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THE WAITING SUPPER CHAPTER I
 Whoever had perceived the yeoman on Everard’s lawn in the dusk of that October evening fifty years ago, might have said at first sight that he was loitering there from idle curiosity.  For a large five-light window of the manor-house in front of him was unshuttered and uncurtained, so that the room within could be scanned almost to its four corners.  Obviously nobody was ever expected to be in this part of the grounds after nightfall.  
The apartment thus swept by an eye from without was occupied by two persons; they were sitting over dessert, the having been removed in the old-fashioned way.  The fruits were local, consisting of apples, pears, nuts, and such other products of the summer as might be presumed to grow on the estate.  There was strong ale and rum on the table, and but little wine.  Moreover, the appointments of the dining-room were simple and even for the date, a countrified household of the smaller , without much wealth or ambition—formerly a numerous class, but now in great part by the landlords.
 
One of the two sitters was a young lady in white muslin, who listened somewhat impatiently to the remarks of her companion, an elderly, personage, whom the merest stranger could have pronounced to be her father.  The watcher evinced no signs of moving, and it became evident that affairs were not so simple as they first had seemed.  The tall farmer was in fact no accidental spectator, and he stood by premeditation close to the trunk of a tree, so that had any traveller passed along the road without the park gate, or even round the lawn to the door, that person would scarce have noticed the other, notwithstanding that the gate was quite near at hand, and the park little larger than a paddock.  There was still light enough in the western heaven to brighten faintly one side of the man’s face, and to show against the trunk of the tree behind the admirable cut of his profile; also to reveal that the front of the manor-house, small though it seemed, was solidly built of stone in that never-to-be-surpassed style for the English country residence—the mullioned and transomed Elizabethan.
 
The lawn, although neglected, was still as level as a bowling-green—which indeed it might once have served for; and the blades of grass before the window were raked by the candle-shine, which stretched over them so far as to touch the yeoman’s face in front.
 
Within the dining-room there were also, with one of the twain, the same signs of a hidden purpose that marked the farmer.  The young lady’s mind was straying as clearly into the shadows as that of the loiterer was upon the room—nay, it could be said that she was quite conscious of his presence outside.  caused her foot to beat silently on the carpet, and she more than once rose to leave the table.  This was checked by her father, who would put his hand upon her shoulder and unceremoniously press her down into her chair, till he should have concluded his observations.  Her replies were brief enough, and there was factitiousness in her smiles of to his views.  A small iron between two of the mullions was open, and some occasional words of the dialogue were audible without.
 
‘As for drains—how can I put in drains?  The pipes don’t cost much, that’s true; but the labour in sinking the is ruination.  And then the gates—they should be hung to stone posts, otherwise there’s no keeping them up through harvest.’  The Squire’s voice was strongly toned with the local accent, so that he said ‘draïns’ and ‘geäts’ like the on his estate.
 
The landscape without grew darker, and the young man’s figure seemed to be absorbed into the trunk of the tree.  The small stars filled in between the larger, the nebulae between the small stars, the trees quite lost their voice; and if there was still a sound, it was from the of a stream which stretched along under the trees that bounded the lawn on its northern side.
 
At last the young girl did get to her feet and secure her retreat.  ‘I have something to do, papa,’ she said.  ‘I shall not be in the drawing-room just yet.’
 
‘Very well,’ replied he.  ‘Then I won’t hurry.’  And closing the door behind her, he drew his decanters together and settled down in his chair.
 
Three minutes after that a woman’s shape emerged from the drawing-room window, and passing through a wall-door to the entrance front, came across the grass.  She kept well clear of the dining-room window, but enough of its light fell on her to show, escaping from the dark-hooded cloak that she wore, stray of the same light dress which had figured but recently at the dinner-table.  The was contracted tight about her face with a drawing-string, making her small and baby-like, and lovelier even than before.
 
Without she brushed across the grass to the tree under which the young man stood .  The moment she had reached him he enclosed her form with his arm.  The meeting and embrace, though by no means formal, were yet not ; the whole proceeding was that of persons who had repeated the act so often as to be unconscious of its performance.  She turned within his arm, and faced in the same direction with himself, which was towards the window; and thus they stood without speaking, the back of her head leaning against his shoulder.  For a while each seemed to be thinking his and her diverse thoughts.
 
‘You have kept me waiting a long time, dear Christine,’ he said at last.  ‘I wanted to speak to you particularly, or I should not have stayed.  How came you to be dining at this time o’ night?’
 
‘Father has been out all day, and dinner was put back till six.  I know I have kept you; but Nicholas, how can I help it sometimes, if I am not to run any risk?  My poor father insists upon my listening to all he has to say; since my brother left he has had nobody else to listen to him; and to-night he was particularly tedious on his usual topics—draining, and tenant-farmers, and the village people.  I must take daddy to London; he gets so narrow always staying here.’
 
‘And what did you say to it all?’
 
‘Well, I took the part of the tenant-farmers, of course, as the beloved of one should in duty do.’  There followed a little break or , implying a strangled sigh.
 
‘You are sorry you have encouraged that beloving one?’
 
‘O no, Nicholas . . . What is it you want to see me for particularly?’
 
‘I know you are sorry, as time goes on, and everything is at a dead-lock, with no of change, and your rural swain loses his freshness!  Only think, this secret understanding between us has lasted near three year, ever since you was a little over sixteen.’
 
‘Yes; it has been a long time.’
 
‘And I an untamed, uncultivated man, who has never seen London, and knows nothing about society at all.’
 
‘Not uncultivated, dear Nicholas.  Untravelled, socially unpractised, if you will,’ she said, smiling.  ‘Well, I did sigh; but not because I regret being your promised one.  What I do sometimes regret is that the scheme, which my meetings with you are but a part of, has not been carried out completely.  You said, Nicholas, that if I consented to swear to keep faith with you, you would go away and travel, and see nations, and peoples, and cities, and take a professor with you, and study books and art, with your study of men and manners; and then come back at the end of two years, when I should find that my father would by no means be indisposed to accept you as a son-in-law.  You said your reason for wishing to get my promise before starting was that your mind would then be more at rest when you were far away, and so could give itself more completely to knowledge than if you we............
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