登陆注册
37324000000023

第23章

He made no suggestion of dining with her that evening.Indeed watching him from her small table Sara Lee decided that he had put her entirely out of his mind.He did not so much as glance at her.Save the cashier at her boxed-in desk and money drawer, she was the only woman in that room full of officers.Quite certainly Henri was the only man who did not find some excuse for glancing in her direction.

But finishing early, he paused by the cashier's desk to pay for his meal, and then he gave Sara Lee the stiffest and most ceremonious of bows.

She felt hurt.Alone in her great room, the curtains drawn by order of the police, lest a ray of light betray the town to eyes in the air, she went carefully over the hours she had spent with Henri that day, looking for a cause of offense.She must have hurt him or he would surely have stopped to speak to her.

Perhaps already he was finding her a burden.She flushed with shame when she remembered about the meals he had had to order for her, and she sat up in her great bed until late, studying by candlelight such phrases as:

"Il y a une erreur dans La note," and " Garcon, quels fruits avez- vous?" She tried to write to Harvey that night, but she gave it up at last.There was too much he would not understand.She could not write frankly without telling of Henri, and to this point everything had centered about Henri.It all rather worried her, because there was nothing she was ashamed of, nothing she should have had to conceal.She had yet to learn, had Sara Lee, that many of the concealments of life are based not on wrongdoing but on fear of misunderstanding.

So she got as far as: "Dearest Harvey: I am here in a hotel at Dunkirk"- and then stopped, fairly engulfed in a wave of homesickness.Not so much for Harvey as for familiar things - Uncle James in his chair by the fire, with the phonograph playing "My Little Gray Home in the West"; her own white bedroom; the sun on the red geraniums in the dining-room window; the voices of happy children wandering home from school.

She got up and went to the window, first blowing out the candle.Outside, the town lay asleep, and from a gate in the old wall a sentry witha bugle blew a quiet "All's well." From somewhere near, on top of the mairie perhaps, where eyes all night searched the sky for danger, came the same trumpet call of safety for the time, of a little longer for quiet sleep.

For two days the girl was alone.There was no sign of Henri.She had nothing to read, and her eyes, watching hour after hour the panorama that passed through the square under her window, searched vainly for his battered gray car.In daytime the panorama was chiefly of motor lorries - she called them trucks - piled high with supplies, often fodder for the horses in that vague district beyond ammunition and food.Now and then a battery rumbled through, its gunners on the limbers, detached, with folded arms; and always there were soldiers.

Sometimes, from her window, she saw the market people below, in their striped red-and-white booths, staring up at the sky.She would look up, too, and there would be an aeroplane sliding along, sometimes so low that one could hear the faint report of the exhaust.

But it was the ambulances that Sara Lee looked for.Mostly they came at night, a steady stream of them.Sometimes they moved rapidly.Again one would be going very slowly, and other machines would circle impatiently round it and go on.A silent, grim procession in the moonlight it was, and it helped the girl to bear the solitude of those two interminable days.

Inside those long gray cars with the red crosses painted on the tops - a symbol of mercy that had ceased to protect - inside those cars were wounded men, men who had perhaps lain for hours without food or care.Surely, surely it was right that she had come.The little she could do must count in the great total.She twisted Harvey's ring on her finger and sent a little message to him.

"You will forgive me when you know, dear," was the message."It is so terrible! So pitiful!"Yet during the day the square was gay enough.Officers in spurs clanked across, wide capes blowing in the wind.Common soldiers bought fruit and paper bags of fried potatoes from the booths.Countless dogs fought under the feet of passers-by, and over all leered the sardonic face ofean Bart, pirate and privateer.

Sara Lee went out daily, but never far.And she practiced French with the maid, after this fashion:

"Draps de toile," said the smiling maid, putting the linen sheets on the bed.

Sara Lee would repeat it some six times.

"Taies d'oreiller," when the pillows came.So Sara Lee called pillows by the name of their slips from that time forward! Came a bright hour when she rang the bell for the boy and asked for matches, which she certainly did not need, with entire success.

On the second night Sara Lee slept badly.At two o'clock she heard a sound in the hall, and putting on her kimono, opened the door.On a stiff chair outside, snoring profoundly, sat Jean, fully dressed.

The light from her candle roused him and he was wide awake in an instant.

"Why, Jean!" she said."Isn't there any place for you to sleep?" "I am to remain here, mademoiselle," he replied in English."But surely - not because of me?""It is the captain's order," he said briefly."I don't understand.Why?""All sorts of people come to this place, mademoiselle.But few ladies.It is best that I remain here."She could not move him.He had remained standing while she spoke to him, and now he yawned, striving to conceal it.Sara Lee felt very uncomfortable, but Jean's attitude and voice alike were firm.She thanked him and said good night, but she slept little after that.

Lying there in the darkness, a warm glow of gratitude to Henri, and a feeling of her safety in his care, wrapped her like a mantle.She wondered drowsily if Harvey would ever have thought of all the small things that seemed second nature to this young Belgian officer.

She rather thought not.

同类推荐
  • UTOPIA

    UTOPIA

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 浔阳记

    浔阳记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 显道经

    显道经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 笑堂和尚语录

    笑堂和尚语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 山中寄诗友

    山中寄诗友

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 我的都市之崛起

    我的都市之崛起

    一段本是平静的生活,却因为一个承诺而改变,在这个都市之中风起云涌
  • 寒玉无双

    寒玉无双

    吴润紧抿着嘴巴,没有说话,一路施展轻功,几乎是半抱着小川一路逃走。到了山下预定的位置吴润牵出早就准备好的马,将小川抱上马“什么都别说了,赶紧走”说着就扬鞭挥去,“师兄!”小川惊呼。“记住”,不要回头,不要再回来!”胯下的马受了惊,一路狂奔,为了不被颠下来,小川紧紧抱住马脖子。回头,师兄的身影越来越小,渐渐成了一个黑点看不到了。“别了,御山”
  • 娇主金屋

    娇主金屋

    莫学刘郎金坐屋,图惹惆怅,美人从未住金屋
  • 天赋碾压

    天赋碾压

    魂穿异界的徐小洛发现自己来到了一个类似地球的平行世界但这是个被外来生物所入侵的地球这里的人类也靠着自身所觉醒的各种天赋与外来的生物斗争而主角徐小洛所觉醒的人物本尊天赋使他一步步站上这个异世界的顶端
  • 忆魂:缘灭

    忆魂:缘灭

    他邪魅一笑,道:“你若爱我,毁了这万千世界,来证明啊。” 她也笑道:“好啊,我如你所愿。”纵然一跃,跳进了万劫不复之地,而天地随之变色。“不!”他墨色眸子变得血红,他怒吼,他......在痛哭。“身为本王的继承人,唯一的恶魔之子,无爱无欲便是你原应有的样子,我不过是帮了你一把。你不会不知道,她是生命之花,万物之源,她死,这世上所有的东西都会跟她一起毁灭。她跳下的是罪恶之源,她会永远消失在这个世界上,不复存在。哈哈哈。”缘生即缘灭,缘灭即缘生,分分合合,终是孽缘。 新书已出
  • 一笑倾城系列神使

    一笑倾城系列神使

    六个性格怪异的少女分别穿越到一个架空的年代,由第一个神使开始任务,再由最后一个神使结束任务,她们性格怪异,想法众多,遇上的人也是痴情种子,但她们不能为了自己的私事而祸害别人……她们守护的是什么?她们信任的又是什么?她们的决定又能左右什么?她们的使命,又关系到了什么?她们带领着六个不同的种族,是要保护地球还是毁灭所有邪恶,再新生……………………“妖族、兽族、天使族、人族、冥族还有精灵族……这是六道……三界六道……一切皆有命数……”……
  • 白发绝殇

    白发绝殇

    她叫乌瞳,出生于一个死人的腹中,被黑猫抚养,集世间一切大悲于一身的绝美女子。她是一个被人背弃,遗弃,放弃,厌弃的棺材仔,婴儿时便被**于镇妖冢只下,任其生死。黑暗里,惑第一个与她说话的人,他问她的名字,她便记下,决定一生。十年后,她去找他,为他打下天下……
  • 我在大唐造假的日子

    我在大唐造假的日子

    内容看名字和类型就知道了。这是一本没有创新的小说,是一本不是在写套路,就是在抄套路的小说,因为它真香。每天只有一章(更字不好听),还不能保证。因为本人是手残,有灵感还好,没灵感会直接卡文,写不出来。至于都这么惨了我为什么要写小说,纯粹想写就写了。脑阔一闪一样都不管。
  • 农门有田之腹黑夫君俏娘子

    农门有田之腹黑夫君俏娘子

    一朝悲催穿越,身份更加可怜,谁都想把她当成软柿子!没钱没地没关系,一双巧嘴造生花,良田财源滚滚来!缺钱她会赚,败类她能打!上的了厅堂,下得了厨房,打得过极品,赚得了大洋,话说,这样的好媳妇去哪找!
  • 绝世神医:腹黑王爷宠上天

    绝世神医:腹黑王爷宠上天

    人人可欺的丞相之女一夜之间竟成了个杀人不眨眼的狠角色,斗继母虐嫡姐,不服的一个字:杀!某王:夫人手酸,让本王来。