It ended by the M. P. agreeing to use his influence with the War Office

to get Sara Lee to France. He was very unwilling. The spy question was

looming large those days. Even the Red Cross had unwittingly spread its

protection over more than one German agent. The lines were being

drawn in.

"I may possibly get her to France. I don't know, of course," he said in

that ungracious tone in which an Englishman often grants a favor which

he will go to any amount of trouble to do. "After that it's up to her."

Mr. Travers reflected rather grimly that after that it was apparently up

to him.

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Sara Lee sat in her room at Morley's Hotel and looked out at the life of

London--policemen with chin straps; schoolboys in high silk hats and

Eton suits, the hats generally in disreputable condition; clerks dressed

as men at home dressed for Easter Sunday church; and men in uniforms.

Only a fair sprinkling of these last, in those early days. On the first

afternoon there was a military funeral. A regiment of Scots, in kilts,

came swinging down from the church of St. Martin in the Fields, tall and

wonderful men, grave and very sad. Behind them, on a gun carriage, was

the body of their officer, with the British flag over the casket and his

sword and cap on the top.

Sara Lee cried bitterly. It was not until they had gone that she

remembered that Harvey had always called the Scots men in women's

petticoats. She felt a thrill of shame for him, and no amount of

looking at his picture seemed to help.

Mr. Travers called the second afternoon and was received by August at

the door as an old friend.

"She's waiting in there," he said. "Very nice young lady, sir. Very

kind to everybody."

Mr. Travers found her by a window looking out. There was a recruiting

meeting going on in Trafalgar Square, the speakers standing on the

monument. Now and then there was a cheer, and some young fellow

sheepishly offered himself. Sara Lee was having a mad desire to go

over and offer herself too. Because, she reflected, she had been in

London almost two days, and she was as far from France as ever. Not

knowing, of course, that three months was a fair time for the slow

methods then in vogue.

There was a young man in the room, but Sara Lee had not noticed him.

He was a tall, very blond young man, in a dark-blue Belgian uniform with

a quaint cap which allowed a gilt tassel to drop over his forehead. He

sat on a sofa, curling up the ends of a very small mustache, his legs,

in cavalry boots, crossed and extending a surprising distance beyond

the sofa.




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