This chapter opens with a long monologue in which the audience is introduced to the characters of the novel. The narrator asks the audience if they know each other personally. He asks if they do, and the audience responds that they do. He then asks the reader if he knows her personally, and she responds that she does, but that she can't tell him what she saw. She then asks if he was stalking her, and he responds that he was. She asks him if he is accusing her of having sex with someone she knows, but the narrator says that he is, and that she should not have kept quiet about it. He tells the reader that he should have listened to her, as she is trying to tell him the truth, but she says that she doesn't want him to hear it, as he trembles when she thinks he knows a person. She tells the audience that she is disappointed that the man she saw was so judgmental, as it is not often that she worries so much about a person, as the narrator does. She also tells the story of how she was worried for a long time about the man, but he did not let her get a word in. She accuses him of being ungrateful and of being a bad person, and asks him to give her a chance to tell her the truth. He says he is not completely innocent, but it is the subject of the conversation that he wants to hear out. He wants to know why the man did not send him a message, and if the man was busy, why did he not leave the farm. He also asks why he was not notified of the disappearance of his pocket, and why he did nothing to alert her. He concludes that he does not want to come back to the farm, because he is too busy to do so. He wonders if he has enjoyed his adventure in
This chapter opens with a long monologue in which the audience is introduced to the characters of the novel. The narrator asks the audience if they know each other personally. He asks if they do, and the audience responds that they do. He then asks the reader if he knows her personally, and she responds that she does, but that she can't tell him what she saw. She then asks if he was stalking her, and he responds that he was. She asks him if he is accusing her of having sex with someone she knows, but the narrator says that he is, and that she should not have kept quiet about it. He tells the reader that he should have listened to her, as she is trying to tell him the truth, but she says that she doesn't want him to hear it, as he trembles when she thinks he knows a person. She tells the audience that she is disappointed that the man she saw was so judgmental, as it is not often that she worries so much about a person, as the narrator does. She also tells the story of how she was worried for a long time about the man, but he did not let her get a word in. She accuses him of being ungrateful and of being a bad person, and asks him to give her a chance to tell her the truth. He says he is not completely innocent, but it is the subject of the conversation that he wants to hear out. He wants to know why the man did not send him a message, and if the man was busy, why did he not leave the farm. He also asks why he was not notified of the disappearance of his pocket, and why he did nothing to alert her. He concludes that he does not want to come back to the farm, because he is too busy to do so. He wonders if he has enjoyed his adventure in