She gripped his hand tighter.
“Ess fay, I knaw, I knaw; but doan’t ’e put your mother first now,—ban’t nature. God bless an’ keep the both of ’e. ’Twill allus be my prayer.”
The cart rattled away, Chris driving, and such silence as Phoebe had never known held the darkening land. She noted a yellow star against the sombre ridge of the world, felt Will’s arm round her and turned to him, seeking that comfort and support her nature cried out for.
Infinitely tender and loving was her husband then, and jubilant, too, at first; but a little later, when Chown had been packed off to his own apartment, with not a few delicacies he had never bargained for, the conversation flagged and the banquet also.
The table was laden with two capons, a ham, a great sugared cake, a whole Dutch cheese, an old-fashioned cut-glass decanter containing brown sherry, and two green wine-glasses for its reception; yet these luxuries tempted neither husband nor wife to much enjoyment of them. Indeed Phoebe’s obvious lowness of spirits presently found its echo in Will. The silences grew longer and longer; then the husband set down his knife and fork, and leaving the head of the table went round to his wife’s side and took her hand and squeezed it, but did not speak. She turned to him and he saw her shut her eyes and give a little shiver. Then a tear flashed upon her lashes and twinkled boldly down, followed by another.
“Phoebe! My awn li’l wummon! This be a wisht home-comin’! What the plague’s the matter wi’ us?”
“Doan’t ’e mind, dear heart. I’m happy as a bird under these silly tears. But ’twas the leavin’ o’ faither, an’ him so hard, an’ me lovin’ him so dear, an’—an’—”
“Doan’t ’e break your heart ’bout him. He’ll come round right enough. ’Twas awnly the pang o’ your gwaine away, like the drawin’ of a tooth.”
“Everybody else in the world knaws I ought to be here,” sobbed Phoebe, “but faither, he won’t see it. An’ I caan’t get un out of my mind to-night, sitting that mournfui an’ desolate, wi’ his ear deaf to Billy’s noise an’ his thoughts up here.”
“If he won’t onderstand the ways of marriage, blessed if I see how we can make him. Surely to God, ’twas time I had my awn?”