Margery returned home, as she had decided, and resumed her old life at Silverthorn.And seeing her father's animosity towards Jim, she told him not a word of the marriage.
Her inner life, however, was not what it once had been.She had suffered a mental and emotional displacement--a shock, which had set a shade of astonishment on her face as a permanent thing.
Her indignation with the Baron for collusion with Jim, at first bitter, lessened with the lapse of a few weeks, and at length vanished in the interest of some tidings she received one day.
The Baron was not dead, but he was no longer at the Lodge.To the surprise of the physicians, a sufficient improvement had taken place in his condition to permit of his removal before the cold weather came.His desire for removal had been such, indeed, that it was advisable to carry it out at almost any risk.The plan adopted had been to have him borne on men's shoulders in a sort of palanquin to the shore near Idmouth, a distance of several miles, where a yacht lay awaiting him.By this means the noise and jolting of a carriage, along irregular bye-roads, were avoided.The singular procession over the fields took place at night, and was witnessed by but few people, one being a labouring man, who described the scene to Margery.When the seaside was reached a long, narrow gangway was laid from the deck of the yacht to the shore, which was so steep as to allow the yacht to lie quite near.The men, with their burden, ascended by the light of lanterns, the sick man was laid in the cabin, and, as soon as his bearers had returned to the shore, the gangway was removed, a rope was heard skirring over wood in the darkness, the yacht quivered, spread her woven wings to the air, and moved away.Soon she was but a small, shapeless phantom upon the wide breast of the sea.
It was said that the yacht was bound for Algiers.
When the inimical autumn and winter weather came on, Margery wondered if he were still alive.The house being shut up, and the servants gone, she had no means of knowing, till, on a particular Saturday, her father drove her to Exonbury market.Here, in attending to his business, he left her to herself for awhile.Walking in a quiet street in the professional quarter of the town, she saw coming towards her the solicitor who had been present at the wedding, and who had acted for the Baron in various small local matters during his brief residence at the Lodge.
She reddened to peony hues, averted her eyes, and would have passed him.But he crossed over and barred the pavement, and when she met his glance he was looking with friendly severity at her.The street was quiet, and he said in a low voice, 'How's the husband?'
'I don't know, sir,' said she.
'What--and are your stipulations about secrecy and separate living still in force?'
'They will always be,' she replied decisively.'Mr.Hayward and Iagreed on the point, and we have not the slightest wish to change the arrangement.'
'H'm.Then 'tis Miss Tucker to the world; Mrs.Hayward to me and one or two others only?'
Margery nodded.Then she nerved herself by an effort, and, though blushing painfully, asked, 'May I put one question, sir? Is the Baron dead?'
'He is dead to you and to all of us.Why should you ask?'
'Because, if he's alive, I am sorry I married James Hayward.If he is dead I do not much mind my marriage.'
'I repeat, he is dead to you,' said the lawyer emphatically.'I'll tell you all I know.My professional services for him ended with his departure from this country; but I think I should have heard from him if he had been alive still.I have not heard at all: and this, taken in connection with the nature of his illness, leaves no doubt in my mind that he is dead.'
Margery sighed, and thanking the lawyer she left him with a tear for the Baron in her eye.After this incident she became more restful;and the time drew on for her periodical visit to her grandmother.