Edna still felt dazed when she got outside in the open air. The Doctor's

coupe had returned for him and stood before the porte cochere. She did

not wish to enter the coupe, and told Doctor Mandelet she would walk;

she was not afraid, and would go alone. He directed his carriage to meet

him at Mrs. Pontellier's, and he started to walk home with her.

Up--away up, over the narrow street between the tall houses, the stars

were blazing. The air was mild and caressing, but cool with the breath

of spring and the night. They walked slowly, the Doctor with a heavy,

measured tread and his hands behind him; Edna, in an absent-minded way,

as she had walked one night at Grand Isle, as if her thoughts had gone

ahead of her and she was striving to overtake them.

"You shouldn't have been there, Mrs. Pontellier," he said. "That was no

place for you. Adele is full of whims at such times. There were a dozen

women she might have had with her, unimpressionable women. I felt that

it was cruel, cruel. You shouldn't have gone."

"Oh, well!" she answered, indifferently. "I don't know that it matters

after all. One has to think of the children some time or other; the

sooner the better."

"When is Leonce coming back?"

"Quite soon. Sometime in March."

"And you are going abroad?"

"Perhaps--no, I am not going. I'm not going to be forced into doing

things. I don't want to go abroad. I want to be let alone. Nobody has

any right--except children, perhaps--and even then, it seems to me--or

it did seem--" She felt that her speech was voicing the incoherency of

her thoughts, and stopped abruptly.

"The trouble is," sighed the Doctor, grasping her meaning intuitively,

"that youth is given up to illusions. It seems to be a provision of

Nature; a decoy to secure mothers for the race. And Nature takes no

account of moral consequences, of arbitrary conditions which we create,

and which we feel obliged to maintain at any cost."

"Yes," she said. "The years that are gone seem like dreams--if one might

go on sleeping and dreaming--but to wake up and find--oh! well! perhaps

it is better to wake up after all, even to suffer, rather than to remain

a dupe to illusions all one's life."

"It seems to me, my dear child," said the Doctor at parting, holding her

hand, "you seem to me to be in trouble. I am not going to ask for your

confidence. I will only say that if ever you feel moved to give it to

me, perhaps I might help you. I know I would understand. And I tell you

there are not many who would--not many, my dear."




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