The Red Cross Girls with the Russian Army
Ar
ttle wooden house, where, to her surprise, she
n Sonya Valesky did
y the old peasant man w
d. His little black eyes were red rimmed
ead disconsolately and then motioned her to
the room and on this co
d only her profession, yes, and one other thing. She recalled the words th
and women never care to help one another? This war
was, or what she had done, she must be restored to health. First and last Nona m
services belonged to the sol
ckly as possible N
earance indicated that she was sufferi
ause of a greater lack of sanitation and cleanliness the fever had bee
ore, yet she had heard the disease discusse
as cleaner than most of the peasants' huts, so far Sonya must h
n a few words of their language, Non
anions for the beautiful Russian woman, were probably old servants. If Sonya was a follower of
irl could see that in spirit old Katja and Nik
conscious of the seri
ned far whiter in the past year, was partly concealed under a small lace cap such as the Russian peasant woman often wears. Then, al
d with her orders she cam
should have found out about my own mother here in a strange land. But perhaps I was meant to take care
p when Sonya took
hed and her dark
d. "I cannot explain to you why not, but perhaps when I am strong aga
ds in her hot ones and hel
t the American
an, who had once been her friend, lay seriously ill at one of the nearby huts. Would one of the hospital physicians come
moreover, after certain formalities Nona was all
American girl that nothing in her past
d, amid surroundings which she could not
tasks day after day mute and dolorous. Sonya was too ill to recognize her nurse, and Nona could not a
to make them see her side of the situation. She had written them that Sonya Valesky had proved herself to have
ere the fragments of conversation which s
she even called the name of Captain Dalton. Nona supposed that she must be recalling her meeting with Captain Dalton
lace. Neither did she give any clue to the kind of work that must have engaged her time and energy. Surely Sonya Valesky must have been upon some secre
rtunity for surmising. Nona would never have left her alone for a mo
er the house, now and then the young Russian lieutenant would join Nona along the road. This could only oc
"Anna Orlaff." Of course she gave no reason for her question. But it m
nfided to Nona that he was a younger brother, but t
Sonya Valesky's history. He explained that their families had long k
Nona was wise enough to discover that he was not so simple and direct as she had first believed him. A Russian does not readily betray either his deeper thoughts or his deeper feelings. The young Russian lieutenant would not even spe
eing in her present strange position. No one brought her papers; Barbara's and Mildred's letters contained litt
d nearer the fortress of Grovno. Like stone houses built by children the other ancient Russian forts had f
of an almost fatal illness, and asked for n
rls and women than it is to boys and men. But ever since their first acquaintance Nona had realized that the horror of it wen
Nona's mother when they were little girls. They had both been allowed to go away to college. It was i
her chair the day when the summ
or the two men in uniform. They were not dressed like soldiers, and as s
od, for at the sight of the strangers they drop
o bring her to Petrograd. She had been in hiding here near Grovno for several months and had
patient was not well enough to be moved
rting did she bestow any con
lden brown eyes with her own strang
ship. It may be that I can make the Russian people understand, but I do not feel sure. This wa
lked away a few steps
as you can, Nona," she urged. "Russia
f to speak, Sonya afterwards went away wi
to co