Mrs. Gregory looked at the picture. Sara Lee smiled into the sun. And

Rene, ignorant that his single rifle was to oppose the march of the

German Army to Calais--Rene smiled also.

Mrs. Gregory rose.

"I shall report your view to the society," she said coldly. "I

understand how you feel, but I fail to see the reason for this attack

on me."

"I guess you see all right!" he flung at her. "She's my future wife.

If you hadn't put this nonsense into her head we'd be married now and

she'd be here in God's country and not living with a lot of foreigners

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who don't know a good woman when they see one. I want her back, that's

all. But I want her back safe. And if anything happens to her I'll

make you pay--you and all your notoriety hunters."

He went out then, and was for leaving without his hat or coat, but the

butler caught him at the door. Out in the spring sunlight he walked

rapidly, still seething, remembering other bitter things he had meant

to say, and repeating them to himself.

But he had said enough.

Mrs. Gregory's account of his visit she reported at a meeting specially

called. The narrative lost nothing in the repetition. But the kindly

women who sat in the church house sewing or knitting listened to what

Harvey had said and looked troubled. They liked Sara Lee, and many of

them had daughters of their own.

The photograph was passed around. Undoubtedly Sara Lee was living in a

ruined village. Certainly ruined villages were only found very near the

Front. And Rene unquestionably held a gun. Tales of German brutalities

to women had come and were coming constantly to their ears. Mabel

Andrews had written to them for supplies, and she had added to the

chapter of horrors.

Briefly, the sense of the meeting was that Harvey had been brutal, but

that he was right. An older woman in a safe place they might continue

to support, but none of them would assume the responsibility of the

crushing out of a young girl's life.

To be quite frank, possibly Harvey's appeal would have carried less

weight had it not coincided with Sara Lee's request for more money.

Neither one alone would have brought about the catastrophe, but

altogether they made question and answer, problem and solution. Money

was scarce. Demands were heavy. None of them except Mrs. Gregory had

more than just enough. And there was this additional situation to face:

there was no end of the war in sight; it gave promise now of going on

indefinitely.




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