“Then you don’t do any fighting?”
“In the trenches—no. But now and then I have a little skirmish.”
A sort of fear had been formulating itself in Sara Lee’s mind. The trenches she could understand or was beginning to understand. But this alternately joyous and silent idler, this soldier of no regiment and no detail—was he playing a man’s part in the war?
“Why don’t you go into the trenches?” she asked with her usual directness. “You say there are too few men. Yet—I can understand Monsieur Jean, because he has only one eye. But you!”
“I do something,” he said, avoiding her eyes. “It is not a great deal. It is the thing I can do best. That is all.”
He went away some time after that, leaving the little house full and busy justifying its existence. The miller’s son, who came daily to chat with Marie, was helping in the kitchen. By the warm stove, and only kept from standing over it by Marie’s sharp orders, were as many men as could get near. Each held a bowl of hot soup, and—that being a good day—a piece of bread. Tall soldiers and little ones, all dirty, all weary, almost all smiling, they peered over each other’s shoulders, to catch, if might be, a glimpse of Marie’s face.
When they came too close she poked an elbow into some hulking fellow and sent him back.
“Elbow-room, in the name of God,” she would beg.
Over all the room hung the warm steam from the kettles, and a delicious odor, and peace.
Sara Lee had never heard of the word morale. She would have been astonished to have been told that she was helping the morale of an army. But she gave each night in that little house of mercy something that nothing else could give—warmth and welcome, but above all a touch of home.
That night Henri did not come back. She stood by her table bandaging, washing small wounds, talking her bits of French, until one o’clock. Then, the last dressing done, she went to the kitchen. Marie was there, with Maurice, the miller’s son.
“Has the captain returned?” she asked.
“Not yet, mademoiselle.”
“Leave a warm fire,” Sara Lee said. “He will probably come in later.”
Maurice went away, with a civil good night. Sara Lee stood in the doorway after he had gone, looking out. Farther along the line there was a bombardment going on. She knew now what a bombardment meant and her brows contracted. Somewhere there in the trenches men were enduring that, while Henri—
She said a little additional prayer that night, which was that she should have courage to say to him what she felt—that there were big things to do, and that it should not all be left to these smiling, ill-clad peasant soldiers.
At that moment Henri, in his gray-green uniform, was cutting wire before a German trench, one of a party of German soldiers, who could not know in the darkness that there had been a strange addition to their group. Cutting wire and learning many things which it was well that he should know.


