The Ballad of the Sad Café-1
and t s. Ster litigation over just a trifle. It if Miss Amelia so mucumbled over a rock in tinctively as to sue about it. Aside from ts seady life and every day o cil t Miss Amelia y years old.
It o evening in April. t. t spring promised s. Doory , and t, steady o o make love. Or to sit quietly and pick a guitar, or simply to rest alone and t all. treet t evening ed, but Miss Amelias store umpy MacPy, purplisop step e imid person le manners and nervous tom step. Miss Amelia ood leaning against t crossed in ts, patiently untying knots in a rope s talked for a long time.
One of t to speak. quot;I see somet; he said.
quot;A calf got loose,quot; said her.
till too distant to be clearly seen. ted srees along t spring grass mingled he near-by lagoon.
quot;No. Its somebodys youngun,quot; said Stumpy MacPhail.
Miss Amelia c do continued until a voice called out and until te close, from t t had come.
tranger, and it is rare t a stranger enters to at t tall and y coat t reaco tle legs seemed too to carry t of sat on blue eyes and a stle mout and sassy -- at t and tcase h a rope.