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"How?"
"I don't know. The balloon and flying service use 'em, too. I've seen officers send them up. Probably it is to find out about upper air currents."
"_Our_ flying service?"
"Yes, ma'am."
"_Ballons d'essai_," she nodded carelessly. But she was not yet entirely convinced regarding the theory she was pondering.
After lunch she continued to be very busy in the laundry for a time, but the memory of those three little balloons above the aspens troubled her.
Smith had gone on duty at the corral; Kid Glenn sauntered clanking into the bar and was there regaled with a _bock_ and a _tranche_.
"Monsieur Keed," said Maryette, "are any of our airmen in Sainte Lesse today?"
Glenn drained his gla.s.s and smacked his lips:
"No, ma'am," he said.
"No balloonists, either?"
"I don't guess so, Maryette. We've got the Boche flyers scared stiff. They don't come over our first lines anymore, and our own people are out yonder."
"Keed," she said, winningly sweet, "do you, in fact, love me a little--for Djack's sake?"
"Yes'm."
"I borrow of you that automatic pistol. Yes?" She smiled at him engagingly.
"Sure. Anything you want! What's the trouble, Maryette?"
She shrugged her pretty shoulders:
"Nothing. It just came into my cowardly head that the path to the _lavoir_ is lonely at sundown. And there are new muleteers in Sainte Lesse. And I must wash my clothes."
"I reckon," he said gravely, unbuckling his weapon-filled holster and quietly strapping it around her shoulder with its pocketed belt of clips.
"You will not require it this afternoon?" she asked.
"No fear. You won't either. Them mule-whacking c.o.o.ns is white."
She understood.
"Some men who seem whitest are blacker than any negro," she remarked.
"_Eh, bien!_ I thank you, Keed, _mon ami_, for your complaisance. You are very amiable to submit to the whim of a silly girl who suddenly becomes afraid of her own shadow."
Glenn grinned and glanced significantly at the cross dangling from her bosom:
"Sure," he said, "your government decorates cowards. That's why it gave you the Legion."
She blushed but looked up at him seriously:
"Keed, if I flew a little toy balloon in the air, where would the west wind carry it?"
"Into the Boche trenches," he replied, much interested in the idea. "If you've got one, we'll paint 'To h.e.l.l with Willie' on it and set it afloat!
But we'll have to get permission from the gendarmes first."
She said, smiling:
"I'm sorry, but I haven't any toy balloons."
She picked up her basket with its new load of soiled linen, swung it gracefully to her head, ignoring his offered a.s.sistance, gave him a beguiling glance, and went away along the sheep-path.
Once more she followed the deep-trodden and ancient trail through copse and pasture and over the stream down into the meadow, where the west wind furrowed the wild-flowers and the early afternoon sun fell hot.
She set her clothes to soak, laid paddle and soap beside them, then, straightening up, remained erect on her knees, her intent gaze fixed on the distant clump of aspens, delicate as mist above the hazel copse on the little hill beyond.
It was a whole hour before her eyes caught the high glimmer of a tiny balloon. Only for a moment was it visible at that distance, then it became merged in the dazzling blue above the woods.
She waited. At last she concluded that there were to be no more balloons.
Then a sudden fear a.s.sailed her lest she had waited too long to investigate; and she sprang to her feet, hurried over the single plank used as a footbridge, and sped down through the alders.
Here and there a pheasant ran headlong across her path; a rabbit or two scuttled through the ferns. Nearing the hazel copse she slackened speed and advanced with caution, scanning the thicket ahead.
Suddenly, on the ground in front of her, she caught sight of a small iron cylinder. Evidently it had rolled down there from the slope above.
Very gingerly she approached and picked it up. It was not very heavy, not too big for her skirt pocket.
As she slipped it into the pocket of her blue woolen peasant-skirt, her quick eye caught a movement among the hazel bushes on the hillside to her right. She sank to the ground and lay huddled there.
CHAPTER XXV
KAMERAD
Down the slope, through the thicket, came a man. She could see his legs only. He wore dust-coloured breeches and tan puttees, like Sticky Smith's and Kid Glenn's, only he wore no big, clanking Mexican spurs.
The man pa.s.sed in front of her, his burly body barely visible through the leaves, but not his features.
She rose, turned, ran over the moss, hurried through the ferns of the warren, retracing her steps, and arrived breathless at the _lavoir_. And scarcely had she dropped to her knees and seized soap and paddle, than a squat, bronzed, powerfully built young man appeared on the opposite bank of the stream, stepping briskly out of the bushes.
He did not notice her at first. He looked about for a place to jump, found one, leaped safely across, and came on at a swinging stride across the meadow.
The girl, bending above the water, suddenly struck sharply with her paddle.