After a moment's hesitation M. Claude, the proprietor, and his old sister, move out into the street, and mechanically I, and all the others follow as if afraid to be left alone within.
CHAPTER XXXVIII
"MY SON!"
And now through the livid sunless silences of the deserted city, still reeking horribly of powder, shrapnel, smoke and burning petroleum, the Germans are coming down the Avenues to enter into possession.
Here they come, a long grey line of foot-soldiers and mounted men, all with pink roses or carnations in their grey tunics.
Suddenly, a long, lidded, baker's cart dashes across the road at a desperate rate, wheeled by a poor old Belgian, whose face is so wild, that I whisper as she passes close to me:
"Is somebody ill in your cart?"
Without stopping, without looking even, her haggard eyes full of despair, she mutters:
"Dead! My son! He was a soldat."