With this outfit we were able to supplement when necessary such provisions as we purchased along the way, and even now and then to make such occasional delicacies as cup custard or to bake a few muffins or small sweet cakes. More than once, too, we have drawn up beside the road where troops were passing, and turned out some really excellent hot doughnuts for them.
Indeed I may say that we became quite well known among both officers and men, being called The Three Graces.
But when so many were doing similar work on a much larger scale our poor efforts are hardly worthy of record. Only one thing is significant! We moved slowly but inevitably toward the Front, and toward that portion of the Front where Charlie Sands was serving his country.
During all this time Mr. Burton never mentioned Hilda but once, and that was to state that he had learned Captain Weber was a widower.
“Not that it makes any difference to me,” he said. “She can marry him tomorrow as far as I’m concerned. I’ve forgotten her, practically. If I marry it will be one of these French girls. They can cook anyhow, and she can’t. Her idea of a meal is a plate of fudge.”
“He’s really breaking his heart for her,” Aggie confided to me later. “Do you notice how thin he is? And every time he looks at the moon he sighs.”
“So do I,” I said tartly; “and I’m not in love either. Ever since that moonlight night when that fool of a German flew over and dropped a bomb onto the best layer cake I’ve ever baked I’ve sighed at the moon too.”
But he was thinner; and, when the weather grew cold and wet and we suggested flannels to him as delicately as possible, he refused to consider them.
“I’d as soon have pneumonia as not,” he said. “It’s quick and easy, and—anyhow we need them to cover the engine on cold nights.”
It was, I believe, at the end of the seventh week that we drew in one night at a small village within sound of the guns. We limped in, indeed, for we had had one of our frequent blowouts, and had no spare tire.