As the sun went down, the outlines of the rejoicing city took on the

faint mist-blue of a dream city. It softened the outlines of the Eiffel

tower to strange and fairy-like beauty and gave to the trees in the

Tuileries gardens the lack of definition of an old engraving. And as

if to remind the rejoicing of the price of their happiness, there came

limping through the crowd a procession of the mutilees. They stumped

along on wooden legs or on crutches; they rode in wheeled chairs; they

were led, who could not see. And they smiled and cheered. None of them

was whole, but every one was a full man, for all that.

Audrey cried, shamelessly like Suzanne, but quietly. And, not for the

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first time that day, she thought of Chris. She had never loved him, but

it was pitiful that he could not have lived. He had so loved life. He

would have so relished all this, the pageantry of it, and the gayety,

and the night's revelry that was to follow. Poor Chris! He had thrown

everything away, even life. The world perhaps was better that these

mutilees below had given what they had. But Chris had gone like a pebble

thrown into a lake. He had made his tiny ripple and had vanished.

Then she remembered that she was not quite fair. Perhaps she had never

been fair to Chris. He had given all he had. He had not lived well, but

he had died well. And there was something to be said for death. For the

first time in her healthy life she wondered about death, standing here

on the Crillon balcony, with the city gone mad with life below her.

Death was quiet. It might be rather wonderful. She thought, if Clay did

not want her, that perhaps it would be very comforting just to die and

forget about everything.

From beneath the balcony there came again, lustily the shouts of a dozen

doughboys hauling a German gun: "Hail! hail! the gang's all here!

What the hell do we care?

What the hell do we care?

Hail, hail, the gang's all here!

What the hell do we care now?"

Then, that night, Clay came. The roistering city outside had made of her

little sitting-room a sort of sanctuary, into which came only faintly

the blasts of horns, hoarse strains of the "Marseillaise" sung by

an un-vocal people, the shuffling of myriad feet, the occasional

semi-hysterical screams of women.

"Mr. Spencer is calling," said the concierge over the telephone, in his

slow English. And suddenly a tight band snapped which had seemed to bind

Audrey's head all day. She was calm. She was herself again. Life was

very wonderful; peace was very wonderful. The dear old world. The good

old world. The kind, loving, tender old world, which separated people

that they might know the joy of coming together again. She wanted to

sing, she wanted to hang over her balcony and teach the un-vocal French

the "Marseillaise."