<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
<p>Margery could hardly repress a scream. As for flushing
and blushing, she had turned hot and turned pale so many times
already during the evening, that there was really now nothing of
that sort left for her to do; and she remained in complexion much
as before. O, the mockery of it! That secret
dream—that sweet word ‘Baroness!’—which
had sustained her all the way along. Instead of a Baron
there stood Jim, white-waistcoated, demure, every hair in place,
and, if she mistook not, even a deedy spark in his eye.</p>
<p>Jim’s surprising presence on the scene may be briefly
accounted for. His resolve to seek an explanation with the
Baron at all risks had proved unexpectedly easy: the interview
had at once been granted, and then, seeing the crisis at which
matters stood, the Baron had generously revealed to Jim the whole
of his indebtedness to and knowledge of Margery. The truth
of the Baron’s statement, the innocent nature as yet of the
acquaintanceship, his sorrow for the rupture he had produced, was
so evident that, far from having any further doubts of his
patron, Jim frankly asked his advice on the next step to be
pursued. At this stage the Baron fell ill, and, desiring
much to see the two young people united before his death, he had
sent anew Hayward, and proposed the plan which they were to now
about to attempt—a marriage at the bedside of the sick man
by special licence. The influence at Lambeth of some
friends of the Baron’s, and the charitable bequests of his
late mother to several deserving Church funds, were generally
supposed to be among the reasons why the application for the
licence was not refused.</p>
<p>This, however, is of small consequence. The Baron
probably knew, in proposing this method of celebrating the
marriage, that his enormous power over her would outweigh any
sentimental obstacles which she might set up—inward
objections that, without his presence and firmness, might prove
too much for her acquiescence. Doubtless he foresaw, too,
the advantage of getting her into the house before making the
individuality of her husband clear to her mind.</p>
<p>Now, the Baron’s conjectures were right as to the event,
but wrong as to the motives. Margery was a perfect little
dissembler on some occasions, and one of them was when she wished
to hide any sudden mortification that might bring her into
ridicule. She had no sooner recovered from her first fit of
discomfiture than pride bade her suffer anything rather than
reveal her absurd disappointment. Hence the scene
progressed as follows:</p>
<p>‘Come here, Hayward,’ said the invalid.
Hayward came near. The Baron, holding her hand in one of
his own, and her lover’s in the other, continued,
‘Will you, in spite of your recent vexation with her, marry
her now if she does not refuse?’</p>
<p>‘I will, sir,’ said Jim promptly.</p>
<p>‘And Margery, what do you say? It is merely a
setting of things right. You have already promised this
young man to be his wife, and should, of course, perform your
promise. You don’t dislike Jim?’</p>
<p>‘O, no, sir,’ she said, in a low, dry voice.</p>
<p>‘I like him better than I can tell you,’ said the
Baron. ‘He is an honourable man, and will make you a
good husband. You must remember that marriage is a life
contract, in which general compatibility of temper and worldly
position is of more importance than fleeting passion, which never
long survives. Now, will you, at my earnest request, and
before I go to the South of Europe to die, agree to make this
good man happy? I have expressed your views on the subject,
haven’t I, Hayward?’</p>
<p>‘To a T, sir,’ said Jim emphatically; with a
motion of raising his hat to his influential ally, till he
remembered he had no hat on. ‘And, though I could
hardly expect Margery to gie in for my asking, I feels she ought
to gie in for yours.’</p>
<p>‘And you accept him, my little friend?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, sir,’ she murmured, ‘if he’ll
agree to a thing or two.’</p>
<p>‘Doubtless he will—what are they?’</p>
<p>‘That I shall not be made to live with him till I am in
the mind for it; and that my having him shall be kept unknown for
the present.’</p>
<p>‘Well, what do you think of it, Hayward?’</p>
<p>‘Anything that you or she may wish I’ll do, my
noble lord,’ said Jim.</p>
<p>‘Well, her request is not unreasonable, seeing that the
proceedings are, on my account, a little hurried. So
we’ll proceed. You rather expected this, from my
allusion to a ceremony in my note, did you not,
Margery?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, sir,’ said she, with an effort.</p>
<p>‘Good; I thought so; you looked so little
surprised.’</p>
<p>We now leave the scene in the bedroom for a spot not many
yards off.</p>
<p>When the carriage seen by Margery at the door was driving up
to Mount Lodge it arrested the attention, not only of the young
girl, but of a man who had for some time been moving slowly about
the opposite lawn, engaged in some operation while he smoked a
short pipe. A short observation of his doings would have
shown that he was sheltering some delicate plants from an
expected frost, and that he was the gardener. When the
light at the door fell upon the entering forms of parson and
lawyer—the former a stranger, the latter known to
him—the gardener walked thoughtfully round the house.
Reaching the small side-entrance he was further surprised to see
it noiselessly open to a young woman, in whose momentarily
illumined features he discerned those of Margery Tucker.</p>
<p>Altogether there was something curious in this. The man
returned to the lawn front, and perfunctorily went on putting
shelters over certain plants, though his thoughts were plainly
otherwise engaged. On the grass his footsteps were
noiseless, and the night moreover being still, he could presently
hear a murmuring from the bedroom window over his head.</p>
<p>The gardener took from a tree a ladder that he had used in
nailing that day, set it under the window, and ascended half-way,
hoodwinking his conscience by seizing a nail or two with his hand
and testing their twig-supporting powers. He soon heard
enough to satisfy him. The words of a church-service in the
strange parson’s voice were audible in snatches through the
blind: they were words he knew to be part of the solemnization of
matrimony, such as ‘wedded wife,’ ‘richer for
poorer,’ and so on; the less familiar parts being a more or
less confused sound.</p>
<p>Satisfied that a wedding was in progress there, the gardener
did not for a moment dream that one of the contracting parties
could be other than the sick Baron. He descended the ladder
and again walked round the house, waiting only till he saw
Margery emerge from the same little door; when, fearing that he
might be discovered, he withdrew in the direction of his own
cottage.</p>
<p>This building stood at the lower corner of the garden, and as
soon as the gardener entered he was accosted by a handsome woman
in a widow’s cap, who called him father, and said that
supper had been ready for a long time. They sat down, but
during the meal the gardener was so abstracted and silent that
his daughter put her head winningly to one side and said,
‘What is it, father dear?’</p>
<p>‘Ah—what is it!’ cried the gardener.
‘Something that makes very little difference to me, but may
be of great account to you, if you play your cards well.
<i>There’s been a wedding at the Lodge
to-night</i>!’ He related to her, with a caution to
secrecy, all that he had heard and seen.</p>
<p>‘We are folk that have got to get their living,’
he said, ‘and such ones mustn’t tell tales about
their betters,—Lord forgive the mockery of the
word!—but there’s something to be made of it.
She’s a nice maid; so, Harriet, do you take the first
chance you get for honouring her, before others know what has
happened. Since this is done so privately it will be kept
private for some time—till after his death, no
question;—when I expect she’ll take this house for
herself; and blaze out as a widow-lady ten thousand pound
strong. You being a widow, she may make you her
company-keeper; and so you’ll have a home by a little
contriving.’</p>
<p>While this conversation progressed at the gardener’s
Margery was on her way out of the Baron’s house. She
was, indeed, married. But, as we know, she was not married
to the Baron. The ceremony over she seemed but little
discomposed, and expressed a wish to return alone as she had
come. To this, of course, no objection could be offered
under the terms of the agreement, and wishing Jim a frigid
good-bye, and the Baron a very quiet farewell, she went out by
the door which had admitted her. Once safe and alone in the
darkness of the park she burst into tears, which dropped upon the
grass as she passed along. In the Baron’s room she
had seemed scared and helpless; now her reason and emotions
returned. The further she got away from the glamour of that
room, and the influence of its occupant, the more she became of
opinion that she had acted foolishly. She had disobediently
left her father’s house, to obey him here. She had
pleased everybody but herself.</p>
<p>However, thinking was now too late. How she got into her
grandmother’s house she hardly knew; but without a supper,
and without confronting either her relative or Edy, she went to
bed.</p>
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