in.
‘It is obvious that you cannot,’ he said, taking in
her compass at a glance; and adding to himself; ‘Charming!
who would have thought that clothes could do so much!—Wait
a minute, my little maid: I have it!’ he said more
loudly.</p>
<p>With all his might he kicked at the sides of the rift, and by
that means broke away several pieces of the rotten
touchwood. But, being thinly armed about the feet, he
abandoned that process, and went for a fallen branch which lay
near. By using the large end as a lever, he tore away
pieces of the wooden shell which enshrouded Margery and all her
loveliness, till the aperture was large enough for her to pass
without tearing her dress. She breathed her relief: the
silly girl had begun to fear that she would not get to the ball
after all.</p>
<p>He carefully wrapped round her a cloak he had brought with
him: it was hooded, and of a length which covered her to the
heels.</p>
<p>‘The carriage is waiting down the other path,’ he
said, and gave her his arm. A short trudge over the soft
dry leaves brought them to the place indicated.</p>
<p>There stood the brougham, the horses, the coachman, all as
still as if they were growing on the spot, like the trees.
Margery’s eyes rose with some timidity to the
coachman’s figure.</p>
<p>‘You need not mind him,’ said the Baron.
‘He is a foreigner, and heeds nothing.’</p>
<p>In the space of a short minute she was handed inside; the
Baron buttoned up his overcoat, and surprised her by mounting
with the coachman. The carriage moved off silently over the
long grass of the vista, the shadows deepening to black as they
proceeded. Darker and darker grew the night as they rolled
on; the neighbourhood familiar to Margery was soon left behind,
and she had not the remotest idea of the direction they were
taking. The stars blinked out, the coachman lit his lamps,
and they bowled on again.</p>
<p>In the course of an hour and a half they arrived at a small
town, where they pulled up at the chief inn, and changed horses;
all being done so readily that their advent had plainly been
expected. The journey was resumed immediately. Her
companion never descended to speak to her; whenever she looked
out there he sat upright on his perch, with the mien of a person
who had a difficult duty to perform, and who meant to perform it
properly at all costs. But Margery could not help feeling a
certain dread at her situation—almost, indeed, a wish that
she had not come. Once or twice she thought, ‘Suppose
he is a wicked man, who is taking me off to a foreign country,
and will never bring me home again.’</p>
<p>But her characteristic persistence in an original idea
sustained her against these misgivings except at odd
moments. One incident in particular had given her
confidence in her escort: she had seen a tear in his eye when she
expressed her sorrow for his troubles. He may have divined
that her thoughts would take an uneasy turn, for when they
stopped for a moment in ascending a hill he came to the
window. ‘Are you tired, Margery?’ he asked
kindly.</p>
<p>‘No, sir.’</p>
<p>‘Are you afraid?’</p>
<p>‘N—no, sir. But it is a long way.’</p>
<p>‘We are almost there,’ he answered.
‘And now, Margery,’ he said in a lower tone, ‘I
must tell you a secret. I have obtained this invitation in
a peculiar way. I thought it best for your sake not to come
in my own name, and this is how I have managed. A man in
this county, for whom I have lately done a service, one whom I
can trust, and who is personally as unknown here as you and I,
has (privately) transferred his card of invitation to me.
So that we go under his name. I explain this that you may
not say anything imprudent by accident. Keep your ears open
and be cautious.’ Having said this the Baron
retreated again to his place.</p>
<p>‘Then he is a wicked man after all!’ she said to
herself; ‘for he is going under a false name.’
But she soon had the temerity not to mind it: wickedness of that
sort was the one ingredient required just now to finish him off
as a hero in her eyes.</p>
<p>They descended a hill, passed a lodge, then up an avenue; and
presently there beamed upon them the light from other carriages,
drawn up in a file, which moved on by degrees; and at last they
halted before a large arched doorway, round which a group of
people stood.</p>
<p>‘We are among the latest arrivals, on account of the
distance,’ said the Baron, reappearing. ‘But
never mind; there are three hours at least for your
enjoyment.’</p>
<p>The steps were promptly flung down, and they alighted.
The steam from the flanks of their swarthy steeds, as they seemed
to her, ascended to the parapet of the porch, and from their
nostrils the hot breath jetted forth like smoke out of volcanoes,
attracting the attention of all.</p>
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