THE AMAZING INTERLUDE
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第65章

But long after he was asleep Sara Lee stood at her window and listened to the leaves, so like the feet of weary men on the ruined street over there.

For the first time she was questioning the thing she had done.She loved Harvey - but there were many kinds of love.There was the love of Jean for Henri, and there was the wonderful love, though the memory now was cruel and hurt her, of Henri for herself.And there was the love of Marie for the memory of Maurice the spy.Many kinds of love; and one heart might love many people, in different ways.

A small doubt crept into her mind.This feeling she had for Harvey was not what she had thought it was over there.It was a thing that had belonged to a certain phase of her life.But that phase was over.It was, like Marie's, but a memory.

This Harvey of the new car and the increased income and the occasional hardness in his voice was not the Harvey she had left.Orperhaps it was she who had changed.She wondered.She felt precisely the same, tender toward her friends, unwilling to hurt them.She did not want to hurt Harvey.

But she did not love him as he deserved to be loved.And she had a momentary lift of the veil, when she saw the long vista of the years, the two of them always together and always between them hidden, untouched, but eating like a cancer, Harvey's resentment and suspicion of her months away from him.

There would always be a barrier between them.Not only on Harvey's side.There were things she had no right to tell - of Henri, of his love and care for her, and of that last terrible day when he realized what he had done.

That night, lying in the new bed, she faced that situation too.How much was she to blame? If Henri felt that each life lost was lost by him wasn't the same true for her? Why had she allowed him to stay in London?

But that was one question she did not answer frankly.

She lay there in the darkness and wondered what punishment he would receive.He had done so much for them over there.Surely, surely, they would allow for that.But small things came back to her - the awful sight of the miller and his son, led away to death, with the sacks over their heads.The relentlessness of it all, the expecting that men should give everything, even life itself, and ask for no mercy.

And this, too, she remembered: Once in a wild moment Henri had said he would follow her to America, and that there he would prove to her that his and not Harvey's was the real love of her life - the great love, that comes but once to any woman, and to some not at all.Yet on that last night at Morley's he had said what she now felt was a final farewell.That last look of his, from the doorway - that had been the look of a man who would fill his eyes for the last time.

She got up and stood by the window.What had they done to him? What would they do? She looked at her watch.It was four o'clock in the morning over there.The little house would be quiet now, but down along the lines men would be standing on the firing step of the trench, andwaiting, against what the dawn might bring.

Through the thin wall came the sound of Harvey's heavy, regular breathing.She remembered Henri's light sleeping on the kitchen floor, his cap on the table, his cape rolled round him - a sleeping, for all his weariness, so light that he seemed always half conscious.She remembered the innumerable times he had come in at this hour, muddy, sometimes rather gray of face with fatigue, but always cheerful.

It was just such an hour that she found him giving hot coffee to the German prisoner.It had been but a little earlier when he had taken her to the roof and had there shown her Rene, lying with his face up toward the sky which had sent him death.

A hundred memories crowded - Henri's love for the Belgian soldiers, and theirs for him; his humor; his absurd riddles.There was the one he had asked Rene, the very day before the air attack.He had stood stiffly and frowningly before the boy, and he had asked in a highly official tone:

"What must a man be to be buried with military honors?" "A general?""No."

"An officer?"

"No, no! Use your head boy! This is very important.A mistake would be most serious.

Rene had shaken his head dejectedly.

"He must be dead, Rene," Henri had said gravely."Entirely dead.As I said, it is well to know these things.A mistake would be unfortunate."His blue eyes had gleamed with fun, but his face had remained frowning.It was quite five minutes before she had heard Rene chuckling on the doorstep.

Was he still living, this Henri of the love of life and courting of death? Could anything so living die? And if he had died had it been because of her? She faced that squarely for the first time.

"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."Beyond the partition Harvey slept on, his arms under his head.