And there I think we may leave them all--Henri and Sara Lee; and Jean

of the one eye and the faithful heart; and Marie, with her kettles; and

even Rene, who still in some strange way belonged to the little house,

as though it were something too precious to abandon.

The amazing interlude had become the play itself. Never again for Sara

Lee would the lights go up in front, and Henri with his adoring eyes

and open arms fade into the shadows.

The drama of the war plays on. The Great Playwright sees fit, now and

then, to take away some well-beloved players. New faces appear and

disappear. The music is the thunder of many guns. Henri still plays

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his big part, Sara Lee her little one. Yet who shall say, in the end,

which one has done the better? There are new and ever new standards,

but love remains the chief. And love is Sara Lee's one quality--love

of her kind, of tired men and weary, the love that shall one day knit

this broken world together. And love of one man.

On weary nights, when Henri is again lost in the shadows, Sara Lee,

her work done, the men gone, sits in her little house of mercy and

waits. The stars on clear evenings shine down on the roofless buildings,

on the rubbish that was once the mill, on the ruined poplar trees, and

on the small acre of peace where tiny crosses mark the long sleep of

weary soldiers.

And sometimes, though she knows it now by heart, she reads aloud that

letter of Henri's to her. It comforts her. It is a promise.

"If that is to be, then think of me, somewhere, perhaps with Rene by my

side, since he, too, loved you. And I shall still be calling you, and

waiting. Perhaps, even beyond the stars, they have need of a little

house of mercy. And God knows, wherever I am, I shall have need of you."



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