There was a garden out in the suburbs; a small, leafy corner, with a

few green tables under the orange trees. An old cat slept all day on the

stone step in the sun, and an old mulatresse slept her idle hours away

in her chair at the open window, till someone happened to knock on one

of the green tables. She had milk and cream cheese to sell, and bread

and butter. There was no one who could make such excellent coffee or fry

a chicken so golden brown as she.

The place was too modest to attract the attention of people of fashion,

and so quiet as to have escaped the notice of those in search of

pleasure and dissipation. Edna had discovered it accidentally one day

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when the high-board gate stood ajar. She caught sight of a little green

table, blotched with the checkered sunlight that filtered through

the quivering leaves overhead. Within she had found the slumbering

mulatresse, the drowsy cat, and a glass of milk which reminded her of

the milk she had tasted in Iberville.

She often stopped there during her perambulations; sometimes taking a

book with her, and sitting an hour or two under the trees when she found

the place deserted. Once or twice she took a quiet dinner there alone,

having instructed Celestine beforehand to prepare no dinner at home. It

was the last place in the city where she would have expected to meet any

one she knew.

Still she was not astonished when, as she was partaking of a modest

dinner late in the afternoon, looking into an open book, stroking the

cat, which had made friends with her--she was not greatly astonished to

see Robert come in at the tall garden gate.

"I am destined to see you only by accident," she said, shoving the

cat off the chair beside her. He was surprised, ill at ease, almost

embarrassed at meeting her thus so unexpectedly.

"Do you come here often?" he asked.

"I almost live here," she said.

"I used to drop in very often for a cup of Catiche's good coffee. This

is the first time since I came back."

"She'll bring you a plate, and you will share my dinner. There's always

enough for two--even three." Edna had intended to be indifferent and as

reserved as he when she met him; she had reached the determination by a

laborious train of reasoning, incident to one of her despondent moods.

But her resolve melted when she saw him before designing Providence had

led him into her path.

"Why have you kept away from me, Robert?" she asked, closing the book

that lay open upon the table.




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