He groped for her hand in the darkness, and so they stood, hand in hand,

like two children, waiting for what might come.

It was not until the thing was over that he told her. He had gone up

first and so that she would not happen on his silent figure unwarned,

had carried Rene to the open upper floor, where he lay, singularly

peaceful, face up to the awful beauty of the night.

"Good night, little brother," Henri said to him, and left him there with

a heavy heart. Never again would Rene sit and whittle on the doorstep

and sing his tuneless Tipperaree. Never again would he gaze with boyish

adoring eyes at Sara Lee as she moved back and forth in the little house.

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Henri stared up at the sky. The moon looked down, cold, and cruelly

bright, on the vanishing squadron of death, on the destroyed town and on

the boy's white face. Somewhere, Henri felt, vanishing like the German

taubes, but to peace instead of war, was moving Rene's brave and smiling

spirit--a boyish angel, eager and dauntless, and still looking up.

Henri took off his cap and crossed himself.

Another sentry took Rene's place the next day, but the little house had

lost something it could not regain. And a greater loss was to come.

Jean brought out the mail that day. For Sara Lee, moving about silent

and red-eyed, there was a letter from Mr. Travers. He inclosed a hundred

pounds and a clipping from a London newspaper entitled The Little House

of Mercy.

"Evidently," he wrote, "you were right and we were wrong. One-half of

the inclosed check is from my wife, who takes this method of showing her

affectionate gratitude. The balance is from myself. Once, some months

ago, I said to you that almost you restored my faith in human nature.

To-day I may say that, in these hours of sorrow for us all, what you have

done and are doing has brought into my gray day a breath of hope."

There was another clipping, but no comment. It recorded the death of a

Reginald Alexander Travers, aged thirty.

It was then that Sara Lee, who was by way of thinking for herself those

days, and of thinking clearly, recognized the strange new self-abnegation

of the English--their attitude not so much of suppressing their private

griefs as of refusing to obtrude them. A strongly individualistic people,

they were already commencing to think nationally. Grief was a private

matter, to be borne privately. To the world they must present an unbroken

front, an unshaken and unshakable faith. A new attitude, and a strange

one, for grumbling, crochety, gouty-souled England.