CONSEQUENCES & THE WAR-WORKERS. E. M. Delafield

CONSEQUENCES & THE WAR-WORKERS - E. M. Delafield


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may very well drop one, but from our own shrapnel. Is there a basement?"

      "You can't send us to the cellar? My dear boy, I, for one, refuse to go. We're not children, and we're not afraid. We're Englishwomen!"

      On this superb sentiment Mrs. Willoughby swept into the middle of the hall and announced in penetrating accents that a Zepp raid was on, and had any one got a pair of field-glasses?

      There was a momentary outbreak of exclamations all around, and then Captain Trevellyan raised his voice: "Please keep away from the windows. There may be broken glass about."

      "Is it dangerous? What are we to do?" gasped Tony, next him. She was rather white.

      At the same moment the very distant but unmistakable reverberation of guns became audible.

      Trevellyan took instant advantage of the sudden cessation of sound in the room.

      "If there is a basement, it would be as well for everybody to go down there, please—just for precaution's sake. And then I'm going to put out these lights." His hand was on the nearest gas-jet as he spoke.

      "Nothing will induce me to stir while there's any danger. I can answer for every woman here!" cried Lesbia, with a gesture of noble defiance.

      Grace Jones came into the middle of the room.

      "Hadn't we better obey orders?" she asked gently. "There is a basement beyond the kitchen."

      She held out her hand to Miss Anthony, and they went through the door into the kitchen.

      After an instant's hesitation, the other women followed. Trevellyan saw that they had lit a candle, and in a moment he heard them beginning to talk quietly amongst themselves.

      A few soldiers in the hall had congregated together, and were talking and laughing. The others made a dash for the door as the firing grew louder, and simultaneously exclaimed: "Here they are!"

      The sound of the huge machines far overhead was unmistakable. They could see the shrapnel bursting, and the guns on the hill boomed heavily and intermittently.

      "Look!" shrieked Lesbia, almost hurling herself out of the door. "They've got one of them! I can see it blazing!"

      Far away, a red spot began to glow, then suddenly revealed the cigar-shaped form in flames, dropping downwards.

      "They've got it!" echoed Trevellyan. "Look! it's coming down. Miles away, by this time. I wonder how many of ours are giving chase."

      The air was full of whirring, buzzing wings, and very far away a red light in the sky seemed to tell of fire.

      Occasional sparks and flashes told of the bursting of shrapnel, but the sounds were dying away rapidly.

      "It's over, and, by Jove, we've got him!" shouted Trevellyan, dashing back into the kitchen. Every one was talking at once, Mrs. Willoughby's voice dominating the rest.

      "I saw the whole thing too perfectly! At least five of the brutes, and two, if not three, of them in flames! I saw them with my own eyes!" she proclaimed, with more spirit than exactitude. "And where are those poor creatures hiding like rats in the cellar?"

      "The noise was awful!" said Tony, shuddering. "It felt as though it were right over our heads. But," she added valiantly, "I do wish we'd seen it all!"

      Trevellyan turned to her apologetically. "I'm so sorry. But I really couldn't help it. They sent me down on purpose to see that this place was warned. It was really perfectly splendid of you to go down like that and miss all the fun."

      "I was very frightened," she told him honestly, "though I do awfully wish I'd seen it. They must have had a splendid view from the Hostel at the top of the street."

      "There was a splendid view from here," said Lesbia cuttingly. "I saw everything there was to be seen."

      Trevellyan was looking for Miss Jones.

      "Thank you so much for giving them the lead you did," he said to her gratefully. "It was very good of you. I felt such a brute for asking you to do it; but there really is danger, you know, especially from the windows, if shrapnel shatters the glass."

      "Oh yes, I know. I wonder," said Grace thoughtfully, "whether they heard it much at Plessing."

      "I know. I was thinking of that all the time. Not that she'd be nervous, you know, except on his account."

      "It would be dreadful for Sir Piers. Oh, I do hope they didn't hear much of it," said Grace.

      One of the men approached her. "If you please, Sister, could you come down into the kitching 'alf a minute?"

      Grace went.

      Trevellyan watched them all disperse, and escorted Mrs. Willoughby to her tram, wondering if he ought not to see her home.

      But Lesbia refused all escort, declaring gallantly that she did not know the meaning of fear, and, anyway, Puffles would protect his missus from any more dreadful, wicked Zepps.

      He left her entertaining her tram conductress with a spirited account of all that she had seen, and much that she had not seen, of the raid.

      As he turned down Pollard Street again, a soldier with his hand bound up lurched out of the open door of the deserted Canteen.

      "Is there any one in there to shut the place up?" Trevellyan asked him.

      "One of the ladies is still in there, sir. Beg pardon, sir; she's a bit upset like."

      Trevellyan thought of little Miss Anthony, who had owned, with a white face, how much the sound of the guns had frightened her.

      He went into the hall. It was dark, but there was a light in the kitchen.

      "Who's there?" said John.

      "I am. It's all right," replied an enfeebled voice; and he went into the kitchen.

      Grace Jones was half leaning and half sitting against the sink, her small face haggard, her hands clutching the only support within reach, the wooden top of a roller-towel.

      "I'm afraid you're ill," exclaimed Trevellyan, looking desperately round him for a chair.

      "It's all right; please don't wait."

      "But it's over now. They brought the brute down. It's miles away by this time."

      He multiplied his reassurances.

      "No, no; it's not that," gasped Miss Jones, looking whiter than ever.

      "There were certainly no casualties over here. We should have seen signs of fire somewhere if they'd dropped a bomb."

      "It's not that!" Grace told him desperately.

      Trevellyan gazed at her helplessly, and repeated in an obtuse manner: "It's all over now—absolutely safe."

      Grace gazed back at him with a wan smile.

      "Would you mind going?" she asked him feebly. "I shall be all right in a minute. It's very tiresome, but the sight of—of blood always upsets me like this, and that man had cut his finger rather badly, and I had to do it up. It's only—that."

      She put her hands up to her damp forehead as though the effort of speech had brought back the sensation of nausea.

      "You're going to faint!" exclaimed Trevellyan. "Let me get some water for you."

      "No, I'm not. Oh, do go!"

      "I can't leave you like this," protested the bewildered John.

      Grace staggered to her feet, and stood holding on to the edge of the sink.

      "I'm afraid—I'm only going to be sick," she said with difficulty.

      Ten minutes later they locked up the Canteen and went up Pollard Street.

      "You see, it had nothing to do with the raid," Grace told him gently. "It was just that poor man bleeding. I've always been like that; it's the only way I'm delicate, because I'm never ill, and


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