<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
<p>Notwithstanding a press of business, Jim went and did his duty
in thanking the Baron. The latter saw him in his
fishing-tackle room, an apartment littered with every appliance
that a votary of the rod could require.</p>
<p>‘And when is the wedding-day to be, Hayward?’ the
Baron asked, after Jim had told him that matters were
settled.</p>
<p>‘It is not quite certain yet, my noble lord,’ said
Jim cheerfully. ‘But I hope ’twill not be long
after the time when God A’mighty christens the little
apples.’</p>
<p>‘And when is that?’</p>
<p>‘St. Swithin’s—the middle of July.
’Tis to be some time in that month, she tells
me.’</p>
<p>When Jim was gone the Baron seemed meditative. He went
out, ascended the mount, and entered the weather-screen, where he
looked at the seats, as though re-enacting in his fancy the scene
of that memorable morning of fog. He turned his eyes to the
angle of the shelter, round which Margery had suddenly appeared
like a vision, and it was plain that he would not have minded her
appearing there then. The juncture had indeed been such an
impressive and critical one that she must have seemed rather a
heavenly messenger than a passing milkmaid, more especially to a
man like the Baron, who, despite the mystery of his origin and
life, revealed himself to be a melancholy, emotional
character—the Jacques of this forest and stream.</p>
<p>Behind the mount the ground rose yet higher, ascending to a
plantation which sheltered the house. The Baron strolled up
here, and bent his gaze over the distance. The valley of
the Exe lay before him, with its shining river, the brooks that
fed it, and the trickling springs that fed the brooks. The
situation of Margery’s house was visible, though not the
house itself; and the Baron gazed that way for an infinitely long
time, till, remembering himself, he moved on.</p>
<p>Instead of returning to the house he went along the ridge till
he arrived at the verge of Chillington Wood, and in the same
desultory manner roamed under the trees, not pausing till he had
come to Three-Walks-End, and the hollow elm hard by. He
peeped in at the rift. In the soft dry layer of touch-wood
that floored the hollow Margery’s tracks were still
visible, as she had made them there when dressing for the
ball.</p>
<p>‘Little Margery!’ murmured the Baron.</p>
<p>In a moment he thought better of this mood, and turned to go
home. But behold, a form stood behind him—that of the
girl whose name had been on his lips.</p>
<p>She was in utter confusion. ‘I—I—did
not know you were here, sir!’ she began. ‘I was
out for a little walk.’ She could get no further; her
eyes filled with tears. That spice of wilfulness, even
hardness, which characterized her in Jim’s company,
magically disappeared in the presence of the Baron.</p>
<p>‘Never mind, never mind,’ said he, masking under a
severe manner whatever he felt. ‘The meeting is
awkward, and ought not to have occurred, especially if as I
suppose, you are shortly to be married to James Hayward.
But it cannot be helped now. You had no idea I was here, of
course. Neither had I of seeing you. Remember you
cannot be too careful,’ continued the Baron, in the same
grave tone; ‘and I strongly request you as a friend to do
your utmost to avoid meetings like this. When you saw me
before I turned, why did you not go away?’</p>
<p>‘I did not see you, sir. I did not think of seeing
you. I was walking this way, and I only looked in to see
the tree.’</p>
<p>‘That shows you have been thinking of things you should
not think of,’ returned the Baron. ‘Good
morning.’</p>
<p>Margery could answer nothing. A browbeaten glance,
almost of misery, was all she gave him. He took a slow step
away from her; then turned suddenly back and, stooping,
impulsively kissed her cheek, taking her as much by surprise as
ever a woman was taken in her life.</p>
<p>Immediately after he went off with a flushed face and rapid
strides, which he did not check till he was within his own
boundaries.</p>
<p>The haymaking season now set in vigorously, and the
weir-hatches were all drawn in the meads to drain off the
water. The streams ran themselves dry, and there was no
longer any difficulty in walking about among them. The
Baron could very well witness from the elevations about his house
the activity which followed these preliminaries. The white
shirt-sleeves of the mowers glistened in the sun, the scythes
flashed, voices echoed, snatches of song floated about, and there
were glimpses of red waggon-wheels, purple gowns, and
many-coloured handkerchiefs.</p>
<p>The Baron had been told that the haymaking was to be followed
by the wedding, and had he gone down the vale to the dairy he
would have had evidence to that effect. Dairyman
Tucker’s house was in a whirlpool of bustle, and among
other difficulties was that of turning the cheese-room into a
genteel apartment for the time being, and hiding the awkwardness
of having to pass through the milk-house to get to the parlour
door. These household contrivances appeared to interest
Margery much more than the great question of dressing for the
ceremony and the ceremony itself. In all relating to that
she showed an indescribable backwardness, which later on was well
remembered.</p>
<p>‘If it were only somebody else, and I was one of the
bridesmaids, I really think I should like it better!’ she
murmured one afternoon.</p>
<p>‘Away with thee—that’s only your
shyness!’ said one of the milkmaids.</p>
<p>It is said that about this time the Baron seemed to feel the
effects of solitude strongly. Solitude revives the simple
instincts of primitive man, and lonely country nooks afford rich
soil for wayward emotions. Moreover, idleness waters those
unconsidered impulses which a short season of turmoil would stamp
out. It is difficult to speak with any exactness of the
bearing of such conditions on the mind of the Baron—a man
of whom so little was ever truly known—but there is no
doubt that his mind ran much on Margery as an individual, without
reference to her rank or quality, or to the question whether she
would marry Jim Hayward that summer. She was the single
lovely human thing within his present horizon, for he lived in
absolute seclusion; and her image unduly affected him.</p>
<p>But, leaving conjecture, let me state what happened.</p>
<p>One Saturday evening, two or three weeks after his accidental
meeting with her in the wood, he wrote the note
following:—</p>
<blockquote><p><span class="smcap">Dear
Margery</span>,—</p>
<p>You must not suppose that, because I spoke somewhat severely
to you at our chance encounter by the hollow tree, I have any
feeling against you. Far from it. Now, as ever, I
have the most grateful sense of your considerate kindness to me
on a momentous occasion which shall be nameless.</p>
<p>You solemnly promised to come and see me whenever I should
send for you. Can you call for five minutes as soon as
possible, and disperse those plaguy glooms from which I am so
unfortunate as to suffer? If you refuse I will not answer
for the consequences.</p>
<p>I shall be in the summer shelter of the mount to-morrow
morning at half-past ten. If you come I shall be
grateful. I have also something for you.</p>
<p style="text-align: right">Yours,<br/>
X.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>In keeping with the tenor of this epistle the desponding,
self-oppressed Baron ascended the mount on Sunday morning and sat
down. There was nothing here to signify exactly the hour,
but before the church bells had begun he heard somebody
approaching at the back. The light footstep moved timidly,
first to one recess, and then to another; then to the third,
where he sat in the shade. Poor Margery stood before
him.</p>
<p>She looked worn and weary, and her little shoes and the skirts
of her dress were covered with dust. The weather was
sultry, the sun being already high and powerful, and rain had not
fallen for weeks. The Baron, who walked little, had thought
nothing of the effects of this heat and drought in inducing
fatigue. A distance which had been but a reasonable
exercise on a foggy morning was a drag for Margery now. She
was out of breath; and anxiety, even unhappiness was written on
her everywhere.</p>
<p>He rose to his feet, and took her hand. He was vexed
with himself at sight of her. ‘My dear little
girl!’ he said. ‘You are tired—you should
not have come.’</p>
<p>‘You sent for me, sir; and I was afraid you were ill;
and my promise to you was sacred.’</p>
<p>He bent over her, looking upon her downcast face, and still
holding her hand; then he dropped it, and took a pace or two
backwards.</p>
<p>‘It was a whim, nothing more,’ he said,
sadly. ‘I wanted to see my little friend, to express
good wishes—and to present her with this.’ He
held forward a small morocco case, and showed her how to open it,
disclosing a pretty locket, set with pearls. ‘It is
intended as a wedding present,’ he continued.
‘To be returned to me again if you do not marry Jim this
summer—it is to be this summer, I think?’</p>
<p>‘It was, sir,’ she said with agitation.
‘But it is so no longer. And, therefore, I cannot
take this.’</p>
<p>‘What do you say?’</p>
<p>‘It was to have been to-day; but now it cannot
be.’</p>
<p>‘The wedding to-day—Sunday?’ he cried.</p>
<p>‘We fixed Sunday not to hinder much time at this busy
season of the year,’ replied she.</p>
<p>‘And have you, then, put it off—surely
not?’</p>
<p>‘You sent for me, and I have come,’ she answered
humbly, like an obedient familiar in the employ of some great
enchanter. Indeed, the Baron’s power over this
innocent girl was curiously like enchantment, or mesmeric
influence. It was so masterful that the sexual element was
almost eliminated. It was that of Prospero over the gentle
Ariel. And yet it was probably only that of the cosmopolite
over the recluse, of the experienced man over the simple
maid.</p>
<p>‘You have come—on your wedding-day!—O
Margery, this is a mistake. Of course, you should not have
obeyed me, since, though I thought your wedding would be soon, I
did not know it was to-day.’</p>
<p>‘I promised you, sir; and I would rather keep my promise
to you than be married to Jim.’</p>
<p>‘That must not be—the feeling is wrong!’ he
murmured, looking at the distant hills. ‘There seems
to be a fate in all this; I get out of the frying-pan into the
fire. What a recompense to you for your goodness! The
fact is, I was out of health and out of spirits, so I—but
no more of that. Now instantly to repair this tremendous
blunder that we have made—that’s the
question.’</p>
<p>After a pause, he went on hurriedly, ‘Walk down the
hill; get into the road. By that time I shall be there with
a phaeton. We may get back in time. What time is it
now? If not, no doubt the wedding can be to-morrow; so all
will come right again. Don’t cry, my dear girl.
Keep the locket, of course—you’ll marry
Jim.’</p>
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