The Amazing Interlude eBook

Mary Roberts Rinehart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 268 pages of information about The Amazing Interlude.

The Amazing Interlude eBook

Mary Roberts Rinehart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 268 pages of information about The Amazing Interlude.

At Jean’s suggestion she added to her report of so many men fed with soup, so much tobacco, sort not specified, so many small wounds dressed —­a request that if possible her allowance be increased.  She did it nervously, but when the letter had gone she felt a great relief.  She enclosed a snapshot of the little house.

Jean, as it happens, had lied about Henri.  Not once, but several times.  He had told Marie, for instance, that Henri was in England, and later on he told Rene.  Then, having done his errand, he drove six miles back along the main road to Dunkirk and picked up Henri, who was sitting on the bank of a canal watching an ammunition train go by.

Jean backed into a lane and turned the car round.  After that Henri got in and they went rapidly back toward the Front.  It was a different Henri, however, who left the car a mile from the crossroads—­a Henri in the uniform of a French private soldier, one of those odd and impracticable uniforms of France during the first year, baggy dark blue trousers, stiff cap, and the long-tailed coat, its skirts turned back and faced.  Round his neck he wore a knitted scarf, which covered his chin, and, true to the instinct of the French peasant in a winter campaign, he wore innumerable undergarments, the red of a jersey showing through rents in his coat.

Gone were Henri’s long clean lines, his small waist and broad shoulders, the swing of his walk.  Instead, he walked with the bent-kneed swing of the French infantryman, that tireless but awkward marching step which renders the French Army so mobile.

He carried all the impedimenta of a man going into the trenches, an extra jar of water, a flat loaf of bread strapped to his haversack, and an intrenching tool jingling at his belt.

Even Jean smiled as he watched him moving along toward the crowded crossroads—­smiled and then sighed.  For Jean had lost everything in the war.  His wife had died of a German bullet long months before, and with her had gone a child much prayed for and soon to come.  But Henri had brought back to Jean something to live for—­or to die for, as might happen.

Henri walked along gayly.  He hailed other French soldiers.  He joined a handful and stood talking to them.  But he reached the crossroads before the ammunition train.

The crossroads was crowded, as usual—­many soldiers, at rest, waiting for the word to fall in, a battery held up by the breaking of a wheel.  A temporary forge had been set up, and soldiers in leather aprons were working over the fire.  A handful of peasants watched, their dull eyes following every gesture.  And one of them was a man Henri sought.

Henri sat down on the ground and lighted a cigarette.  The ammunition train rolled in and halted, and the man Henri watched turned his attention to the train.  He had been dull and quiet at the forge, but now he became smiling, a good fellow.  He found a man he knew among the drivers and offered him a cigarette.  He also produced and presented an entire box of matches.  Matches were very dear, and hardly to be bought at any price.

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Project Gutenberg
The Amazing Interlude from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.