THE AMAZING INTERLUDE

By

Mary Roberts Rinehart

VI

Sara Lee Kennedy was up at dawn the next morning. There was a very

serious matter to decide, for Henri's plan had included only such hand

luggage as she herself could carry.

Sara Lee care fully laid out on the bed such articles as she could not

possibly do without, and was able to pack into her suitcase less than

a fourth of them. She had fortunately brought a soft wool sweater,

which required little room. Undergarments, several blouses, the sweater

and a pair of heavy shoes - that was her equipment, plus such small

toilet outfit as is necessary when a young woman uses no make-up and

regards cold cream only as a remedy for chapped hands.

The maid found her in rather a dismal mood.

"Going across, miss!" she said. "Fancy that!"

"It's a secret," cautioned Sara Lee. "I am really not sure I am going.

I am only trying to go."

The maid, who found Sara Lee and the picture of Harvey on her dressing

table both romantic and appealing, offered to pack. From the first

moment it was evident that she meant to include the white dress. Indeed

she packed it first.

"You never know what's going to happen over there," she asserted. "They

do say that royalties are everywhere, going about like common people.

You'd better have a good frock with you."

She had an air of subdued excitement, and after she had established the

fact that not only the white frock but slippers and hose also would go

in she went to the door and glanced up and down the passage. Then she

closed the door.

"There was queer goings-on here last night, miss," she said cautiously.

"Spies!"

"Oh, no!" cried Sara Lee.

"Spies," she repeated. "A man and a woman, pretending to be Belgian

refugees. They took them away at daylight. I expect by now they've

been shot."

Sara Lee ate very little breakfast that morning. All through England

it was confidently believed that spies were shot on discovery, a theory

that has been persistent - and false, save at the battle line - since

the beginning of the war. And Henri's plan assumed new proportions.

Suppose she made her attempt and failed? Suppose they took her for a

spy, and that tomorrow's sun found her facing a firing squad? Not,

indeed, that she had ever heard of a firing squad, as such. But she

had seen spies shot in the movies. They invariably stood in front of

a brick wall, with the hero in the center.

So she absent-mindedly ate her kippered herring, which had been strongly

recommended by the waiter, and tried to think of what a spy would do, so

she might avoid any suspicious movements. It struck her, too, that war

seemed to have made the people on that side of the ocean extremely ready

with weapons. They would be quite likely to shoot first and ask

questions afterwards - which would be too late to be helpful.

She remembered Henri, for instance, and the way, without a word, he had

shot the donkey.

That day she wrote Harvey a letter.

"Dearest:" it began; "I think I am to leave for France to-night. Things

seem to be moving nicely, and I am being helped by the Belgian Relief

Commission. It is composed of Belgians and is at the Savoy Hotel."

Here she stopped and cried a little. What if she should never see

Harvey again - never have his sturdy arms about her? Harvey gained by

distance. She remembered only his unfailing kindness and strength and

his love for her. He seemed, here at the edge of the whirlpool, a sort

of eddy of peace and quiet. Even then she had no thought of going back

until her work was done, but she did an unusual thing for her, unused

to demonstration of any sort. She kissed his ring.

Followed directions about sending the money from the church society,

a description of Morley's and Trafalgar Square, an account of tea at

the Travers', and of the little donkey - without mention, however, of

Henri. She felt that Harvey would not understand Henri.

But at the end came the passage which poor Harvey read and re-read

when the letter came, and alternately ground his teeth over and kissed.

"I do love you, Harvey dear. And I am coming back to you. I have felt

that I had to do what I am doing, but I am coming back. That's a

promise. Unless, of course, I should take sick, or something like that,

which isn't likely."

There was a long pause in the writing here, but Harvey could not know

that.

"I shall wear your ring always; and always, Harvey, it will mean to me

that I belong to you. With dearest love.

"SARA LEE"

Then she added a postscript, of course.

"The War Office is not letting people cross to Calais just now. But I

am going to do it anyhow. It is perfectly simple. And when I get over

I shall write and tell you how.

"S. L."

It was the next day that an indignant official in the censor's office

read that postscript, and rose in his wrath and sent a third

Undersomething-or-other to look up Sara Lee at Morley's. But by this

time she was embarked on the big adventure; and by the time a cable

reached Calais there was no trace of Sara Lee.

During the afternoon she called up Mr. Travers at his office, and rather

gathered that he did not care to use the telephone during business hours.

"I just wanted to tell you that you need not bother about me any more,"

she said. "I am being sent over and I think everything is all right."

He was greatly relieved. Mrs. Travers had not fully indorsed his

encomiums of the girl. She had felt that no really nice girl would

travel so far on so precarious an errand, particularly when she was

alone. And how could one tell, coming from America, how her sympathies

really lay? She might be of German parentage - the very worst sort,

because they spoke American. It was easy enough to change a name.

Nevertheless, Mr. Travers felt a trifle low in his mind when he hung up

the receiver. He said twice to himself: "Twenty pounds!" And at last

he put four sovereigns in an envelope and sent them to her anonymously

by messenger. Sara Lee guessed whence they came, but she respected the

manner of the gift and did not thank him. It was almost the first gold

money she had ever seen.

She was very carefully searched at the railway station that night and

found that her American Red Cross button, which had come with her dollar

subscription to the association, made the matron inspector rather

kindly inclined. Nevertheless, she took off Sara Lee's shoes, and ran

over the lining of her coat, and quite ruined the maid's packing of the

suitcase.

"You are going to Boulogne?" asked the matron inspector.

Sara Lee did not like to lie.

"Wherever the boat takes me," she said with smile.

The matron smiled too.

"I shouldn't be nervous, miss," she said. "It's a chance, of course,

but they have not done much damage yet."

It was after midnight then, and a cold fog made the station a gloomy

thing of blurred yellow lights and raw chill. A few people moved about,

mostly officers in uniform. Half a dozen men in civilian clothes

eyed her as she passed through the gates; Scotland Yard, but she did not

know. And once she thought she saw Henri, but he walked away into the

shadows and disappeared. The train, looking as absurdly small and light

as all English trains do, was waiting out in the shed. There were no

porters, and Sara Lee carried her own bag.

She felt quite sure she had been mistaken about Henri, for of course

he would have come and carried it for her.

The train was cold and quiet. When it finally moved out it was under

way before she knew that it was going. And then suddenly Sara Lee's

heart began to pound hard.

It was a very cold and shivering Sara Lee who curled up, alone in her

compartment, and stared hard at Harvey's ring to keep her courage up.

But a curious thing had happened. Harvey gave her no moral support.

He brought her only disapproval. She found herself remembering none of

the loving things he had said to her, but only the bitter ones.

Perhaps it was the best thing for her, after all. For a sort of dogged

determination to go through with it all, at any cost, braced her to her

final effort.

So far it had all been busy enough, but not comfortable. She was cold,

and she had eaten almost nothing all day. As the hours went on and the

train slid through the darkness she realized that she was rather faint.

The steam pipes, only warm at the start, were entirely cold by one

o'clock, and by two Sara Lee was sitting on her feet, with a heavy coat

wrapped about her knees.

The train moved quietly, as do all English trains, with no jars and

little sound. There were few lights outside, for the towns of Eastern

England were darkened, like London, against air attacks. So when she

looked at the window she saw only her own reflection, white and

wide-eyed, above Aunt Harriet's fur neckpiece.

In the next compartment an officer was snoring, but she did not close

her eyes. Perhaps, for that last hour, some of the glow that had brought

her so far failed her. She was not able to think beyond Folkestone, save

occasionally, and that with a feeling that it should not be made so

difficult to do a kind and helpful thing.

At a quarter before three the train eased down. In the same proportion

Sara Lee's pulse went up. A long period of crawling along, a stop or

two, but no resultant opening of the doors; and at last, in a cold rain

and a howling wind from the channel, the little seaport city.

More officers than she had suspected, a few women, got out. The latter

Sara Lee's experience on the steamer enabled her to place; buyers mostly,

and Americans, on their way to Paris, blockade or no blockade, because

the American woman must be well and smartly gowned and hatted. A man

with a mourning band on his sleeve carried a wailing child.

The officers lighted cigarettes. The civilians formed a line on the

jetty under the roof of the shed, and waited, passports in hand, before

a door that gleamed with yellow light. Faces looked pale and anxious.

The blockade was on, and Germany had said that no ships would cross

that night.

As if defiantly the Boulogne boat, near at hand, was ablaze, on the shore

side at least, with lights. Stewards came and went. Beyond it lay the

harbor, dark and mysterious save where, from somewhere across, a

flashlight made a brave effort to pierce the fog.

One of the buyers ahead of Sara' Lee seemed exhilarated by the danger

ahead.

"They'll never get us," she said. "Look at that fog!"

"It's lifting, dearie," answered a weary voice behind her. "The wind is

carrying it away."

When Sara Lee's turn came she was ready. A group of men in civilian

clothes, seated about a long table, looked her over carefully. Her

passports moved deliberately from hand to hand. A long business, and

the baby wailing harder than ever. But the office was at least warm.

Some of her failing courage came back as she moved, following her papers,

round the table. They were given back to her at last, and she went out.

She had passed the first ordeal.

Suitcase in hand she wandered down the stone jetty. The Boulogne boat

she passed, and kept on. At the very end, dark and sinister, lay another

boat. It had no lights. The tide was in, and its deck lay almost flush

with the pier. Sara Lee walked on toward it until a voice spoke to her

out of the darkness and near at hand.

"Your boat is back there, madam."

"I know. Thank you. I am just walking about."

The petty officer - he was a petty officer, though Sara Lee had never

heard the term - was inclined to be suspicious. Under excuse of lighting

his pipe he struck a match, and Sara Lee's young figure stood out in full

relief. His suspicions died away with the flare.

"Bad night, miss," he offered.

"Very," said Sara Lee, and turned back again.

This time, bewildered and uneasy, she certainly saw Henri. But he

ignored her. He was alone, and smoking one of his interminable

cigarettes. He had not said he was crossing, and why had he not spoken

to her? He wandered past down the pier, and she lost him in the shadows.

When he came back he paused near her, and at last saluted and spoke.

"Pardon," he said. "If you will stand back here you will find less wind."

Thank you."

He carried her suitcase back, and stooping over to place it at her feet

he said: "I shall send him on board with a message to the captain. When

I come back try again."

He left her at once. The passengers for Boulogne were embarking now.

A silent lot, they disappeared into the warmth and brightness of the

little boat and were lost. No one paid any attention to Sara Lee

standing in the shadows.

Soon Henri came back. He walked briskly and touched his cap as he

passed. He went aboard the Boulogne steamer, and without a backward

glance disappeared.

Sara Lee watched him out of sight, in a very real panic. He had been

something real and tangible in that shadowy place - something familiar

in an unfamiliar world. But he was gone. She threw up her head.

So once more Sara Lee picked up her suitcase and went down the pier.

Now she was unchallenged. What lurking figure might he on the dark deck

of the Calais boat she could not tell. That was the chance she was to

take. The gangway was still out, and as quietly as possible she went

aboard. The Boulogne boat had suddenly gone dark, and she heard the

churning of the screw. With the extinction of the lights on the other

boat came at last deeper night to her aid. A few steps, a stumble, a

gasp - and she was on board the forbidden ship.

She turned forward, according to her instructions, where the overhead

deck made below an even deeper shadow. Henri had said that there were

cabins there, and that the chance was of finding an unlocked one. If

they were all locked she would be discovered at dawn, and arrested. And

Sara Lee was not a war correspondent. She was not accustomed to arrest.

Indeed she had a deep conviction that arrest in her case would mean death.

False, of course, but surely it shows her courage.

As she stood there, breathless and listening, the Boulogne boat moved

out. She heard the wash against the jetty, felt the rolling of its

waves. But being on the landward side she could not see the faint

gleam of a cigarette that marked Henri's anxious figure at the rail.

So long as the black hulk of the Calais boat was visible, and long

after indeed, Henri stood there, outwardly calm but actually shaken by

many fears. She had looked so small and young; and who could know what

deviltry lurked abroad that night?

He had not gone with her because it was necessary that he be in Boulogne

the next morning. And also, the very chance of getting her across lay

in her being alone and unobserved.

So he stood by the rail and looked back and said a wordless little prayer

that if there was trouble it come to his boat and not to the other.

Which might very considerably have disturbed the buyers had they known

of it and believed in prayer.

Sara Lee stood in the shadows and listened. There were voices overhead,

from the bridge. A door opened onto the deck and threw out a ray of

light. Some one came out and went on shore, walking with brisk ringing

steps. And then at last she put down her bag and tried door after door,

without result.

The man who had gone ashore called another. The gangway was drawn in.

The engines began to vibrate under foot. Sara Lee, breathless and

terrified, stood close to a cabin door and remained immovable. At one

moment it seemed as if a seaman was coming forward to where she stood.

But he did not come.

The Calais boat was waiting until the other steamer had got well out of

the harbor. The fog had lifted, and the searchlight was moving over

the surface. It played round the channel steamer without touching it.

But none of this was visible to Sara Lee.

At last the lights of the quay began to recede. The little boat rocked

slightly in its own waves as it edged away. It moved slowly through

the shipping and out until, catching the swell of the channel, it shot

ahead at top speed.

For an hour Sara Lee stood there. The channel wind caught her and tore

at her skirts until she was almost frozen. And finally, in sheer

desperation, she worked her way round to the other side. She saw no

one. Save for the beating heart of the engine below it might have been

a dead ship.

On the other side she found an open door and stumbled into the tiny dark

deck cabin, as chilled and frightened a philanthropist as had ever

crossed that old and tricky and soured bit of seaway. And there, to be

frank, she forgot her fright in as bitter a tribute of seasickness as

even the channel has ever exacted.

She had locked herself in, and she fell at last into an exhausted sleep.

When she wakened and peered out through the tiny window it was gray

winter dawn. The boat was quiet, and before her lay the quay of Calais

and the Gare Maritime. A gangway was out and a hurried survey showed

no one in sight.

Sara Lee picked up her suitcase and opened the door. The fresh morning

air revived her, but nevertheless it was an extremely pale young woman

who, obeying Henri's instructions, went ashore that morning in the gray

dawn unseen, undisturbed and unqestioned. But from the moment she

appeared on the gangway until the double glass doors of the Gare

Maritime closed behind her this apparently calm young woman did not

breathe at all. She arrived, indeed, with lungs fairly collapsed and

her heart entirely unreliable.

A woman clerk was asleep at a desk. Sara Lee roused her to half

wakefulness, no interest and extremely poor English. A drowsy porter

led her up a staircase and down an endless corridor. Then at last he

was gone, and Sara Lee turned the key in her door and burst into tears.


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