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Show U) 17 'l‘lllC 11.\111{ 1"()]11£S'l' THE RETR CAT alrous tact towards Marie 11'1111111'1111 that 11'11.< 11111111111 .11] praise. H11 11111'111's1111111'i.<h1111i1l1i.< 11111'111 his 111111111111'111 their little 1'0111111s11tion in 111111111111111'.11"1111111 l \1'i.<h‘ he told me, that I 111111 111111111 111111 1111111'111'.<1111o11 11111111111'.l1"11'11s so 1'erV' short 111111 1 might .<11 (‘11-‘11) 1111111 1111111'111111011 it. There 11"010 so manV' thin11.< 1111111111 11's111h11t 1 might have said-ands1<0 110101111110 1110 another 11111111110." T She never did-~s1he kept. 111111 from 11111'. Kind to him perhaps, but 11111111 1111111111111 111111 111111111111' 1111111111111"s inti: 11111111: 110 had almost the 1111'. it .<'111111111dtto 1110,1116 patiOIJll)‘ 11'aitin11'f1t1r the moment when <'1111<1<11111ld 110111111111 1, the air too of a man who was sur,(1 in his 1111111'1,1h 11t that mom1nt would come. And the other thing that stittened him was his hatred for SemV'onOV'. Hatred maV' seem too fierce a word for the emotion of {1111' one as mi 1d and 11'entl, as T10111hard- and V'et hatred at this time it was. He seemed no longer afraid of SemV'onoV' and there was somethino about him now which surprised the other man T111111111'h all those first daV's at 1111115111, when we seemed for a moment almost to have slipped out of the war and 1111111 1011din1r the smaller more quarrelsome life of earl ie1 daV':,T10nehard was 00:1pied 111th,oan' one question-"XVhat was he feelin11 about 1'111V0110V 4" I felt as thou11'h I could stand anything if 1111111 she didnt love him. Since that awful ni11ht of the "111111211thIelh(idhroejfgreldliirself :0 losing her; anV' one should 1:111 it "as th d lake 101' happv-but he-neveri kmw‘I ((nflgniptetision that I could not hear. ell what she felt." I didn"t The indecision was not to last mmh longer. One evening, when 1 C 0 ha d" 110111 at Mittovo about a week, he wa 1 s at the ross wat1hing the sun. lik e a crimson flower, sink behind the dim giey forest. The Nestor, in the evening mist, was 179 a golden shadow under the. hill. This beauty made him 11111111111311013'. 110 was wishing passionately, as he stood there, for work, hard, dangerous, gripping work. lle did not know that that was to be the last idle minute of his life. ill'earing 11 step on the path he turned round to find Se1n< yonov at his side. "Lovely View, isn't it 1"" said Semyonov, watching him. "Lovely," answered Trenehard. Semyonov sat down on the little stone seat beneath the (‘1'11ss and looked up at his rival. Trenehard looked down at him, hating his square, stolid composure, his thick thighs, his fair heard, his ironi 11.11 eyes. "You're a beastly maul" he thought. "How long are you going to be with us, do you think ?‘" asked Semyonov. "Don‘t know-depends on so many tl'iings." "\Vhy don"t you go back to England? They want soldierS. " "\\ouldnt pass my eV'esight." "\\hen are they goin.11 to be11in doin11 something on the other Front, do V'ou think. "\\h11n they" re reeadV', I suppose." 111111" r0. \‘CI'IV slow. \\herds all V'our armV' we heard so much about.1"" T1101 e"' a big armV' goin11 to be readv soon "1Yes, but we were told thinns would 1100111 111 l\l111'.1t‘s only the Germans who V0,0'""begun. "I don"t know; I"V'e seen no English papers for some weeks." There was a pause. Semyonov smiled, stood up, looked into rl‘renehards 010:1. "1 must go to England," he said slowly, "after the. war. Marie Ivanovna and 1 will go, I hope, together. She told |