<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
<p>A considerable period of inaction followed among all
concerned.</p>
<p>Nothing tended to dissipate the obscurity which veiled the
life of the Baron. The position he occupied in the minds of
the country-folk around was one which combined the mysteriousness
of a legendary character with the unobtrusive deeds of a modern
gentleman. To this day whoever takes the trouble to go down
to Silverthorn in Lower Wessex and make inquiries will find
existing there almost a superstitious feeling for the moody
melancholy stranger who resided in the Lodge some forty years
ago.</p>
<p>Whence he came, whither he was going, were alike
unknown. It was said that his mother had been an English
lady of noble family who had married a foreigner not unheard of
in circles where men pile up ‘the cankered heaps of
strange-achieved gold’—that he had been born and
educated in England, taken abroad, and so on. But the facts
of a life in such cases are of little account beside the aspect
of a life; and hence, though doubtless the years of his existence
contained their share of trite and homely circumstance, the
curtain which masked all this was never lifted to gratify such a
theatre of spectators as those at Silverthorn. Therein lay
his charm. His life was a vignette, of which the central
strokes only were drawn with any distinctness, the environment
shading away to a blank.</p>
<p>He might have been said to resemble that solitary bird the
heron. The still, lonely stream was his frequent haunt: on
its banks he would stand for hours with his rod, looking into the
water, beholding the tawny inhabitants with the eye of a
philosopher, and seeming to say, ‘Bite or don’t
bite—it’s all the same to me.’ He was
often mistaken for a ghost by children; and for a pollard willow
by men, when, on their way home in the dusk, they saw him
motionless by some rushy bank, unobservant of the decline of
day.</p>
<p>Why did he come to fish near Silverthorn? That was never
explained. As far as was known he had no relatives near;
the fishing there was not exceptionally good; the society
thereabout was decidedly meagre. That he had committed some
folly or hasty act, that he had been wrongfully accused of some
crime, thus rendering his seclusion from the world desirable for
a while, squared very well with his frequent melancholy.
But such as he was there he lived, well supplied with
fishing-tackle, and tenant of a furnished house, just suited to
the requirements of such an eccentric being as he.</p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p>Margery’s father, having privately ascertained that she
was living with her grandmother, and getting into no harm,
refrained from communicating with her, in the hope of seeing her
contrite at his door. It had, of course, become known about
Silverthorn that at the last moment Margery refused to wed
Hayward, by absenting herself from the house. Jim was
pitied, yet not pitied much, for it was said that he ought not to
have been so eager for a woman who had shown no anxiety for
him.</p>
<p>And where was Jim himself? It must not be supposed that
that tactician had all this while withdrawn from mortal eye to
tear his hair in silent indignation and despair. He had, in
truth, merely retired up the lonesome defile between the downs to
his smouldering kiln, and the ancient ramparts above it; and
there, after his first hours of natural discomposure, he quietly
waited for overtures from the possibly repentant Margery.
But no overtures arrived, and then he meditated anew on the
absorbing problem of her skittishness, and how to set about
another campaign for her conquest, notwithstanding his late
disastrous failure. Why had he failed? To what was
her strange conduct owing? That was the thing which puzzled
him.</p>
<p>He had made no advance in solving the riddle when, one
morning, a stranger appeared on the down above him, looking as if
he had lost his way. The man had a good deal of black hair
below his felt hat, and carried under his arm a case containing a
musical instrument. Descending to where Jim stood, he asked
if there were not a short cut across that way to Tivworthy, where
a fête was to be held.</p>
<p>‘Well, yes, there is,’ said Jim. ‘But
’tis an enormous distance for ’ee.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, yes,’ replied the musician. ‘I
wish to intercept the carrier on the highway.’</p>
<p>The nearest way was precisely in the direction of Rook’s
Gate, where Margery, as Jim knew, was staying. Having some
time to spare, Jim was strongly impelled to make a kind act to
the lost musician a pretext for taking observations in that
neighbourhood, and telling his acquaintance that he was going the
same way, he started without further ado.</p>
<p>They skirted the long length of meads, and in due time arrived
at the back of Rook’s Gate, where the path joined the high
road. A hedge divided the public way from the cottage
garden. Jim drew up at this point and said, ‘Your
road is straight on: I turn back here.’</p>
<p>But the musician was standing fixed, as if in great
perplexity. Thrusting his hand into his forest of black
hair, he murmured, ‘Surely it is the
same—surely!’</p>
<p>Jim, following the direction of his neighbour’s eyes,
found them to be fixed on a figure till that moment hidden from
himself—Margery Tucker—who was crossing the garden to
an opposite gate with a little cheese in her arms, her head
thrown back, and her face quite exposed.</p>
<p>‘What of her?’ said Jim.</p>
<p>‘Two months ago I formed one of the band at the Yeomanry
Ball given by Lord Toneborough in the next county. I saw
that young lady dancing the polka there in robes of gauze and
lace. Now I see her carry a cheese!’</p>
<p>‘Never!’ said Jim incredulously.</p>
<p>‘But I do not mistake. I say it is so!’</p>
<p>Jim ridiculed the idea; the bandsman protested, and was about
to lose his temper, when Jim gave in with the good-nature of a
person who can afford to despise opinions; and the musician went
his way.</p>
<p>As he dwindled out of sight Jim began to think more carefully
over what he had said. The young man’s thoughts grew
quite to an excitement, for there came into his mind the
Baron’s extraordinary kindness in regard to furniture,
hitherto accounted for by the assumption that the nobleman had
taken a fancy to him. Could it be, among all the amazing
things of life, that the Baron was at the bottom of this
mischief; and that he had amused himself by taking Margery to a
ball?</p>
<p>Doubts and suspicions which distract some lovers to imbecility
only served to bring out Jim’s great qualities. Where
he trusted he was the most trusting fellow in the world; where he
doubted he could be guilty of the slyest strategy. Once
suspicious, he became one of those subtle, watchful characters
who, without integrity, make good thieves; with a little, good
jobbers; with a little more, good diplomatists. Jim was
honest, and he considered what to do.</p>
<p>Retracing his steps, he peeped again. She had gone in;
but she would soon reappear, for it could be seen that she was
carrying little new cheeses one by one to a spring-cart and horse
tethered outside the gate—her grandmother, though not a
regular dairywoman, still managing a few cows by means of a man
and maid. With the lightness of a cat Jim crept round to
the gate, took a piece of chalk from his pocket, and wrote upon
the boarding ‘The Baron.’ Then he retreated to
the other side of the garden where he had just watched
Margery.</p>
<p>In due time she emerged with another little cheese, came on to
the garden-door, and glanced upon the chalked words which
confronted her. She started; the cheese rolled from her
arms to the ground, and broke into pieces like a pudding.</p>
<p>She looked fearfully round, her face burning like sunset, and,
seeing nobody, stooped to pick up the flaccid lumps. Jim,
with a pale face, departed as invisibly as he had come. He
had proved the bandsman’s tale to be true. On his way
back he formed a resolution. It was to beard the lion in
his den—to call on the Baron.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Margery had recovered her equanimity, and gathered
up the broken cheese. But she could by no means account for
the handwriting. Jim was just the sort of fellow to play
her such a trick at ordinary times, but she imagined him to be
far too incensed against her to do it now; and she suddenly
wondered if it were any sort of signal from the Baron
himself.</p>
<p>Of him she had lately heard nothing. If ever monotony
pervaded a life it pervaded hers at Rook’s Gate; and she
had begun to despair of any happy change. But it is
precisely when the social atmosphere seems stagnant that great
events are brewing. Margery’s quiet was broken first,
as we have seen, by a slight start, only sufficient to make her
drop a cheese; and then by a more serious matter.</p>
<p>She was inside the same garden one day when she heard two
watermen talking without. The conversation was to the
effect that the strange gentleman who had taken Mount Lodge for
the season was seriously ill.</p>
<p>‘How ill?’ cried Margery through the hedge, which
screened her from recognition.</p>
<p>‘Bad abed,’ said one of the watermen.</p>
<p>‘Inflammation of the lungs,’ said the other.</p>
<p>‘Got wet, fishing,’ the first chimed in.</p>
<p>Margery could gather no more. An ideal admiration rather
than any positive passion existed in her breast for the Baron:
she had of late seen too little of him to allow any incipient
views of him as a lover to grow to formidable dimensions.
It was an extremely romantic feeling, delicate as an aroma,
capable of quickening to an active principle, or dying to
‘a painless sympathy,’ as the case might be.</p>
<p>This news of his illness, coupled with the mysterious chalking
on the gate, troubled her, and revived his image much. She
took to walking up and down the garden-paths, looking into the
hearts of flowers, and not thinking what they were. His
last request had been that she was not to go to him if be should
send for her; and now she asked herself, was the name on the gate
a hint to enable her to go without infringing the letter of her
promise? Thus unexpectedly had Jim’s manœuvre
operated.</p>
<p>Ten days passed. All she could hear of the Baron were
the same words, ‘Bad abed,’ till one afternoon, after
a gallop of the physician to the Lodge, the tidings spread like
lightning that the Baron was dying.</p>
<p>Margery distressed herself with the question whether she might
be permitted to visit him and say her prayers at his bedside; but
she feared to venture; and thus eight-and-forty hours slipped
away, and the Baron still lived. Despite her shyness and
awe of him she had almost made up her mind to call when, just at
dusk on that October evening, somebody came to the door and asked
for her.</p>
<p>She could see the messenger’s head against the low new
moon. He was a man-servant. He said he had been all
the way to her father’s, and had been sent thence to her
here. He simply brought a note, and, delivering it into her
hands, went away.</p>
<blockquote><p><span class="smcap">Dear Margery Tucker</span>
(ran the note)—They say I am not likely to live, so I want
to see you. Be here at eight o’clock this
evening. Come quite alone to the side-door, and tap four
times softly. My trusty man will admit you. The
occasion is an important one. Prepare yourself for a solemn
ceremony, which I wish to have performed while it lies in my
power.</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Von
Xanten</span>.</p>
</blockquote>
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