About the middle of January Mabel Andrews wrote to Sara Lee from

France, where she was already installed in a hospital at Calais.

The evening before the letter came Harvey had brought round the

engagement ring. He had made a little money in war stocks, and into

the ring he had put every dollar of his profits--and a great love, and

gentleness, and hopes which he did not formulate even to himself.

It was a solitaire diamond, conventionally set, and larger, far larger,

than the modest little stone on which Harvey had been casting anxious

glances for months.

"Do you like it, honey?" he asked anxiously.

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Sara Lee looked at it on her finger.

"It is lovely! It--it's terrible!" said poor Sara Lee, and cried on his

shoulder.

Harvey was not subtle. He had never even heard of Mabel Andrews, and

he had a tendency to restrict his war reading to the quarter column in

the morning paper entitled "Salient Points of the Day's War News."

What could he know, for instance, of wounded men who were hungry? Which

is what Mabel wrote about.

"You said you could cook," she had written. "Well, we need cooks, and

something to cook. Sometime they'll have it all fixed, no doubt, but

just now it's awful, Sara Lee. The British have money and food, plenty

of it. But here--yesterday I cut the clothes off a wounded Belgian boy.

He had been forty-eight hours on a railway siding, without even soup or

coffee."

It was early in the war then, and between Ypres and the sea stretched a

long thin line of Belgian trenches. A frantic Belgian Government, thrust

out of its own land, was facing the problem, with scant funds and with no

materiel of any sort, for feeding that desolate little army. France had

her own problems--her army, non-productive industrially, and the great

and constantly growing British forces quartered there, paying for what

they got, but requiring much. The world knows now of the starvation of

German-occupied Belgium. What it does not know and may never know is of

the struggle during those early days to feed the heroic Belgian Army in

their wet and almost untenable trenches.

Hospital trains they could improvise out of what rolling stock remained

to them. Money could be borrowed, and was. But food? Clothing?

Ammunition? In his little villa on the seacoast the Belgian King knew

that his soldiers were hungry, and paced the floor of his tiny

living-room; and over in an American city whose skyline was as pointed

with furnace turrets as Constantinople's is with mosques, over there

Sara Lee heard that call of hunger, and--put on her engagement ring.




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