<h2>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
<p>Seeing that Jim lived several miles from the widow, Margery
was rather surprised, and even felt a slight sinking of the
heart, when her new acquaintance appeared at her door so soon as
the evening of the following Monday. She asked Margery to
walk out with her, which the young woman readily did.</p>
<p>‘I am come at once,’ said the widow breathlessly,
as soon as they were in the lane, ‘for it is so exciting
that I can’t keep it. I must tell it to somebody, if
only a bird, or a cat, or a garden snail.’</p>
<p>‘What is it?’ asked her companion.</p>
<p>‘I’ve pulled grass from my husband’s grave
to cure it—wove the blades into true lover’s knots;
took off my shoes upon the sod; but, avast, my
shipmate,—’</p>
<p>‘Upon the sod—why?’</p>
<p>‘To feel the damp earth he’s in, and make the
sense of it enter my soul. But no. It has swelled to
a head; he is going to meet me at the Yeomanry Review.’</p>
<p>‘The master lime-burner?’</p>
<p>The widow nodded.</p>
<p>‘When is it to be?’</p>
<p>‘To-morrow. He looks so lovely in his
accoutrements! He’s such a splendid soldier; that was
the last straw that kindled my soul to say yes. He’s
home from Exonbury for a night between the drills,’
continued Mrs. Peach. ‘He goes back to-morrow morning
for the Review, and when it’s over he’s going to meet
me. But, guide my heart, there he is!’</p>
<p>Her exclamation had rise in the sudden appearance of a
brilliant red uniform through the trees, and the tramp of a horse
carrying the wearer thereof. In another half-minute the
military gentleman would have turned the corner, and faced
them.</p>
<p>‘He’d better not see me; he’ll think I know
too much,’ said Margery precipitately.
‘I’ll go up here.’</p>
<p>The widow, whose thoughts had been of the same cast, seemed
much relieved to see Margery disappear in the plantation, in the
midst of a spring chorus of birds. Once among the trees,
Margery turned her head, and, before she could see the
rider’s person she recognized the horse as Tony, the
lightest of three that Jim and his partner owned, for the purpose
of carting out lime to their customers.</p>
<p>Jim, then, had joined the Yeomanry since his estrangement from
Margery. A man who had worn the young Queen
Victoria’s uniform for seven days only could not be
expected to look as if it were part of his person, in the manner
of long-trained soldiers; but he was a well-formed young fellow,
and of an age when few positions came amiss to one who has the
capacity to adapt himself to circumstances.</p>
<p>Meeting the blushing Mrs. Peach (to whom Margery in her mind
sternly denied the right to blush at all), Jim alighted and moved
on with her, probably at Mrs. Peach’s own suggestion; so
that what they said, how long they remained together, and how
they parted, Margery knew not. She might have known some of
these things by waiting; but the presence of Jim had bred in her
heart a sudden disgust for the widow, and a general sense of
discomfiture. She went away in an opposite direction,
turning her head and saying to the unconscious Jim,
‘There’s a fine rod in pickle for you, my gentleman,
if you carry out that pretty scheme!’</p>
<p>Jim’s military <i>coup</i> had decidedly astonished
her. What he might do next she could not
conjecture. The idea of his doing anything sufficiently
brilliant to arrest her attention would have seemed ludicrous,
had not Jim, by entering the Yeomanry, revealed a capacity for
dazzling exploits which made it unsafe to predict any limitation
to his powers.</p>
<p>Margery was now excited. The daring of the wretched Jim
in bursting into scarlet amazed her as much as his doubtful
acquaintanceship with the demonstrative Mrs. Peach. To go
to that Review, to watch the pair, to eclipse Mrs. Peach in
brilliancy, to meet and pass them in withering contempt—if
she only could do it! But, alas! she was a forsaken
woman.</p>
<p>‘If the Baron were alive, or in England,’ she said
to herself (for sometimes she thought he might possibly be
alive), ‘and he were to take me to this Review,
wouldn’t I show that forward Mrs. Peach what a lady is
like, and keep among the select company, and not mix with the
common people at all!’</p>
<p>It might at first sight be thought that the best course for
Margery at this juncture would have been to go to Jim, and nip
the intrigue in the bud without further scruple. But her
own declaration in after days was that whoever could say that was
far from realizing her situation. It was hard to break such
ice as divided their two lives now, and to attempt it at that
moment was a too humiliating proclamation of defeat. The
only plan she could think of—perhaps not a wise one in the
circumstances—was to go to the Review herself; and be the
gayest there.</p>
<p>A method of doing this with some propriety soon occurred to
her. She dared not ask her father, who scorned to waste
time in sight-seeing, and whose animosity towards Jim knew no
abatement; but she might call on her old acquaintance, Mr. Vine,
Jim’s partner, who would probably be going with the rest of
the holiday-folk, and ask if she might accompany him in his
spring-trap. She had no sooner perceived the feasibility of
this, through her being at her grandmother’s, than she
decided to meet with the old man early the next morning.</p>
<p>In the meantime Jim and Mrs. Peach had walked slowly along the
road together, Jim leading the horse, and Mrs. Peach informing
him that her father, the gardener, was at Jim’s village
further on, and that she had come to meet him. Jim, for
reasons of his own, was going to sleep at his partner’s
that night, and thus their route was the same. The shades
of eve closed in upon them as they walked, and by the time they
reached the lime-kiln, which it was necessary to pass to get to
the village, it was quite dark. Jim stopped at the kiln, to
see if matters had progressed rightly in his seven days’
absence, and Mrs. Peach, who stuck to him like a teazle, stopped
also, saying she would wait for her father there.</p>
<p>She held the horse while he ascended to the top of the
kiln. Then rejoining her, and not quite knowing what to do,
he stood beside her looking at the flames, which to-night burnt
up brightly, shining a long way into the dark air, even up to the
ramparts of the earthwork above them, and overhead into the
bosoms of the clouds.</p>
<p>It was during this proceeding that a carriage, drawn by a pair
of dark horses, came along the turnpike road. The light of
the kiln caused the horses to swerve a little, and the occupant
of the carriage looked out. He saw the bluish,
lightning-like flames from the limestone, rising from the top of
the furnace, and hard by the figures of Jim Hayward, the widow,
and the horse, standing out with spectral distinctness against
the mass of night behind. The scene wore the aspect of some
unholy assignation in Pandaemonium, and it was all the more
impressive from the fact that both Jim and the woman were quite
unconscious of the striking spectacle they presented. The
gentleman in the carriage watched them till he was borne out of
sight.</p>
<p>Having seen to the kiln, Jim and the widow walked on again,
and soon Mrs. Peach’s father met them, and relieved Jim of
the lady. When they had parted, Jim, with an expiration not
unlike a breath of relief; went on to Mr. Vine’s, and,
having put the horse into the stable, entered the house.
His partner was seated at the table, solacing himself after the
labours of the day by luxurious alternations between a long clay
pipe and a mug of perry.</p>
<p>‘Well,’ said Jim eagerly, ‘what’s the
news—how do she take it?’</p>
<p>‘Sit down—sit down,’ said Vine.
‘’Tis working well; not but that I deserve something
o’ thee for the trouble I’ve had in watching
her. The soldiering was a fine move; but the woman is a
better!—who invented it?’</p>
<p>‘I myself,’ said Jim modestly.</p>
<p>‘Well; jealousy is making her rise like a thunderstorm,
and in a day or two you’ll have her for the asking, my
sonny. What’s the next step?’</p>
<p>‘The widow is getting rather a weight upon a feller,
worse luck,’ said Jim. ‘But I must keep it up
until to-morrow, at any rate. I have promised to see her at
the Review, and now the great thing is that Margery should see we
a-smiling together—I in my full-dress uniform and clinking
arms o’ war. ’Twill be a good strong sting, and
will end the business, I hope. Couldn’t you manage to
put the hoss in and drive her there? She’d go if you
were to ask her.’</p>
<p>‘With all my heart,’ said Mr. Vine, moistening the
end of a new pipe in his perry. ‘I can call at her
grammer’s for her—’twill be all in my
way.’</p>
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