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Show in; 'I‘Ill‘? lt.\ttl\' I‘ltHIlCS'l‘ THE INVISIBLE BATTLE i‘tlwalvs round the «'ut'lH‘t'. always just out (it sight. always moehiua oue's elumsy pursuit. And still, even now, I telt no exeitemeut. no elit‘iosit)‘. My 't'eet: had not: yet touehe d the euehauted ground. . . 'l‘he treneh had at onee slipped haek into its earlier eouiposure. The dusk was now ereeping‘ down the hill; with ever)" stir ot' the hreexe more stars were hlown into the silty; the oal; was all hlael; now like a friendly shadow proteetina me. "'llhere‘ll he no more for a while," said the (lolonel. uas right. lle There was stillness: no hatter): however dis taut. no pittei'ipatter of ritle tire, no ehattering' report; ot‘ the maehine guns. Men began to eross the yard, slowly, without caution. The dusk 'itttllltt us so that I eould not see. the ('olouel‘s taee: a stream that eut the field, hidden in the day, was now suddenly revealed h.‘ 2 grinning careless moon. Then a soldier erossed the yard to us, told us that llr. Feniyonov wished us: to start and had sent us a guide: the wagons were ready. At that instant, whence I l(110\\' not, for the first time that day, exeitement leapt upon me. Events had hitherto passed hetore me like, the shadowed him of a (-inematttg'raph: it had heen as though some one had given me glimpses of a life, an adventure, a eountr)‘ with whieh I should later have some eoneern hut whose houudaries l, was not yet to eross. Now, suddenly» "l"‘tl‘l‘l' it was heeause of the dark and the silenee l eannot say. l 97 we were quite (listiuetly aware. As we walked aeross the yard into the long: low tield. speaking in whispers, watehing a shaft ot‘ light. perhaps some distant projeetor that tremliled in pale white shadows on the horixon, we seemed to me. to he. in actual truth, the hunters ot' '[lreuehardls dream. Never, surely. hetortn had I known the world so silent. l'uder the hedges that lined the tield there were soldiers lilw ghosts: our own wagons. with the sanitars walltiug lit" side them. mmesl aeross the around without even the ereak ell a wheel. Fem‘rontw was to meet us in an hours time at a (‘t'l'litilll'l‘1|"l'tt;ttl. l was ei\en the eommand ot' the party. l \\a\ Howe it! litt‘t‘al tt‘tltlt. ltt't‘atlih'ssl)' (‘M'ltt‘th \\.ts heating in m) My heart lit-east lihe some ereature who make; tannin; hutps' at est-ape. .\lv\ tongue was dry and my hrain lwt. lint l was iii:pp\ . . . happy with a strange e.\'altatien that was unlilw an) emotion that i had known It. fl tt‘. lt \t,.i~ in part the happine-s‘ that, I had ltnown mtt'nnw in lluglo tmihall or in tennis when the plan-rs \~.. I" lurid". Il1.1'll.'tl and the :‘Jtlttt' hard. hilt it was more 13.1, :hii, lam l' i .Y lt l l irn it in.‘ 3 M i t ‘ ~ i- ply that we were given something definite to do~‘\\'t‘ llit‘l had wounded (hiring the morning)‘ it was rather that. as in the. ehildreu's e‘an'ie we were "hot." we had drawn in a moment close to some one or Something of whose prest MU \*.v.'v t . "ti'llllltt‘lll'd \‘ie\\'ot'lautl 'V ."tt"tt"lilll"vtl'lllt'llJIIDItllll‘~\‘ttlI l ‘ -t l t i ' 3. i' l .t ' :. '1 .I u .. l' iott mote.tomthanthat. "$115.": ; Hath, :uie :1 3 ‘ »'l~' ;_r s .i all '. " i It. to . tint ‘ l I,17i‘lil-, ‘. I . t \‘i.i-h on:- liax tii.tti\ «laws ' Ni :: . ‘t‘t‘ p:i~i that one ha»; 1"». had heeonie, n'iyselt', an aetor iu the affair. It, was not >lllt' ‘: , tl‘u .it t:i'~' ll ' t‘ l .'.tio » " netting: ot' the happiness that l ' it ,l i~ '_i i :: tl ' lit-torn- tlllt"". llhir» happiness, lot .l:mlw,ai.tl \Llillllillt'UJ I wt, aim, a4 ti,'l.‘sl‘-~vl-H : t‘ lt|‘~ l‘ltttl'ttllllltll‘x 'llllt'n‘l'l'llhttl‘ll, lltlt. now, ln-en m'x reward; ; flur, \t .‘elt that rem-lation as it, eatin- [m that: :.i 1, t'wi'tanate than l. liut, what 1 |