Sonya let go Nona"s hands and stepped back into her little room. From under her pillow she drew a small folded paper.
"In going to Siberia I forfeit all my estates, Nona," Sonya Valesky explained when she came back. "But I have a small amount of money in the United States, as well as in my own country. Perhaps the government may be willing to allow me to dispose of my property, although of course I can"t tell. But I have made a will and had it witnessed here in the prison. If it is possible I want you to have half of the little I have left and Katja and Nika the rest. There would be no chance to leave it to the cause of peace in these days."
Nona received the little paper.
"You won"t be in Siberia all your life, Sonya, that I won"t believe,"
she protested. "Some day when this war is over the Czar will pardon you.
Please remember that I shall never forget you and never stop trying to do what I can for your release. If I am allowed to have it, I will take care of your money until you are able to come to me."
Hearing a guttural noise behind her, Nona Davis now turned around. Her guard was signaling that the time allotted for her visit was over.
She was not able to kiss the older woman good-by, only to hold both her hands close for another moment and then to go away with her eyes so blinded with tears that she could not see. Yet she never forgot the picture that Sonya Valesky made when she had a final glance at her.
Four days later a few lines appeared in the Russian daily papers, stating that Sonya Valesky, a woman of n.o.ble birth, but at present a Russian nihilist, had been condemned to penal servitude in Siberia for life. She had been proved guilty of treason to the Imperial Government.
CHAPTER XIV
_Mildred"s Return_
On the same afternoon that Nona and Barbara read the news of Sonya Valesky"s sentence, Mildred Thornton came to Petrograd.
Her return was characteristic of Mildred.
It was a little past twilight and Nona and Barbara were in their shabby sitting room; they now shared the same bedroom in the new lodgings. Nona had been crying, and in order to try and make her forget, Barbara was reading aloud. She had received a package of books and magazines from d.i.c.k Thornton earlier in the day, but this was her first chance to look them over.
Although endeavoring to listen, in reality Nona"s attention was only pretence. Her thoughts were with the Russian woman whose life had been so strangely a.s.sociated with her own. It seemed to Nona that she had not realized how much she cared for Sonya Valesky until these last few weeks. She had become like an exquisite older sister whom she might possibly have had as a companion and friend. Never had Nona been more conscious of her own loneliness. It is true that she had been more or less lonely all her life, but this she had taken as a matter of course.
Now in these last few hours she had suddenly been overwhelmed by the thought.
Apparently their work as Red Cross nurses in Europe was nearly over.
At least, when Mildred finally joined them, the three girls intended returning to France to spend a little time with Madame Castaigne and Eugenia. Then Barbara and Mildred would doubtless go back to their homes in the United States. Barbara would be married in a short time and Mildred would not wish to remain longer away from her mother and father. But Nona had no home and no people to whom she might return.
The girl was glad at this moment that there were no lights in their sitting room save the two candles which were directly behind Barbara"s book. She did not wish the younger girl to guess the extent of her depression.
Yet it was Nona who first heard the knock at their sitting room door.
Quickly as possible she got up and walked forward to open it, not even attempting to smooth her hair or to wipe the traces of tears from her face. Barbara did not glance from the page of her book, both girls were so convinced that it was only the woman who usually brought them their dinner at this hour.
When Nona opened the door, Mildred took her by both shoulders and quietly kissed her.
"Mildred!" It was Nona"s exclamation that finally aroused Barbara Meade.
But even then, although Barbara rose to her feet, dropping her book on the floor, she did not move forward. She let Mildred come and put her arms around her and kiss her on both cheeks. Then Mildred stood still in the center of the room and smiled at her two friends.
"Won"t either one of you say she is glad to see me?" she asked, with a mixture of gayety and wistfulness.
By this time Barbara and Nona were both embracing the newcomer at once, and at the same time attempting to remove her wraps. Under her nursing coat Mildred was wearing a long sable coat, suitable for a princess, but neither of the girls noticed it in the excitement of her arrival.
"Where did you come from? Oh, Mildred, what have you been doing all this time? I have nearly died of anxiety." Barbara protested. "Surely you could have gotten us some word, if only to say you were alive."
Mildred shook her head. "I couldn"t, dear. I have come back to you the very first moment it was possible. But it is a long story. I can"t tell you all at once. May I sit down?"
At last Nona and Barbara had the grace to observe that Mildred looked white and tired.
"I arrived in Petrograd about half an hour ago with General Alexis and his staff and the Russian maid who has been with us ever since we were left behind at Grovno," she explained, when her friends had thrust her unceremoniously into their only comfortable chair.
"I told General Alexis that I must find you at once, so we drove to the United States Emba.s.sy and they gave us your address. Then they left me here. I am dreadfully hungry; can"t we have something to eat before I finish my story?"
"Certainly not," Barbara insisted, "or not until you have answered two or three more questions. For I am much more apt to die of curiosity than you are to perish of starvation. How long did you remain at Grovno, and did the Germans ever capture you? I suppose your general didn"t die, if he escorted you to our humble door. But if he wasn"t desperately ill, why did he have you stay so long in a position of such danger?" And Barbara ceased to ask more questions simply because her breath had given out.
At the same instant Nona signaled a warning glance. Mildred was almost fainting with exhaustion. In these last few weeks she must have pa.s.sed through difficult experiences and naturally she could not tell them everything at once.
"Please go downstairs and ask that dinner be sent up, Barbara," Nona demanded. "And get soup or milk or something special; if not I"ll make some beef tea for Mildred on the alcohol lamp. Mildred, suppose you put on my wrapper and lie down until after you have eaten, then we can talk as long as you have strength for."
And the girls did talk until nearly midnight in spite of Mildred"s fatigue. She was perfectly well, only tired, she insisted, and greatly excited at seeing Nona and Barbara again.
She had pa.s.sed through events in these past few weeks such as few women have ever known. But of course Mildred related what had taken place in a simple, almost matter of fact fashion. She was so little given to heroics, or to thinking of herself as a conspicuous personage.
"Yes, they had stayed on at Grovno until almost the hour when the Germans entered the old fortress. General Alexis had been wounded, but had not considered his wound serious and would not desert his post until he had finally accomplished his purpose. For the last hour virtually only six persons had kept the German army from entering the fortifications: General Alexis, Colonel Feodorovitch, two lieutenants and two private soldiers, although the Russian physician, who had remained with his commander, had turned soldier toward the last."
"But you don"t mean that you continued inside the fort to the very end?"
Barbara demanded almost angrily. "I suppose you were forgotten."
"I think I was at the last," Mildred returned. "You see, at first when General Alexis discovered that I was the Red Cross nurse who had been chosen to stay behind, he was angry and insisted that I leave at once.
But by the time he learned of my presence, it was too late to find me an escort. Besides, the doctor did not wish me to go. There was a Russian woman, a kind of servant, who was also with us, and did the cooking, I believe, if we ever ate. Anyhow, she stayed with me and looked after me when she could, so that I was never actually alone."
"But Mildred," Nona asked, guessing at many details that her friend did not mention, "how did you finally get away at last? And have you come directly here from Grovno? Surely the fort did not hold out all these weeks."
"No, we have been away from Grovno nearly two weeks, I can"t remember the exact pa.s.sage of time very well," Mildred explained, lifting her hands to let down the long braids of her heavy flaxen hair, and allowing the hairpins to drop girl fashion, carelessly into her lap. She was wearing Nona"s kimono, and it is always easier to talk confidentially with one"s hair down, if one happens to have the ma.s.s that Mildred had.
The very weight of it was oppressive when she was tired.
"Yes, it was terribly interesting toward the last," she went on, "although I don"t believe even then we were in great danger. General Alexis is too wise to have permitted that. Everything was in readiness; all the plans were made days beforehand for our getting away. The different regiments of private soldiers with their officers continued to march away from Grovno, and so much ammunition was moved that I think almost no stores of any value were left. Then the moment finally came for our own retreat."
To Barbara"s intense irritation, Mildred actually paused for an instant at this point in her story. But she continued almost immediately.
"There was an underground pa.s.sage outside the fort, leading all the way to the river. The seven of us at last left the fort together. By this time General Alexis had almost to be carried, the pain from his wound had grown so intense. Then every once in a while, as we went on, one of the soldiers would place a bomb in such a position that it would explode after we had gone. In this way the underground pa.s.sage was wrecked, so there never was any possibility of the Germans being able to follow us.
When we reached the bridge over the river two motor cars were waiting for us. Colonel Feodorovitch, one of the lieutenants and the two private soldiers stayed to see that the last bridge over the Styr was blown up.
The other five, General Alexis, his physician, and one officer and we two women started west in an effort to join the retreating regiments, who were to come up with a portion of the Grand Duke"s army."
"Goodness, Mildred Thornton, what an experience you have been through!"
Nona e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed. "Yet you talk as quietly as if it were almost an ordinary occurrence!"
Mildred shook her head. "It is not because I feel it an ordinary experience, Nona, but because so much has happened I am overpowered by the bigness of it. Really, when we got safely away from the fort, the battle, or at least my share in it, was only about to begin. We had gone a few miles into the country, when General Alexis became desperately ill. Unless he could have immediate attention his physician said there was no possible hope for his life."
Barbara had by this time slipped out of her chair and was sitting on the floor with her hands clasped over her knees, looking all eyes, and rocking herself slowly back and forward as a relief for her excitement.
"But you brought your general back with you, Mildred Thornton, or you said you did. How on earth did you manage about him?" she interrupted.