Page:Good Sports (1919).djvu/244

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
WAR BRIDE
235

standing on my porch pretty in September with blossoming trumpet-vine.

I went up to my room. The letter was in French. I could not read it—only his name, sweetly written—Jean Beaupré.

I took it to the public library and there with grammar and French lexicon I worked it out, as I had done the flannel pieces.

I made it grow—hid behind a stack of books.

"Dear Lady," the letter said. "The suit is beautiful. I am informed I am to have the honor of entering heaven in it——

"If the good saint forgives my sins and lets me in——

"So, lady, I will thank you when I see you there.

"You will know me by the stripes, pink and white, and all the pretty hand-stitches, lady, and the slippers, a little too large.

"Till we meet in heaven then—good day."

I could feel the hot tears in my eyes, for underneath his name was a message in another hand:

"Monsieur Beaupré died the day this note was written," it told me.

And I longed for the shelter of my own room.

That night on a New England hill-top, a widowed war-bride leaned out of her window