The Red Cross Girls in Belgium
was tired; another, she feared she would find the imprisoned soldiers terribly downca
n ordinary occupations. They have their sad days and their cheerful days. There are times when the confinement and de
ur and five o'clock o
thing[Pg 111] interesting in the sight of the ugly, over-crowded ro
to the prisoners and Dr. Mason had made no such effort. It was merely through the courtesy of the German commandant that the American physician and nu
ect for authority. Whenever the others were not loo
and sultry inside the prison, but now a breeze was blowing, stirring th
ldiers. Some of them were smoking cherished pipes, while other
va, Switzerland. They have sent forth a petition to the various governments at war, asking among other things that prisoners be allowed to receive money, letters and packages from their frie
rse it chanced she had never before seen any number of prisoners. Now and then a few of them
g
ed Cross nurse is a soldier's friend. Yet in the character of an ordinary girl Barbara would have been almost as cordially
ng its close the men who had been working in the fields were to return. Th
his yard was a wide gate which could be swung back on hinges,
tside the prison wall and given chairs to
rself growing bored. Dr. Mason could not talk to her. The German officer was discoursing so earnestly in his own
lled a few paces away. There was little to see except the stretch of much-travel
being marched back to their jail. The tread was slow and dead, without animation or life. It was as if the m
ss. She was naturally not thinking of herself. So it had not occurred t
g
rse's coat thrown over the back of her chair. So she wore her American Red Cross unifo
She smiled at him, half wistful and half friendly. Instantly the young fellow's hand
me. For as each line of soldiers, with their guards on either side,
ician had a husky sensation in his throat and his glasses became suddenly blurred. Th
rly affecting. The truth was it was not Barbara who was being saluted, but the uniform she wore, the white ground with its
t there were too many of them and they moved too rapidly to study the individual faces. However, as the men finally entered the prison gate the
he obstruction. This was Barbara's chance to get a good look at the
possible without illness. He wore no hat and his hair was tawny as the hay he had just been cu
h say. Besides this, he seemed enormously interested in Barbara. Obviously the youn
the prisoner than she should have been. This was because she had se
suddenly under her breath. "I am sorr
cle in his face, yet his eyes answer
g
to her. Also she was not expected to speak to him. But she had an unlooked-for chance
g as careful a lookout as possible. "The other girls will be grieved to h
is answer was in the look he flashed at the girl. Then next the order
ra and Dr. Mason starte
uch an extraordinarily dull companion during the r
nsieur Bebé was scarcely an acquaintance, yet she had seen and spoken to him before. As for Lieutenant Hume, he was almost a friend. At least
the German authorities might be persuaded to exchange him for one of their own men, should proper interest be shown in his case.
ach other outside the hospital front doo
the girl slipped her
e," she insisted, "and thank you for taking me with you. I am so
nurse. The fact that she was a nurse struck him
o blame it is I, for taking you upon such a fatiguing expeditio
admiration and friendship. It was good to be admired and like
er until he reached the house of