The Egoist by George Meredith
page 359 of 777 (46%)
page 359 of 777 (46%)
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too early for the opening of the door, so that Crossjay began to dance
with an appetite, and was despatched to besiege a bakery. Clara felt lonely without him: apprehensively timid in the shuttered, unmoving village street. She was glad of his return. When at last her letter was handed to her, on the testimony of the postman that she was the lawful applicant, Crossjay and she put out on a sharp trot to be back at the Hall in good time. She took a swallowing glance of the first page of Lucy's writing: "Telegraph, and I will meet you. I will supply you with everything you can want for the two nights, if you cannot stop longer." That was the gist of the letter. A second, less voracious, glance at it along the road brought sweetness:--Lucy wrote: "Do I love you as I did? my best friend, you must fall into unhappiness to have the answer to that." Clara broke a silence. "Yes, dear Crossjay, and if you like you shall have another walk with me after breakfast. But, remember, you must not say where you have gone with me. I shall give you twenty shillings to go and buy those bird's eggs and the butterflies you want for your collection; and mind, promise me, to-day is your last day of truancy. Tell Mr. Whitford how ungrateful you know you have been, that he may have some hope of you. You know the way across the fields to the railway station?" "You save a mile; you drop on the road by Combline's mill, and then there's another five-minutes' cut, and the rest's road." |
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