The Amazing Interlude - Page 15/173

So Harvey stopped whistling, rang the bell apologetically, and--faced a

new and vivid Sara Lee, flushed and with shining eyes, but woefully

frightened.

She told him almost at once. He had only reached the dining room of

the Leete house, which he was explaining had a white wainscoting when

she interrupted him. The ladies of the Methodist Church were going to

collect a certain amount each month to support a soup kitchen as near

the Front as possible.

"Good work!" said Harvey heartily. "I suppose they do get hungry, poor

devils. Now about the dining room--"

"Harvey dear," Sara Lee broke in, "I've not finished. I--I'm going

over to run it."

"You are not!"

"But I am! It's all arranged. It's my plan. They've all wanted to do

something besides giving clothes. They send barrels, and they never hear

from them again, and it's hard to keep interested. But with me there,

writing home and telling them, 'To-day we served soup to this man, and

that man, perhaps wounded.' And--and that sort of thing--don't you see

how interested every one will be? Mrs. Gregory has promised twenty-five

dollars a month, and--"

"You're not going," said Harvey in a flat tone. "That's all. Don't

talk to me about it."

Sara Lee flushed deeper and started again, but rather hopelessly.

There was no converting a man who would not argue or reason, who based

everything on flat refusal.

"But somebody must go," she said with a tightening of her voice.

"Here's Mabel Andrews' letter. Read it and you will understand."

"I don't want to read it."

Nevertheless he took it and read it. He read slowly. He did nothing

quickly except assert his masculine domination. He had all the faults

of his virtues; he was as slow as he was sure, as unimaginative as he

was faithful.

He read it and gave it back to her.

"I don't think you mean it," he said. "I give you credit for too much

sense. Maybe some one is needed over there. I guess things are pretty

bad. But why should you make it your affair? There are about a million

women in this country that haven't got anything else to do. Let them go."

"Some of them will. But they're afraid, mostly."

"Afraid! My God, I should think they would be afraid! And you're asking

me to let you go into danger, to put off our wedding while you wander

about over there with a million men and no women and--"