The Amazing Interlude - Page 66/173

The girl was singularly adaptable. In a few days it was as though she

had been for years in her little ruined house. She was very happy,

though there was scarcely a day when her heart was not wrung. Such

young-old faces! Such weary men! And such tales of wretchedness!

She got the tales by intuition rather than by words, though she was

picking up some French at that. Marie would weep openly, at times. The

most frequent story was of no news from the country held by the Germans,

of families left with nothing and probably starving. The first inquiry

was always for news. Had the American lady any way to make inquiry?

In time Sara Lee began to take notes of names and addresses, and through

Mr. Travers, in London, and the Relief Commission, in Belgium, bits of

information came back. A certain family was in England at a village in

Surrey. Of another a child had died. Here was one that could not be

located, and another reported massacred during the invasion.

Later on Sara Lee was to find her little house growing famous, besieged

by anxious soldiers who besought her efforts, so that she used enormous

numbers of stamps and a great deal of effort. But that was later on.

And when that time came she turned to the work as a refuge from her

thoughts. For days were coming when Sara Lee did not want to think.

But like all big things the little house made a humble beginning. A mere

handful of men, daring the gibes of their comrades, stopped in that first

night the door stood open, with its invitation of firelight and candles.

But these few went away with a strange story--of a beautiful American,

and hot soup, and even a cigarette apiece. That had been Henri's

contribution, the cigarettes. And soon the fame of the little house went

up and down the trenches, and it was like to die of overpopularity.

It was at night that the little house of mercy bloomed like a flower.

During the daytime it was quiet, and it was then, as time went on, that

Sara Lee wrote her letters home and to England, and sent her lists of

names to be investigated. But from the beginning there was much to do.

Vegetables were to be prepared for the soup, Marie must find and bring

in milk for the chocolate, Rene must lay aside his rifle and chop

firewood.

One worry, however, disappeared with the days. Henri was proving a

clever buyer. The money she sent in secured marvels. Only Jean knew,

or ever knew, just how much of Henri's steadily decreasing funds went

to that buying. Certainly not Sara Lee. And Jean expostulated only

once--to be met by such blazing fury as set him sullen for two days.