He nodded. “That’s the general idea,” he said.
Miss Carruthers came into the hall.
“Oh, Miss Carruthers, this is Major Merrivale,” I said.
“Ah, yes,” she replied. “How do you do? You have come to take the girls home. I wondered if…” she began, and hesitated. “Well, I have to get home, too. I didn’t feel I could leave while these two were here…and, of course, I wasn’t sure how to get to the coast myself.”
“You mean you want to come along with us,” said the major, with a smile. “But of course. There’s plenty of room.”
Miss Carruthers’s face expressed her joy and relief. I could see that he had the same effect on her as he had on the rest of us.
“Now,” put in Madame Rochère. “You girls have everything ready. Déjeuner will be served now…and then you can leave. Come along into the dining room and we can start.”
We followed her there. I walked beside the major and said, “I must tell you, there is a baby.”
He turned and looked at me. He had a way of raising his eyebrows that was very attractive and somehow made one feel that it would be easy to make him understand.
“A baby?” he said.
“The cottages near the school were destroyed by a Zeppelin. The people there—a husband and wife—were killed. They left a baby. I knew them. I used to visit them. I brought the baby here.”
“And you want to take the child along with you?”
“I must. I made a solemn promise. It was when she was dying.”
“I see. And you promised the mother to take care of the child. Do you know how to look after it?”
“Oh, yes….And you don’t mind…?”
He laughed. “I don’t think I should be very good at looking after it. But you ladies will see to that, I am sure.”
I laughed with him. I thought he was wonderful. I turned away to hide my emotion and he took my arm and pressed it.
Not only was he capable and lighthearted, he had understood at once.
After the meal—which made me think of the Feast of the Passover—our pieces of baggage were put in the army vehicle, and in a short time we were driving to the border.
We were very soon in heavy traffic. It seemed as though the entire population of Belgium was eager to get out of the country. It was a pathetic sight to see that lost, bewildered look on the faces of so many. There were vehicles of all sorts, people on bicycles, some with wheelbarrows, some on foot—all with one purpose: to get away before the invading army caught up with them.
Major Merrivale was in complete command. He sat at the driver’s wheel and Annabelinda had contrived it so that she was in the front beside him. Miss Carruthers and I, with Edouard, sat in the back.
The major kept up a conversation most of the time. He told us that the British army was already coming into France.
“It won’t be long before we are driving the Germans back,” he said. “In the meantime, we have to prepare. We were all caught a little on the hop, as the saying goes, while the Germans had been planning this for years. The Kaiser was determined on it. He has been trying to get at us for years…ever since he sent that telegram of congratulations to Kruger at the time of the South African war—and that’s going back a bit. We shall have to teach him a lesson. Are you comfortable at the back?”
“Oh, yes, thanks,” we both said.
“And Monsieur Edouard?”
“He’s happy. He’s finding it all very amusing.”
“Wise child. That’s the right attitude.”
“It can’t be very amusing for these people who are leaving their homes,” I said.
“It will only be temporarily,” he replied. “Soon they will all be going back.”
“When do you think the Germans will reach Mons, Major?” asked Miss Carruthers.
“That’s hard to say, but if they keep up their present speed, I’d say in a week or so.”
“Is it as bad as that?”
“Oh, it was a foul thing to do…to plunge into a country which has nothing whatever to do with this…just because it is easy to get to the enemy that way. Poor little Belgium…completely without the means to resist. Never mind, we’ll soon make those Germans wish they hadn’t started this.”
“You are very confident,” I said.
“I’ve always been like this. Often I’m wrong, but at least I’ve had the pleasure of believing everything will come right…even if it does go the other way. So you see, it’s not such a foolish attitude to take.”
“I think it is the right attitude,” said Annabelinda, smiling at him.
He returned the smile. I thought, He is finding her attractive…and for the simple reason that she is.
“It is a matter of opinion,” put in Miss Carruthers. “It’s like everything in life. There is a good side and a bad side. But the major is right when he says it is good to be optimistic, as long as one is prepared to face the truth when one is proved to be wrong.”
“Ah,” said the major, “we have a philosopher here. A Sibyl.”
“Actually,” said Miss Carruthers, “my name is Sybil.”
The major gave his infectious laugh and we all joined in, Miss Carruthers as heartily as any.
I thought then, Here we are, in this hazardous situation, in circumstances which are tragic to so many, and yet there are times when we can laugh and, yes, really be happy.
And we were on our way. I had Edouard with me and there had been no opposition to his coming. Miss Carruthers was different from what she had ever been before. Annabelinda had put that upsetting scene between us right out of her mind.
And this was all due to Major Merrivale.
It was evening before we crossed the frontier.
Major Merrivale told us that his name was Marcus and, as he did not see any reason why we should stand on ceremony, he suggested we should drop the “Major” and address him by his Christian name.
“This,” he said, “is a very special occasion, is it not? We are going to remember this for a long time. Don’t you agree?”
We all did wholeheartedly.
“Now I think that young man at the back will be wondering why he is kept from his slumbers.”
“Actually,” I replied, “he is deep in them now, so I am sure he is wondering no such thing.”
“All the same, he ought to be made comfortable for the night. I think we all deserve that, and now that the desire for speed is not so intense, I am going to find an inn where we can stay.”
“That would be wonderful,” said Annabelinda.
We all agreed that it would be.
“There’s a little place near Saint-Amand. We might make for that,” he said.
“You seem to know the country well,” said Annabelinda.
“I studied the map and I discussed it with a fellow officer who did know something. There is an inn called Le Cerf. The Stag. Sounds homely, doesn’t it? The sort of place you’d find in the New Forest, say. So we’ll look for that. There will probably be a board outside depicting the creature. If we can’t find that, we’ll soon find something else.”
There was not so much traffic on the roads now, and I was glad. It was so depressing to see those poor people driven from their homes. I hoped they were all safely over the border by now…and that they would soon be on the way back to their homes.
We found Le Cerf. It was a fair-sized inn with tables in the gardens surrounding it. There was a somewhat loquacious host who greeted us effusively, largely, I think, because of Marcus Merrivale’s presence. He was a member of the British army and therefore an ally.
There were three rooms available: One was allotted to the major and one to Miss Carruthers; and Annabelinda and I shared the third with Edouard. We went to them to wash, and agreed to meet in the lounge when we were ready.
There were two beds in our room, and first I looked after Edouard. Some soup and a creamy pudding were sent up to him. I fed him and prepared him for bed, and soon he was fast asleep.
Annabelinda in the meantime was washing. She sat before the mirror, studying her face, while I went on dealing with Edouard.