THE AMAZING INTERLUDE

By

Mary Roberts Rinehart

XV

"But why should I go?" Sara Lee asked. "It is kind of you to ask me,

Jean. But I am here to work, not to play."

Long ago Sara Lee had abandoned her idea of Jean as a paid chauffeur.

She even surmised, from something Marie had said, that he had been a

person of importance in the Belgium of before the war. So she was

grateful, but inclined to be obstinate.

"You have been so much alone, mademoiselle -"

"Alone!"

"Cut off from your own kind. And now and then one finds, at the hotel

in Dunkirk, some English nurses who are having a holiday. You would

like to talk to them perhaps."

"Jean," she said unexpectedly, "why don't you tell me the truth? You

want me to leave the village tonight. Why?"

"Because, mademoiselle, there will be a bombardment."

"The village itself?"

"We expect it," he answered dryly.

Sara Lee went a little pale.

"But then I shall be needed, as I was before."

"No troops will pass through the town to-night. They will take a road

beyond the fields."

"How do you know these things?" she asked, wondering. "About the troops

I can understand. But the bombardment."

"There are ways of finding out, mademoiselle," he replied in his

noncommittal voice. "Now, will you go?"

May I tell Marie and Rene?"

" No."

"Then I shall not go. How can you think that I would consider my own

safety and leave them here?"

Jean had ascertained before speaking that Marie was not in the house.

As for Rene, he sat on the single doorstep and whittled pegs on which to

hang his rifle inside the door. And as he carved he sang words of his

own to the tune of Tipperary.

Inside the little salle a manger Jean reassured Sara Lee. It was

important - vital - that Rene and Marie should not know far in advance

of the bombardment. They were loyal, certainly, but these were his

orders. In abundance of time they would be warned to leave the village.

"Who is to warn them?"

"Henri has promised, mademoiselle. And what he promises is done."

"You said this morning that he was in England."

"He has returned."

Sara Lee's heart, which had been going along nerely as a matter of duty

ll day, suddenly began to beat faster. Her color came up, and then faded

again. He had returned, and he had not come to the little house. But

then - what could Henri mean to her, his coming or his going? Was she

to add to her other sins against Harvey the supreme one of being

interested in Henri?

Not that she said all that, even to herself. There was a wave of

gladness and then a surge of remorse. That is all. But it was a very

sober Sara Lee who put on her black suit with the white collar that

afternoon and ordered, by Jean's suggestion, the evening's preparations

as though nothing was to happen.

She looked round her little room before she left it. It might not be

there when she returned. So she placed Harvey's photograph under her

mattress for safety, and rather uncomfortably she laid beside it the

small ivory crucifix that Henri had found in a ruined house and brought

to her. Harvey was not a Catholic. He did not believe in visualizing

his religion. And she had a distinct impression that he considered such

things as did so as bordering on idolatry.

Sometime after dusk that evening the ammunition train moved out. At a

point a mile or so from the village a dispatch rider on a motor cycle

stopped the rumbling lorry at the head of the procession and delivered

a message, which the guide read by the light of a sheltered match. The

train moved on, but it did not turn down to the village. It went beyond

to a place of safety, and there remained for the night.

But before that time Henri, lying close in a field, had seen a skulking

figure run from the road to the mill, and soon after had seen the mill

wheel turn once, describing a great arc; and on one of the wings, showing

only toward the poplar trees, was a lighted lantern.

Five minutes later, exactly time enough for the train to have reached

the village street, German shells began to fall in it. Henri, lying

flat on the ground, swore silently and deeply.

In every land during this war there have been those who would sell their

country for a price. Sometimes money. Sometimes protection. And of all

betrayals that of the man who sells his own country is the most dastardly.

Henri, lying face down, bit the grass beneath him in sheer rage.

One thing he had not counted on, he who foresaw most things. The miller

and his son, being what they were, were cowards as well. Doubtless the

mill had been promised protection. It was too valuable to the Germans

to be destroyed. But with the first shot both men left the house by the

mill and scurried like rabbits for the open fields.

Maurice, poor Marie's lover by now, almost trampled on Henri's prostrate

body. And Henri was alone, and his work was to take them alive. They

had information he must have - how the modus vivendi had been arranged,

through what channels. And under suitable treatment they would tell.

He could not follow them through the fields. He lay still, during a

iercer bombardment than the one before, raising his head now and then

to see if the little house of mercy still stood. No shells came his

way, but the sky line of the village altered quickly. The standing

fragment of the church towers went early. There was much sound of

falling masonry. From somewhere behind him a Belgian battery gave

tongue, but not for long. And then came silence.

Henri moved then. He crept nearer the mill and nearer. And at last he

stood inside and took his bearings. A lamp burned in the kitchen,

showing a dirty brick floor and a littered table - such a house as men

keep, untidy and unhomelike. A burnt kettle stood on the hearth, and

leaning against the wall was the bag of grain Maurice had carried from

the crossroads.

"A mill which grinds without grain," Henri said to himself.

There was a boxed-in staircase to the upper floor, and there, with the

door slightly ajar, he stationed himself, pistol in hand. Now and then

he glanced uneasily at the clock. Sara Lee must not be back before he

had taken his prisoners to the little house and turned them over to

those who waited there.

There were footsteps outside, and Henri drew the door a little closer.

But he was dismayed to find it Marie. She crept in, a white and broken

thing, and looked about her.

"Maurice!" she called.

She sat down for a moment, and then, seeing the disorder about her, set

to work to clear the table. It was then that Henri lowered his pistol

and opened the door.

"Don't shriek, Marie," he said.

She turned and saw him, and clutched at the table.

"Monsieur!"

"Marie," he said quietly, "go up these stairs and remain quiet. Do not

walk round. And do not come down, no matter what you hear!"

She obeyed him, stumbling somewhat. For she had seen his revolver, and

it frightened her. But as she passed him she clutched at his sleeve.

"He is good - Maurice," she said, gasping. "Of the father I know nothing,

but Maurice -"

"Go up and be silent!" was all he said.

Now, by all that goes to make a story, Sara Lee should have met Mabel at

the Hotel des Arcades in Dunkirk, and should have been able to make that

efficient young woman burn with jealousy - Mabel, who from the safety of

her hospital in Boulogne considered Dunkirk the Front.

Indeed Sara Lee, to whom the world was beginning to seem very small, had

had some such faint hope. But Mabel was not there, and it was not until

long after that they met at all, and then only when the lights had gone

down and Sara Lee was again knitting by the fire.

There were a few nurses there, in their white veils with the red cross

over the forehead, and one or two Englishwomen in hats that sat a trifle

too high on the tops of their heads and with long lists before them

which they checked as they ate. Aviators in leather coats; a few Spahis

in cloak and turban, with full-gathered bloomers and high boots; some

American amhulance drivers, rather noisy and very young; and many

officers, in every uniform of the Allied armies - sat at food together

and for a time forgot their anxieties under the influence of lights, food

and warmth, and red and white wine mixed with water.

When he chose, Jean could be a delightful companion; not with Henri's

lift of spirits, but quietly interesting. And that evening he was a new

Jean to Sara Lee, a man of the world, talking of world affairs. He

found her apt and intelligent, and for Sara Lee much that had been

clouded cleared up forever that night. Until then she had known only

the humanities of the war, or its inhumanities. There, over that little

table, she learned something of its politics and its inevitability. She

had been working in the dark, with her heart only. Now she began to

grasp the real significance of it all, of Belgium's anxiety for many

years, of Germany's cold and cruel preparation, and empty protests of

friendship. She learned of the flight of the government from Brussels,

the most important state papers being taken away in a hand cart, on top

of which, at the last moment, some flustered official had placed a tall

silk hat! She learned of the failure of great fortifications before the

invaders' heavy guns. And she had drawn for her such a picture of

Albert of Belgium as she was never to forget.

Perhaps Sara Lee's real growth began that night, over that simple diuner

at the Hotel des Arcades.

"I wish," she said at last, "that Uncle James could have heard all this.

He was always so puzzled about it all. And - you make it so clear."

When dinner was over a bit of tension had relaxed in her somewhat. She

had been too close, for too long. And when a group of Belgian omcers,

learning who she was, asked to be presented and gravely thanked her, she

flushed with happiness.

"We must see if mademoiselle shall not have a medal," said the only one

who spoke English.

"A medal? For what?"

"For courage," he said, bowing. "Belgium has little to give, but it can

at least do honor to a brave lady."

Jean was smiling when they passed on. What a story would this slip of a

girl take home with her!

But: "I don't think I want a medal, Jean," she said. "I didn't come for

that. And after all it is you and Henri who have done the thing - not I."

Accustomed to women of a more sophisticated class, Jean had at first

taken her naivete for the height of subtlety. He was always expecting

her to betray herself. But after that evening with her he changed. Just

such simplicity had been his wife's. Sometimes Sara Lee reminded him of

her - the upraising of her eyes or an unstudied gesture.

He sighed.

"You are very wonderful, you Americans," he said. It was the nearest to

a compliment that he had ever come. And after that evening he was always

very gentle with her. Once he had protected her because Henri had asked

him to do so; now he himself became in his silent way her protector.

The ride home through the dark was very quiet. Sara Lee sat beside him

watching the stars and growing increasingly anxious as they went, not

too rapidly, toward the little house. There were no lights. Air raids

had grown common in Dunkirk, and there were no street lights in the

little city. Once on the highway Jean lighted the lamps, but left them

very low, and two miles from the little house he put them out altogether.

They traveled by starlight then, following as best they could the tall

trees that marked the road. Now and then they went astray at that, and

once they tilted into the ditch and had hard pulling to get out.

At the top of the street Jean stopped and went on foot a little way down.

He came back, with the report that new shells had made the way impassable;

and again Sara Lee shivered. If the little house was gone!

But it was there, and lighted too. Through its broken shutters came the

yellow glow of the oil lamp that now hung over the table in the salle a

manger.

Whatever Jean's anxieties had been fell from him as he pushed open the

door. Henri's voice was the first thing they heard. He was too much

occupied to notice their approach.

So it was that Sara Lee saw, for the last time, the miller and his son,

Maurice; saw them, but did not know them, for over their heads were bags

of their own sacking, with eyeholes roughly cut in them. Their hands

were bound, and three soldiers were waiting to take them away.

"I have covered your heads," Henri was saying in French, "because it is

not well that our brave Belgians should know that they have been betrayed

by those of their own number."

It was a cold and terrible Henri who spoke.

"Take them away," he said to the waiting men.

A few moments later he turned from the door and heard Sara Lee sobbing

in her room. He tapped, and on receiving no reply he went in. The room

was unharmed, and by the light of a candle he saw the girl, face down on

the bed. He spoke to her, but she only lay crouched deeper, her

shoulders shaking.

"It is war, mademoiselle," he said, and went closer. Then suddenly all

the hurt of the past days, all the bitterness of the last hour, were

lost in an overwhelming burst of tenderness.

He bent over her and put his arms round her.

"That I should have hurt you so!" he said softly. "I, who wouki die for

you, mademoiselle. I who worship you." He buried his face in the warm

hollow of her neck and held her close. He was trembling. "I love you,"

he whispered. "I love you."

She quieted under his touch. He was very strong, and there was refuge

in his arms. For a moment she lay still, happier than she had been for

weeks. It was Henri who was shaken now and the girl who was still.

But very soon came the thing that, after all, he expected. She drew

herself away from him, and Henri, sensitive to every gesture, stood back.

"Who are they?" was the first thing she said. It rather stabbed him.

He had just told her that he loved her, and never before in his careless

young life had he said that to any woman.

"Spies," he said briefly.

A flushed and tearful Sara Lee stood up then and looked up at him gravely.

"Then - that is what you do?"

"Yes, mademoiselle."

Quite suddenly she went to him and held up her face.

"PLease kiss me, Henri," she said very simply. "I have been cruel and

stupid, and -"

But he had her in his arms then, and he drew her close as though he

would never let her go. He was one great burst of joy, poor Henri. But

when she gently freed herself at last it was to deliver what seemed for

a time his death wound.

"You have paid me a great tribute," she said, still simply and gravely.

"I wanted you to kiss me, because of what you said. But that will have

to be all, Henri dear."

"All?" he said blankly.

"You haven't forgotten, have you? I - I am engaged to somebody else."

Henri stood still, swaying a little.

"And you love him? More than you care for me?"

"He is - he is my kind," said Sara Lee rather pitifully. "I am not what

you think me. You see me here, doing what you think is good work, and

you are grateful. And you don't see any other women. So I-"

"And you think I love you because I see no one else?" he demanded, still

rather stunned.

"Isn't that part of it?"

He flung out his hands as though he despaired of making her understand.

"This man at home -" he said bitterly; "this man who loves you so well

that he let you cross the sea and come here alone - do you love him very

dearly?"

"I am promised to him."

All at once Sara Lee saw the little parlor at home, and Harvey, gentle,

rather stolid and dependable. Oh, very dependable. She saw him as he

had looked the night he had said he loved her, rather wistful and very,

very tender. She could not hurt him so. She had said she was going

back to him, and she must go.

"I love him very much, Henri."

Very quietly, considering the hell that was raging in him, Henri bent

over and kissed her hand. Then he turned it over, and for an instant

he held his cheek against its warmth. He went out at once, and Sara

Lee heard the door slam.


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